The Business of Business Schools: International, Innovative, Involved, Impact #ABS13
25 Nov 2013
What businesses will your business school be in five years from now?
Business Schools are in a number of businesses - teaching students, teaching management, research, professional education, business engagement, international markets, teaching innovation, local and regional business development and many more. Many of these are critical not only to the success of the business school but often a wider university.
The conference will address full range of challenges facing Business Schools and look at how the role of business schools and management education might change over the coming years.
A strategy and operations management event for the leaders and managers of business schools.
A challenging event for the teaching and research leaders in business education.
A thought provoking conference for business school leaders and stakeholders facing a future of fast moving change.
Business Schools are complex education, management, training, and research centers with a strong connection locally regionally and internationally, facing some of the greatest pressures of change in post school education.
What businesses are business schools in? It is clear from government reports, ABS reports, new initiatives and new money that business schools need to have the ability to function at different levels, with different products in different management and education markets at home and abroad. But can many sustain that range or is it time to specialise, regionalise, internationalise?
And business schools are not going to get the market to themselves. Matched funding will have to be won; new players are entering the market, such as management consultancies and education publishers.
This event will hear presentations and discussion on the full range of forces pressing on business schools to provide an intense snapshot for business school planning and strategy.
Programme
Day 1 - 25 Nov 2013
09:50
Robin Lustig, Award-winning journalist and presenter
Introduction from Conference Chair
What's on now:
09:55
Constantin Cotzias,Chairman, Bloomberg London and Head of Government Relations, Strategy and Business Development, Bloomberg UK
Professor G “Anand” Anandalingam, Dean, Business School, Imperial College London;
Professor Nora Colton, Dean, Royal Docks Business School;
Professor Stephen Brammer, Professor of Strategy and Director of Faculty, Birmingham Business School
Where are Business School markets going?International demand discussion
Emma Leech, Director of Marketing, Communications and Recruitment, The University of Nottingham;
Dr Jo Beall, Director of Education and Society, British Council.
What are the two biggest external challenges to business schools that are not in our hands to change and the two biggest challenges internally that are in our hand to change?;
Vote to find the top two challenges. Chaired by Professor Kai Peters, Chief Executive, Ashridge Business School
Tim Stewart, Dean of BPP Business School, BPP University;
Neil Selby, Director, Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business, London;
Della Bradshaw, Education Editor, FT.
What and how should we teach:Delivering Engaged Curriculum in Business and Management Education
Dr Jane Harrington, Pro-Vice Chancellor and Executive Dean, Faculty of Business & Law, University of the West of England;
Petra Wilton, Director of Strategy and External Affairs, Chartered Management Institute;
Dr Elizabeth Halford, Head of Research, Information and Enquiry, Quality Assurance Agency.
To What Question do Business Schools Provide an Answer?Discussion with Business School panel:
Ron Livingstone, Head of Business School, University of the West of Scotland;
Professor Simon Collinson, Dean, Birmingham Business School;
Professor Zoe Radnor, Professor of Service Operations Management, Loughborough School of Business and Economics.
To What Question do Business Schools Provide an Answer?Open Discussion
Ron Livingstone, Head of Business School, University of the West of Scotland;
Professor Simon Collinson, Dean, Birmingham Business School;
Professor Zoe Radnor, Professor of Service Operations Management, Loughborough School of Business and Economics.
Professor Angus Laing, Chair, Association of Business Schools;
Jerry Forrester, Dean, University of Hertfordshire;
Professor Mark Hart, Professor of Small Business and Entrepreneurship, Aston Business School;
Robert Beattie, Executive Director, Association of Business Schools.