Marriott School Student Duo Wins International Ethics Competition


A pair of Marriott School students proved to be the winning combination at the University of Arizona Eller College of Management’s 2006 International Ethics Case Competition.

Philip Arias and Sarah McMullin, both undergraduate students at BYU’s Marriott School of Management, earned first place at the fourth annual ethics competition. The team was recognized for its strong analysis of an ethical dilemma pulled straight from the banking world’s headlines. Each of the twenty-one teams from the United States, China, Canada and Mexico, received the same case about a week before the competition — questioning if it was ethically acceptable to offer mortgages to illegal immigrants.

“It was a tough topic but a great project to work on” says McMullin, a business management major with an emphasis in entrepreneurship from Redding, Calif. “We took the academic knowledge we found and applied it to real life for the business professionals who were judging us.”

McMullin and Arias were selected to represent the Marriott School after submitting a résumé, cover letter, and fielding an interview with professors Jeff Thompson and David Hart. The student duo spent an estimated forty hours on research and discussions in the week and a half before to the competition to shape their presentation into winning form. Both Arias and McMullin researched the topic and read articles from industry magazines before they came together — even meeting between classes — to piece together a sound, ethical argument.

“We had completely different opinions that would change every time we did more research,” McMullin says with a laugh. “We spent a lot of time convincing each other. Our presentation went through several metamorphoses.”

With their research and an outline of their presentation, the students went to faculty advisers Hart and Thompson for guidance.

“I wish I could take some credit, but they really did a great job” says Hart, assistant professor of public management. “Philip and Sarah took our advice and ran with it. At the competition, they were singled out because of their preparation and because they were from BYU.”

The grueling hours of preparation paid off. When the team arrived at the University of Arizona and met the other teams, Arias and McMullin felt prepared even if they were a little intimidated at first, Arias recalls. But nerves quickly settled after sailing through the first round of the competition and into the finals.

There was no simple “yes or no” answer to the case. The team analyzed potential risks and existing professional policies before concluding that extensive security measures should be taken before extending mortgages to illegal immigrants. Offering such mortgages was both ethically and financially sound for the bank because of the growing profit in the remittance market.

“There was never any pressure to win,” says Arias, an information systems major from Lexington, Mass. “We wanted to go and represent BYU well and have fun. It was just a pleasant surprise that we won.”

Arias and McMullin call the competition one of their landmark academic experiences at BYU. Both were equally grateful for the opportunity to promote the Marriott School.

The Marriott School is located at Brigham Young University, the largest privately owned, church-sponsored university in the United States. The school has nationally recognized programs in accounting, business management, public management, information systems, organizational behavior and entrepreneurship. The school’s mission is to prepare men and women of faith, character and professional ability for positions of leadership throughout the world. Approximately 3,000 students are enrolled in the Marriott School’s graduate and undergraduate programs.

Media Contact: Joseph Ogden (801) 422-8938 or 787-9989
Writer: Camilla Hodge (801) 422-1152