Residential Fieldtrips: Adding Value to Marketing Education and Student Experiences
Fieldtrips are important non-formal way of teaching and learning different fields. Marketing courses are important as today businesses are growing and exploring international markets. At present marketing is not just limited to advertisements in local newspapers and television channel instead different aspects of marketing and different sources like internet, social media marketing and word of mouth have emerged. Experiential learning is useful for many fields including marketing. Present paper is a discussion on the benefits of residential field trips for marketing students. The paper is based on the experiences and views of the 32 marketing students from studying in the marketing course at Middlesex University in UK who visited Edinberg, Scotland and attended many seminars and workshop there on marketing. The results of the study reflect that field trip was beneficial for students not only in understanding the marketing concepts but also improving their relationship with other students as well as faculty members.
Table of Contents
Abstract 2
Residential fieldtrips: adding Value to marketing education and student experiences 4
Introduction 4
Purpose of the research 4
Literature Review 5
Residential Education 5
Methodology 7
Results and Findings 7
Practical/real life insights (if any) that the student gained 9
The impact of residential experience on relationships and interaction with fellow students and members of faculty? 10
Expectations and experiences from the trip 10
How will I apply these practical learning and knowledge in class ? 11
What would I have done differently in organizing a residential event? 11
References 13
Residential fieldtrips: adding Value to marketing education and student experiences
Introduction
The educational system in the UK has been described as being in an "age of accountability," which has had implications that have influenced most areas of education. Standards-based education has been one of the changes. This situation may be forcing many non-formal education providers to change the way that they conduct program evaluations.
Purpose of the research
In the 21st century society will not continue to evolve and keep up with the ever-changing planet without an innovative and successful system of higher education (Marchese, 1997). It is incumbent upon colleges and universities to serve society by creating the best possible education for the leaders of tomorrow. For all the intricacies of higher education, none of them matter without the two elements that must be present: students and faculty. Without the success of both of these stakeholder segments, nothing else in higher education really matters. According to Hersh (1999), one way that many colleges and universities are working to create a mutually successful environment for students and faculty is the creation or reemergence of residential colleges.
Purpose of the research was to know whether residential fieldtrips are valuable or useful for students studying marketing and what is the impact of these trips on their relationships with fellow students and faculty members.
Literature Review
Residential Education
There is a long history of the residential college system as an important aspect of higher education in America and abroad. The first reported intentional residential college was founded at Merton College of Oxford University in 1264 (Ryan, 1992), over 700 years ago. The buildings of Merton were grouped around a chapel, which was a cornerstone of much of higher education at the time. The residential college was designed to move beyond the normal boundaries of teaching and education of the university and focus on the many aspects of being an educated person. Faculty lived with the students and helped shape them in terms of sobriety, chastity, and worship (Ryan, 1992). In other words, this was the beginning of the movement to educate a student as a whole person and not just as a teacher, clergy, or whatever field of vocation was being sought. It was also clear at this time in history that the "whole person" was intended to mean the spiritual and moral character naturally associated with Christian religion. The second residential college at Oxford did not follow until 1379, but it did become the first teachers college where students were taught not only to be teachers of children, but were also taught and groomed to become part of the residential college system, thus offering greater sustainability of the ideal.
Residential Education Centers are one part of an array of sources of education. These sources include formal education and non-formal education sources. Some organizations label learning that occurs outside of the school as informal learning, though for this study these sources of learning will be called non-formal learning. Sources of education for children include television, school, families, newspapers, magazines, radio, friends, and the internet (Coyle, 2005). The National Research Council...
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