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Business Education: Past, Present, and Future

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Presentation on theme: "Business Education: Past, Present, and Future"— Presentation transcript:

1 Business Education: Past, Present, and Future
The 19th PBFEAM Conference Business Education: Past, Present, and Future William T. Lin Professor of Finance, Tamkang University Director, Center for Greater China’s Financial Markets

2 Business Education in Taiwan Before
Students – small in number and preparation, but high in morale. Students’ education can catch economic development. Faculty – less qualified, but more in demand. Not many professors have extended business exposure. But they are needed much by students and industries. Job Market – demanding more than supplied. The economy’s momentum is built on the talent of business school graduates. Contributions – higher than expectation. So business education pays!

3 Business Education in Taiwan Now
Students – more in number than industries need, as many colleges emerge and business schools increase number of departments and student enrollments. And Faculty – more qualified than students need. Many more PhD graduates from domestic and foreign universities are recruited to business schools. Plus Job Market – less developed than needed. The economy does not offer strong potentials to business graduates! So Contributions – falling short of expectations. So pay is low!

4 What Should We Expect Uneven student qualities – due to diminishing numbers. There will be a big drop in 2015. Dissatisfied graduates – due to stagnant pay. Students will be less motivated! Unmotivated faculty – due to lower expectation from students. Teaching has to be reengineered. Impractical education – due to unmatched demand (job market) and supply (graduates). Business schools need to collaborated with industries to reshape the profile of business education.

5 What Can Be Done More Diverse Courses – to compensate for student quality. Business school curriculum has to be modified to adapt to Taiwan’s service-oriented economic model. More Practical Courses – to raise productivity and pay. Students need to be trained for practical skills before graduation. Fewer programs – to concentrate learning. Number of academic programs should go down for business schools to be more focused! Better Textbooks – to fit the education. Content should be more relevant to Taiwan’s business environment.


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