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Introducing organisational behaviour: issues in course design

Bogdan Costea (Bogdan Costea is a Lecturer in the Department of Behaviour in Organisations, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK.)
Norman Crump (Norman Crump is a Lecturers in the Department of Behaviour in Organisations, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK.)

Education + Training

ISSN: 0040-0912

Article publication date: 1 December 1999

4461

Abstract

This paper explores some of the theoretical issues involved in the process of designing introductory undergraduate courses in OB (organisational behaviour). The basis of reflection for this study is the authors’ recent experience at Lancaster University. This paper is a commentary on the conceptual bases underpinning our views. We take a hermeneutic and phenomenological perspective which results in a design that works as a heuristic device meant to circumvent the limitations of traditional approaches – especially the tensions between theory and its practical relevance in business education, and the limited range of models presented as possible recipes for contingencies facing managers in modern organisations.

Keywords

Citation

Costea, B. and Crump, N. (1999), "Introducing organisational behaviour: issues in course design", Education + Training, Vol. 41 No. 9, pp. 403-415. https://doi.org/10.1108/00400919910305513

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1999, MCB UP Limited

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