Future of Management Education
by
English

About The Book

<p>To remain relevant, management education must reflect the realities that influence its subject matter, management, while at the same time addressing societal needs and expectations. Faced by powerful drivers of change, many of which are amplified by the immense turbulence caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, an assessment of where management education stands and where it is going is timely. </p><p>This book brings together management education scholars, practitioners, and stakeholders to identify trends and to critically analyse key challenges from their respective perspectives. They consider the requirements for providing relevant management education in the future and explore changes and opportunities around themes such as responsibility, sustainability, innovation, competitive strategy, and technological change. The different perspectives of the authors contribute distinct insights and form a fascinating kaleidoscope of reflections on the present and predictions and prescriptions for the future of management education. </p><p>The result is a comprehensive volume that will be essential reading for scholars and administrators committed to the growth and development of management education. It also will be of keen interest to management educators as well as management learners who will shape and be shaped by the management education of the future.</p> <p><strong>Part 1: The changing context of ME</strong> 1. ‘May you live in interesting times’: Considering the future of management education<strong> </strong><i>Martin Fellenz, Mairead Brady and Sabine Hoidn </i>2. The global market for management education<strong> </strong><i>Geoffrey Wood </i>3. Management Education and Business School Strategic Positioning: Exploring and Exploiting History for Competitive Advantage <i>Paul Hibbert and William M. Foster </i>4. Management Education and Digital Technology: Choices for strategy and innovation <i>David Levefre and Leonardo Caporarello </i>5. Management Education and Early Career Academics: Challenges and Opportunities <i>Olivier Ratle, Alexandra Bristow and Sarah Robinson </i><strong>Part 2: Prospects and Perspectives of ME </strong>6. Management Education and Interpersonal Growth: A Humanist Transcendental-Personalist Perspective <i>Kleio Akrivou, Manuel Joaquín Fernandez Gonzalez, Germán Scalzo and Ricardo Rodriguez Murcio </i>7. Management Education and the Diversity Challenge <i>Kiran Trehan and Clare Rigg </i>8. Evidence-Based Management Education <i>Rob Briner, Alessandra Capezio and Jean-Nöel Patrick L'Espoir Decosta </i><strong>Part 3: Innovative practices in ME </strong>9. Teaching Management in the Fourth Industrial Revolution <i>Cynthia Fukami, Douglas Allen and Dennis Wittmer </i>10. The management classroom of the future: Megatrends and global challenges <i>John Cullen </i>11. Management Education and Artificial Intelligence: Towards Personalized Learning <i>Christine Rivers and Anna Holland </i><strong>Part 4: Dynamics of Accreditation and Regulation of ME </strong>12. Beyond ‘The School’ as the object of assessment: Sector disruption and the changing nature of business school accreditation <i>Ulrich Hommel and Koen Vandenbempt</i><strong> </strong>13. A vison for management education: The AACSB perspective <i>Stephanie M. Bryant, Patrick G. Cullen and Juliane E. Iannarelli </i><strong>Part 5: Conclusion </strong>14. Quo Vadis: Reconsidering the future of management education <i>Sabine Hoidn, Mairead Brady & Martin Fellenz</i></p>
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