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Roundtable on Business Education
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2011
Extract
A consideration of Rakesh Khurana's From Higher Aims to Hired Hands: The Social Transformation of American Business Schools and the Unfulfilled Promise of Management as a Profession (Princeton, 2007).
Khurana's book is an examination of the development of the university-based business school in the United States from the nineteenth century to today. He asserts that while the original goal of these schools was to train a professional class of managers in the mold of doctors or lawyers, university business schools no longer strive for this ideal. Instead, Khurana believes that business schools have become purveyors of a product –the MBA–sold to student-consumers. People should therefore not be surprised at corporate misconduct when managers are considered responsible only to shareholders. Khurana calls for a renewal of the professional ideal in the business school, in which future business leaders are trained to take their place as moral leaders in society. We asked each of the following authors to comment on the book and see if business education underwent a similar transition in other countries.
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- Meeting Report
- Information
- Business History Review , Volume 82 , Issue 2: A Special Issue on Alfred D. Chandler Jr. , Summer 2008 , pp. 329 - 358
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- Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2008
References
1 See, for instance, Aaronson, Susan, “Dinosaurs in the Global Economy? American Graduate Business Schools in the 1980s and 1990s,” in Management Education and Competitiveness: Europe, Japan, and the United States, ed. Amdam, Rolv Petter (London, 1996), 215.Google Scholar
2 See, for instance, Locke's, The Collapse of the American Management Mystique (Oxford, 1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Khurana touches only briefly on the ideas offered by Jeffrey Pfeffer and Christina Fong on the links between theory and practice in “The End of Business Schools? Less Success than Meets the Eye,” Academy of Management: Learning and Education (Washington, D.C., 2002).
4 Wilson, John F. and Thomson, Andrew, The Making of Modern Management: British Management in Historical Perspective (Oxford, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5 See Grey, Chris, A Very Short, Fairly Interesting and Reasonably Cheap Book about Studying Organisations (London, 2005), 120–21.Google Scholar
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7 I exclude the French écoles supérieures de commerce, which were basically secondary schools.
8 Norwegian Research Center in Management and Organizations, “Management Education and Selection of Top Managers in Europe and the United States” (University of Bergen, 2001), 90.
9 I describe the institutionalization of these schools and their intellectual achievement in The End of the Practical Man: Entrepreneurship and Higher Education in Germany, France, and Great Britain, 1880–1940 (Greenwich, Conn., 1984, 2006).
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30 Economic Journal (1908).
31 Quoted in Hitotsubashi University, 1875–2000 (2000), 107.
32 Journal of National Political Economy (1921).
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