1 / 21

Making the business curriculum more than the sum of its parts

Making the business curriculum more than the sum of its parts. Peter Long Muriel Eddowes Faculty of Organisation & Management Sheffield Hallam University EDiNEB Conference - June 2008. Objectives of the paper.

baguon
Download Presentation

Making the business curriculum more than the sum of its parts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Making the business curriculum more than the sum of its parts Peter Long Muriel Eddowes Faculty of Organisation & Management Sheffield Hallam University EDiNEB Conference - June 2008

  2. Objectives of the paper • to report on the outcomes from a UK government funded project to develop a Business Education resource • designed to encourage integration of the first year undergraduate business curriculum • based on a replica retail company • comprises data and information which can be used in a variety of ways as a common resource to support teaching across the curriculum • to demonstrate the resource • to report the impact on the student perspective of the business curriculum • to report on effect on one of the modules in the first year curriculum

  3. Perspectives on practice • students perceive their first year of business studies as a collection of largely unrelated modules, eg marketing, HR, operations, finance (Bain, G S., 1992; Macfarlane, B., 1998) • pulling together of these areas is often left to a later stage in the programme (if at all) through a capstone module (often on Management Strategy) • anecdotal evidence from employers suggests that an holistic view of business is highly desirable in business graduates • an early integrated foundation will support the achievement of such an holistic perspective

  4. how to integrate • a number of ways in which this holistic foundation can be laid • our experience is that modules tend to be designed as self contained units and that cross modular activities are difficult to organise and manage • our suggested solution is to use a common resource across modules that • enables students to apply the subject matter from the different components of the programme to the same organisation, • incrementally develops knowledge and understanding within a common context • has been accepted as worthy of development and has been implemented at Sheffield Hallam University with some (but not total) success

  5. a conceptual framework

  6. original project rationale • challenge • of engaging Business students with numerical analysis and IT • integrate • the 'quants' and IT into a "Business Analysis" module • more generally, topics across the business curriculum • engage • to produce a model for enhancing student engagement

  7. Project outputs • the resource has been developed in stages over the last eight years • last three years have been funded by the UK's Higher Education Funding Council (HEFCE) • is now in the public domain • three web sites • the business customer facing • the business company intranet • Logistics plc customer facing • a catalogue of learning activities

  8. the resource • a replica retail company • familiarity of students with the context • a wealth of data, descriptions, activities, issues have been devised • provides a common scenario for all modules to use • department store • 9 branches in different locations • presents range of management challenges • supply chain • incorporated through a logistics company

  9. the business other branches the resource structure Clothing Household (kitchen and bathroom including relevant electrical) Household – linens/furnishing fabrics/carpets Entertainment – audio, TV, cameras, computers Furniture Shoes and accessories Toiletries Stationery Restaurant Buying/stock control Finance (day-to-day and company reports etc.) Marketing/promotion/customer relations mgt Customer Services Insurance for goods sold Logistics HR Staff training Store card On-line selling Distribution centre Clothing: UK and overseas suppliers supplier the mall company Logistics plc supply chain supplier head office store UK Food Transport Stock management Warehousing 'Green' issues Facilities Mgt Catering Car parking Special decorations Lettings Staff training Security

  10. web sites

  11. use in the Business Analysis module

  12. evaluation and results • The effectiveness of the resource in engaging students and facilitating an integrated view has been evaluated through • a number of student surveys • and focus group meetings • performance in the Business Analysis module undertaken by review of results and attitudes

  13. connections helps see connections between different modules helps see connections between BA topics and business activities

  14. perceptions of use resource is convincingly realistic web navigation is easy

  15. based on experience ... realism is important to me

  16. regarding Business Analysis which module do you like the most? which module do you like the least?

  17. performance in Business Analysis

  18. Conclusions • some evidence to show that the resource has had a positive effect on engagement and students' perceptions of the integrated nature of business • relative popularity of "hard" subjects (numerically based) has increased

  19. Implications for Innovation of Practice • a condition of the funding for this development project is that the deliverables should be widely available to Higher Education Establishments within the UK • much effort has been devoted to disseminating the outcomes and promoting the wider use of the resource • these efforts have met with some success and the continued maintenance and development of the resource has become a key issue for the project team

  20. contacts Please contact us for further details or go to our project web site http://teaching.shu.ac.uk/om/thebusiness/website/new_project We are also looking for ideas for our learning activities catalogue!! Peter Long p.d.long@shu.ac.uk Tel: +44 114 225 Muriel Eddowes m.eddowes@shu.ac.uk Tel: +44 114 225 5039 Sheffield Hallam University, Faculty of Organisation and Management, City Campus, Sheffield S1 1WB UK

  21. References Bain, G S (1992) “The Future of Management Education”, Journal of the Operational Research Society, 43, 6, 557-561. Barber, C S, Borin, N, Cerf, D C and Swartz, T A (2001)," The Role of Marketing in an Integrative Business Curriculum", Journal of Marketing Education, 23, 3, 240-248 Hamilton, D, McFarland, D. and Mirchandani, D. (2000) "A Decision Model for Integration across the Business Curriculum in the 21st Century", Journal of Management Education, 24, 1, 102-126 Macfarlane, B, (1998) “Refugees, Nomads and Tourists: an anatomy of business and management lecturers in higher education”, Journal of European Business Education, 7, 2, 31–44. Markulis, P M, Howe, H and Strang, D R (2005) "Integrating the business curriculum with a comprehensive case study: A prototype", Simulation & Gaming, 36, 2, 250-258 Ottewill, R, McKenzie, G and Leah, J (2005) "Integration and the hidden curriculum in business education", Education & Training, 47, 2, 89-97 Campbell, N D, Heriot, K C and Finney, R Z (2006) " In defense of silos: an argument against the integrative undergraduate business curriculum", Journal of Management Education, 30, 2, 316-332

More Related