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I know exactly what you're talking about. It can sometimes get 'quite lonely' if you want to do non-profit, and many business-school students (I'll be surprised if this is limited to Wharton) are focused on very corporate (investing, etc) areas of social impact.
I also don't think that it's as simple as impact vs capacity. Many business school students worry too much about capacity, but they forget that capacity seldom has the power to inspire others. So they become very competent at crunching numbers and implementing frameworks and deciding who to help, but become very poor at becoming ambassadors of social impact, and inspiring others to follow their path.
Because of this, I don't generally think the business school environment is very suitable for those looking to do non-profit. It's even less so, I think, for a Chinese student going to business school. I have met very, very few Chinese business school students looking to go into non-profit (regardless of school), so you might find yourself with very little environment support in this case.
In case it isn't clear yet, I think environment support is crucial. Before you can inspire others, you often need first to surround yourself with people who can inspire you too. For this, I've looked outside of business school. After all, let's not forget that Wharton is a part of UPenn, an amazing ivy league institution.
... And at UPenn, I've found an AMAZING non-profit leadership program. It is basically a 'professional school' for non-profit professionals. You need two years minimum work experience to apply. There are students from Penn, Princeton, etc (very good undergraduate institutions) there, and they've come from jobs like teaching, social venturing, and so on. Yes, they know how to have an impact, and they know how to inspire each other.
(The person who started the programme, btw, is a former Wharton professor, who decided that he did not have the support he needed at Wharton, and so he left the school, took a job that paid about 70% less, and is now educating the next generation of non-profit leaders (including, ironically, Wharton students like me!), in a building right next door to Wharton. Yes, he surely understands the importance of having an environment that suits you, even when you earn less to do the exact same thing.)
http://www.sp2.upenn.edu/npl/
So essentially what I've done is to tap on the resources of this other programme, and especially of the amazing students in this other programme, to inspire myself. I've taken two classes there so far, and would have taken more had I discovered both the programme, and my interest in non-profit, sooner. This is something you can consider. If you come here, perhaps you can take 3-4 classes at this other programme, and interact more with the students from there, while also positioning yourself in other ways with the Wharton degree. It's not perfect, I know, but it's probably better than trying to do non-profit purely in a business school setting, where many of your classmates (and again, particularly those of your classmates who share your background in terms of nationality, profession, and so on) will not be able to provide you any support at all for your dreams.
Feel free to contact me if you want to chat more offline. I know most of the time I ask people to post online if they have questions, but when you truly have an issue that is so unique and in my opinion so worthy of support, I'm happy to talk to you offline too.
Good luck, Jason |
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