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De-Departmentalizing the B-School

June 2, 2008

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Today, you need to know a little bit of everything, But Villanova University's undergraduate business school curriculum, starting this fall, is designed on the theory that you don't need an individual course in everything.

James Danko, Villanova's business dean, said the “fundamental root” of the new curriculum is to have a multidisciplinary perspective. Several courses that used to be taught stand alone will be integrated into one course. For example, the introductory courses in finance and in accounting, which used to be two separate courses, will become one. The new course, financial management and reporting, will be six credits and taught by two instructors.

Walter Tymon, associate professor of management, explained another new course, in business dynamics, will also be taught over two semesters. It was created by a team of professors from accounting, business law, finance, information systems, management and marketing. Faculty members from these areas will each teach a section. The first semester will focus on giving students a "context for studying business." Questions the course will cover include: "What is business and how does a business create value? Who are the various stakeholders in a business and how do they, and should they, influence decision-making? How has business evolved, and what are the important issues associated with the global business environment, ethics, leadership, teams, communication, motivation, and the structure and culture of companies."

The second semester will focus on concepts from "each functional area of business with an emphasis on integration and how each discipline is part of a total system to achieve a business mission."

Building on the growing trend of colleges requiring new students to read a common book before they enroll, Villanova is having its new business majors read Pour Your Heart into It: How Starbucks Built a Company One Cup at a Time, over the summer prior to beginning the course. Students will discuss the book in the business dynamics course, and in small groups led by business executives who graduated from Villanova's Executive M.B.A. program.

“That’s going to be taught from a broader perspective,” Danko said.

Also, instead of having separate courses about skills such as communication or technology, Danko said there will be an emphasis in these skills being taught throughout the curriculum.

The changes came about in attempt to respond to the current business world, Danko said. The current curriculum has not had a significant overhaul since the 1950s and is based on an economic model that is no longer applicable into today’s world, he said.

Tymon, who was on the faculty committee that looked at curriculum revision, said that one of the factors that led to the change was “the fact that we do have a global economy.” He also mentioned students need to be able to see the “big picture” and the intent behind it, which means they need to have knowledge across the disciplines of business. “Students really need to be able to integrate across functions,” he said.

Danko said 85 percent of the faculty voted in favor of the proposed changes.

John J. Fernandes, president and chief executive officer of AACSB International: The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, said an integrative curriculum like the one Villanova will be using is increasingly common.

“It’s definitely the wave of the future to build an integrated curriculum,” he said.

In addition to the new curriculum, there have also been changes in how the faculty and departments have been structured. When Danko became dean three years ago, he proposed a new organization, which included compressing some departments and opening new ones. Operations management was merged with management and strategy. The economics department became economics and statistics. Accounting and management information merged to make accounting and information systems. In addition, Danko said he made "trial departments" called strategic initiative groups. Professors were offered the chance to take a "leave of absence" from their own department to join these groups. Some of these groups have focused on course development while others have focused on research. He said he encouraged the faculty to work in a “multidisciplinary way.” This faculty reorganization became a precursor to the change in curriculum.

Although most business schools don’t follow this model, Fernandes said he thinks that will change in the future because the traditional model is not sustainable, and more business schools will rethink structures.

“They’re going to have to, personally I think they should, but they’re going to have to,” he said.

Johns Hopkins School of Business is going even further than Villanova in its approach to faculty organization. The school, which only opened in 2007, will have no departments, beginning July of this year, said Yash Gupta, the dean. All professors will be encouraged to be part of multidisciplinary centers for research. But Gupta said that departments aren't needed.

“Business decisions are integrative,” he said.

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Comments on De-Departmentalizing the B-School

  • And what about ethics?
  • Posted by Kalynne Pudner on June 2, 2008 at 6:45am EDT
  • As someone who teaches Business Ethics out of the Philosophy Department as a core requirement for Business students, at an institution that is purportedly considering moving the course over to the B-School, I found ethics conspicuous in its absence here. Where does biz ethics fit into this new integrative curriculum model, I wonder?

  • Villanova's aspiration and challenge
  • Posted by David Shupe at eLumen Collaborative on June 2, 2008 at 11:30am EDT
  • The business school at Villanova is making the right choice -- both knowledge and practice are best understood in an integrated way. The challenge will be to institutionalize this using the conventional information systems of higher education, which embody the old non-integrated department/course model, or are they making changes with that as well?

  • Revised curriculum
  • Posted by Fred Flener , Retired at Northeastern Illinois University on June 2, 2008 at 11:30am EDT
  • Isn't "business ethics" an oxymoron?

  • A new thing?
  • Posted by John Gregg on June 2, 2008 at 12:00pm EDT
  • This is very much along the lines of the MBA program at University of Maryland University Campus - campus and online, below:

    * AMBA 601 The Role of Managers and Organizations in Society (6)
    * AMBA 602 The Dynamics of Individuals and Groups at Work (6)
    * AMBA 603 The Marketing of New Ideas (6)
    * AMBA 604 Technology and Operations Management (6)
    * AMBA 605 Economics of Management Decisions (6)
    * AMBA 606 Organizations and the External Environment (6)
    * AMBA 607 Strategic Management (6)

    I did a traditional program, online format, but longed for the above format types.

  • Please Forgive My Plagiarism ...
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on June 2, 2008 at 9:45pm EDT
  • Undergraduates majoring in business? ... A mind is a terrible thing to waste.

  • "undergraduates majoring in business?"
  • Posted by EngProf on June 2, 2008 at 11:30pm EDT
  • "isn't business ethics an oxymoron?"

    My, aren't we snotty. Yep, those English majors sure do wonders for the economy...