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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 109 results
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Spee, James C.; Fraiberg, Allison – Journal of Management Education, 2015
In light of recent critiques of management education, this article examines the "Carnegie Report's" argument that the core components of liberal arts education (Analytical Thinking, Multiple Framing, The Reflective Exploration of Meaning, and Practical Reasoning) can and should be integrated into the undergraduate business…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Business Administration Education, Liberal Arts, Curriculum
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Katz-Buonincontro, Jen – Journal of Management Education, 2015
This review presents a synthesis of the state of arts-based management education scholarship, with teaching and research recommendations. To begin, the lack of creativity and empathy development in management students is presented. Next, literature-based descriptions of arts-based management exercises focus on how to use improvisational theatre,…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Studio Art, Business Administration Education, Scholarship
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Guerriero Wilson, Robbie – Journal of Management Education, 2015
This essay considers the developments in education for management in 20th-century Britain. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, that is, the highpoint of the United Kingdom's economic success, management was considered more of an art than a science, and formal education specifically for management was limited. After the Second World…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Business Administration Education, Administrator Education, Business Education
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Barry, Daved; Meisiek, Stefan – Journal of Management Education, 2015
Over the past decade, numerous business schools have begun experimenting with studio-based inquiry, often drawing inspiration from professional studios used within art and design schools and from business and governmental studios used for problem-solving and innovation. Business school studios vary considerably in form, ranging from temporary…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Business Administration Education, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices
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Benson, Joy; Dresdow, Sally – Journal of Management Education, 2014
Management and professional business education is central to developing human talent that can help organizations be competitive in today's complex business environment. So the question for management educators is how do we know that graduates have the talent that business needs? Learning outcome assessment has been the process used by…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Business Administration Education, College Outcomes Assessment, Design
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Taylor, Scott N. – Journal of Management Education, 2014
It has become common practice for management students to participate in some sort of self-assessment or multisource feedback assessment (MSF; also called 360-degree assessment or multirater assessment) during their management degree program. These assessments provide students invaluable feedback about themselves and assist students in their…
Descriptors: Self Evaluation (Individuals), Feedback (Response), Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Problems
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Kenworthy, Amy L.; Hrivnak, George A. – Journal of Management Education, 2014
Amy Kenworthy and George A. Hrivnak share their thoughts in this commentary, writing that they were both stimulated by and written in response to Riebe and Jackson's article "Assurance of Graduate Employability Skill Outcomes Through the Use of Rubrics." Having read two iterations of that article, they highlight three key messages…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Employment Potential, Job Skills, College Outcomes Assessment
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Cohen, Michael; Billsberry, Jon – Journal of Management Education, 2014
Advocates of rubrics have claimed that the inclusion of employers in the shaping of management education rubrics can help students demonstrate to employers that they have relevant managerial skills. There is an inevitable logic to this argument. Let employers determine what they want from graduates, and academics can then design programs to…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Administrator Education, Undergraduate Study, Graduate Study
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Schultz, Patrick L.; Quinn, Andrew S. – Journal of Management Education, 2014
In this article, we present a proposal for fostering learning in the management classroom through the use of student-produced video assignments. We describe the potential for video technology to create active learning environments focused on problem solving, authentic and direct experiences, and interaction and collaboration to promote student…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Video Technology, Problem Solving, Interaction
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Werner, Roye – Journal of Management Education, 2014
In this rejoinder to "Let's Burn Them All," a librarian supports the author's case for eliminating textbooks in the teaching of management and organizational behavior. A move away from textbooks would free libraries from worrying about whether and to what extent to provide expensive textbook access to students, a long-standing…
Descriptors: Librarians, Textbooks, Management Development, Library Materials
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Fornaciari, Charles J.; Lund Dean, Kathy – Journal of Management Education, 2014
While the scholarship of teaching and learning literature has made great advances in our understanding of how learning might best occur, the syllabus as a teaching and learning tool appears to have been almost completely left out of the developmental conversation. Overwhelmingly, extant literature about syllabi and their use focuses on operational…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Processes, Administrator Education
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Foster, Jason; Helms Mills, Jean; Mills, Albert J. – Journal of Management Education, 2014
Textbooks are an important element in teaching management in higher education because of their assumed ability to disseminate key theories and debates in a seemingly objective fashion. However, a number of studies have questioned not only the scientific character of the textbook but also of management theory itself. More recent studies suggest…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Textbook Content, United States History, Politics of Education
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Schaefer, Rebecca A. Bull; Palanski, Michael E. – Journal of Management Education, 2014
This article describes an in-class exercise designed to demonstrate the concept of emotional contagion. Empirical research has found that leader emotional displays at work relate to various member work attitudes and performance. However, students may have a difficult time understanding how and why emotions can influence organizational outcomes.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Psychological Patterns, Interpersonal Communication, Affective Behavior
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Taylor, Steven S.; Statler, Matt – Journal of Management Education, 2014
Organizational scholars and neuroscientists suggest that when people are more emotionally engaged, they learn more effectively. Clinical art therapists suggest that the experience as well as the expression of emotions can be enabled or constrained by different materials. So then, what materials can be employed by management educators to achieve…
Descriptors: Instructional Materials, Psychological Patterns, Learner Engagement, Business Administration Education
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Ledley, Fred D.; Holt, Stephen S. – Journal of Management Education, 2014
Business is progressively integrating technologies and R&D with corporate and business strategy. This trend is creating increasing demand for executives and managers who have sufficient technology-centered knowledge to work effectively in interdisciplinary environments. This study addresses how management education could address the growing…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Business Administration Education, Science Education, Educational Objectives
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