The development of managerial skills in MBA programs

Author:

Varela Otmar,Burke Michael,Michel Norbet

Abstract

PurposeBusiness schools have been under fire for their alleged inefficacy in developing students’ managerial skills in MBA programs. On the basis of extant learning theories, the purpose of this paper is to propose a reconsideration of learning goals and assessment procedures for managerial skill development within MBA education.Design/methodology/approachThe authors review the literatures on stage, experiential, social, and action learning theories to identify pedagogical suggestions for optimal skill development and to highlight the constraints program administrators and teachers face in efforts to advance students’ acquisition of complex managerial skills in MBA classrooms.FindingsConceptually, the authors argue that an emphasis on mastering complex managerial skills – as an expected learning outcome – might be an overly ambitious goal that can lead to neglecting early attainments in skill acquisition and create false impressions of MBA program failure. Furthermore, the authors discuss how MBA programs could consider the use of newer evaluation procedures for evaluating skill development.Originality/valueThe paper calls for greater attention to intermediate stages of managerial skill development for establishing learning goals, the consideration of knowledge structures for assessing the degree of skill development, and a focus on managerial skill development as a life‐long process.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management

Reference91 articles.

1. AACSB (2010), “Business School Data Trends and 2010 List of Accredited Schools”, available at: www.aacsb.edu/publications/data‐trends/2010.pdf (accessed May 15, 2011).

2. AACSB (2011a), “Examples of learning goals and measures of achievement”, available at: www.aacsb.edu/accreditation/business/standards/aol/learning_goals_examples.asp (accessed March 14, 2011).

3. AACSB (2011b), Globalization of Management Education. Report of the AACSB International, Emerald, Tampa, FL.

4. AMBA (2011), “Accreditation criteria”, available at: www.mbaworld.com/administrator/file_sys/uploaded_files/1299681060‐MBA%20critieria_web.pdf (accessed September 25, 2011).

5. Anderson, J.R. (1982), “Acquisition of cognitive skills”, Psychological Review, Vol. 89 No 4, pp. 369‐406.

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