‘New BM’: Making Active Learning a Reality and Challenges Ahead for the Business School Jim Keane & Anna Jones
Dec 11, 2015
‘New BM’: Making Active Learning a Reality and Challenges Ahead
for the Business School
Jim Keane & Anna Jones
Background
• Old BM • large range of modules• large number of staff involved• cross departmental• no line manager responsibility
• Conversion rate fallen from 26% to 16% in 6 years
• Total student numbers on BM SH and Joints, fallen from 459 to 276 in 6 years
‘New BM’
• Responding to opportunities within university, in particular the new academic year, CeAL expertise and resources, and (possibly) Institute of Sustainability.
• Draft consultation report issued January 2008, discussed at BM course board 25th January, full team meetings were then held 30th January and 10th March.
• Other meetings held with some tutors and HoDs on 9th and 29th April, 16th June and 18th September
• Time to start developing what has emerged from this process.
• Level 1 – what BM is basically about (+project); level 2 – decision making both operationally and functionally; level 3 – contemporary BM strategic issues
• AL; sustainability; authentic assessments; integration
‘New BM`
BMN101Management Development
BMN101Management Development
BMN102Business Contexts
BMN102Business Contexts
BMN103Management
Contexts
BMN103Management
Contexts
BMN104Perspectives on Business
Management
BMN104Perspectives on Business
Management
BMN201Managing Business
Operations
BMN201Managing Business
Operations
Placement (Optional)Placement (Optional)
BMN301 Building & Sustaining Strategy
BMN301 Building & Sustaining Strategy
BMN202Managing
HR
BMN202Managing
HR
BMN203Marketing
for Decision Makers
BMN203Marketing
for Decision Makers
BMN204Managing
at the Inter-
national Level
BMN204Managing
at the Inter-
national Level
FM233Accounting
and Finance for
Decision Makers
FM233Accounting
and Finance for
Decision Makers
BMN205The
Reflective Manager
BMN205The
Reflective Manager
BMN211 Inter-national
Field Trip
BMN211 Inter-national
Field Trip
BM333Dissertation OR
BM333Dissertation OR
BM399Investi-gative Study
BM399Investi-gative Study
BMN305 Leader-ship &
Change
BMN305 Leader-ship &
Change
BMN307 21st Century Global
Operations Mgt
BMN307 21st Century Global
Operations Mgt
FM306 Corporate Account-
ability
FM306 Corporate Account-
ability
BMN304 Strategic Marketing Principles
BMN304 Strategic Marketing Principles
Level 2
Level 3
Level 1
Project
Issues
• Lost momentum, but this can quickly be regained• More communication within the team• Key is building a supportive team who are
committed to an active learning pedagogy as much as is practically possible
• Virtually all of ‘New BM’ can be delivered by 12 staff
• BM colleagues who are not involved• Level 1 project• Not perfect by any means – this is a heuristic
process and there are risks • Validation!
Next Steps
• Meeting of full team early January 2009 to begin development of ‘New BM’ (Wednesday 14th January?)
• Facilitator will be Angela Tomkins
• Hoping for CeAL support and involvement
• Already some examples of good AL practice being tested by tutors
Research Method
• Qualitative interviews (30-90 mins)• 20 interviews (19 to date)• Audio recorded, transcribed in full, de-
identified• Core team, people who teach into the BM,
people who have been involved in various ways, management
• Analysis – emergent, themes identified, cross checked, refined
Analytical Framework
• Activity systems theory (Engström 1999,2001) does not assume a unified approach but takes into account varied perspectives, histories and multiple layers of practices, rules and conventions
• Takes into account the local • Places human activity within the
collaborative, historical and cultural• Action taking place in and upon context
• Takes into account conflict in social practice• Examines the transitions within and between
activity systems • Considers multiple perspectives and networks of
interacting systems• Considers the tensions between interacting
systems• Role of contradiction or disturbance (Blackler et
al 2000) as a source of change• Incoherences, inconsistencies and paradoxes
are integral elements of activity systems. The disturbance becomes apparent when people interpret situations in different ways and so the inherent dilemmas become clear (Blackler et al 2000)
Advantages of the Change
‘this is forcing us to think about how we can do a better job of educating students, think about how we can do a better, it is a great opportunity’
‘we will challenge students to actually know where they stand’
‘it much better replicates the messy situations that students will have to face once they get into the workforce’
Structural Concerns
‘It [the new BM] has to change the culture slightly because in the past everyone wanted to teach their own little bit and has been very defensive of that…[the attitude was] I’ve got to come in and do my bit of this because I have to defend my subject’.
‘The initial promise is that change will be easy and not too time consuming but there are continually changing goalposts, QA becomes an issue, there are an array of bureaucratic and strangling constraints and people are constrained to think within structures.’
Interpersonal Concerns
‘There are lots of people who don’t know what is going on’
‘The problems will be that either the staff can’t cope, the students can’t cope or certain members of management can’t cope’
‘People are not willing to tell staff to fit into the new shape of the degree, do something that is unfamiliar’
Pedagogical Concerns
‘If I was looking from the outside in I guess the things that would concern me would be … getting the co-ordination right, getting the assessment right, not confusing the students, getting them on board right from the start.’
‘How is it going to be assessed? That will be interesting.’
‘The BM is just a bit of everything but not enough to be an accountant or a finance person or even a manager.’
‘People have to have a clear idea of what they are doing’
‘The degree is the wrong way around’
Structural Roadblocks
‘BM doesn’t have a home in its own right. People fly in as experts in a particular area and they leave again and no one really has ownership. I might talk to my colleagues about what they are doing but I don’t really know.’
‘There just doesn’t feel like there is the chance to step back and breathe and say, let’s think conceptually, what do we really want? What are we going to do?
Personal Roadblocks
‘getting buy-in from all or most staff’‘some people are generally resistant to change’‘Teaching with others may limit one’s creativity
as you can’t do something if [a colleague] is moaning’
‘the whole things will unravel, people will pull out, the changes won’t go far enough, it will be driven by a too limited pool’
‘It’s like a factory … it runs a bit like a school, like a factory’
Pedagogical Roadblocks
‘we need to think about what the course as a whole needs rather than what the individual staff member needs’
‘students might not feel as if they belong to someone’
‘there may be resistance from students – from the good ones who have succeeded using other forms of learning and the weaker ones because it does not provide them with structure’
‘getting coverage across a sufficient range’
Communication
• Open-ness, clear lines of communication• Structured, open ways of involving staff• Team building• Structured and regular meetings, clear forum for
sharing information, teaching, planning• Investigating student expectations• Evaluating the program• Information about what has been successful in
other institutions
Resources
• Money – for time release, guest speakers, field trips, money that is not tied to external agendas
• Library resources
• Time
• Professional Development
‘You’ve got to convince people otherwise you’ve lost them really. So staff training definitely and real academic staff training. Pitched at the right level and it needs to be decided on not by central departments, or even budget holders who’ve got an agenda to pursue but people within the department who say this is what we really need. It think definitely the active learning and PBL stuff is absolutely essential, its really fulfilling as well’
Moving Forward
• Away days with management input• Team cohesion and empowerment (small
things like lunches make a huge difference), commitment to each other
• Clarity regarding available resources• Development for support staff• Lines of communication between support
staff, BM team, management• Marketing
Some Recommendations
• Ongoing, regular, formalised, open, inclusive communication structure that goes across staff rather than through individuals
• Targetted professional development around curriculum design and assessment
• Developing notions of active learning as they apply in the BM
• Broadening the locus of control
Professional Development
• Targetted, local, contextual, provocative• Arising out of BM rather than imposed from outside• Pitched at an academic levelEg• Curriculum design: aims, objectives, teaching
assessment• Active learning: practical, what is it in the BM
context, teaching and assessment• Teaching large classes• Reflection• Classroom management• Project based or enquiry based learning
Some key questions for BM
• How is knowledge understood?
• What are the learning goals?
• How are they best taught?
• What will be the structure of the curriculum?
• What will the teaching activities be?
• How will they be assessed?
Concept mapping
• What (if any) is the prerequisite knowledge?
• Is there a hierarchy of knowledge?• What are the key concepts?• What are the skills or attributes?• What are the relationships between
concepts• What are the relationships between
content and attributes?
Development of objectives
• Attributes of a BM graduate• Curriculum objectives• Specific objectives• Teaching• Assessment• Reflection and review
Academic Development Programme
1. Attributes of a BM graduate
2. Detailed concept mapping of the degree programme
3. Curriculum design
4. Enquiry based learning/teaching