IBSCDC, continuing its tradition of advocating case methodology and case pedagogy at MBA programs, has put together all the relevant case studies meant for a specific course in the form of a Course Case Map (CCM). Now you can teach an entire MBA course using IBSCDC's case studies. Like it is said in ibscdc.org's home page, if MBA is all about case studies, you can define the focus and the rigor through IBSCDC's case studies. Each Course Case Pack (CCP) comes with a pack of resources that can be ideally and effectively used for delivering a course. Each CCP consists of:
(a) Case Studies
(b) Structured Assignments
(c) Teaching Notes
(d) Executive Briefs (Video Case Studies)
(e) Video Interviews
(f) Effective Executive Interviews
COURSE CASE MAPS @ IBSCDC
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Executive Brief
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Case studies have become a powerful instructive lifeline for business schools. Management education has changed because of them, which even helped globalize it. Many more changes are also sweeping in (culled from experiences):
- Internet has a gold mine of information that, if channeled properly, can grow into rich knowledge. This trend has even altered the role of a teacher - from a knowledge provider to a learning facilitator
- Students are seeking more than classroom learning. Just analysing case facts and figures is no longer making classes come alive
- Not every faculty can work out a case study as it must be. It requires strenuous hard-work and disciplined training.
- Business schools can shape the best talent but can't get them to teach. Teaching doesn't seem to fit in as a lucrative job
Closely observing these pertinent changes have got us, at Icfai Business School Case Development Centre (IBS CDC), thinking as always. Solutions were hard to come by, but we got around this dilemma too. Months of shrewd thinking and careful testing created a novel product, Executive Brief.
Executive Brief is by nature a video presentation. It recounts dilemmas faced by an executive, who can be an entrepreneur, manager, VP, CEO, etc. These dilemmas can either be retrospective or futuristic. Of course, business schools have to instill valued corporate virtues in their students.
Their multimedia edge can take learning to the next level, seizing student's fleeting attention for quite some time. That's not to say that they can replace case studies. But Executive Briefs can become nice add-ons to student's learning, as case studies are. This, we strongly feel, after we tested them out and got a glowing response from students as well as the faculty. And if the executive is around when the Executive Brief is played out, nothing like that. Running through some of these Briefs, one can feel the joy in using - and learning from - this powerful pedagogical tool. This product tries to speak to the students in their language - the language of videos (YouTube, Facebook, Myspace, Twitter!!!).