2010
DOI: 10.1177/1052562910368652
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Enhancing Deep Learning: Lessons From the Introduction of Learning Teams in Management Education in France

Abstract: Drawing from the reflective teaching and learning practices recommended in influential publications on learning styles, experiential learning, deep learning, and dialogue, the authors tested the concept of "learning teams" in the framework of a leadership program implemented for the first time in a top French management school (Grande Ecole). Qualitative feedback and personal observations on the implementation and outcomes of using this new learning paradigm reveal that although the steps from teaching to lear… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Over this time, he has moved from focusing on the dissemination of information and facilitation of the development of critical, analytical, and strategic thinking, to developing students' ability to engage in self-reflection, practical reflexivity, and self-observation to learn from, and through, their lived experience (Eriksen, 2012) in an attempt to strengthen their capacity to be effective relational leaders (Cunliffe & Eriksen, 2011). Consistent with management educators such as Borredon, Deffayet, Baker, and Kolb (2011) in their employment of learning teams to facilitate deep learning, and Innes' (2006) conceptualization of problem-based learning groups, he grew to understand learning and personal development to be a social, as well as a psychological, process and, thus, began to imagine his courses as communities of mutual learning and development. The social aspect of learning emphasizes that each student has a responsibility not only for his or her learning and growth but also a responsibility for-and ability to influence-fellow students' learning and growth (Mesle, 2008).…”
Section: Rationale For the Development And Employment Of The Peer Coamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over this time, he has moved from focusing on the dissemination of information and facilitation of the development of critical, analytical, and strategic thinking, to developing students' ability to engage in self-reflection, practical reflexivity, and self-observation to learn from, and through, their lived experience (Eriksen, 2012) in an attempt to strengthen their capacity to be effective relational leaders (Cunliffe & Eriksen, 2011). Consistent with management educators such as Borredon, Deffayet, Baker, and Kolb (2011) in their employment of learning teams to facilitate deep learning, and Innes' (2006) conceptualization of problem-based learning groups, he grew to understand learning and personal development to be a social, as well as a psychological, process and, thus, began to imagine his courses as communities of mutual learning and development. The social aspect of learning emphasizes that each student has a responsibility not only for his or her learning and growth but also a responsibility for-and ability to influence-fellow students' learning and growth (Mesle, 2008).…”
Section: Rationale For the Development And Employment Of The Peer Coamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Farley contends that the focus of these discipline areas is predominantly on ‘initiating the students into an academic field’ (Farley, 2005: 201). Approaches to learning within higher education have traditionally been based around lectures and research, and this type of academic environment usually shapes course curricula and syllabi that are conducive to knowledge transfer (Borredon et al., 2011; Rovio-Johansson, 2016). Assessment and feedback strategies are typically designed to measure the students’ level of knowledge acquisition and may unintentionally promote fixed mindsets about performance, rather than critical learning (Tesch, 2016).…”
Section: Bridging the Gap Between Higher Education And Christian Schoolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Experiential learning, a pedagogical paradigm dating from John Dewey's Experience and Education [2], has become an essential component of many business curricula, one intended to advance both student learning outcomes and professional readiness (e.g., McCarthy & McCarthy [3]; Devasagayam, Johns-Masten, & McCollum [4]; Ord [5]; Borredon, Deffayet, Baker, & Kolb [6]). Such experiential learning, as outlined by McCarthy and McCarthy, involves hands-on, practically focused learning experiences and project-oriented pedagogical techniques [3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%