Traditional approaches to teaching in higher education typically fail to prepare students with many of the skills they need to become the knowledge workers employers expect them to be as graduates. Furthermore, successful students expect that the strategies they cultivated during their academic career will transfer to their professional career, only to be disappointed and frustrated when the traditional modes of student learning fail to bring them comparable levels of success. It is the position of this article that those teaching in higher education have an obligation to assist students in developing their knowledge, skills, and abilities, while also cultivating appropriate mindsets that will allow them to discover new approaches to enduring organizational challenges and develop novel solutions to tomorrow's problems. Action learning projects, where students work collaboratively to address a client's real-world organizational challenge through their concurrent learning and application of course content, offer one strategy particularly well suited to help educators fulfill this educational goal. After a brief history of action learning, the six elements of the Marquardt Model are discussed, in terms of both their critical features and the ways in which they support learning innovation. The next section describes the use of action learning cycles as the process by which students engage in the project and develop learning strategies accomplish the client's goal. The final section of the paper describes common constraints that students and instructors engaged in action learning projects encounter.
Article navigation
1 September 2012
Research Article|
September 01 2012
Innovative Learning/Learning Innovation: Using Action Learning Projects to Develop Students' Industry Mindset Available to Purchase
Christy Brazee;
Christy Brazee
1
Department of Communication Center for New Learning, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Search for other works by this author on:
Denver Lopp
Denver Lopp
2
Department of Aviation Technology, Purdue University
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1757-2231
Print ISSN: 1757-2223
International Journal of Innovation Science (2012) 4 (3): 155–172.
Citation
Brazee C, Lopp D (2012), "Innovative Learning/Learning Innovation: Using Action Learning Projects to Develop Students' Industry Mindset". International Journal of Innovation Science, Vol. 4 No. 3 pp. 155–172, doi: https://doi.org/10.1260/1757-2223.4.3.155
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Book Review: Entrepreneurship and Innovation: Global Insights from 24 Leaders. (2010). (J.C. Barrood, ed.)
International Journal of Innovation Science (September,2011)
The fuzziness of mindsets: Divergent conceptualizations and characterizations of mindset theory and praxis
International Journal of Organizational Analysis (September,2016)
Creating a growth mindset
Strategic HR Review (August,2017)
Why mindset matters: growth mindset as a driver of mentoring engagement in retail organizations
Development and Learning in Organizations: An International Journal (June,2026)
Apprehending mindsets in employee development
Human Resource Management International Digest (May,2017)
Related Chapters
Defining the “Mindset” in Global Mindset: Modeling the Dualities of Global Leadership
Advances in Global Leadership
Leading With A Global Mindset
Navigating Complexities in Leadership: Moving Toward Critical Hope
Global Mindset: A Review and Proposed Extensions
The Global Mindset
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
