Case Study Teaching

Case-Based Teaching

Case-based teaching is the use of real world situations to introduce students to a variety of perspectives. The experience is open-ended and presents opportunities and unique challenges.

“Because wisdom can’t be told.”

In 1940, Harvard Business Professor Charles Gragg summarized case-based teaching with the quotation above. By engaging students in a situation that occurred in the real world, the learning is deeper and more meaningful than lecturing.

Teaching cases requires being prepared for a variety of student responses, but also not circumscribing the students’ analyses.

Similar to cases, but more immersive, are simulations and games. More information is available at this link. Simulations involve students responding in real time to simulated conditions, while case-based teaching has students analyzing previous events, proposing solutions, then justifying and discussing them.

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