Author: Hogan Christine
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Ltd
ISSN: 0951-354X
Source: The International Journal of Educational Management, Vol.13, Iss.1, 1999-01, pp. : 31-44
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Abstract
Many innovations have taken place in the teaching-learning strategies for organisational behaviour (OB), in the School of Management over the past 18 months. This paper describes the impetus for these changes (i.e. budget pressures) and the search for alternative teaching-learning strategies suitable for organisational behaviour. It documents the journey of lecturers, part-time staff and students who took part in this adventure. The change process involved a team of eight full-time and ten part-time staff members and over 800 students in a multicultural environment. During the first meeting, students had to negotiate their roles, desirable group norms and the gradations of penalties they would use if these ground rules were not adhered to. Each week the roles of facilitator, facilitator's buddy, time-keeper and scribe were rotated. Students learnt to work with "dominators", "quiet members", "social loafers", "poor timekeepers". Some learnt to confront conflict, others decided to ignore it. Student assignments included a creative learning log and a report describing in depth what they learnt themselves and working in groups and relating their experiences to models and theories of organisational behaviour.