Last month I wrote a piece titled “The MBA
Conundrum” which has subsequently appeared on more websites
than I have the time or patience to continually check up but most
of which are ironically disguises for cheap marketing operations
for purchasable “Online MBA’s” using genuine
articles on genuine MBA programmes to give the impression of authenticity.
Whether purchasing an online degree is technically fraud or
just a misleading con is currently the subject of intense debate,
but one thing is for certain: if it doesn’t defraud an
unsuspecting employer looking to hire on the basis of academic
qualification, it certainly defrauds the purchaser of the online
degree.
In the midst of the current workload of my MBA programme at
the BI in Oslo, there has been some considerable complaint from
some of my contemporaries that it is difficult to actually “learn” anything
when one is being required to read and write far beyond what
appears to be a rational schedule. To this criticism, the Harvard
educated teacher of our Strategy class responded last week that
although it seems as if there is no actual process of “learning” taking
place, there is actually far more than if courses were just structured
in a steady, leisurely format with plenty of time for analysis
and interpretation of every assignment. “I don’t
mean to be unsympathetic,” she announced to a belligerent
ochlocracy, “but this is the way it ‘goes in’ best”.
As much as I am reluctant to admit it right now, sitting up
at two in the morning between three unfinished assignments, there
is a degree of truth to what the Professor says, and it is the
same degree of truth that separates purchasing a title and actually
earning.
In another class last week, an interesting discussion concerning
the epistemology of Plato’s phrase “Know Thyself” came
up when I mentioned that the truer interpretation of the Greek, “γνωθι σεαυτον” was
probably “learning how to be oneself”. The subject
came up as a result of Jim Collins’ attribution of the
quote in his management bestseller “Good To Great”,
which charts the development of organisations that have consistently
returned successful results over a fifteen year period and have
at one point made a gigantic leap without using the dubious artificial
processes of stock manipulation or creative accounting.
What makes for a great degree is much the same as what makes
for a great organisation: the process of discovering oneself
within the structure of the current climate. Purchasing an online
degree is akin to bolstering the balance sheet of a company through
illegal means – such as Enron, Worldcom and numerous others
in the competitive market climate of the turn of the century:
while there may be some fantastic short-term benefits, the consequence
can only ultimately end in tears.
The confusion comes from people’s inability to distinguish
between success and experience. Success is what comes out of
experience, which is ultimately, what leading a full, complete
existence is about, whether one ends up with an MBA, a PhD, or
host of stories which make for fascinating telling. It is a sad
fact that a competitive society spawns such vagrant hoaxes in
the infrastructure, for, predictably enough, it is not the hoaxers
who end up missing out – they usually pay penance and end
up cashing in again at some point - but those who are hoaxed.
Read Daniel M. Harrison's blog at
http://danielmarkharrison.blogs.com.
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