商学院教学手册:基于实践的方法

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Action Learning Pub Date : 2022-05-04 DOI:10.1080/14767333.2022.2084871
Michael J. Walton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这本重磅巨著的重点是围绕如何最好地提升和活跃学生、学术人员和招聘机构的商学院体验。这种关注的背景,是对现有商学院教育主张的持续批评。鉴于全球不断变化的社会和环境挑战,现有商学院教育主张未能为毕业生提供足够的实践技能和能力,以满足雇主的需求。一个持续存在的担忧是,在竞争激烈的学术市场中,商学院可能更关心保持自己的学术地位和研究排名,而不是充分关注向毕业生传授实用和商业技能。持有商业学位不再是学生适合商业职业的必要证据,持有者将拥有在工作场所成功和生存的必要技能。因此,商学院有一个“……重新需要向学生和潜在雇主证明他们所提供的教育的价值和有效性,从而建立他们的基本合法性”(xxi)。在这方面,对在线学习的强制熟悉,加上全球学生群体对社交媒体活动的沉迷,迫使许多培训和学习教育家——无论是商学院内部还是外部——在提供非传统学习工具的方法上变得更具实验性,并精通于此。《手册》强调了高等教育普遍面临的几个挑战,特别是大学部门面临的几个挑战,例如(i)需要为终身学习提供更多可用的条款;(ii)认识到学生群体是越来越挑剔和苛刻的消费者;(iii)需要提供一系列的交付工具,而不是依赖于面对面(通常以讲座为基础)的教育参与。(iv)雇主认为商学院学位与现实商业世界100%相关的程度。商学院还必须应对来自越来越多的专家和专业机构的竞争,这些机构提供更注重实际的、经过认证的商业资格。为了应对这些背景挑战,《手册》遵循一个逻辑结构,探讨了技术的使用、学术人员发展的重要性、与学生联系的创新和非传统方式的考虑,以及提高学生的就业能力。全书共25章,分为以下七个部分:
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Handbook of teaching and learning at business schools: a practice-based approach
The focus for this weighty tome is on matters revolving around how best to enhance and enliven the business school experience for students, academic staff and recruiting organisations. The context for such preoccupations is continuing criticism of the existing business school education proposition, which fails to provide graduates with sufficient practical skills and capabilities to meet the demands of employers in the light of changing social and environmental challenges globally. One continuing concern is that business schools may be more concerned with maintaining their academic status and research ranking, in the competitive academic marketplace, rather than focusing sufficiently on imparting practical and business-focused skills of their graduates. Holding a business studies degree is no longer necessarily evidence of a student’s suitability for a business career to that the holder will have the necessary skills to prosper and survive in the workplace. Consequently, business schools have a ‘ ... renewed need to demonstrate, to students and potential employers, the value and effectiveness of the education they provide and therefore establish their basic legitimacy’ (xxi). The objective of the Handbook is described as seeking to ‘ ... instigate multiple angles from which to consider teaching and learning in business school’ (xxii). In this regard the forced familiarisation with online learning, combined with the addiction of social media activity across student populations globally, has forced the hand of many training and learning educationalists – both within and external to Business Schools – to become more experimental in their approach to, and proficient at, providing non-traditional vehicles for learning. The Handbook highlights several challenges confronting higher education in general, and the University sector in particular such as (i) the need to make more available provision for lifelong learning, (ii) a recognition of the student body as being increasingly critical and demanding consumers, (iii) a need to offer a range of delivery vehicles rather than relying on face-to-face – often lectures based – educational engagements, and (iv) the extent to which a business school degree is viewed by employers to be 100% relevant to the real world of business. Business Schools must also cope with competition from increasing numbers of specialist and professional bodies offering more practically oriented, and certified, business qualifications. In engaging with such contextual challenges, the Handbook follows a logical structure exploring the use of technology, the importance of academic staff development, a consideration of innovative and non-traditional ways of connecting with students, and of enhancing student employability. The 25 Chapters are organised into seven Parts as follows:
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来源期刊
Action Learning
Action Learning EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
40.00%
发文量
47
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Critical incident technique and action learning to enable organizational learning How to facilitate critical action learning How to promote inclusion, collective intelligence and democracy Action learning aiding innovation In memoriam – Professor John Burgoyne
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