{"title":"Executive Education","authors":"Rolv Petter Amdam","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.205","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Executive education, defined as consisting of short, intensive, non-degree programs offered by university business schools to attract people who are in or close to top executive positions, is a vital part of modern management education. The rationale behind executive education is different from that of the degree programs in business schools. While business schools enroll students to degree programs based on previous exams, degrees, or entry tests, executive education typically recruits participants based on their positions—or expected positions—in the corporate hierarchy. While degree programs grade their students and award them degrees, executive education typically offers courses that do not have exams or lead to any degree.\n Executive education expanded rapidly in the United States and globally after Harvard Business School launched its Advanced Management Program in 1945. In 1970, around 50 university business schools in the United States and business schools in at least 43 countries offered intense executive education programs lasting from three to 18 weeks. During the 1970s, business schools that offered executive education organized themselves into an association, first in the United States and later globally. From the 1980s, executive education experienced competition from the corporate universities organized by corporations. This led the business schools to expand executive education in two directions: open programs that organized potential executives from a mixed group of companies, and tailor-made programs designed for individual companies.\n Despite being an essential part of the activities of business schools, few scholars have conducted research into executive education. Extant studies have been dominated by a focus on executive education in the context of the rigor-and-relevance debate that has accompanied the development of management education since the early 1990s. Other topics that are touched upon in research concern the content of courses, the appropriate pedagogical methods, and the effect of executive education on personal development. The situation paves the way for some exciting new research topics. Among these are the role of executive education in creating, maintaining, and changing the business elite, the effect of executive education on socializing participants for managerial positions, and women and executive education.","PeriodicalId":294617,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management","volume":"55 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-07-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.205","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Executive education, defined as consisting of short, intensive, non-degree programs offered by university business schools to attract people who are in or close to top executive positions, is a vital part of modern management education. The rationale behind executive education is different from that of the degree programs in business schools. While business schools enroll students to degree programs based on previous exams, degrees, or entry tests, executive education typically recruits participants based on their positions—or expected positions—in the corporate hierarchy. While degree programs grade their students and award them degrees, executive education typically offers courses that do not have exams or lead to any degree.
Executive education expanded rapidly in the United States and globally after Harvard Business School launched its Advanced Management Program in 1945. In 1970, around 50 university business schools in the United States and business schools in at least 43 countries offered intense executive education programs lasting from three to 18 weeks. During the 1970s, business schools that offered executive education organized themselves into an association, first in the United States and later globally. From the 1980s, executive education experienced competition from the corporate universities organized by corporations. This led the business schools to expand executive education in two directions: open programs that organized potential executives from a mixed group of companies, and tailor-made programs designed for individual companies.
Despite being an essential part of the activities of business schools, few scholars have conducted research into executive education. Extant studies have been dominated by a focus on executive education in the context of the rigor-and-relevance debate that has accompanied the development of management education since the early 1990s. Other topics that are touched upon in research concern the content of courses, the appropriate pedagogical methods, and the effect of executive education on personal development. The situation paves the way for some exciting new research topics. Among these are the role of executive education in creating, maintaining, and changing the business elite, the effect of executive education on socializing participants for managerial positions, and women and executive education.
高管教育是现代管理教育的重要组成部分,它是由大学商学院提供的短期、强化、非学位课程组成,旨在吸引处于或接近高层管理职位的人。高管教育的基本原理不同于商学院的学位课程。商学院招收学位课程的学生是基于以前的考试、学位或入学考试,而高管教育通常是根据他们在公司层级中的职位或预期职位来招募参与者。虽然学位课程会给学生打分并授予学位,但高管教育通常提供的课程没有考试,也不会获得任何学位。1945年,哈佛商学院(Harvard Business School)推出高级管理课程(Advanced Management Program)后,高管教育在美国乃至全球迅速扩张。1970年,美国约有50所大学商学院和至少43个国家的商学院提供为期3至18周的高强度高管教育课程。在20世纪70年代,提供高管教育的商学院组成了一个协会,最初是在美国,后来在全球范围内。从20世纪80年代开始,高管教育经历了来自企业组织的企业大学的竞争。这导致商学院向两个方向扩展高管教育:一是组织来自不同公司的潜在高管的开放课程,二是为单个公司设计的量身定制课程。尽管高管教育是商学院活动的重要组成部分,但很少有学者对高管教育进行研究。自上世纪90年代初以来,管理教育的发展一直伴随着一场关于严谨性和相关性的辩论,在这种背景下,现有的研究一直以关注高管教育为主。研究中涉及的其他主题涉及课程内容、适当的教学方法以及高管教育对个人发展的影响。这种情况为一些令人兴奋的新研究课题铺平了道路。其中包括高管教育在创造、维持和改变商业精英方面的作用,高管教育对管理职位参与者社会化的影响,以及女性和高管教育。