Discussion: View Thread

  • 1.  Please Post

    Posted 09-29-2008 12:47

     

    Reminder

    The <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:placetype w:st="on">Academy</st1:placetype> of <st1:placename w:st="on">Marketing Sciences Submission Deadline</st1:placename></st1:place> is NOVEMBER 14, 2008. Get information at www.ams-web.org Theme "Marketing for a Better World"

    May 20-23, 2009 in <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:city w:st="on">Baltimore</st1:city>, <st1:state w:st="on">Maryland</st1:state></st1:place> (Co-Chairs: Michael Czinkota & Ilkka Ronkainen)

     

    Please consider submitting a paper or special session proposal to the Special Track "Small Countries, Small Firms Meet Global Marketing"

     

    Contact the Track Co-Chairs H. Ruediger Kaufman (kaufmann.r@intercollege.ac.cy) and Betty Jane Punnett (eureka@caribsurf.com) for more information

     

     

    Best Regards,

     

    Betty Jane Punnett, Ph.D.

     

    Betty Jane Punnett, Ph.D.

    Professor, International Business & Management

    University of the <st1:place w:st="on">West Indies</st1:place>, Cave Hill

     

    Please visit my newly created website and send your comments www.healthyweightvillage.com 

    forward to friends who may be interested - Thanks! BJ

     

    visit www.endcancer.ca to donate
    to my 2nd 60 Km walk to end cancer

     



  • 2.  Please post

    Posted 11-11-2008 11:14

    The Academy of Marketing Sciences Submission Deadline is extended to December 4, 2008. Get information at www.ams-web.org Theme "Marketing for a Better World"

    May 20-23, 2009 in <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:city w:st="on">Baltimore</st1:city>, <st1:state w:st="on">Maryland</st1:state></st1:place> (Co-Chairs: Michael Czinkota & Ilkka Ronkainen)

     

    Please consider submitting a paper or session proposal to the Special Track "Small Countries, Small Firms Meet Global Marketing"

     

    Contact the Track Co-Chairs H. Ruediger Kaufman (kaufmann.r@intercollege.ac.cy) and Betty Jane Punnett (eureka@caribsurf.com) for more information.

     

     

     

    Best Regards,

     

    Betty Jane Punnett, Ph.D.

     

    Betty Jane Punnett, Ph.D.

    Professor, International Business & Management

    University of the <st1:place w:st="on">West Indies</st1:place>, Cave Hill

     

    Please visit my newly created website and send your comments www.healthyweightvillage.com 

    forward to friends who may be interested - Thanks! BJ

     

    visit www.endcancer.ca to donate
    to my 2nd 60 Km walk to end cancer

     



  • 3.  Please Post

    Posted 11-25-2009 09:21

    Dear IMD members – please share this announcement with your colleagues, and consider joining us! Thanks, Betty Jane

     

    ANNOUNCING THE FIRST WORKSHOP

     

    WRITING AND PUBLISHING FOR ACADEMICS

     

    MAY 20 to 24, 2010

    Barbados

     

    An international Event Especially Designed for

    Academics, University/College Lecturers, Researchers and Scholars

     

    The University of the West Indies (Cave Hill, Barbados), in collaboration with the University of Limerick (Ireland) is hosting the first international workshop on writing and publishing for academics.

     

    "The workshop will nourish and sustain your professional development in a range of explicit and implicit ways" (Sarah Moore - Limerick)

    "I guarantee you will go away from the workshop feeling energized about your academic writing" (Betty Jane Punnett - UWI)

     

    The Workshop

     

    Academic writing and publishing is a critical aspect of being a successful scholar, with promotion, tenure, and effective teaching relying on publications in leading journals. Many academics, for a variety of reasons, find academic writing a challenge. This workshop is intended to help you overcome this challenge. You will complete a specific writing project during the workshop and develop plans to guide your future writing and publishing.

     

    This will be a 5 day, intensive, residential event. Expert facilitators will ensure you experience a productive, stress-free writing environment, and enjoy a holistic orientation. This workshop will support and develop your academic writing and publishing skills.

     

    Participants from any discipline and at any stage in their careers are welcome. Participants will:

     

    • Develop competence and confidence in their academic writing
    • Enhance healthy and positive orientations to academic writing
    • Understand the academic writing and publishing process
    • Complete a specific writing project
    • Design a template for running workshops in their own academic locations

     


    The Facilitators

     

    The workshop will be facilitated by experts in academic writing and publishing

     

    Yehuda Baruch (DSc Technion, Israel) has run workshops on reviewing and publishing in the USA, Europe, Asia, and Australia/NZ, and at the Academy of Management and SIOP. He is Professor of Management at UEA Norwich (UK) and has held Visiting positions at the University of Texas (Arlington), and London Business School. He has published some 100 papers in refereed journals, as well as Opening the Black Box of Editorship and Wining Reviews: A guide for Evaluating Scholarly Writing. He is the Editor of Group & Organization Management, former editor of Career Development International, and serves on many Editorial Boards, including the Journal of Management. He has edited special issues for leading journals, reviews regularly for refereed journals and major conferences, and Chaired the Careers Division of the Academy of Management.

     

    Peter Elbow is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He is best known for his work in writing theory, practice, and pedagogy. Peter is the author of several books, including Embracing Contraries: Explorations in Learning and Teaching,, Writing with Power: Techniques for Mastering the Writing Process, Writing Without Teachers, and his most recent, Being A Writer . He subscribes to an empowering and engaging approach to writing that will add huge value to the writers' retreat experience. Despite being an internationally renowned expert in the field, his engaging and encouraging facilitation style will help to create and confident and positive approach to the writing that will enhance this retreat.

     

    Sarah Moore is Professor and Associate VP at the University of Limerick. She is an award winning teacher and has worked to enhance and develop pedagogical practice in higher education, both within her University and throughout the Irish Education Sector. In 2001 she initiated writers' retreats at UL, where they have been running regularly ever since. She has shared this practice in a range of different contexts and with Betty Jane Punnett  has worked created a unique type of academic writers' workshops at UWI since 2005. She has published several books and many research papers including 'How to be a student' (2005, Open University Press), The Handbook of Academic Writing (with Rowena Muurray), and Teaching at College and University.

     

    Betty Jane Punnett (Ph.D., New York University) is a Professor at the University of the West Indies (Barbados) and has held positions in Canada, China, Ireland, Japan, the USA. She has offered workshops in academic writing and publishing for the past five years. She has published over fifty papers in refereed journals, numerous book chapters ,and several books, including International Perspectives on Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management, Experiencing International Business and Management, Successful Professional Women of the Americas, and The Handbook for International Management Research. She edited Insights for the AIB for several years, and serves on the editorial boards for several journals, as well as reviewing for a variety of conferences.

     

     


    Full Cost US$3,000.00 (includes workshop fee, writing resource pack with books, and accommodation).

     

    Early Registration (by March 1) US$2,500.

     

    Books to be provided:

     

    Yehuda Baruch's "Wining Reviews: A guide for Evaluating Scholarly Writing"

    Peter Elbow's "Being a Writer"

    Sarah Moore's "The Handbook of Academic Writing"

     

     

    For more information and to register, please contact:

    Professor Betty Jane Punnett, eureka@caribsurf.com

     

     

    Join us in Barbados for this Exciting Workshop

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Please consider donating to my 2010 60 K. walk for cancer in September. Go to www.endcancer.ca to the Toronto site, click on donate now and go to my personal page

     

    BettyJane Punnett

    Professor, International Business & Management

    University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus

    Barbados

     

    check www.healthyweightvillage.com for a healthier lifestyle

     



  • 4.  Please post

    Posted 02-01-2010 18:25

    Call for Papers

    Special Issue of the International Journal of Cross-Cultural Management

    "Cultural Metaphors for Understanding and Doing Business in the Caribbean Region"

     

    Editors for Special Issue:

    Betty Jane Punnett, Professor and Ahkentoolove Corbin, Lecturer

    Department of Management Studies, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados

     

    Cultural metaphors and similar approaches to understanding culture and cultural similarities and differences have become more popular recently. These approaches provide a 'different' way of looking at culture that is distinct from the more quantitative measures of culture, and they provide additional ways to understand culture and its impact on management. The Caribbean region has been largely ignored in management research, and this special issue devoted to cultural metaphors within the region is intended to add to our knowledge of the region.

     

    We welcome contributions about anywhere in the region and want to include views from the Dutch, English, French, and Spanish Caribbean; however submissions must be in English. Submissions will be blind reviewed in the traditional IJCCM review process. If you are interested in preparing a submission and would like more information on the metaphor concept, please send an email to eureka@caribsurf.com. If you are willing to serve as a reviewer for the Special Issue, please send an email to the same address.

     

    Important Dates

    October 31:     Submissions Due

    January 31:      Completion of the Review Process

    April 30:          First Revisions

    May 31:           Completion of Second Review Process

    June 30:           Final Revisions

     

     

    Please consider donating to my 2010 60 K. walk for cancer in September. Go to www.endcancer.ca to the Toronto site, click on donate now and go to my personal page

     

    BettyJane Punnett

    Professor, International Business & Management

    University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus

    Barbados

     

    check www.healthyweightvillage.com for a healthier lifestyle

     



  • 5.  please post

    Posted 03-23-2016 12:00

    ***Apologies for cross-posting***

     

     

    Call for Papers

    ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT LEARNING & EDUCATION

    SPECIAL ISSUE

     

    STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT EDUCATION:

    NAVIGATING BETWEEN DIFFERENT APPROACHES AND LEARNING IMPACTS

     

    Guest Editors for the Special Issue

    R. Greg Bell, University of Dallas

    Igor Filatotchev, City University of London and WU, Vienna

    Ryan Krause, Texas Christian University

     

    Advisory Editor:

    Michael Hitt, Texas A&M University

     

    The topic of this Special Issue is strategic management education. Strategic management courses today are criticized for being "repositories of multiple frameworks that are not tightly integrated and are aging rapidly" (Mahoney & McGahan, 2007, p. 86). Others have voiced concerns with regard to the lack of effectiveness of strategic management education (Jarzabkowski & Kaplan, 2015; Porter & McKibbin, 1988; Mintzberg & Gosling, 2002). Mintzberg (2004) argues that MBA faculty have too readily reduced strategic management to a kit bag of analytic techniques that are often inadequate and irrelevant to effective strategic thinking itself. Some observers note that "practitioners increasingly judge the field as irrelevant, and that judgment is reflected in student assessment" (Bower, 2008; p. 274).

     

    This Special Issue is devoted to addressing the increasingly frequent calls for more relevant and practically applicable strategy education (e. g. Bower, 2008; Mintzberg, 2004; Greiner, Bhambri, & Cummings, 2003; Rynes, Bartunek, & Daft, 2001; Starkey & Madan, 2001).  Its aim is to assess the learning and knowledge transfer implications of different philosophies, designs, and approaches to strategic management education based on both the cutting edge research in the field and its highly relevant practical implications. Empirical and conceptual pieces are welcome in the following areas:

     

    THE ROLE AND PLACE OF THEORY IN STRATEGY EDUCATION

    There is an ongoing debate about the role and place of theory in strategy education.  On the one hand, the theory acquisitive approach (Grant 2008) argues for an emphasis on theory, built on the assumption that applying a set of pre-established steps allows the student who knows little about the topic to learn more efficiently and economically. Alternatively, advocates of the practice based approach (Bower 2008; Jarzabkowski & Spee, 2009) contend their approach develops more fully the students' capacity for more innovative, blue ocean approaches to strategy formulation and implementation.  It is important that strategy educators address the role and place for theory because some (e.g., Ghoshal, 2005) assert that what we teach is actually bad for practice. These debates raise a number of relevant questions:

    In what ways can theory improve strategy education and learning?

    Are there alternative approaches to teaching strategic management beyond the theory acquisitive and practice based approach extremes?

    How can we reconcile rigor in learning with practical relevance of strategic management concepts and frameworks?

     

    SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND STRATEGY EDUCATION

    There is an increasing awareness of societal and environmental issues affected by business activities, especially those of multinational companies (MNCs). Thus the quest for enhancing corporate focus on business ethics and corporate social responsibility (CSR) is not only an answer to recent corporate scandals and the recognition that business leaders may be acting irresponsibly more often than previously thought, but also a result of the changes and new demands in the global marketplace, such as increased stakeholder activism and scrutiny (e.g., Filatotchev and Stahl, 2015). Although it is still contested whether corporations and their leaders have social responsibilities that extend beyond their wealth-generating function, in light of growing socio-political and environmental challenges around the world, there is increasing pressure from stakeholders – among them governments, local communities, NGOs and consumers – for corporations and their leaders to self-regulate and contribute to the "triple bottom line" of social, environmental, and economic sustainability ("people, planet, profits"). Possible discussion questions include:

    Should strategic management education integrate elements of business ethics and CSR?

    How can strategy education include both the market environment and the social, political, and legal nonmarket environments in which firms operate?

    How can academics raise awareness among future business leaders of the importance of corporate strategic objectives that go beyond mere compliance with laws and regulations and embrace wider societal objectives?

     

    ANALYSIS, DECISION MAKING, AND IMPLEMENTATION

    Since decision-making quality is the key to effective strategy formulation and implementation, there are increasing calls for strategic management education to place greater emphasis on what students are being taught about the "how" of strategic management.  This leads to a number of important discussion questions:

    Are there ways in which decision-making styles can be integrated with popular strategy tools including Porter's five forces and value chain analyses, SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) and VRIO (value, rarity, imitability, organization) frameworks, portfolio matrices, and strategy clocks, among others?

    Students today are criticized for their inability to handle the ambiguity of high rates of change facing many industries.  How can strategy educators prepare students to think critically and creatively while taking into account multiple perspectives and cultures?    

    How can strategic management students develop an ability to cope with paradoxes and ambiguity, given the complexity and contradiction now implicit in strategy making (Schneider & Lieb, 2004).

    Strategic management courses are dominated by the scientific paradigm (Bennis & O'Toole, 2005; Pfeffer & Fong, 2002). As a result, business schools produce plenty of "technocrats" and "craftsman" but few "artists" (Maranville, 2011).  How can strategy courses integrate the artistic paradigm?

    How can strategic management courses be designed to fully integrate analysis and implementation, and what are the roles of non-academic tutors in achieving this?  

     

    ADDITIONAL TOPICS

    There are several additional areas in which we welcome submissions that advance strategic management teaching and education

    While the primary focus of the special issue is on teaching strategy in the academic environment, we also seek to examine approaches to strategy education and training that are practiced by other profit and nonprofit organizations.

    We also welcome papers devoted to innovation in strategic management education. For example, such papers might explore combining field experiments with class discussions, or integrating diverse media in the strategy courses.

    We also echo the call of others to determine how alternative modes of learning beyond the teacher-student exchange, such as peer review and peer-to-peer exchange, as well as the development of specialized student expertise, can advance students' understanding of the complexity of strategic decision making (Mahoney & McGahan, 2007).

     

    SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

    Initial submissions should be received by March 31, 2017 and should be designated for either the Research & Reviews section or the Essays, Dialogues, & Interviews section.  Authors are encouraged to visit AMLE's website (www.aom.pace.edu/amle) for detailed guidance on these sections.  Submissions should be accompanied by an assurance of originality and exclusivity. Papers should adhere to the "Information for Contributors" guide for authors that can be found at aom.org/AMLE.

     

    All submissions will be subject to a rigorous double-blind peer-review process, with one or more of the guest editors acting as action editor, and final approval coming from the AMLE journal editor. Invitations to revise and resubmit will follow initial submissions in approximately 3 months. Final acceptances will be made by May 1, 2018. Please direct any questions regarding the Special Issue to Igor Filatotchev (Igor.Filatotchev@city.ac.uk), Greg Bell (gbell@udallas.edu), and Ryan Krause (r.krause@tcu.edu).

     

     

    REFERENCES

     

    Bennis, W. G., & O'Toole, J. (2005). How business schools lost their way. Harvard Business Review83(5), 96-104.

    Bower, J. L. (2008). The Teaching of Strategy: From General Manager to Analyst and Back Again? Journal of Management Inquiry, 17(4), 269-275.

    Filatotchev I., & Stahl, G. (2015). Towards transnational CSR: Corporate social responsibility approaches and governance solutions for multinational corporations', Organizational Dynamics, 44, 121-129.

    Ghoshal, S. (2005). Bad management theories are destroying good management practices. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 4(1), 75-91.

    Grant, R. M. (2008). Why strategy teaching should be theory based. Journal of Management Inquiry, 17(4), 276-281.

    Greiner, L. E., Bhambri, A., & Cummings, T. G. (2003). Searching for a strategy to teach strategy. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 2(4), 402-420.

    Jarzabkowski, P., & Kaplan, S. (2015). Strategy toolsinuse: A framework for understanding "technologies of rationality" in practice. Strategic Management Journal, 36(4), 537-558.

    Jarzabkowski P., M. Giulietti, B Oliveira & N. Amoo (2013), 'We don't need no education'. Or do we: Management education and alumni adoption of strategy tools', Journal of Management Inquiry, 22(1), 452-472.

    Jarzabkowski, P., Spee, A. P. (2009), 'Strategy as practice: A review and future directions for the field', International Journal of Management Reviews, 11(1), 69-95.

    Mahoney, J. T., & McGahan, A. M. (2007). The field of strategic management within the evolving science of strategic organization. Strategic Organization5(1), 79-99.

    Maranville, S. (2011). The Art of Strategic Management: A Case-Based Exercise. Journal of Management Education35(6), 782-807.

    Mintzberg, H. (2004). Managers, not MBAs: A hard look at the soft practice of managing and management development. Berrett-Koehler Publishers.

    Mintzberg, H., & Gosling, J. (2002). Educating managers beyond borders. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 1(1), 64-76.

    Pfeffer, J., & Fong, C. T. (2002). The end of business schools? Less success than meets the eye. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 1(1), 78-95.

    Porter, L. W., & McKibbin, L. E. (1988). Management Education and Development: Drift or Thrust into the 21st Century?. McGraw-Hill Book Company, College Division, PO Box 400, Hightstown, NJ 08520.

    Rynes, S. L., Bartunek, J. M., & Daft, R. L. (2001). Across the great divide: Knowledge creation and transfer between practitioners and academics. Academy of Management Journal44(2), 340-355.

    Schneider, M., & Lieb, P. (2004). The challenges of teaching strategic management: Working toward successful inclusion of the resource-based view. Journal of Management Education28(2), 170-187.

    Starkey, K., & Madan, P. (2001). Bridging the relevance gap: Aligning stakeholders in the future of management research. British Journal of Management12(s1), S3-S26.

     

     

     

    Dr. R. Greg Bell
    Associate Professor
    Satish & Yasmin Gupta College of Business

    University of Dallas

    Accredited by AACSB International
    1845 E. Northgate Drive | Irving, Texas 75062 | USA
    gbell@udallas.edu | 972-721-5167 |