Helen Lee Bouygues
Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for deprecated parameters".Template:Wikidata image Helen Lee Bouygues is the founder of the Reboot Foundation and a former partner at McKinsey & Company.[1][2]
Early life
Bouygues was born in Boston, Massachusetts. She lived in Seoul, South Korea, with her family from the ages of six to 16 before returning to the United States.[3]
Lee Bouygues graduated from Princeton University in 1995.[4] She received her MBA from Harvard Business School in 2000.[3]
Career
Lee Bouygues started her career as an associate at J.P. Morgan before becoming Director of Pathnet. After Harvard, she was CFO of Cogent Communications.[5] From 2004 to 2011, she worked as a Partner at Alvarez and Marsal Paris, a global professional services firm.[5]
She founded her own consulting firm, Lee Bouygues Partners, in 2010.[5] From 2014 to 2017, she was a Partner at McKinsey and Company, heading up the Turnaround and Restructuring Pole in France.[3]
Bouygues sits on the boards of CGG (company)[5], Vivarte[6], Burelle[7], Steinhoff International|Steinhoff Europe[8], and American Hospital of Paris.[9]
Reboot Foundation
In 2018, after being inspired by watching her daughter learn how to think about the world around her, Bouygues founded the Reboot Foundation[10] to advance education and research in the field of critical thinking.[11]
Reboot funds a number of research projects both in Paris, where the foundation is based, and in the United States.[12] The foundation researches critical thinking education, the impact of misinformation online, and the impact of technology on learning and thinking.
In 2019, it released a report on fake news and media literacy[12] as well as a report on the impact of educational technology on student learning.[13] The foundation conducts an annual survey into public opinion and practices related to critical thinking.[14] Reboot published a book about critical thinking in 2019 called A Parents’ Guide to Critical Thinking.[15]
External links
References
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