Publication | Closed Access
From Management as a Vocation to Management as a Scientific Activity: An Institutional Account of a Paradigm Shift
40
Citations
44
References
2002
Year
EducationOrganization ScienceOrganizational BehaviorScientific ActivityLearning OrganizationScience StudyHistory Of ScienceManagementResearch CultureWorld War IiStrategyStrategic ManagementManagement Education FieldParadigm ShiftHigher EducationFrom ManagementManagement EducationOrganizational CommunicationBusiness HistoryBusinessScience And Technology StudiesScience Policy
Using an institutional perspective, I analyze the historic circumstances surrounding the shift from a management as a vocation model to one that is scientifically based. I argue that prior to World War II, the management education field was fragmented but dominated by a vocational model in which specific trade practices and skills were taught. I trace how the institutional field shifted to embrace a model of management education that was tightly linked to empirical research. Using the Academy of Management Journal articles as a marker for this paradigm shift, I test hypotheses about the diffusion pattern of science-based concepts of management education.
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