Business Schools at the Crossroads? A Trip Back from Sparta to Athens

Some business schools have come under considerable criticism for what observers see as their complicit involvement in the corporate scandals and financial crises of the last 15 years. Much of the discussion about changes that schools might undertake has been focused on curriculum issues. However, revisiting the curriculum does not get at the root cause of the problem. Instead, it might create a new challenge: the risk of decoupling the discussion of the curriculum from broader issues of institutional purpose. In this article, we argue that the most pressing need facing business schools is not to teach new courses to be responsive to social demands and stay relevant. Instead, it is to revisit their basic mission—the principles and beliefs on which they were founded—and then to re-evaluate their curriculum design choices in this light. We contrast the Spartan and Athenian educational paradigms as a way of shedding light on the nature of a coherent response.

[1]  J. Birkinshaw,et al.  Management innovation , 2005, IEEE Engineering Management Review.

[2]  Gregory R. Beabout,et al.  Handbook of Virtue Ethics in Business and Management , 2017 .

[3]  M. Nussbaum Not For Profit , 2015 .

[4]  M. Reitzig,et al.  What’s ‘New’ About New Forms of Organizing? , 2013 .

[5]  Erich C. Dierdorff,et al.  Building a Better MBA: From a Decade of Critique Toward a Decennium of Creation , 2013 .

[6]  Daniela P Blettner,et al.  How Useful are the Strategic Tools We Teach in Business Schools? , 2013 .

[7]  David E. Cavazos,et al.  Business Ethics as a Required Course: Investigating the Factors Impacting the Decision to Require Ethics in the Undergraduate Business Core Curriculum , 2012 .

[8]  Domènec Melé,et al.  The Firm as a “Community of Persons”: A Pillar of Humanistic Business Ethos , 2012 .

[9]  J. Moon,et al.  Corporate social responsibility and sustainability education: A trans-Atlantic comparison , 2011, Journal of Management & Organization.

[10]  Thomas Ehrlich,et al.  Rethinking Undergraduate Business Education: Liberal Learning for the Profession , 2011 .

[11]  M. Nussbaum,et al.  Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities , 2012 .

[12]  Julian Birkinshaw,et al.  Reinventing Management: Smarter Choices for Getting Work Done , 2010 .

[13]  Su Mi Dahlgaard-Park Ethics and Excellence , 2010 .

[14]  B. Mujtaba,et al.  The State of Business Schools, Business Education, and Business Ethics , 2009 .

[15]  Jeremy C. Short,et al.  Mission Statements in U.S. Colleges of Business: An Empirical Examination of Their Content With Linkages to Configurations and Performance , 2008 .

[16]  Esther Roca,et al.  Introducing Practical Wisdom in Business Schools , 2008 .

[17]  Paul J. H. Schoemaker,et al.  The Future Challenges of Business: Rethinking Management Education , 2008 .

[18]  Sharon Clinebell,et al.  The Tension in Business Education Between Academic Rigor and Real-World Relevance: The Role of Executive Professors , 2008 .

[19]  Rakesh Khurana,et al.  Introduction to From Higher Aims to Hired Hands The Social Transformation of American Business Schools and the Unfulfilled Promise of Management as a Profession , 2010 .

[20]  G. Hamel The Future of Management , 2007 .

[21]  S. Marginson,et al.  Globalisation and Higher Education , 2007 .

[22]  D. Yanow Power, Politics, and Science in the Study of Complex Organizations , 2007 .

[23]  Mie Augier,et al.  The Pursuit of Relevance in Management Education , 2007 .

[24]  Ellen Peirce,et al.  Ethics, CSR, and Sustainability Education in the Financial Times Top 50 Global Business Schools: Baseline Data and Future Research Directions , 2007 .

[25]  James G. March,et al.  The Study of Organizations and Organizing Since 1945 , 2007 .

[26]  Nansook Park,et al.  Character strengths in organizations , 2006 .

[27]  A. V. D. Ven,et al.  Knowledge for Theory and Practice , 2006 .

[28]  Joel M. Evans,et al.  Who's in the Ethics Driver's Seat? Factors Influencing Ethics in the MBA Curriculum , 2006 .

[29]  Kenneth D. Butterfield,et al.  Academic Dishonesty in Graduate Business Programs: Prevalence, Causes, and Proposed Action , 2006 .

[30]  Barbara A. Ritter Can Business Ethics be Trained? A Study of the Ethical Decision-making Process in Business Students , 2006 .

[31]  Jonathan D. Cohen Social, Emotional, Ethical, and Academic Education: Creating a Climate for Learning, Participation in Democracy, and Well-Being. , 2006 .

[32]  A. Sison,et al.  The Nature of the Firm, Agency Theory and Shareholder Theory: A Critique from Philosophical Anthropology , 2006 .

[33]  S. Ghoshal,et al.  Beyond Self-Interest Revisited , 2006 .

[34]  Matthew Hartley,et al.  Mission Statements: A Thematic Analysis of Rhetoric across Institutional Type , 2006 .

[35]  Julian Birkinshaw,et al.  Sumantra Ghoshal on Management: A Force for Good , 2006 .

[36]  J. Roberts The Oxford Dictionary of the Classical World , 2005 .

[37]  W. Bennis,et al.  How business schools lost their way. , 2005, Harvard business review.

[38]  S. Ghoshal Bad Management Theories Are Destroying Good Management Practices , 2005 .

[39]  Jeffrey Pfeffer,et al.  Why Do Bad Management Theories Persist? A Comment on Ghoshal , 2005 .

[40]  K. Starkey,et al.  Rethinking the Business School , 2004 .

[41]  Jeffrey Pfeffer,et al.  The Business School ‘Business’: Some Lessons from the US Experience* , 2004 .

[42]  P. Cartledge What have the Spartans Done for us?: Sparta’s Contribution to Western Civilization* , 2004, Greece and Rome.

[43]  Ellwood Patterson Cubberley,et al.  The History Of Education , 2004 .

[44]  Christopher Grey,et al.  Reinventing Business Schools: The Contribution of Critical Management Education , 2004 .

[45]  Jeffrey Pfeffer,et al.  The Business School Business: Some Lessons from the U.S. Experience , 2004 .

[46]  M. Seligman,et al.  Character Strengths and Virtues: A Handbook and Classification , 2004 .

[47]  Henry Mintzberg,et al.  Managers Not MBAs: A Hard Look at the Soft Practice of Managing and Management Development , 2004 .

[48]  J. D. Margolis,et al.  Social Issues and Management: Our Lost Cause Found , 2003 .

[49]  Fabrizio Ferraro,et al.  Economics Language and Assumptions: How Theories Can Become Self-Fulfilling , 2003 .

[50]  Kevin G. Corley,et al.  Being Good Versus Looking Good: Business School Rankings and the Circean Transformation From Substance to Image , 2002 .

[51]  Christina T. Fong,et al.  The End of Business Schools? Less Success Than Meets the Eye , 2002 .

[52]  Ken Starkey,et al.  Bridging the Relevance Gap: Aligning Stakeholders in the Future of Management Research , 2001 .

[53]  J. Boardman,et al.  The Oxford illustrated history of Greece and the Hellenistic world , 2001 .

[54]  Peter Mortimore,et al.  Learning: The Treasure Within , 1999 .

[55]  Lutz Preuss,et al.  Ethical Theory in German Business Ethics Research , 1999 .

[56]  Terry Roberts,et al.  The Power of Paideia Schools: Defining Lives Through Learning , 1998 .

[57]  Chiranjeev Kohli,et al.  Corporate identity: The role of mission statements , 1997 .

[58]  J. Delors Learning: The Treasure within. Report to UNESCO of the International Commission on Education for the twenty-first-Century, Paris UNESCO 1996 , 1996 .

[59]  S. Mintz Aristotelian virtue and business ethics education , 1996 .

[60]  P. Adler,et al.  Two Types of Bureaucracy: Enabling and Coercive , 1996 .

[61]  S. Ghoshal,et al.  Bad for Practice: A Critique of the Transaction Cost Theory , 1996 .

[62]  Alfonso Montuori,et al.  Limits to Anthropocentrism: Toward an Ecocentric Organization Paradigm? , 1995 .

[63]  T. Gladwin,et al.  Shifting Paradigms for Sustainable Development: Implications for Management Theory and Research , 1995 .

[64]  E. Craig,et al.  The Oxford dictionary of philosophy , 2008 .

[65]  D. Vogel Differing National Approaches to Business Ethics , 1993 .

[66]  Thomas Gilovich,et al.  Does Studying Economics Inhibit Cooperation , 1993 .

[67]  S. Ghoshal,et al.  A Learning Alliance between Business and Business Schools: Executive Education as a Platform for Partnership , 1992 .

[68]  C. Christensen,et al.  Education for Judgment: The Artistry of Discussion Leadership , 1991 .

[69]  John Mahoney Teaching Business Ethics in the UK, Europe and the USA: A Comparative Study , 1990 .

[70]  F. Furman Teaching business ethics: Questioning the assumptions, seeking new directions , 1990 .

[71]  R. E. Miles The Future of Business Education , 1985 .

[72]  R. Ackoff,et al.  Mechanisms, organisms and social systems , 1984 .

[73]  J. Barnes,et al.  The Complete Works of Aristotle the Revised Oxford Translation , 1984 .

[74]  M. Adler The Paideia proposal : an educational manifesto , 1982 .

[75]  Paul Cartledge Literacy in the Spartan oligarchy , 1978, The Journal of Hellenic Studies.

[76]  John W. Meyer,et al.  Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony , 1977, American Journal of Sociology.

[77]  M. C. Jensen,et al.  Harvard Business School; SSRN; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI); Harvard University - Accounting & Control Unit , 1976 .

[78]  P. Drucker Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices , 1974 .

[79]  W. Jaeger Early Christianity and Greek paideia , 1961 .

[80]  H. Marrou,et al.  A History Of Education In Antiquity , 1964 .

[81]  Gilbert Highet,et al.  Paideia: The Ideals of Greek Culture. Volume I: Archaic Greece. The Mind of Athens. Volume II: In Search of the Divine Centre. Volume III: The Conflict of Cultural Ideas in the Age of Plato , 1947 .

[82]  Pierre-Maxime Schuhl,et al.  12. Jaeger (Werner). Paideia : the Ideals of Greek Culture, translated from the german manuscript by Gilbert Highet ; vol. III : The conflict of cultural Ideals in the age of Plato. Oxford, 1945 , 1946 .

[83]  Werner Wilhelm Jaeger,et al.  Paideia: The Ideals of Greek Culture , 1939 .

[84]  E. G. Sihler Aristotle's Criticisms of the Spartan Government , 1893, The Classical Review.