Month: December 2019

‘All About Work’ Holiday Break

As 2019 rolls toward its last few weeks, All About Work will be taking its annual end-of-year break. The most popular posts on the blog this year were:

  1. Population Ecology Theory in Real Life: How The Globe and Mail Misunderstood its Environment
  2. Bob White and “Final Offer”
  3. Malcolm Gladwell’s “10,000 Hour Rule” Doesn’t Add Up
  4. Why Academic Freedom is Important to Everyone (Not Just Academics)
  5. The Joy of Figures

Have a restful holiday, and see you in 2020!

Frost on cedars at Buntzen Lake. (credit: own photo)

A Crisis of Confidence and A Triumph of Nonsense

Business is the most popular major at most universities and colleges around the world. In Canada, business-related programs enrol almost 20% of all post-secondary students. But business has always struggled to define itself as an academic discipline. Business schools started in the first part of the 20th century because of the need for managers in an industrial economy. It was assumed that scientific research could identify the qualities of a good manager, and that people could be trained to develop those qualities themselves.

Historians of management education have since pointed out that those assumptions were wrong. For one thing, the ideal manager in the early 20th century used a hierarchical “command and control” managerial style. But that type of management doesn’t work well in every situation or in every organization.  Collaborative and supportive forms of management can also be very effective, but most management training still assumes that managers have formal authority over the workers, and that managers should use that authority to control how the workplace operates.

There are some managerial skills that can be taught, such as understanding financial statements. But one of the most important skills of a good manager is being able to understand a situation and to respond appropriately – and that is mostly learned through experience. Even after nearly a century of research into management and organizations, we really can’t identify the “best” way to manage, or how to effectively teach that. And that’s a big problem for a very prominent and powerful academic discipline.

Two newly published essays have bravely spoken out in very blunt terms about the sad state of management education, along with suggesting some ways to start fixing it.  Both of these essays (more…)