| What is XB? | ||
| Briefly |
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| XB | A
classroom-as-organization that engages
participants with the skills, attitudes, and knowledge of management. |
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Other ways of teaching Management and Organizational Behavior
approaches have benefits and drawbacks.
Lectures present theory to those who can stay awake. Games keep you awake but
oversimplify reality. Cases present realistic dilemmas, but you imagine
decisions that you couldn't really execute. Simulations draw you in, but
you have to play a pretend role and then suspend the simulation for
theoretical discussion. Folding paper airplanes proves easier than
learning. Nor does
emotional involvement in a simulation replicate real organizational
experience. How do you feel
about encounter groups? You learn a lot about yourself through deep emotional
experience. Maybe too deep! Besides, the
"unstructured" group environment won't teach you much about
complex organizations. XB skims the cream and dumps the whey of these approaches. The teacher – "Senior
Manager" - creates an organization with a mission: for participants
to teach each other, learn organizational behavior, and practice
management. The XB Manual (each participant receives one) contains
instructions for every task. These
programmed tasks are divided, creating departments (and the opportunity
to talk about departmentalization). The Senior Manager delegates
responsibility for execution to the participants and then sits back to
let the participants run the organization. It doesn't work. It doesn't work for the same reasons that real-world organizations
don’t work. People don't do what other participants ask them to do;
they don't read, for example. Participants
experience a modicum of the chaotic reality whose chill presence
disturbs the sleep of every entrepreneur.
They feel the weight of their responsibility for leading other
participants to achieve their assigned objectives, and they recognize a
fear that has shaped organizations since the dawn of history but whose
overhead cost organizations can no longer afford in the age of
information, fear of peers. They
appeal to the Senior Manager (The Leviathan!) to assume control. The Senior Manager steadfastly
delegates. It doesn't work. But when XB doesn't work, it does work. With learning as our mission,
we observe whatever happens as a case from the literature and then do
what management theory tells us to do.
Learning from reading, coaching, and making mistakes, each
department learns to run its own aspect of the organization and sees how
its function ties in to the whole. Participants learn how to observe with discipline, to think before acting, to take responsibility, and to use personal commitment to get others to accomplish objectives. XB becomes an organization of real people doing real work. Description of XB for Professors of Management and Organizational Behavior |
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