The Business School Business: Some Lessons from the U.S. Experience

Stanford GSB Research Paper No. 1855

32 Pages Posted: 30 Jun 2004

See all articles by Jeffrey Pfeffer

Jeffrey Pfeffer

Stanford Graduate School of Business

Christina Ting Fong

University of Washington - Michael G. Foster School of Business

Date Written: May 2004

Abstract

U.S. business schools dominate the business school landscape, particularly for the MBA degree. This fact has caused schools in other countries to imitate the U.S. schools as a model for business education. But U.S. business schools face a number of problems, many of them a result of offering a value proposition that primarily emphasizes the career-enhancing, salary-increasing aspects of business education as contrasted with the idea of organizational management as a profession to be pursued out of a sense of intrinsic interest or even service. We document some of the problems confronting U.S. business schools and show how many of these arise from a combination of a market-like orientation to education coupled with an absence of a professional ethos. In this tale, there are some lessons for educational organizations both in the U.S. and elsewhere that are interested in learning from the U.S. experience.

Keywords: Education

Suggested Citation

Pfeffer, Jeffrey and Fong, Christina T., The Business School Business: Some Lessons from the U.S. Experience (May 2004). Stanford GSB Research Paper No. 1855, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=560072 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.560072

Jeffrey Pfeffer (Contact Author)

Stanford Graduate School of Business ( email )

655 Knight Way
Stanford, CA 94305-5015
United States

Christina T. Fong

University of Washington - Michael G. Foster School of Business ( email )

Box 353200
Seattle, WA 98195-3200
United States

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