管理教育中的批判性思维

C. Rigg
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引用次数: 1

摘要

大多数人认为批判性思维是高等教育的核心;一个基本的目的是培养学生批判论点、仔细审查证据和逻辑推理的能力。然而,在管理教育中,20世纪80年代出现了一种不同的批判性思维,这是对主流管理教育的不满所引发的,主流管理教育似乎乐于教管理者如何推理、分析和批评,而不问有关目的、手段、价值和对员工、消费者、环境或社会的后果等基本问题。在这种情况下,批判性管理教育(CME)通过质疑知识的合法性、批判性反思和批判性存在或行动的结合,促进了与世界的批判性接触。在管理教育中,批判性思维的目的被视为朝着更大的社会公正和一个人与环境都不受压迫的世界的方向前进。CME可以包括批判性内容和批判性教学法。CME的批判性思维框架已经从最初的新马克思主义和批判管理研究(CMS)中使用的霸权理论扩展到后现代主义,后结构主义,心理动力学,女权主义,生态学,批判现实主义,后殖民理论,批判种族理论和酷儿理论。管理教育中的批判教学法借鉴了社区和激进成人教育的悠久传统,采用了参与式方法和对话的做法。此外,反身性起着核心作用。批判性管理教育者用来探索组织混乱、矛盾和悖论的教学方法是广泛而多样的,包括电影、戏剧、文学以及瑜伽和冥想等身体锻炼。对继续教育的批评包括:学者有权扰乱学生的自我意识、批判性反思的潜在破坏性影响、教育工作者假定的道德优越感、对种族和性别问题的忽视,以及批评管理是一种矛盾修饰法的挑战。为了激发批判性思维,教育工作者需要重新定义他们的角色和他们对学习的假设。试图成为一名CME教育者被比作在边缘工作,作为一个温和的激进分子,随之而来的压力和风险来自学生,同龄人和机构的反对。经验丰富的教育工作者提倡寻找“无人竞争的利基”来开发CME模块和材料,如可选模块或新课程;利用空间,说明机构的优先事项(如尊重和排名),并吸引学生。关于继续教育的研究在很大程度上局限于对教育者实践的单一反思和评价。尽管这些都很丰富,但这意味着该领域还有许多未解决的问题,需要进一步研究。这些问题包括:•课堂上的高度多样性对批判性教学法有什么影响?•初级教师尝试将批判性引入管理教育的经验是什么?•芝加哥商业交易所如何应对不断变化的社会挑战?•后人类社会物质性可能意味着什么?•CME能为本科生和无工作经验者提供什么?•CME如何对管理实践产生影响?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Thinking Critically in Management Education
Most would argue that critical thinking is core to higher education; that a fundamental purpose is to cultivate students’ capacity to critique arguments, to scrutinize evidence, and to reason logically. However, in management education, a different take on thinking critically emerged in the 1980s, provoked by dissatisfaction with a mainstream management education which appeared happy to teach managers how to reason, analyze, and critique, without asking fundamental questions about ends, means, values, and consequences for employees, consumers, the environment, or society. In this vein, critical management education (CME) promotes a critical engagement with the world through a combination of questioning the legitimacy of knowledge, critical reflection, and critical being or action. The purpose of thinking critically in management education is seen as moving in the direction of greater social justice and a world in which neither people, nor the environment, are oppressed. CME can encompass both critical content and critical pedagogy. Frameworks for thinking critically in CME have broadened from the original neo-Marxist and hegemony theory employed in critical management studies (CMS) to draw from postmodernist, post-structuralist, psychodynamic, feminist, ecological, critical-realist, postcolonial theory, critical race theory, and queer theory. Critical pedagogy in management education has drawn from the longer traditions of community and radical adult education, with their practices of participative methods and dialogue. In addition, reflexivity plays a central part. Teaching and learning methods used by critical management educators as ways to explore the messiness, contradictions, and paradoxes of organizations are wide and varied, and include film, drama, and literature as well as bodywork such as yoga and meditation. Criticisms of CME include the right of academics to unsettle students’ sense of themselves, potentially disruptive effects of critical reflection, educators’ presumed moral superiority, neglect of issues of race and gender, as well as the challenge that critical management is an oxymoron. To provoke critical thinking challenges educators to redefine their role and their assumptions about learning. Attempting to be a CME educator has been likened to working on the margins, as a tempered radical, with attendant stresses and risks of student, peer, and institutional disapproval. Experienced educators advocate finding “uncontested niches” to develop CME modules and materials such as an optional module or new course; exploiting spaces which speak to the priorities of institutions (such as esteem and rankings) as well as appeal to students. Research on CME has been largely restricted to single reflective accounts and evaluations of educator practice. Rich though these are, it means the field has many unanswered questions that invite further research. These include: • What are the implications of hyper-diversity in the classroom for critical pedagogies? • What are junior faculty’s experiences of trying to introduce criticality into management education? • How can CME respond to changing societal challenges? • What might be the implications of post-human socio-materiality? • What can CME offer to undergraduate and post-experience constituencies? • How can CME make a difference to management practice?
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