TY - JOUR
T1 - Learning Through Disruptions
T2 - Equipping Students to Cope With Challenging Contexts Through a Field-based Course in Africa
AU - Blasco, Maribel
AU - Langevang, Thilde
AU - Jeppesen, Søren
N1 - Published online: 29 Jan 2022.
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - Students wishing to pursue careers in international business, notably in the developing world, must be prepared for complex, unpredictable, uncomfortable, and messy realities, and to collaborate with others very different from themselves. Mainstream business school learning environments are generally highly structured, cognitively oriented, predictable and hence not particularly conducive to orchestrating the disruptive experiences that can develop such abilities. In this article, we show how a field-based course in an East African country can support such learning. Based on data gathered from students over several iterations of the field course, we draw on experiential learning theory (ELT) in showing how the top-down orchestration of the course constituted a learning space that produced three main types of disruption to students’ taken-for-granted habits and assumptions, namely: intense sensory impressions and sensations, loss of predictability and control, and learning interdependency on others. Students had to “bottom-up” manage these disruptions while conducting a group assignment with local students, to a tight deadline, producing “dissonances”—feelings of discomfort—that triggered the ELT cycle. Our findings show that such disruptions can foster learning of the abovementioned abilities; and we suggest ways in which such learning spaces might be created closer to home than East Africa
AB - Students wishing to pursue careers in international business, notably in the developing world, must be prepared for complex, unpredictable, uncomfortable, and messy realities, and to collaborate with others very different from themselves. Mainstream business school learning environments are generally highly structured, cognitively oriented, predictable and hence not particularly conducive to orchestrating the disruptive experiences that can develop such abilities. In this article, we show how a field-based course in an East African country can support such learning. Based on data gathered from students over several iterations of the field course, we draw on experiential learning theory (ELT) in showing how the top-down orchestration of the course constituted a learning space that produced three main types of disruption to students’ taken-for-granted habits and assumptions, namely: intense sensory impressions and sensations, loss of predictability and control, and learning interdependency on others. Students had to “bottom-up” manage these disruptions while conducting a group assignment with local students, to a tight deadline, producing “dissonances”—feelings of discomfort—that triggered the ELT cycle. Our findings show that such disruptions can foster learning of the abovementioned abilities; and we suggest ways in which such learning spaces might be created closer to home than East Africa
KW - Africa
KW - Developing countries
KW - Experiential learning
KW - Field course
KW - Intercultural awareness/development
KW - Project-based learning
KW - Africa
KW - Developing countries
KW - Experiential learning
KW - Field course
KW - Intercultural awareness/development
KW - Project-based learning
U2 - 10.1177/10525629211072571
DO - 10.1177/10525629211072571
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1052-5629
VL - 46
SP - 853
EP - 887
JO - Journal of Management Education
JF - Journal of Management Education
IS - 5
ER -