Welcome to my blog about cases and the case method, the people who create and use cases, and the ways in which the case method is changing to reflect diverse cultures and technologies.

18 January 2012

Barriers to developing schools adopting the case method

Our recent feature www.ecch.com/developingcountries on how emerging economies are discovering the benefits of using the case method in management education seems to be well timed. I also came across this blog from Professor Erhan Erkut exploring the barriers to adopting the case method for those coming to it fresh and with limited resources.  There are huge benefits to a school adopting the case method: local cases written by local authors immersed in the social and business cultures, research links with their local business communities, international exposure to other schools adopting the cases.   But we'd be doing ourselves a disservice if we weren't also aware of the barriers that can get in the way of a developing school, however committed, wishing to adopt the case method for the first time and professor Erkut's post does well to highlight an earlier research paper by Marina Apaydin.  Both illustrate a need for increased co-operation and support from western schools and academics.  We're trying to do our bit, too, and will be running a workshop dedicated to academics from emerging markets later this year - details to follow.  I'm also interested to see if the increasing use of mobile technologies acts as another barrier or actually eases entry into the use of cases, given the huge penetration into emerging markets.  But that's something for my next post, I think.


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