The role of business schools in society

Author:

Cornuel Eric

Abstract

PurposeIn the future, the legitimacy of business schools will no longer be in question, nor will their vocation to participate in training the élite (especially of companies) alongside institutes which, in various countries, train top Civil Servants. But this context, which dominant positions always provoke, should not encourage complacency. On the contrary, it should invite reflection on the weaknesses of the institutions in question. Aims to discuss this issue.Design/methodology/approachSome major new trends in management education are questioned (the use of new information technologies, an initiation to management starting at a much earlier stage of the education track, a different way to grasp the use of case studies).FindingsThis paper is an analysis of the functions of business schools and management faculties in universities. It leads one to observe that they appear above all as places busy “reproducing” or “miming” reality. Where science faculties describe, management teaching establishments imitate.Originality/valueThis paper is dedicated not only to stressing the pedagogic dangers that new trends in management education imply, but also to explaining what major change it could induce.

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

Reference5 articles.

1. Cohen, M.D. and March, J.D. (1986), Leadership and Ambiguity: The American College President, 2nd ed., Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA.

2. Kant, E. (1781), Critique of Pure Reason.

3. Katz and Associates (1999), Dancing with the Devil: Information Technology and the New Competition in Higher Education, Jossey‐Bass, San Francisco, CA.

4. Kourilsky, M. (1977), “The kinder‐economy: a case study of kindergarten pupils' acquisition of economic concepts”, Elementary School, Vol. 77, pp. 182‐91.

5. Kourilsky, M. (1983), Mini Society: Experiencing‐Real World Economics in the Elementary School Classroom, Addison‐Wesley, Menlo Park, CA.

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