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Educational Innovation in Economics and Business III : Innovative Practices in Business Education / edited by Richard G. Milter, John E. Stinson, Wim H. Gijselaers.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Conference/Event
Contributor:
Milter, Richard G., Editor.
Stinson, John E., Editor.
Gijselaers, W., Editor.
Conference Name:
EDINEB Conference |n (3rd : 1996 : Orlando, Fla.)
Series:
Educational Innovation in Economics and Business ; 3
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Education.
Learning, Psychology of.
Educational technology.
Instructional Psychology.
Digital Education and Educational Technology.
Local Subjects:
Education.
Instructional Psychology.
Digital Education and Educational Technology.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xix, 352 pages) : illustrations
Edition:
1st ed. 1998.
Place of Publication:
Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1998.
Summary:
Almost thirty years ago a friend involved in the education profession told me that in his estimation much more was "caught" by students outside of classrooms than was "taught" within those hallowed walls. This statement has stuck with me through years of personal schooling, working as a high school teacher, working in management, serving as a management consultant and trainer, and facilitating learning on university campuses across the US, eastern Europe, and Asia. Learning by doing is certainly something most people have experienced. But the fact that there is more opportunity to learn more things today as never before (with knowledge doubling every 20 months) makes learning by doing more complicated. As organizations move to respond to the rapid changes in their environments, people within those organizations must face the uncertainty and ambiguity that comes with such conditions. The one thing most futurists agree on is that the future will be very different than the present. Exponential change has become commonplace. Companies used to worry about redefining their goals and specific describing their place in an industry. Today, in order to survive, they must be constantly addressing the issues inherent in redefining their industries.
Contents:
I: Bridging Academia and Business
Setting the Parameters for Training
Joint Ventures in Management Development
The Future of Economics
Roles of Economics in Business and Management Education
Thv. Action Learning Partnership (ALPS®) Model
II: Restructuring Single Courses or Focused Approaches
Group Dynamics and Unconscious Organizational Behavior
Organization-As-Classroom Approaches to Management Education
Longitudinal Assessment of Case-Based Teaching in the Required Undergraduate Cost Accounting Course
The Delivery of Accounting in the Problem-Based Learning Environment
III: Undergraduate Learning Methods
Learning Across Functional Silos
Business 20/20: Ohio University’s Integrated Business Core
Project-Based Learning in Leisure Management Training
The Postmodern Challenge to 16–19 Business Education in the United Kingdom
A Collaborative Approach to Improving Students’ Critical Thinking on Business Undergraduate Courses in the UK and US
IV: Graduate Learning Methods
The Problem Solving Buffet
Open Learning Versus Lecturing
Application of Problem-Based Learning Pedagogy to Management Education
V: Use of Technology
Computer-Based Education in a Student-Centered Curriculum
Low Cost Multi-Media for Distance Learning
Bread and Butter Multimedia Business Cases.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
"This book is the result of the Third EDINEB Conference which was held December 5-9, 1996 in Orlando, Florida"--Page xv.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
94-017-1388-X

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