Case learning is difficult both for teacher and student, but highly rewarding provided you give it proper attention. Five videos on how to prepare for and learn from cases.
Professor Hanno Roberts and Associate professor Espen Andersen at BI Norwegian School of Management have made a series of five videos on case learning and preparation, originally for students at the BI/Fudan MBA program.
This teaching method is difficult both for teacher and student, but highly rewarding provided you give it proper attention - which means effective preparation.
Hanno Roberts and Espen Andersen talk about the goal of case teaching, how students can prepare individually, how to prepare as a group, how to go through the case discussion in the classroom, and then we sum up with some strategies for how to retain what you have learned.
The videos are there, free for all to use - and hopefully, students will watch them carefully, and the result will be better case teaching, more learning, and an even more enjoyable experience teaching.
Here is a list of the five videos, along with places you can watch them:
Video 1/5: Overview - the why and how of cases (Youtube|Vimeo)
The first video deals with why we use case studies in teaching, and how to think about them: As examples and exercises designed to help you behave like a manager with real managerial problems to deal with. We deal with some misconceptions (such as students thinking that there is a "correct answer" to a case) and describe the importance of laying out a "line of argument" - the important issue being not what answer you end up with, but how you got there.
Video 2/5: Individual preparation (Youtube)
The second video details how to prepare, as an individual, for a case class. We describe how to read a case carefully, several times, each time with a different purpose: First for overview, second for detail, third for results.
Video 3/5: Group preparation (YoutubeA/YoutubeB|Vimeo)
In the third video, we talk about how to prepare as a group, since both individually and group oriented case classes should include some group preparation. We underscore the need to plan the work up front, treating the group as a mini-organization, establishing rules and roles for the people involved and making sure that everyone contributes with what they do best - but also that everyone does everything, and everyone should be able to present and argue for the results. We also talk about group issues and how to deal with them.
(the Youtube version is split in two because Youtube does not allow videos over 10 minutes in length.)
Video 4/5: In the classroom - discussion and participation (Youtube)
Here we talk about how a case class progresses, with a beginning (various ways to open the discussion), a middle (with rules for how to comment and the importance of letting the discussion flow), and an end (though not always a firm conclusion.)
Video 5/5: What do we learn from case studies? (Youtube)
Here we discuss what to take away from a case class - what did you learn? You learn from individual cases, but also by going through many - and then recognizing situations from cases when you run into situations in your own work as a manager.
Feedback: Feel free to send your comments and questions regarding this article by E-mail to forskning@bi.no
Text: Espen Andersen, Department of Strategy and Logistics at BI Norwegian School of Management.