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Teaching Paradigm Shifting In Management Education: University Business Schools And The Entrepreneurial Imagination

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  • Robert Chia

Abstract

This paper argues that the cultivation of the ‘entrepreneurial imagination’ is the singular most important contribution university business schools can make to the business community. Instead of the prevalent emphasis on the vocationalizing of business/management programmes in order to make them more ‘relevant’, university business schools should adopt a deliberate educational strategy that privileges the ‘weakening’ of thought processes so as to encourage and stimulate the entrepreneurial imagination. This requires a radical shift in pedagogical priorities away from teaching analytical problem‐solving skills to cultivating a ‘paradigm‐shifting’ mentality. This, in turn, requires that management academics themselves engage in the practice of what is termed here ‘intellectual entrepreneurship’. It is through this academic practice that management educators can become skilled in the art of crafting relationship between sets of apparently disparate ideas and of thus bringing alive the facts they are attempting to impart. Only when such facts are embellished and illuminated by a mind possessing an intimate sense for the power and beauty of ideas and the bearing of one set of ideas on another, can they become pregnant with meaning and therefore able to excite the entrepreneurial imagination. It is argued here that recourse to literature and the arts provides new avenues for exploring relational patterns and frames of understanding, as well as the micro‐logics of perceptual organization, necessary for cultivating a critical sensitivity to hidden assumptions and subtle relationships in social situations which lend themselves to entrepreneurial interventions.

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  • Robert Chia, 1996. "Teaching Paradigm Shifting In Management Education: University Business Schools And The Entrepreneurial Imagination," Journal of Management Studies, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 33(4), pages 409-428, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:jomstd:v:33:y:1996:i:4:p:409-428
    DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6486.1996.tb00162.x
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    Cited by:

    1. Burt, George & Mackay, David J. & van der Heijden, Kees & Verheijdt, Charlotte, 2017. "Openness disposition: Readiness characteristics that influence participant benefits from scenario planning as strategic conversation," Technological Forecasting and Social Change, Elsevier, vol. 124(C), pages 16-25.
    2. Patzelt, Holger & zu Knyphausen-Aufseß, Dodo & Fischer, Heiko T., 2009. "Upper echelons and portfolio strategies of venture capital firms," Journal of Business Venturing, Elsevier, vol. 24(6), pages 558-572, November.
    3. Mireille Chidiac El Hajj & Richard Abou Moussa & May Chidiac, 2018. "Eco-Entrepreneurial Intention: The "Trigger" Approach," Post-Print hal-04085839, HAL.
    4. Kayhan Tajeddini & Stephen Mueller, 2009. "Entrepreneurial characteristics in Switzerland and the UK: A comparative study of techno-entrepreneurs," Journal of International Entrepreneurship, Springer, vol. 7(1), pages 1-25, March.
    5. Sokol, Aneta, 2010. "Research into development potentialities of academic entrepreneurship in Poland," Perspectives of Innovations, Economics and Business (PIEB), Prague Development Center (PRADEC), vol. 6(3), October.
    6. Lee, Boram & Fillis, Ian & Lehman, Kim, 2018. "Art, science and organisational interactions: Exploring the value of artist residencies on campus," Journal of Business Research, Elsevier, vol. 85(C), pages 444-451.
    7. Athanasios MANDILAS & Dimitrios KOURTIDIS & Giannoula FLOROU & Stavros VALSAMIDIS, 2016. "Accounting Education And Research In Relation To Business Needs," Scientific Bulletin - Economic Sciences, University of Pitesti, vol. 15(3), pages 3-12.
    8. Stephen Downing, 2005. "The Social Construction of Entrepreneurship: Narrative and Dramatic Processes in the Coproduction of Organizations and Identities," Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, , vol. 29(2), pages 185-204, March.
    9. Paola Adinolfi & Fernando Giancotti, 2021. "Pedagogical Triage and Emergent Strategies: A Management Educational Program in Pandemic Times," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 13(6), pages 1-18, March.
    10. Elco van Burg & A. Georges L. Romme, 2014. "Creating the Future Together: Toward a Framework for Research Synthesis in Entrepreneurship," Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, , vol. 38(2), pages 369-397, March.
    11. José-Carlos García-Rosell, 2019. "A Discursive Perspective on Corporate Social Responsibility Education: A Story Co-creation Exercise," Journal of Business Ethics, Springer, vol. 154(4), pages 1019-1032, February.
    12. Aneta Sokol, 2010. "Research Into Development Potentialities Of Academic Entrepreneurship In Poland," Perspectives of Innovation in Economics and Business (PIEB), Prague Development Center, vol. 6(3), pages 38-40, October.
    13. Thomas P. Kenworthy & W. Edward McMullan, 2018. "In consideration of entrepreneurship theory," Scientometrics, Springer;Akadémiai Kiadó, vol. 115(2), pages 767-783, May.
    14. Miguel Pina e Cunha & Joao Vieira da Cunha & Carlos Cabral Cardoso, 2000. "Looking for complication: The case of management education," Nova SBE Working Paper Series wp394, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Nova School of Business and Economics.
    15. Dodd, Sarah Drakopoulou, 2002. "Metaphors and meaning: A grounded cultural model of us entrepreneurship," Journal of Business Venturing, Elsevier, vol. 17(5), pages 519-535, September.
    16. Sylvain Bureau & Elisa Salvador & Jacqueline Fendt, 2012. "Small firms and the growth stage: can entrepreneurship education programmes be supportive?," Post-Print hal-02530098, HAL.
    17. Urs Jäger & Guillermo Cardoza & Luis Umaña-Timms, 2015. "Teachers as Mentors: An Entrepreneurial Approach to Experience-based Learning at the Base of the Pyramid (An Exploratory Essay)," Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Emerging Economies, Entrepreneurship Development Institute of India, vol. 1(1), pages 99-113, January.
    18. Ferreira, Fernando A.F., 2018. "Mapping the field of arts-based management: Bibliographic coupling and co-citation analyses," Journal of Business Research, Elsevier, vol. 85(C), pages 348-357.
    19. Paul Harrison Adjimah & Akli Lawrence Perry, 2014. "Effectiveness of Entrepreneurship Development Programs in Ghanaian Polytechnics," International Review of Management and Marketing, Econjournals, vol. 4(1), pages 78-89.

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