Elizabethtown College Associate Professor of Marketing Bryan Greenberg has been named a regional recipient of the 2022 Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP) Teaching Excellence Award. The ACBSP recognizes individuals each year who exemplify teaching excellence in the classroom.
Greenberg will be honored, along with other regional recipients, at the ACBSP Conference 2022 on June 17 to 20 in Washington, D.C. He will receive a crystal medallion and a monetary award. As a regional recipient, Greenberg is now a candidate for the international award.
“There are those who were born to teach,” Adjunct Professor of Marketing Kathy Schwab ’90 said. “Those rare souls who not only inspire, but also understand how (and take the time) to truly tap into students’ strengths, passions, and vulnerabilities to help them achieve not only their greatest potential professionally, but also personally. Dr. Bryan Greenberg is one of these rare souls. His enthusiasm and preparation are remarkable. His dedication to students as a teacher, advisor, and mentor is nothing short of inspirational. His impact? Profound.”
The ACBSP Associate Degree Commission established the International Teaching Excellence Award in 1995 to recognize outstanding classroom teachers. ACBSP is the only specialized body for business schools that presents an award recognizing excellence in teaching, open to application by the entire membership.
About ACBSP
ACBSP’s mission is to promote continuous improvement and recognize excellence in the accreditation of business education programs around the world. ACBSP is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA) as a specialized accreditation agency for business education. ACBSP is the only global accrediting body to accredit business, accounting, and business-related programs at all degree levels. ACBSP currently over 1,000 member campuses in more than 60 countries. Of those campuses, 851 have achieved accreditation and more than 160 are in candidacy for accreditation. Individual members on these campuses now exceed 13,000.