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My Philosophy of Education/Training
"Good, the more communicated, the more abundant grows."
--- John Milton, English Writer

I sometimes shock and awe OB students on the first day of classes with a surprise classroom style.
"Carpe Diem! (Sieze the Day!)"
I love to teach university students! Early in my career, I received a number
of job offers to become a full time external corporate consultant and/or company
executive. Although financially lucrative, I felt these opportunities would
clearly interfere with my calling in lifeto engage in rich learning exchanges
with thinking students who seek a better world. So Ive been based here at BYU
ever since, but also been able every few years to enjoy occasional visiting
professorships in other parts of the world: Michigan, Hawaii, Switzerland and
Brazil.
Courses I teach tend to emphasize both conceptual material (theory) and practical, hands-on application. We use a combination of classroom methods including cases, lectures, experimental exercises, video clips, and small group work. The use of this mixed methodology builds on the premise that learning comes not only from reading/writing, but also from interaction, debate and dialogue.
At the outset of each semester, I try to convey to students that I hope to enable them to see alternatives, to engage in divergent thinking, not convergent scholarship. As such, I will be pushing other views than the typical BYU conservative, Republican-dominated view. Instead, I hope to open up other perspectives. My personal values are not left-wing or on the right. Rather, Im allied vertically with those at the bottom of the pyramid, against those at the top. My lot is cast with the have-nots, the disenfranchised, the poor, peasants, minorities, labor, women, blue collar workers, etc.those who are marginalized in society. Thus, my role at times is to be a provocateur.
This may offend some students who see themselves as future candidates for the top of the pyramid. Typical BYU students are often exposed to 30-60 hours, or more, of university courses that emphasize top-down views, masquerading as neutral, objective theories. But, in fact, they are heavily biased. Many students begin to believe that the dominant opinion is the only valid idea. I prefer to enlarge students understanding by suggesting that other perspectives are also valid, in fact, critically needed in todays world. University knowledge is to be critically analyzed, not canonized. A victim of the Nazi concentration camp makes the view from below clear:
It is an experience of incomparable value to have learned to
see the great events of the history of the world from beneath; from the viewpoint
of the useless, the suspect, the powerless, the oppressed, the despisedin a
word, from the viewpoint of those who suffer. --- Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Every course I teach attempts to raise ones consciousness about assumptions
and values. I also emphasize service learning and the building of high-ethics
organizations. My hope is that through greater awareness and the development
of new conceptual frameworks, students will be better equipped to improve human
society, whatever their chosen occupation may be. As we jointly create a genuine
learning organization, the classroom becomes an incubator for trying new things,
thinking differently, and generating innovative paradigms.
The sections that follow consist of various course syllabi, feedback from
students, both anonymous and some that are identifiable, service learning experiences,
my articles on education and university service, as well as other links to education
and learning.
Academic
Affiliations
Academy of Management
American Association for the Advancement
of Science
American Psychological Association
American Sociological Association
Society for the Psychological Study of
Social Issues
American Association of University Professors
Industrial Relations Research Association
Union of Concerned Scientists
Society for the Study of Social Problems
Association for Workplace Democracy
International Industrial Relations Association
The Inter-American Society of Psychology
Industrial Cooperative Association
Delaware Valley Federation for Economic Democracy
International Association for the Economics
of Self-Management
International Sociological Association
Latin American Council on Self-Management
International Communal Studies Association
Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics
International Association of Business
and Society
Microcredit Summit
Credit with Learning Exchange
Editorial
Service
Manuscript reviewer for the following:
Journal of Management Education
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
Utopian Studies
Journal of International and Area Studies
Cornell University Press
Prentice Hall Publishing Co.
Addison Wesley Co.
Pearson Press
Editorial
Board
Co-editor, Journal
of Microfinance
SAM Advanced Management Journal, Board of Editors
Co-editor of a special issue of Policy Studies Journal
University Teaching
Courses:
Graduate level coursesOrganizational Development
and Change, International Business, Spirituality in the Workplace, Power and
Politics in Organizations, Diversity and Management, Leadership Philosophy and
Style, MBA Organizational Behavior, Third World Development, Consulting Processes,
MBA Ethics, Business and Society, Industrial Democracy, Social Entrepreneurship,
Civil Society.
Undergraduate level coursesIntroductory
Organizational Behavior, International Management, Public Management and Ethics,
Democratic Management, Honors, Leadership and Global Change Agentry, TQM and
Manufacturing Productivity, Religious Values and Economics, Small Business Start-up
Skills.
Educational Vision/Mission:
- To build a sustainable student movement for
alleviating global poverty through a type of Mormon Peace Corps.
- To aid students in the quest for leadership
and change skills in organizational life.
- To help students achieve congruence between
good organizational theory and gospel principles and values.
- To inspire students with a greater vision
of how they can not only canonize what is known, but learn to
analyze it and to explore what is not known, thereby solving some of humanitys
most serious problems.
- To empower students so that collectively
we can change the world.
Current and Recent Projects:
All good things take time to develop. ---Lewis Mumford, Social Philosopher
- Helped design and launch the Academy for
Creating Enterprise (ACE), training program to empower returned native missionaries
in Cebu, the Philippines, with business skills and microcredit loans to
help them create a better future.
- Launched a new NGO, H.E.L.P. International,
to assist victims of Hurricane Mitch, helping to raise $116,000 and creating
47 new village banks for some 800 poor women benefiting 4,000 people. It
has now been restructured as H.E.L.P. International and has sponsored programs
not only in Honduras,
but in El Salvador, Peru, Venezuela, Bolivia, Guatemala, and Brazil (raising over $600,000).
- Assisted with board development, banquet/auctions
of the Ouelessebougou-Utah Alliance in Salt Lake City and Provo, raising some $300,000 annually for development
projects in Mali, West Africa.
- Founded and organized the International Development
Network (IDN) leading to our first Symposium held at BYU, April
1, 1999 (with some 25 charity groups) and others since.
- Helped LDS leaders in Zimbabwe
design a charitable program to prevent and/or alleviate the devastating African
tragedy of HIV-AIDS, providing consulting, student interns, and evaluation
of this organization, known as Raising the Generation.
- Assisted a group of LDS executives create
the Native American Mentoring Enterprise, (NAME), arranging for a group of
my graduate students to help the founders prepare an organizational structure
and training materials to teach young Navajos leadership and life skills.
- Supervised an in-depth assessment of an LDS-related
NGO, Liahona Economic Development Foundation (LEDF) in Nigeria carried out by a team of 3 students, after which
we began to raise funds in Utah for microlending in West Africa.
- Mentored BYU students to do a project aiding
the Goshute Tribe near the Navada-Utah border, performing a feasibility study
for setting up a microcredit program through the Utah Microenterprise Loan
Fund.
- Oversaw two dozen students in the Fiji Distance
Learning Program, operated by graduate students and undergraduates serving
in the South Pacific. This was done in cooperation with the Churchs
CES administration, offering courses to young Fijian adults and returned missionaries
so that with OB, management
and computer skills, they will qualify for better careers and a positive future.
- Created a partnership between former Mexican
mission presidents and my BYU students who traveled to Mexico to help create Cumorah University,
consisting of several educational institutions to train returned native missionaries
so they may enjoy a higher quality of life. This effort has now expanded to
include the creation of the Hispanic University
for Latinos in Utah.
- In contrast to the above long-term sustainable
programs, I also sponsored numerous other short-term student service projects
including assisting the First Hope Orphanage in Nepal, collecting eye-wear
for rural Mexicans, Utah Valley March of Dimes, Starlight UK, the Utah Valley
Food and Care Coalition, the Rose Foundation Schools in Guatemala, helping
an orphanage in Cabo Verde, Mexico, aiding the Alma Success Academy in Guatemala,
establishing a school in Northern Honduras, and so forth.
- Some two dozen BYU students, faculty and
staff launched a microenterprise assessment, training and development program,
SOAR China, in South and Western Regions of the Peoples
Republic
of China.
- My students and I have created five documentary
videos on our projects in Latin America,
as well as nine web sites, six newsletters, and several power point presentations
on programs in Mali, Nigeria, Honduras, Peru, El Salvador,
Venezuela,
Cumorah University in Mexico, Thailand, China, Ethiopia, Ivory Coast,
Uganda,
Nicaragua,
and Western Samoa.
- Three colleagues and I formed a new nonprofit
foundation, Action Against Poverty, to facilitate the start-up and growth
of dozens of NGOs doing Third World
relief, education, healthcare, and economic development. We also assisted
in building the Timpanogos Community Network and the Provo Economic Coalition
with local activist groups working to foster community social change through
companies, government agencies, banks, and service agencies.
Education is not filling a bucket, but lighting a fire. ---William
Butler Yeats
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