B-Schools Adapt to a Changing Workplace

B-Schools Adapt to a Changing Workplace

Business basics are no longer enough to satisfy workplaces that value employees who can adapt to swiftly changing industries, disruptive technology, and the thorny issues facing humanity in the years to come.

Darren Dahl, a senior associate dean at the University of British Columbia's Sauder School of Business in Vancouver, said:

The goal of a university education is to teach people how to deal with uncertainty, how to be a critical thinker, how to be okay when things are changing. The notion of going to work for the big corporation, and the jobs that we traditionally do, are evolving and changing.

To keep on top of what employers are looking for, staff at the Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario in London, Ont., recently completed 250 interviews with leaders in government, business and non-profits around the globe, said acting dean Mark Vandenbosch. He said:

Although people do need to have technical literacy that's probably higher than before — the skills that are really demanded are the soft skills that will allow them to adapt.

Embracing creativity

These skills include the ability to bring alternative viewpoints to a problem, Vandenbosch said, as well as things like creativity, grit, teamwork, communications effectiveness and decision-making skills.

At Sauder School of Business, Dahl said the MBA program includes a required course in creativity. The creativity class curriculum is not centred on business innovation, such as coming up with a new product. It is more base creativity, he said, adding:

Creativity is a muscle. If you stopped exercising it years ago — some people say you're the most creative when you're five or six years old and then it's just downhill —  how do we strengthen that muscle for you as a leader, whether you work in corporate or a non-profit or your own entrepreneurial venture? That's a fundamental tool in the toolbox, and I think society has just woken up to that in the last five years.

Joe Musicco, who teaches at Sheridan College's Pilon School of Business in Toronto, said "business is certainly embracing creativity in a big way." There are a number of factors contributing to the business world's increasing interest in creativity, he said.

You could point to things like technology and AI [Artificial Intelligence]. You could point to things like the changing nature of work and being more of a thinker and a consultant, and expectations of people in general that [graduates] are going to be able to bring innovation and creative problem-solving skills to the table.

Students have more diverse goals

What students want has changed, too. Dahl said:

The younger generations today are very much interested in having impact. That could mean anything from having an impact by building their own business, to having a positive influence on society.

In the past, most business school students would strive for the same jobs at large, branded international corporations, he said. While some still do, others want to work for non-profits, and some want to be their own bosses, said Dahl.

Preparation for the entrepreneurial world

Dahl said there has also been "a sea change in respect to the importance of entrepreneurial activity in the economy." To meet that need, course material is now taught differently, he said, moving away from "the classic lecturing on the stage" to methods that involve more action and applied learning.

Check out: What Are the Best MBAs for Entrepreneurship?

Business school classes could be challenged to partner up with engineering students on a project, or to work with start-ups, for example.

At Ivey Business School, Vandenbosch said "a huge percentage of our graduates run their own businesses."

The typical route they take, though, is to work for somebody else for a few years after graduation to get on-the-ground experience, then return to the school to take advantage of the entrepreneurial incubator it offers for alumni, he said.

We provide a lot of support post graduation for those who want to come back at a later time to start a venture two, three or four years later.

Source: CBC

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