Bringing teaching to life

Author:

Brandon‐Jones Alistair,Piercy Niall,Slack Nigel

Abstract

PurposeThe aim of this review and of the papers in this special issue is to critically examine different approaches to teaching operations management (OM) in order to provoke and stimulate educators within the discipline.Design/methodology/approachThe papers within this special issue include empirical assessments of a problem‐based learning enterprise resource planning (ERP) simulation; a computer‐based learning tool for material requirements planning (MRP); a simulation of assembly operations; an operations strategy innovation game; an extension of the production dice game; an experiential teaching method in different class settings; and problem‐based assessment methods in OM. A variety of data are used to support these empirical studies, including survey, interview, and observational data.FindingsThe papers within the special issue support the argument that OM is well‐suited to more applied methods of teaching focusing on the application of subject knowledge to real‐life situations through a variety of techniques.Practical implicationsIt is hoped that this review and the papers within this special issue act to stimulate educators to re‐evaluate their approaches to teaching OM and encourage them to consider adopting experiential teaching methods, business simulations, role‐plays, group exercises, live cases, and virtual learning environments, instead of, or in addition to, the more conventional lectures that typically dominate many OM modules around the world.Originality/valueA special issue on teaching OM appears timely given the significant changes to both the university landscape and to the nature of the discipline that we have witnessed over the last quarter of a century.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Strategy and Management,General Decision Sciences

Reference10 articles.

1. Davis, S. and Botkin, J. (1994), The Monster Under the Bed: How Business is Mastering the Opportunity of Knowledge for Profit, Simon & Schuster, New York, NY.

2. Mintzberg, H. (2004), Managers Not MBAs: A Hard Look at the Practice of Managing and Management Development, Berett‐Koehler, San Francisco, CA.

3. Slack, N., Brandon‐Jones, A., Johnston, R. and Betts, A. (2012), Operations and Process Management, 3rd ed., Pearson, Harlow.

4. Ulrich, T. (2005), “The relationship of business major to pedagogical strategies”, Journal of Education for Business, Vol. 80 No. 5, pp. 269‐74.

5. Bligh, D.A. (1998), What's the Use of Lectures?, 5th ed., Penguin, Harmondsworth.

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