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Help with critiquing a paper on management education

  • 1.  Help with critiquing a paper on management education

    Posted 07-18-2007 10:47
    Colleagues,

    I am in the process of preparing a paper for submission to the Academy of Management Learning and Education journal. The title is "Building the foundations of professional expertise: a dialectical approach"

    I attach the abstract below. I wonder if anyone on the list would be interested in reading the draft paper and giving me critical feedback to help me improve it before submission?

    I copy the abstract at the bottom of this email. If you are able to help do please email me directly.

    Yours in hope

    Mark

    Prof. Mark Fenton-O'Creevy
    Director, Programmes and Curriculum, OU Business School
    & Professor of Organisational Behaviour
    Open University
    Walton Hall
    Milton Keynes MK7 6AA
    United Kingdom


    e-mail: m.p.fenton-ocreevy@open.ac.uk
    (DL) +44 (0)1908-655804
    Fax: +44 (0)1908-655898


    Building the foundations of professional expertise: a dialectical approach





    Abstract


    Recent critiques of management curricula and teaching pay particular attention to the disconnection between the formal knowledge and analytical techniques conveyed in programs and the messy, ill-structured nature of practice. At the same time the developing field of research into professional expertise suggests that the development of expertise requires bringing together different forms of knowledge and the integration of formal and non-formal learning with the development of cognitive flexibility. Such complex learning outcomes are unlikely to be achieved through a 'knowledge transmission' approach to curriculum design. We argue that in many ways current higher education practices create barriers to developing ways of knowing which can underpin the formation of expertise. Using an example from a practice-focused distance learning course, we explore the role of distance learning in enabling a dialogue between formal learning and informal practice-learning and the use of 'practice dialogues' among course participants to enable integration of learning experiences. Finally, we argue that we need to find ways in higher education of enabling students to engage in relevant communities of expertise, rather than drawing them principally into a community of academic discourse which is not well aligned with practice.



    Keywords: expertise, professional, distance-learning, higher-education, ill structured domain