This Changed My Life as a Professor
Steven Sonsino
Turn Your Expertise into Authority with a Great Book | DM AUTHORITY to Start | Business School Professor, Keynote Speaker, Bestselling Author and Business Publisher
I attended the International Teachers Program at NYU Stern exactly 25 years ago. It changed my life. So I wrote this for my column in the Financial Times when I got home. Also 25 years ago.
Turning a career Into a calling
Paul van Fenema summed it up well on day one. Being a business school academic was like being a five-legged sheep, he said. Paul, a doctoral student at Erasmus University in Rotterdam, was one of 30 academics around the world nominated by their business schools for a place on the prestigious International Teachers Programme. And his concept of a sheep with too many legs seemed an appropriate metaphor for the increasing complexity of our role as professors.
As well as becoming active and high-profile academic researchers, or conducting increasingly complex consulting projects with partners from industry, we are also expected to teach a wide range of business executives as well as full-time and part-time MBA students. Of all the challenges facing us, it was on this particular sheep’s leg – on the role and skills of academic teaching – that the ITP was to concentrate.
The ITP currently hosted by New York University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business was launched in 1973 by a consortium of nine international business schools. Its purpose is to work with outstanding business educators to increase participants’ awareness of their approaches to teaching and learning.
I was there earlier this year (1999-2000) with a colleague, Michael Dickmann. We met faculty from a range of institutions, including London Business School, Goizueta Business School (Atlanta), IMD (Lausanne), Insead (Fontainebleau), and NYU. Our fellow participants represented a cross section of disciplines and there was a wide range of teaching experience. There were several full professors on the programme, for example, and while walking up Fifth Avenue I asked one of them, Piero Tedeschi, from the Escola de Adminstra??o de Empresas de S?o Paulo, Brazil, why he had attended the programme.?
“We can all still learn, my friend,” he said, slapping me on the back. “And to be honest, I like to give myself a kick up the butt from time to time.”
From talking to colleagues who knew the programme in the past, it seems to me that the ITP grew out of a desire to coach faculty in the particular skills of teaching case studies, the staple diet of many MBA programmes. The ITP 1999-2000 programme focused a great deal of attention on this, allowing us to work with a number of experts in the case method.
Professor Kamran Kashani from IMD took us through his award-winning Sony Europe case, in which he used video clips and newspaper cuttings to bring the story up to date. Professor Kashani said that updating is significant, as it brings home to students the relevance of the lessons that can be gleaned from old cases.
The Art of Leading Discussions
In contrast to Professor Kashani's energetic, entertaining style of teaching, Professor Louis Barnes (better known as By) from Harvard Business School used case studies of only a page or two to explore the art of leading discussions. We sat in a circle and Professor Barnes asked simple questions, forcing us to articulate our thoughts and clarify our decisions about possible courses of action. The session reinforced my belief that the responsibility for a discussion is vested in the class, not necessarily in the professor. This collaborative, facilitative approach is very powerful, I believe, although it can be frustrating for class members who simply want The Answer.??
The ITP then helped us to explore participative and active learning techniques with Mel Silberman from Temple University, New Jersey, who demonstrated a range of techniques for breaking up discussions and actively engaging students in the learning process.
We also took part in short teaching sessions, which were videotaped and later reviewed privately with educational counsellors.
While these provided valuable time to reflect on our skills, it was the subsequent sessions we took with the Actors Institute off Broadway that stirred the greatest debate in the group and had the profoundest impact on me.
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The Power of Experiential Learning
Over two or three days we took part in a series of exercises, ostensibly based on aspects of creativity, that included communicating without words, making giant collages and constructing buildings from polystyrene shapes. Some of the group could not see the point of the exercises and suggested that the staff at the Institute could have helped us more effectively by focusing on working with an audience, voice projection, acting a role, or self-confidence.?
I took a different view. On reflection, I realized that I had immersed myself so whole-heartedly in the progression of exercises that I had relied less and less on words to understand the meaning and mood that the leaders of the exercises were trying to convey.
At a gut level I suddenly appreciated that in teaching my whole person was involved. I knew this intellectually, but this seemed a different insight. I already had a sense of “grounding” and of my body as a powerful visual aid, but this insight was something more.
At another level, my experience captured the idea that teaching was not a job, a set of specific behaviours that I bolted on. It was a vocation, a state of mind and a state of body. It occurred to me that in teaching I am not acting or pretending (although these are skills of teaching), I am being a teacher, I exist as a teacher.
This was such an “aha!” moment for me that it prompted a question. Can teaching always be this powerful? I concluded that it must be and it has forced me to ask how I can constantly create such an atmosphere of engagement. Is the key simply to create self-awareness in students?
I hope the ITP directors retain this element of experiential teaching and learning in the programme. I believe it offers an insight into the spirit of teaching.
On returning to the UK I tried to encapsulate for the Dean, why the ITP had been so valuable for me.
I believe that simply watching and working with world-class tutors and participants offered many practical techniques for improving teaching skills. But, more importantly, sharing the experience and beliefs of people who cared so deeply about teaching and learning helped me realize how much of a vocation we are engaged in.
I do not believe I will ever forget this lesson. And, turning again to the sheep, I can’t help feeling that I now know which leg is the most significant for me.
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Are teachers born or made?
It seems like 10 minutes, but it’s 25 years since I attended the International Teachers Programme at NYU Stern School of Business. The programme directors were Professor Chris Kelly, now at MIT Sloan School of Management, and Professor Tom Pugel, former Vice Dean of Executive Programs at NYU Stern – oh, and a ton of other things, the pair of them.
Sadly Professor Barnes of Harvard and Mel Silberman from Temple University are now no longer with us. But their work lives on through the teachers they inspired.
I owe them all and my fellow participants on the program a lifetime of gratitude.
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Here's a link to the International Teachers Program for my faculty colleagues. If you haven't been, go.