Editor's Note: Take a look at our featured best practice, Digital Transformation: Next-Generation Learning Organization (21-slide PowerPoint presentation). Survival of a business in this Digital Age largely depends on its ability to timely embrace Digital Transformation. Digital Transformation entails using Digital Technologies to streamline business processes, culture, and customer experiences in order to stay ahead of the rivals. To compete in [read more]
7 Principles of Management Education
* * * *
Management is not a function nor a blend of functions. It is a practice best understood by means of experience that are set in context.
All levels of education divide subject matter into definite categories, according to the means of creation of that knowledge, not by the manner in which it is used. This is true for Management Education as well.
Management Education being imparted in educational institutions, although essential, is missing a tremendous chance of creative learning for practicing managers that may empower them to engage in Innovation Management, by teaching subject matter in compartmentalized form.
For effective management, knowledge is essential but wisdom is key—the capacity to combine knowledge from different sources and use it judiciously.
Art combined with science through craft is what management is all about—coping with issues in their highest complexity of living, not as arranged compendia.
An alternative approach to Management Education has been developed that:
- Integrates Management Education with management development.
- Employs extremely noteworthy innovations in Management Education and development.
This approach has helped leading business schools revamp the whole process of disseminating Management Education. The approach encompasses the following 7 principles:
- The criteria for selection of candidates should include practicing managers with demonstrated job performance.
- Education and practice of management should be parallel and cohesive.
- Management Education must draw from life and experience.
- Contemplative thinking should be fundamental to learning.
- Organizational Development should be a corollary of management development.
- Management Education should be a continuous learning process.
- Each facet of education must enable learning.
The application of above principles assists in simultaneous development of managers and organizations.
Let us delve a little deeper into some of the principles encompassed in this approach.
The criteria for selection of candidates should include practicing managers with demonstrated job performance.
The practice of management can be improved in a classroom, but it did not originate from there. Merely classroom study cannot produce good managers. Current Management Education programs rely on the candidate presenting themselves for selection, then choosing from the pool of candidates and setting them on a path for Leadership Development.
Transforming classrooms into vibrant learning platforms requires selecting learners on the basis of managerial experience. Intelligence is a good basis for selection but verified job-performance is a far more realistic and suitable indicator for participant selection, particularly when the aim is to groom great future leaders.
Education and practice of management should be parallel and cohesive.
It is not logical to select participants on the basis of their practice and improve their skill while keeping them removed from that practice. Keeping managers on the job enables education and experience to be intertwined making both environments richer.
Continuing both education and practice does create tension but such tension is inherent in management practice therefore encountering it is more beneficial than sidestepping it.
Management Education must draw from life and experience.
Presently, the learning agenda is controlled almost entirely by instructors in the class room resulting in much teaching and little learning.
Formalized knowledge—ideas, concepts, research—should meet the need that the managers bring to the classroom and reverberate with the participant’s wide-ranging but tacit knowledge.
A process of infusion rather than intrusion is required to galvanize the faculty’s educational push and the participants’ learning pull.
Interested in learning more about Principles of Management Education? You can download an editable PowerPoint on Principles of Management Education here on the Flevy documents marketplace.
Do You Find Value in This Framework?
You can download in-depth presentations on this and hundreds of similar business frameworks from the FlevyPro Library. FlevyPro is trusted and utilized by 1000s of management consultants and corporate executives. Here’s what some have to say:
“My FlevyPro subscription provides me with the most popular frameworks and decks in demand in today’s market. They not only augment my existing consulting and coaching offerings and delivery, but also keep me abreast of the latest trends, inspire new products and service offerings for my practice, and educate me in a fraction of the time and money of other solutions. I strongly recommend FlevyPro to any consultant serious about success.”
– Bill Branson, Founder at Strategic Business Architects
“As a niche strategic consulting firm, Flevy and FlevyPro frameworks and documents are an on-going reference to help us structure our findings and recommendations to our clients as well as improve their clarity, strength, and visual power. For us, it is an invaluable resource to increase our impact and value.”
– David Coloma, Consulting Area Manager at Cynertia Consulting
“FlevyPro has been a brilliant resource for me, as an independent growth consultant, to access a vast knowledge bank of presentations to support my work with clients. In terms of RoI, the value I received from the very first presentation I downloaded paid for my subscription many times over! The quality of the decks available allows me to punch way above my weight – it’s like having the resources of a Big 4 consultancy at your fingertips at a microscopic fraction of the overhead.”
– Roderick Cameron, Founding Partner at SGFE Ltd
Readers of This Article Are Interested in These Resources
|
29-slide PowerPoint presentation
|
|
32-slide PowerPoint presentation
| |||
About Mark Bridges
Mark Bridges is a Senior Director of Strategy at Flevy. Flevy is your go-to resource for best practices in business management, covering management topics from Strategic Planning to Operational Excellence to Digital Transformation (view full list here). Learn how the Fortune 100 and global consulting firms do it. Improve the growth and efficiency of your organization by leveraging Flevy's library of best practice methodologies and templates. Prior to Flevy, Mark worked as an Associate at McKinsey & Co. and holds an MBA from the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago. You can connect with Mark on LinkedIn here.Top 10 Recommended Documents on Learning Organization
» View more resources Learning Organization here.
» View the Top 100 Best Practices on Flevy.