Hack:
There's no Mastery in Master of Business Administration - Fixing the Foundations of Management
I am a student in a part-time MBA program. I agree with your suggestion that the popularity of part-time programs may be is in part due to the fact that “A couple of years practicing management in the workplace would add tremendous perspective to their classroom learning.” Simultaneous studying and working means that one gets immediate practice of the management theories by being able to take what is learned in the classroom and applying it the next day at one’s job. This is underscored for us in our program, as explicitly making connections between what we’re learning in the classroom and what we’re doing in our jobs is part of how we are graded in our management course.
I do, however, disagree with some of your other solutions. For example, I can’t help thinking that despite the fact that there are instances such as Steve Jobs getting great value from his college calligraphy course, that I am better off learning economics, finance, etc before I am learning about music and animals. At the end of the day, as a manager, my job is in large part to manage people and money, and so I think that these priorities are perfectly in line with many of the traditional business school subjects. An alternative option would be to have guest lectures in nontraditional business school subjects or the ability to audit such classes in other schools in the same university for free. I also disagree that business schools focus too much on solutions. I have never seen a case study which describes either the solution or what the actual subject of the case ended up doing. We are taught to layout the problem and dissect the nuances of the issues and circumstances surrounding the problem, and if we come to a solution after all of that, I’m not so sure that is a bad thing. Finally, I’m also not clear on what is entirely problematic with the fact that “A business education has a significant number of assessments in order to be able to grade or calibrate student performance,” as I think it is reasonable to test learning of quantitative subjects (of which in business school there are many) by having students take assessments.
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Your ideas raise very good points that I considered before I decided to apply for an “accelerated” MBA (a part time program that will allow me to continue to work and graduate in less than two years). As a young working professional with a few years of experience under my belt, I considered the following:
• I wanted to accelerate my career path and opportunities, and it seemed like getting an MBA was answer
• I didn’t want to become “stale” in the sense that my job could not offer me more extensive training that can enhance my personal brand
• My peers were also getting MBA’s and I didn’t want to be left behind
Prior to taking on my huge student loans, I also struggled with the question that will 2 years of MBA classes really springboard me into a “higher” position with a better title and a higher salary? In the next two years, will I be able to make better management decisions if given the opportunity? And like you said, will I face the problem of competing with numerous MBA grads with the same exact skill set as me and how will I overcome that? But the idealized benefits of “having an MBA” outweighed the possibilities of inadequate answers to my uncertainty.
I’m seeing an interesting issue when conversing with my peers currently working in corporate jobs like myself. Many of us 20-somethings are asking the question “what am I doing with my life?” because of the mundaneness of our current jobs, but are unwilling to give up the safety net of a good paycheck to venture out of the comfort zone. I struggled with the same question and the solution to my question was to pursue an MBA – because I think that will open up more opportunities for me rather than being stagnant at my current situation. Sadly, it is a vicious cycle.
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Stephen,
I would like to clarify that any field of human endeavor,be it management or anything else, need to evolve and adopt. We need to distinguish between educating humans and educating humanity. The former is an individualized endeavor while the latter is a collective endeavor. Our MBA programs like all the rest is directed to the education of individuals. Humanity is yet to develop a collective educational function. A collective educational function will require a new and a different infrastructure altogether from what we have created and use for individual human education. A collective educational system needs to have a permanency that is longer than a human-life or that of an empire-era (such as the Roman era, or the Egyptian period). We need an infrastructure that will hold ( not just in books) all wisdom to practice it by everyone at the time of its need, even without, human skills development to practice that wisdom. Only when humanity is able to call upon and use such wisdom ( as we do when we call an app on our ipad or iphone) for ALL our needs can we successfully claim to have achieved life,liberty and happiness for everyone. If this goal seems impossible or unlikely to be attained, then, who could we blame but the inertia for not doing what needs to be done? I hope this distinction, individual Vs collective, ALL Vs a few, NOW- when needed Vs Occasional and temporary Vs permanent is clear when we recommend/consider solutions.
Bala
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Can't agree more with you on this Steve, and if there is one solution which I would like to pick it has to be overhauling the curriculum. Modern management is less than a century old science, the foundations of which got laid during the period of the wars. The whole emphasis is on left brain thinking trying to get more out of less. Logic has completely overtaken intuition pushing humans into being more like robotic creatures than divine beings. Which probably explains some of the best entrepreneurs and innovators are the ones who either drop out of college early.
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Stephen - I agree. I never got my Master's, but when I graduated with a bachelor's degree in biz admin I had learned how I *should* act as a manager - and that proved to not be very useful when I became unit manager of a restaurant. Learning about leadership/management and being a leader/manager are two different things...
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Like your article. Used it in my daily read today at leader-leader.org
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