Implicit Mental Models in Teaching Cases: An Empirical Study of Popular MBA Cases in the United States and China

Neng Liang (First Author), Jiaqian Wang (Participant Author)

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal

    Abstract

    To identify the possible mismatch between what MBA students are supposed to learn and what they are actually exposed to in the case methods, we analyzed the manifest and latent meanings of popular MBA teaching cases in the United States and China. Our findings suggest that despite repeated calls for a more holistic approach to management education, overemphasis on the rational framework persists. We identify five patterns common to both U.S. and Chinese cases; namely, rationalistic framework, undersocialized protagonist, strategy-driven organization, manager-as-analyst, and naïve and biased politics. We also discuss the likely causes for the biases and propose possible ways to develop better-balanced teaching cases.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)397-413
    JournalAcademy of Management Learning and Education
    Volume3
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2004

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    • SSCI

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