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Journal ArticleDOI

The Growing Split Between Management Theory and Practice.

James S. Hekimian
- Vol. 1969, Iss: 1, pp 115-116
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TLDR
A business school is a long-run resource of this community in that its major responsibility is to provide a good education to the students of the community as mentioned in this paper, which is a very important and rather unique tie between business schools and the business community.
Abstract
There exists a very important and rather unique tie between business schools and the business community. A business school is a long-run resource of this community in that its major responsibility ...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Neither “Food Chain” nor “Translation Problem”? The Disregard of Academic Research in Best-Selling Business Books

TL;DR: This article found no evidence to suggest a research food chain through these books, and the pattern of citations did not suggest a translation problem; if anything, it suggests gratuitous citation of selected articles that frequently follow little or no discernible logic, suggesting that the underlying problem may be one of research methods and interpretation that are common to the published literature in our discipline.
Journal ArticleDOI

Promotions in the Corporate World: Comparing the Perspectives of University Professors, MBA Students, and Corporate Managers

TL;DR: This paper investigated the extent to which 102 managers, 111 MBA students, and 43 professors have similar perspectives regarding the importance of four factors in attaining promotions, and found that managers and professors did not significantly differ in their views.

Tarihsel Bir Bakışla Bilim-Yönetim Birlikteliği

TL;DR: In this paper, Doga bilimci yonelim, ABD’de hala egemen olmakla birlikte, bir yandan da yoneticiler icin ise yarar olana yeterince egilmedigi ileri surulmektedir.
Journal ArticleDOI

Promotions In The Corporate World: Comparing The Perceptions of University Professors, MBA Students, and Corporate Managers.

TL;DR: This article investigated agreement among managers, MBA students, and professors regarding the importance of four factors used in promotion decisions, and found that MBA students agreed with managers, but not with professors.
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