The Importance of Basic, Applied Research

Journal of Market-Focused Management - Tập 2 - Trang 303-308 - 1998
William W. Cooper1, Leigh McAlister2
1Management Science and Information Systems Department, CBA 4.202, Graduate School of Business, The University of Texas at Austin, USA
2Department of Marketing, CBA 7.202, Graduate School of Business, University of Texas, Austin

Tóm tắt

Among many audiences there is a general sense that universitybusiness education is failing to meet the needs of the marketplace.Moore and Diamond (1996) suggest that the pressure to respondto the marketplace has increased in recent years because of thelow entry barriers for new education vehicles, the high exitbarriers for existing education institutions, and the proliferationof alternative ways to deliver university level education inbusiness.We illustrate this pressure by noting that non-conventional,distance learning educational opportunities increased by 800%between 1993 and 1997. We suggest business schools in researchuniversities can compete effectively if we focus on researchthat is both basic (influencing further knowledge development)and applied (problem driven), and if we differentiate our offeringby incorporating the findings of our basic, applied researchinto our curriculum.

Tài liệu tham khảo

American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (1996), AACSB Faculty Leadership Task Force Report, http://www.aacsb.edu/tf2.html. Cooper, William W. (1974), “Understanding, Prediction and Control–and Other Matters for Scientific Research,” SUPALUM, a publication of Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Urban & Public Affairs. Gubernick, Lisa, and Ashlea Ebeling (1997), “I Got My Degree Through E-Mail,” Forbes, June 16, pp. 84–92. Moore, M. R., and M. A. Diamond (1996), The Challenge of Change in Business Education, New York: Ernst & Young Foundation. OR/MS Today, “Survey of INFORMS Members,” June, 1997.