{"title":"Centennium of collegiate real estate education: a prospection on “the search for a discipline” in the American school of business","authors":"Owiti A. K’Akumu","doi":"10.1108/jerer-02-2024-0009","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<h3>Purpose</h3>\n<p>This study reviews the teaching of real estate in the USA for the first 100 years after the foundational curriculum was laid down in 1923 by three key institutions: the National Association of Real Estate Boards (NAREB), the Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities (The Institute) and the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). Its line of investigative pursuit is the persistent lamentation by American real estate scholars that real estate is not getting the respect it deserves as an academic discipline compared to its peers in the school of business such as accounting, finance and marketing. The study addresses a fundamental question: What is the cause of this endless “search for a discipline”? This is motivated by the belief that identification of the root cause of this “search for a discipline” will lead to the requisite solution: the intellectual foundation of the real estate discipline.</p><!--/ Abstract__block -->\n<h3>Design/methodology/approach</h3>\n<p>The study used qualitative document analysis to review two primary documents published in 1959 as reports on business education in the USA: (1) Higher Education for Business, financed and sponsored by the Ford Foundation, and (2) The Education of American Businessmen – financed and sponsored by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The impacts of the publications on the teaching of real estate to date have been reviewed in the context of scholarly actions and literature that has been generated in relation to the two documents.</p><!--/ Abstract__block -->\n<h3>Findings</h3>\n<p>The two primary documents impacted negatively on the teaching of real estate. The committee members who produced the two reports had indicated that real estate did not fit into the business curriculum hence should not be taught in business school. This conclusion led to unintended negative outcomes for real estate education. The negative impact of the reports arose principally because the teachers of real estate misinterpreted the outcome to mean that they should tweak the real estate curriculum to fit in the pedagogical framework of the business school. This reaction is responsible for perpetuating the identity crisis that has plagued real estate as an academic discipline since its inception as a subject of study in 1923. Secondly, at the inception of the real estate education in 1923, while the AACSB accepted real estate as a discipline in the school of business, Richard T. Ely wrote the curriculum under land economics which has led to the persistent collegiate dilemma regarding the teaching of the discipline.</p><!--/ Abstract__block -->\n<h3>Social implications</h3>\n<p>The study sheds light on the situation of business education in the USA and AACSB-accredited colleges internationally. It draws attention to the incoherent body of knowledge of business education and will help schools of business to redesign their curricula to include course contents that rightly reflects the business oriented academic disciplines.</p><!--/ Abstract__block -->\n<h3>Originality/value</h3>\n<p>The study is timely as it has been done 100 years since the development of the first standard collegiate real estate curriculum following the 1923 conference at Madison. The study has reviewed the first 100 years in terms of the persistent quest: “in search of a discipline”. In so doing, it has uncovered the root cause of this search during the first centennium; and to end the search, it proposes that real estate should not be taught as a business discipline.</p><!--/ Abstract__block -->","PeriodicalId":44570,"journal":{"name":"Journal of European Real Estate Research","volume":"167 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of European Real Estate Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/jerer-02-2024-0009","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"BUSINESS, FINANCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose
This study reviews the teaching of real estate in the USA for the first 100 years after the foundational curriculum was laid down in 1923 by three key institutions: the National Association of Real Estate Boards (NAREB), the Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities (The Institute) and the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). Its line of investigative pursuit is the persistent lamentation by American real estate scholars that real estate is not getting the respect it deserves as an academic discipline compared to its peers in the school of business such as accounting, finance and marketing. The study addresses a fundamental question: What is the cause of this endless “search for a discipline”? This is motivated by the belief that identification of the root cause of this “search for a discipline” will lead to the requisite solution: the intellectual foundation of the real estate discipline.
Design/methodology/approach
The study used qualitative document analysis to review two primary documents published in 1959 as reports on business education in the USA: (1) Higher Education for Business, financed and sponsored by the Ford Foundation, and (2) The Education of American Businessmen – financed and sponsored by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The impacts of the publications on the teaching of real estate to date have been reviewed in the context of scholarly actions and literature that has been generated in relation to the two documents.
Findings
The two primary documents impacted negatively on the teaching of real estate. The committee members who produced the two reports had indicated that real estate did not fit into the business curriculum hence should not be taught in business school. This conclusion led to unintended negative outcomes for real estate education. The negative impact of the reports arose principally because the teachers of real estate misinterpreted the outcome to mean that they should tweak the real estate curriculum to fit in the pedagogical framework of the business school. This reaction is responsible for perpetuating the identity crisis that has plagued real estate as an academic discipline since its inception as a subject of study in 1923. Secondly, at the inception of the real estate education in 1923, while the AACSB accepted real estate as a discipline in the school of business, Richard T. Ely wrote the curriculum under land economics which has led to the persistent collegiate dilemma regarding the teaching of the discipline.
Social implications
The study sheds light on the situation of business education in the USA and AACSB-accredited colleges internationally. It draws attention to the incoherent body of knowledge of business education and will help schools of business to redesign their curricula to include course contents that rightly reflects the business oriented academic disciplines.
Originality/value
The study is timely as it has been done 100 years since the development of the first standard collegiate real estate curriculum following the 1923 conference at Madison. The study has reviewed the first 100 years in terms of the persistent quest: “in search of a discipline”. In so doing, it has uncovered the root cause of this search during the first centennium; and to end the search, it proposes that real estate should not be taught as a business discipline.
本研究回顾了自 1923 年美国房地产委员会(NAREB)、土地经济与公共事业研究所(The Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities)和美国高等商学院协会(AACSB)三大机构制定基础课程后的前 100 年美国房地产教学情况。美国房地产学者一直在感叹,与会计、金融和市场营销等商学院的同行相比,房地产作为一门学科没有得到应有的尊重。本研究探讨了一个根本问题:这种无休止的 "学科探索 "的原因是什么?本研究采用定性文献分析法,回顾了 1959 年出版的两份有关美国商业教育的主要文献:(1) 由福特基金会资助和赞助的《商业高等教育》;(2) 由纽约卡内基公司资助和赞助的《美国商人教育》。我们结合与这两份文件相关的学术活动和文献,回顾了迄今为止这两份出版物对房地产教学的影响。编写这两份报告的委员会成员指出,房地产不适合商科课程,因此不应该在商学院教授。这一结论给房地产教育带来了意想不到的负面影响。报告产生负面影响的主要原因是,房地产专业的教师误解了这一结果,认为这意味着他们应该调整房地产课程,以适应商学院的教学框架。这种反应导致了自 1923 年房地产作为一门学科诞生以来一直困扰着这门学科的身份危机。其次,在 1923 年房地产教育创立之初,虽然 AACSB 接受房地产为商学院的一门学科,但理查德-T-伊利(Richard T. Ely)却在土地经济学下编写了课程,这导致了学院在该学科教学方面长期存在的困境。本研究非常及时,因为自 1923 年在麦迪逊召开会议后制定第一个标准的大学房地产课程以来,这项研究已经进行了 100 年。本研究回顾了前 100 年的不懈探索:"寻找一门学科"。在这样做的过程中,它揭示了第一个百年期间这种探索的根本原因;为了结束这种探索,它提出房地产不应作为一门商业学科来教授。