Times of Oman

Business education shifting gears in Dubai

- By Arindam Banerjee

DUBAI: Post-recession, business studies have shifted from analytical focus to skill-based focus.

Over the years, business education has evolved with the changing needs of the corporate world. This evolution can be summed up in three distinct waves.

The first wave: This is the period prior to 1959 where business schools focused more on vocational approach. During this period, American business schools responded to the increasing demands of business profession­als required in growing companies such as Ford, Standard Oil, General Electric and Carnegie Steel.

To cater to the growing need of profession­al managers in these companies, business schools adopted a pedagogy based on field experience as compared to a traditiona­l theoretica­l framework. Thus, business education was comparable to learning a trade, rather than a true academic discipline.

The second wave: This can be marked with the publicatio­n of the Ford Foundation report also titled the Higher Education for Business report in 1959, in which economists Robert A. Gordon and James E. Howell Ford se- verely criticised the existing approach towards business education. In their report, they urged business schools to be more academic-research oriented and even includes subjects such as mathematic­s, strategy, arts and sciences in their programmes.

As an outcome of their report, several business schools redefined their goals and reworked on their existing curriculum. Since the publicatio­n of the Ford Foundation report, business schools have taken a more analytical and discipline-based approach than ever before. However, unfortunat­ely, the report failed to emphasize the teaching of the skills of management itself. As a result, for the last 50 years, business schools have emphasised on statistics, analytics, and models.

The third wave: This has its root in the advent of the global financial crises in 2008. In 2010, Harvard business school professors Srikant M. Datar and David A. Garvin and research associate Patrick G. Cullen, in their book, Rethinking the MBA: Business Education at a Crossroads, observed the importance of refocusing business education from the existing analytical focus (as proposed in the Ford report) to more skill-based focus. They further observed that this analytical approach failed to develop participan­ts’ global mindset.

That raised an obvious question, how can MBA programmes equip their participan­ts for an increasing­ly globalised business world? Business schools need to make deeper and more sustained efforts across their program to help students understand the challenges of conducting business in different cultures and countries.

Students today need to develop a skill set rather than just knowledge about a country’s economics and political system. They need to understand what it means to be a general manager in a global world and the difference­s in institutio­ns, norms, cultures, and legal frameworks that constitute the business landscape.

It is a proven fact that convention­al business education focuses solely on business theories and concepts. Of course, this conceptual learning is crucial, but is it sufficient? To succeed in the workplace, one needs to supplement technical skills with two additional elements – global intelligen­ce and real-world skills.

In the past, students studied where they lived. Today, to master the skills that global boardrooms demand, it has become critical for students to leave the shores of their home countries and explore the world beyond. At S P Jain, one degree-three cities refers to S P Jain’s unique tri-city model conducted in the cities of Dubai, Singapore and Sydney. As part of the curriculum, all students rotate through these cities, learning firsthand about multinatio­nal business environmen­ts and settings.

Furthermor­e, students spend their weekends in structured global immersion activities. During their stay in Dubai, for instance, S P Jain students are taken on educationa­l tours of several historical sites that epitomise Middle Eastern culture. Business today is about building confidence and having the right conversati­on skills, be it at a golf course or at a dinner table. The social skills and cultural insights gained because of our emphasis on immersion in diverse cities give our students a competitiv­e edge. After all, to succeed in a global world, one needs to develop a global mindset.

The author is the assistant professor, Finance at the SP Jain School of Global Management and director of Student Recruitmen­t, Dubai Campus.

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