Yeadon-Lee, Annie and Hall, Roger (2013) Developing transferable management skills through Action Learning. Industry and Higher Education, 27 (1). pp. 67-75. ISSN 0950-4222
Abstract

There has been increasing criticism of the relevance of the Master of Business Administration (MBA) in developing skills and competencies. Action learning, devised to address problem-solving in the workplace, offers a potential response to such criticism. This paper offers an insight into one university’s attempt to integrate action learning into the curriculum. Sixty-five part-time students were questioned at two points in their final year about their action learning experience and the enhancement of relevant skills and competencies. Results showed a mixed picture. Strong confirmation of the importance of selected skills and competencies contrasted with weaker agreement about the extent to which these were developed by action learning. There was, nonetheless, a firm belief in the positive impact on the learning process. The paper concludes that action learning is not a panacea but has an important role in a repertoire of educational approaches to develop relevant skills and competencies.

Information
Library
Documents
[thumbnail of YeadonLeeDeveloping.pdf]
Preview
YeadonLeeDeveloping.pdf - Accepted Version

Download (129kB) | Preview
[thumbnail of YeadonLeeDeveloping.doc]
YeadonLeeDeveloping.doc - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only

Download (152kB)
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email