Our current scientific heritage has driven us to fractionate knowledge and a deepened understanding within specific areas or disciplines. It has also led us to a society and organizations structured by functions rather than issues or challenges. For any school of the future it will be of fundamental importance to break these man-made and inherited barriers between interdependent and interconnected areas of knowledge and of society.
In order to effectively develop future-relevant research and establish the basis for practice-relevant education, the management school of the future will tear down the currently existing, yet unnecessary, walls between business and management practitioners and researchers. New research and educational priorities will demand the removal of current barriers between academics and practitioners, allowing free movement in both directions, e.g.:
- A professor takes 2-years off [1] to work in a start-up in Somalia, or
- An entrepreneur spends a 2-year executives-in-residence [2] sabbatical to digest and distill his professional experience
Business leaders, entrepreneurs, directors of NGOs, consultants and activists will be encouraged to join the management school for one or more years to digest and distill their experience as research from the work place.
More than anything, the management school of the future needs a comprehensive mix of educators and researchers with a wealth of experiences and backgrounds. Moving back and forth between reflective work at a management school and work in the action frontier of business and other organizational work is a critical success factor of ensuring high relevance of the faculty in their role as lead-learners in the educational and research process.
[1] Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
[2] IMD, Lausanne
September 6, 2013 at 7:16 pm
I beleive Dr. Muff is exactly on point. I know first hand that I could not deliver ture value in the classroom if I had not been a CEO of some large and small enterprises. The invaluable lessons learned in the work place, coupled with academic studies, increases the ability to properly frame problems, to which there may be a number of optimal answers. Moreover, this blending of academic and industry experience permits one to develop models and insights that likely would not otherwise perculate into useful knowledge.