{"title":"Simultaneous development of management skills and behaviours in taught academic programmes","authors":"A. Ward, Noel R. Jackson","doi":"10.1109/ITHET.2014.7155699","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Technical programmes frequently focus exclusively on the associated technical domain knowledge and skills with perhaps some generic skills development coincidentally and perhaps accidentally included. If Higher Education (HE), as the main provider of competent graduates, is to enable employers to be able to respond to the key global challenges of the next decade, is a pure focus on technicalities sufficient? It is contended that the answer is no, graduates need to have competence in aspects of management they will face in the early stages of employment. This attitude is firmly adopted in the department of Electronics at the University of York where management is integrated into almost all in its undergraduate and some of its postgraduate programme portfolio. The paper starts with a discussion of the justification for management teaching as a legitimate subject in the Electrical and Information Education field. This is followed by a literature review that considers the skills and behaviours managers need, appropriate pedagogies to develop these and assessment methods suitable to warrant them. A case study is then described of the Electronic Engineering programmes at the University of York including, a dedicated taught Masters in Engineering Management. In the taught MSc in Engineering Management there is a consistent approach to the assessment of generic skills, a strong emphasis on curiosity-based learning and a structured individual learning log for every student. Statistics on student numbers and feedback on the programme from different student groups and the programme's external examiner are given. The overall quality assurance measures taken for the programme are also briefly discussed. The paper proposes a generic programme modular structure that provides space for technical content but also for management content and shows how managerial behaviours can be developed as an integral part of the programme. It also describes the approach taken to assessment and discusses the issues these bring, in particular scalability.","PeriodicalId":432693,"journal":{"name":"2014 Information Technology Based Higher Education and Training (ITHET)","volume":"35 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2014-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"2014 Information Technology Based Higher Education and Training (ITHET)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/ITHET.2014.7155699","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 6
Abstract
Technical programmes frequently focus exclusively on the associated technical domain knowledge and skills with perhaps some generic skills development coincidentally and perhaps accidentally included. If Higher Education (HE), as the main provider of competent graduates, is to enable employers to be able to respond to the key global challenges of the next decade, is a pure focus on technicalities sufficient? It is contended that the answer is no, graduates need to have competence in aspects of management they will face in the early stages of employment. This attitude is firmly adopted in the department of Electronics at the University of York where management is integrated into almost all in its undergraduate and some of its postgraduate programme portfolio. The paper starts with a discussion of the justification for management teaching as a legitimate subject in the Electrical and Information Education field. This is followed by a literature review that considers the skills and behaviours managers need, appropriate pedagogies to develop these and assessment methods suitable to warrant them. A case study is then described of the Electronic Engineering programmes at the University of York including, a dedicated taught Masters in Engineering Management. In the taught MSc in Engineering Management there is a consistent approach to the assessment of generic skills, a strong emphasis on curiosity-based learning and a structured individual learning log for every student. Statistics on student numbers and feedback on the programme from different student groups and the programme's external examiner are given. The overall quality assurance measures taken for the programme are also briefly discussed. The paper proposes a generic programme modular structure that provides space for technical content but also for management content and shows how managerial behaviours can be developed as an integral part of the programme. It also describes the approach taken to assessment and discusses the issues these bring, in particular scalability.
技术方案经常只集中于相关的技术领域知识和技能,也许碰巧或偶然地包括一些一般技能的发展。如果高等教育(HE)作为合格毕业生的主要提供者,要使雇主能够应对未来十年的主要全球挑战,那么纯粹关注技术就足够了吗?有人认为答案是否定的,毕业生需要具备他们在就业初期将面临的管理方面的能力。这种态度在约克大学(University of York)电子系得到了坚定的采纳,该校几乎所有本科课程和部分研究生课程都将管理学纳入其中。本文首先论述了电气与信息教育领域管理教学作为一门合法学科的正当性。接下来是一篇文献综述,其中考虑了管理人员需要的技能和行为,开发这些技能和行为的适当教学方法以及适合保证这些技能和行为的评估方法。然后描述了约克大学电子工程课程的案例研究,包括一个专门的工程管理硕士课程。在授课式工程管理硕士课程中,有一个统一的方法来评估通用技能,强调基于好奇心的学习,并为每个学生提供结构化的个人学习日志。提供了学生人数的统计数据以及不同学生群体和课程外部审查员对课程的反馈。还简要讨论了为该方案采取的全面质量保证措施。该文件提出了一种通用的方案模块结构,既为技术内容提供空间,也为管理内容提供空间,并说明如何将管理行为作为方案的一个组成部分加以发展。它还描述了用于评估的方法,并讨论了这些方法带来的问题,特别是可伸缩性。