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Operations management teaching

Operations management teaching
Operations management teaching
This paper explores the relevance to industry's needs of operations management (OM) teaching in higher education, by researching the content of OM modules delivered by UK academics and comparing the results of this research with the views of business practitioners having had first-hand experience of OM teaching on MBA programmes. To determine whether a gap exists in terms of the importance placed on key content areas, the views of OM academics and practitioners were empirically tested using an online survey instrument. The findings indicate that although there is a broad degree of cohesion among academics relating to module content there are gaps between academics and practitioners in terms of the relative importance of key content areas. Such differences are most evident with regard to supply chain management, capacity management, inventory control and lean production tools and techniques. In this regard, the results provide a backdrop for the development of this important subject discipline to ensure that what is taught in the lecture theatre is valued in the business environment.
0950-4222
375-387
Doran, Desmond
a032c545-e8c9-4bd3-a68a-0f96d506eaaa
Hill, Alex
9a64b138-7d33-4c10-b745-84ac60feb752
Brown, Steve
b4aaf64c-2032-4715-a9ea-ef5e604b5de1
Aktas, Emel
3dfe90f1-07d9-487f-b0cd-86bf8aad3ee7
Kuula, Markku
826ae94e-5d8e-44fa-9dc2-728ebd100497
Doran, Desmond
a032c545-e8c9-4bd3-a68a-0f96d506eaaa
Hill, Alex
9a64b138-7d33-4c10-b745-84ac60feb752
Brown, Steve
b4aaf64c-2032-4715-a9ea-ef5e604b5de1
Aktas, Emel
3dfe90f1-07d9-487f-b0cd-86bf8aad3ee7
Kuula, Markku
826ae94e-5d8e-44fa-9dc2-728ebd100497

Doran, Desmond, Hill, Alex, Brown, Steve, Aktas, Emel and Kuula, Markku (2013) Operations management teaching. Industry and Higher Education, 27 (5), 375-387. (doi:10.5367/ihe.2013.0172).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper explores the relevance to industry's needs of operations management (OM) teaching in higher education, by researching the content of OM modules delivered by UK academics and comparing the results of this research with the views of business practitioners having had first-hand experience of OM teaching on MBA programmes. To determine whether a gap exists in terms of the importance placed on key content areas, the views of OM academics and practitioners were empirically tested using an online survey instrument. The findings indicate that although there is a broad degree of cohesion among academics relating to module content there are gaps between academics and practitioners in terms of the relative importance of key content areas. Such differences are most evident with regard to supply chain management, capacity management, inventory control and lean production tools and techniques. In this regard, the results provide a backdrop for the development of this important subject discipline to ensure that what is taught in the lecture theatre is valued in the business environment.

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More information

Published date: 1 October 2013
Organisations: Decision Analytics & Risk

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 408582
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/408582
ISSN: 0950-4222
PURE UUID: 5a6e0e4f-cbc1-494c-837a-27c08b94eff3

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Date deposited: 24 May 2017 04:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 14:06

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Contributors

Author: Desmond Doran
Author: Alex Hill
Author: Steve Brown
Author: Emel Aktas
Author: Markku Kuula

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