Beyond national regulation in higher education? Revisiting regulation and understanding organisational responses to foreign accreditation of management education programmes

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Dante J. Salto
Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Owens ◽  
Usman Talat

This is an empirical investigation considering how the Knowledge Transfer Openness Matrix (KTOM) could facilitate accessibility and Knowledge Transfer (KT) for the UK Higher Education (HE) Management Education Teaching when utilising learning technologies. Its focus is where learning technologies applications currently assist the KT process and support accessibility for the HE teacher and learner. It considers the philosophy of openness, focusing on its usefulness to support accessibility within UK HE Management Education Teaching. It discusses how the openness philosophy may assist the KT process for the HE teacher and learners using learning technologies. In particular, the potential to support accessibility within HE Management Education Teaching environments is appraised. There appear several implications for both teachers and learners. These are characterized in the proposed KTOM. The matrix organises KT events based on the principles of the openness philosophy. The role of learning technologies in events is illustrated with regard to teaching and learning accessibility.


Author(s):  
Christiane Molina

Societies across the world currently deal with multiple interconnected problems whose solutions call for the active participation of various actors. The private sector is among them and as a result, business leaders are in need of competencies that enable them to find appropriate answers. Sustainability competence may offer the key to transition towards a more equal and fair economy where the resources are maintained for the use of future generations. Higher Education Institutions and specifically business schools are an essential means to develop such competency. This chapter presents a proposal of an educational pathway for the development of competencies for sustainability and offers educators an array of teaching techniques that could be used at each stage.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 51-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amarolinda Zanela Klein ◽  
José Carlos da Silva Freitas Junior ◽  
Juliana Vitória Vieira Mattiello Mattiello da Silva ◽  
Jorge Luis Victória Barbosa ◽  
Lucas Baldasso

The popularity of Mobile Instant Messaging (MIM) has prompted educators to integrate it in teaching and learning in higher education. WhatsApp® is a multi-platform instant messaging application widely used worldwide, however, there is still little applied research on its use as a platform for educational activities in management higher education. In this article, the authors present a quantitative and qualitative assessment of a concrete experience of WhatsApp® use that involved 140 undergraduate management students. Data were collected through questionnaires answered by the participants after the end of the experience of use, and also via content analysis of their conversations inside their WhatsApp® groups. The results indicate five main educational affordances of MIM that can be considered in management education: interactivity, knowledge sharing, sense of presence, collaboration and ubiquity. The article also explores the limitations of this tool and provides suggestions of good practices of MIM use for teaching and learning.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 397-417
Author(s):  
Naveen C. Amblee ◽  
Deepak Dhayanithy

Internationalization of higher education is considered to be among the most widely researched as well as one of the most misunderstood topics. In this study, we take a phenomenological approach to better understand what internationalization means to faculty members at a leading business school in India, as the country has emerged as one of the largest providers of management education in the world today. This is important because faculty members are considered to be the key drivers of internationalization at their institutions. We find that internationalization means different things to different faculty members, and that these views are strongly shaped by each faculty member’s unique set of past international experiences. We are able to link these views to De Meyer’s three strategic drivers of globalization/internationalization, and find that for Indian management faculty, the desire to enrich the home base emerges as the dominant driver of internationalization, followed by the desire for global learning. Although not a prominent driver, the desire to leverage India’s unique knowledge base was also evident. We expect that these views will drive the future internationalization endeavors of this and other similar leading Indian business schools.


Author(s):  
Jennifer S. Leigh ◽  
Amy Kenworthy

Over the last three decades, service-learning has become a well-known experiential learning pedagogy in both management education and higher education more broadly. This popularity is observed in the increasing number of peer-reviewed publications on service-learning in management and business education journals, and on management education topics within higher education journals focused on civic engagement and community-based teaching and learning. In this field of study, it is known that service-learning can result in positive outcomes for students, faculty, and community members. In particular, for students, positive results are related to mastery of course content and group process skills like teamwork and communication, leadership, and diversity awareness. Despite the rise in scholarship, service-learning instructors still face several challenges in the area of best practice standards, fostering deep and cohesive partnerships, and managing institutional pressures that disincentivize engaged teaching practices. With constantly evolving challenges in management education, continued research is needed to understand a variety of service-learning facets such as platforms (face-to-face, hybrid, and virtual learning), populations (graduate vs. undergraduate populations and adult vs. traditional college-age learners), measurement (how to assess university-community partnerships and faculty instruction), and which institutional policies and procedures can enable and reward community-engaged teaching and learning approach.


2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 0-0
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Postuła ◽  
Agnieszka Brzozowska

The role of universities in shaping entrepreneurial attitude and skills is very important. So it is crucial for higher education to develop teaching methods, which will be helpful in this whole process and will allow to train the most valid competences. The following article is a discussion in which direction development of such a program of teaching could go and which elements of learning process are crucial for management education. In this study we based on interviews conducted with students from different years of studies, managers and alumni. We distinguished which competences are the most useful among managers, leaders and entrepreneurs and discussed methods of teaching.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 223-239
Author(s):  
S. A. Shapiro ◽  
A. B. Veshkurova ◽  
R. R. Lukyanova ◽  
O. V. Nikonova

This work considers the main approaches to improving the process of teaching students of management specialties of higher education in the context of the introduction of digital technologies. The results of the study of students’ priorities regarding the form and presentation of the studied material are shown, their analysis and interpretation are described. The conclusions of the author’s team on the trends and prospects for digitalization of the higher management education system in the Russian Federation were made.


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