Newswise — A four-person team that includes two faculty members at  The University of Alabama’s Culverhouse College of Commerce has had an  article accepted for publication later this year that will shed some  light on the thorny issue of the relevance and value of the research  activities of business school faculty.
The paper, “Does Business  School Research add Economic Value for Students?” was accepted late last  year by a top business journal, Academy of Management Learning and  Education, (AMLE) published by the Academy of Management. AMLE's Thomson  Reuters Impact Factor is 2.889, ranking it eighth out of the 89 major  management journals covered by Thomson Reuters.
The paper’s  authors are Paul L. Drnevich, assistant professor of strategic  management, and Craig E. Armstrong, assistant professor of  entrepreneurship, both in the management and marketing department at The  University of Alabama, and Jonathan P. O’Brien, Lally School of  Management and Technology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and T.  Russell Crook, College of Business Administration at the University of  Tennessee.
The bottom line: Faculty research productivity means a  larger post-graduate paycheck for graduate students, but teaching is  important too and faculty shouldn’t be excessively pre-occupied with  research.
“The scholarly research conducted by business school  faculty has long been the subject of intense criticism for lacking  relevance and value to practice,” the authors say in the article’s  abstract. “In contrast, we theorize that such research is relevant and  valuable in that it contributes to what is arguably the most critical  metric of relevance for B-school students: the economic value they  accrue from their education. We investigate this counter argument on a  sample of 658 business schools over an eight-year period. We find that  research adds significant value in that it can potentially enhance  student salaries by an average of $24,000 per year. However, we also  observe that “excessive” research activity can lead to diminishing or  even negative returns for students, and a research focus solely on elite  journals might rob students of the benefits of exposure to a broader  array of new ideas.”
Misconceptions over the lack of relevance and  value to practice of business school research have become a thorny  enough issue to prompt some universities to de-emphasize or discontinue  the research focused tenure process and/or create faculty tracks that  focus solely on teaching. These “clinical” professors are hired based on  their professional experience and promoted primarily on their teaching  and service performance, with a minimum focus on research and/or a touch  of grant-raising. Such dual tracks allow “research” faculty to focus on  their areas of expertise while non-research faculty spend more time in  the classroom, but can short change the student if they take research  faculty out of the classroom. Consistent with the study, students  benefit the most from faculty who actively create new knowledge (through  research and/or practice) and make it available to students in the  classroom.
The study focused on 658 major business schools  world-wide with a graduate (MBA) program, including several universities  in the state of Alabama. The study covered an eight-year time span,  using advanced statistical techniques to rule out alternative  explanations for the impact of faculty research productivity on student  salaries.
“One of our main goals at The Culverhouse College of  Commerce is to combine research and teaching to provide the best  education experience possible,” said J. Barry Mason, dean of the  business school. “We are constantly striving to recruit and retain top  researchers, but we are also always looking for top teachers as well.  Sometimes the answer can be found though adjunct faculty and people who  bring several years of real world experience to the classroom.”
The  paper notes that “faculty who are actively engaged in research can  likely provide value for their students by transferring to them new  knowledge gleaned from their own research.  In addition, even if an  individual faculty member’s own research has little relevance to  practice, being actively engaged in research helps faculty keep abreast  of, and involved with, ‘cutting edge’ knowledge developments in the  field.”
Source: http://newscri.be/link/1074901 
MBA graduates are agents for change!!
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