When it comes to improving student engagement, social sciences and humanities are at a disadvantage. Natural sciences, engineering, arts and computer science courses usually have time specifically timetabled for practical application of theory. In business-related subjects this is not traditionally the case. Case studies are usually the ‘go to’ for educators to bring a real world application to the learning and workshops around those case studies or impending coursework are a compliment. However they cannot compare to a student learning about air resistance then dropping a feather and a ball bearing to test the theory.
Getting students more engaged is a battle cry in all academic institutions. Educators know that if they are going to yield good results, they need to get their students more engaged with course content. The dynamic model of educational effectiveness (Creemers & Kyriakedes, 2006) cites a key characteristic of educators who are associated with high learning gains is managing time in class to maximise student engagement. Simply put, you have to manage time well if you are to increase the
Short of bending the laws of physics, educators cannot condense the application of business theories and concepts into a short enough time frame for students to have any meaningful engagement. The reason is that to test, for example, the simple theory that lowering the price of a product will increase the revenue a student would have to create a product, position it in a market and compete for sales volume amongst others trying to do the same. Even the best academic institutions in the world could not do this within the real world time constraints of a university course. The only way to create this level of engagement with the content of a business course is
This is not to say that Universities and educators are the cause of increasing disengagement amongst students, indeed social trends are producing student intakes with ever shorter attention spans and lower motivation. From smart-phones to Covid there is plenty working against improving engagement in class. However with these changes on the student side universities cannot expect to maintain their academic standings without making corrective decisions, let alone improve academic standings.
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