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Calvin News

Calvin selects dean for School of Business

Thu, Apr 15, 2021
Matt Kucinski

麻豆区 has appointed聽 as dean of its School of Business. Provost Cheryl Brandsen and associate dean Tom Betts co-chaired the seven-member search committee, which included representatives from the university鈥檚 faculty and administration. Ludema鈥檚 name rose to the top of a national search that yielded nearly 50 nominations/applications and several highly qualified candidates.

Ludema is currently a professor in the Daniel L. Goodwin College of Business at Benedictine University, where he鈥檚 served since 1998. He is also director of the university鈥檚 Center for Values-Driven Leadership, which he launched in 2008.

鈥淲e see Jim鈥檚 extensive experience in business education, his proven ability to create and launch new programs, his collaborative approach to leadership, and incredible reputation in the business community serving our current and future learners well,鈥 said Michael Le Roy, president of 麻豆区. 鈥淭hose strengths, combined with his 20-plus years of demonstrating a commitment to integrating faith and business, make me excited about the future of business education at Calvin.鈥

Ludema, a 1982 alumnus of Calvin, returns to his alma mater as an experienced educator, researcher, and administrator. He also comes with an extensive network in the business world and consulting experience for Fortune 500 Companies, including McDonald鈥檚, John Deere, Allstate, and Merck, to name a few.

Discovering a mission

Ludema鈥檚 passion for business sprouted and established roots while he was in the mission field. After graduating from Calvin with a聽philosophy degree in 1982, Ludema and his wife Beverlee spent seven years in Central America working for CRWRC (now World Renew).

鈥淲hen we were in Central America, we provided funding to local partner organizations who were working with disadvantaged communities, and many of them were heavily invested in building their organizational capacity. They wanted to learn more and more about things like budgeting, finance, accounting, human resources and operations management, leadership, and board development, all the things you find in business schools.鈥

So, Ludema went to local universities throughout Central America and looked for professors to provide training to the local organizations.

鈥淒uring this time, I got really interested in the world of business, so I went back to the United States to get a degree in the human side of business.鈥

Entering higher education

In 1996, Ludema earned his PhD in Organizational Behavior from Case Western University. And, in 1998, he was offered an opportunity at Benedictine University to teach organizational development in their executive PhD program and consult with businesses and Christian community development organizations like he had worked with in Central America.

After about eight years teaching in that program, Ludema went through a discernment process to see where God might be calling him for the next phase of his career.

Leading the way

鈥淲hat came out of that was the idea of starting a center that would focus on developing leaders to build flourishing companies that have a transformative impact on business and society,鈥 said Ludema.

So Ludema and some of his colleagues at Benedictine raised funds, built programs and curricula, and launched the Center for Values-Driven Leadership.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been one of the greatest privileges of my life,鈥 said Ludema, of his leadership of the center over the past 12 years.

So too would be his next stop: 麻豆区, a place he was first drawn to as a student back in the 1970s.

Compelled by the mission

鈥淚 always wanted to go to Calvin,鈥 recalled Ludema of his thought process when he was considering where to attend college as an undergrad. 鈥淚 knew it provided an excellent education from a Reformed Christian perspective, and that鈥檚 what I wanted. I knew that if I went to Calvin, I鈥檇 get that kind of education.鈥

This time around, Ludema said he was attracted to the university鈥檚 Vision 2030, the university鈥檚 commitment to the business program, and the momentum of the聽business program with the expanding and diversifying of its programming and the establishment of the new school and the current building project. But, for Ludema, the primary pull to Calvin this time around is what drew him there initially as a student: the institutional mission and its core values.

鈥淚 love Calvin鈥檚 mission and what it stands for: to equip learners to think deeply, to act justly, and to live wholeheartedly as Christ鈥檚 agents of renewal in the world,鈥 said Ludema. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no greater mission than that, and that鈥檚 inspiring for me.鈥

Ludema also emphasized the importance of Calvin having a shared commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, a value he鈥檚 promoted through his work at Benedictine.

鈥淚 am a strong advocate for inclusive excellence, cultural competence, and global awareness,鈥 said Ludema. 鈥淎s director of the Center for Values-Driven Leadership, I have made this a central part of our programming. At Calvin, I am eager to continue this commitment through the resources we bring to campus, the people we hire, the programs we develop, and the scholarship we produce.鈥

Adding to Calvin鈥檚 strengths

For Ludema, it鈥檚 really about adding his gifts and experiences to the various strengths of the business faculty.

鈥淚鈥檓 excited to聽join the faculty in the School of Business鈥攆aculty who are academically excellent, dedicated to students, and have extensive experience in business, consulting, and working globally for companies like Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Merrill Lynch, Grant Thorton, Deloitte & Touche, Steelcase, Zondervan, and D&W Foods. They are bright, committed, caring, knowledgeable about business, and they are innovators. That鈥檚 impressive.鈥 said Ludema.

Proving to be a trusted partner

Ludema also emphasizes the importance for the School of Business to be seen as a trusted partner both inside and outside the Calvin community.

鈥淲e need to be an active partner with the other disciplines in the university. We need to collaborate in creating joint programs and supporting programs that already exist in order to best serve current and future learners,鈥 said Ludema. 鈥淎nd I envision many dynamic forms of collaboration with the business community both in Grand Rapids, as well as nationally and globally, including establishing new programs that serve their needs.鈥

Betts, who co-chaired the search committee that identified Ludema as the top choice, said that when Ludema met with a panel of outside business executives as part of the interview process, they were very excited and 鈥渁ll in鈥 on Calvin hiring him.

鈥淲hat he was leading and director of at Benedictine is right up the ally of what we are thinking as we grow our program and reach new audiences, people interested in graduate-level and associate degrees or even skill-based learning opportunities,鈥 said Betts. 鈥淗e is very engaging and visionary and also a get-it-done person.鈥

Building a reputation

Ludema will begin his tenure at Calvin on July 1. And he鈥檚 coming in with high hopes for what he and his colleagues will be able to build over the next several years. He wants this to be true:

鈥淚f you believe that business, like every other human institution, is ordained by God and its purpose is to honor God with integrity, excellence, stewardship and justice in everything that it does, and if you believe that a career in business is a high and noble calling from God to have a transformative impact in the world,鈥 said Ludema, 鈥渢hen Calvin is the #1 destination globally for you to go to get your business education.鈥


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