AI時(shí)代如何重塑管理教育?中國(guó)科學(xué)技術(shù)大學(xué)科技商學(xué)院、管理學(xué)院執(zhí)行院長(zhǎng)葉強(qiáng)QS發(fā)表文章,探討價(jià)值創(chuàng)造新范式

?智能總結(jié)隨著2026年的到來(lái),人工智能的討論常聚焦于技術(shù)突破與生產(chǎn)力提升,但更值得關(guān)注的是管理教育與管理研究正在經(jīng)歷的結(jié)構(gòu)性重塑。AI正重新定義價(jià)值創(chuàng)造方式、組織運(yùn)作模式及大學(xué)與社會(huì)的互動(dòng)機(jī)制,促使商學(xué)院必須回答其核心使命:在技術(shù)日益介入決策、協(xié)調(diào)甚至判斷的時(shí)代,商科教育究竟為何而存在?招生趨勢(shì)的變化并非對(duì)管理教育的否定,而是凸顯傳統(tǒng)以穩(wěn)定框架為核心的教育模式難以適應(yīng)技術(shù)加速變革的現(xiàn)實(shí)。與此同時(shí),大學(xué)正從教學(xué)、科研、社會(huì)服務(wù)三大使命向“社會(huì)創(chuàng)新核心節(jié)點(diǎn)”演進(jìn),商學(xué)院需成為連接科技創(chuàng)新與戰(zhàn)略、治理、金融及倫理的樞紐
關(guān)聯(lián)問(wèn)題: AI如何重塑組織架構(gòu)?管理教育如何適應(yīng)技術(shù)變革?商學(xué)院如何整合STEM學(xué)科?
AI時(shí)代的管理教育重塑
在全球聚焦AI技術(shù)突破的浪潮中,中國(guó)科學(xué)技術(shù)大學(xué)科技商學(xué)院、管理學(xué)院執(zhí)行院長(zhǎng)葉強(qiáng)教授在QS官方雜志《QS Insights》上發(fā)表前瞻文章:Management education’s reset in the age of AI。
文章指出,在技術(shù)日新月異的當(dāng)下,聚焦于穩(wěn)定框架的傳統(tǒng)管理教育模式正面臨深刻挑戰(zhàn)。招生趨勢(shì)的變化、大學(xué)使命的演進(jìn)以及AI對(duì)組織架構(gòu)的重塑,共同指向一個(gè)核心命題:管理教育的價(jià)值必須被重新定義。本文不僅是對(duì)全球管理教育未來(lái)的洞察,也清晰闡明了中國(guó)科大科技商、管理學(xué)院的創(chuàng)立初心與使命擔(dān)當(dāng)。

以下為文章原文,期待與各界同仁共同思考與探索。
As 2026 begins, conversations about artificial intelligence are often framed around dramatic technological breakthroughs or productivity gains. What I am keeping an eye on, however, is a quieter but more structural shift: how management education and management research are being redefined as AI reshapes how value is created, how organisations operate, and how universities engage with society.
Business schools remain vital to higher education systems worldwide. Yet they now face a renewed and sharpened question: what is business education for, in an era where technology increasingly mediates decision-making, coordination and even judgment? Over the next year, the answers institutions give, implicitly or explicitly, will matter.
Enrolment as a signal, not a verdict
Across many regions, business schools are encountering growing friction in recruitment, at the MBA and EMBA level and increasingly at the undergraduate level. Demographic shifts and changing employer expectations play a role, but one factor is particularly visible to students: the rapid advance of AI.
For many prospective learners, “future-proof” education is now associated with data science, computing, engineering and other STEM fields. By contrast, general management education is under closer scrutiny, especially as AI systems begin to automate or augment tasks that once defined early-career business roles, analysis, reporting, drafting, and even elements of strategy.
This does not mean management is becoming less important. Rather, it suggests that the traditional value proposition of business education, focused on stable frameworks and established practices, no longer speaks clearly to a world of accelerating technological change.
In 2026, I will be watching whether schools interpret enrolment pressure as a short-term marketing challenge, or as a deeper signal that curriculum design and research agendas must evolve.

The university’s three missions, and the next chapter for business schools
The second trend I’m watching is how universities redefine their role as “engines” of societal progress. Historically, we can roughly see three stages of modern university development:
The first stage, often represented by the University of Bologna and the University of Oxford et al, established the university’s first great mission: teaching and talent cultivation.
The second stage, associated with the University of Berlin (today Humboldt University), articulated the mission of scientific research as central to the university.
The third stage, exemplified by universities such as Wisconsin and later Stanford, elevated the mission of service to society, translating knowledge into social and economic progress.
Business schools, alongside law, medicine, engineering and other professional schools, have played an essential role in this third mission: forging leaders, strengthening institutions and bridging theory with practice. Looking ahead, I believe universities will move further toward becoming core nodes of social innovation, places where scientific discovery, technological invention, policy design and market creation interact at speed. In that future, the business school’s contribution is not peripheral but the central.
Why? Because the next chapter is not only about “more technology.” It is about value creation, how ideas become products, how labs become industries, how research becomes impact, and how organisations remain legitimate and responsible while scaling innovation. A “new-type research university” must integrate disciplines around real societal problems, and business schools are uniquely positioned to connect innovation with strategy, governance, finance, ethics, operations and entrepreneurship.
In 2026, I will be watching universities that move from excellence in separate silos to excellence in integrated value creation systems.

AI and the reconfiguration
of organisations
AI is not simply a new tool added to existing workflows; it is reshaping the internal architecture of organisations. Early signals suggest that AI can compress coordination layers, accelerate decision cycles and redefine what expertise means inside firms. Teams may become smaller yet more productive, and workflows may increasingly be organised around intelligent agents rather than purely human processes.
This creates a renewed agenda for management research and education. Classic concepts, capabilities, hierarchy, incentives, leadership and culture, remain relevant, but must be re-examined under new conditions. Questions of decision-making, accountability, talent development and ethics now look different when outcomes emerge from human–AI collaboration.

Technology-led development and the renewed importance of management
Around the world, governments are placing renewed emphasis on technology-driven industrial development. Strategic industries, resilient supply chains, productivity growth and innovation in areas from energy to advanced manufacturing have become national priorities.
Yet technological capability alone does not guarantee economic or social success. Scaling innovation depends on management: how organisations are designed, how ecosystems are governed, how uncertainty is hedged, and how responsibility and legitimacy are maintained. In this sense, AI and advanced technology increase, rather than reduce, the demand for sophisticated management knowledge.
In 2026, I will be watching which countries and institutions recognise that technology creates possibilities, but management converts possibilities into sustained productivity and societal value.
A response from China: USTC’s Faculty of Business for Science and Technology
At the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), we are responding to these shifts by building a Faculty of Business for Science and Technology, a deliberate effort to innovate how business education and management research are conducted in a technology-driven era.
The guiding idea is straightforward: management education must be reconnected to the frontier of science and technology, and it must serve the real process of value creation, from discovery to deployment. That means closer integration with STEM disciplines, deeper engagement with industry and society, and a research agenda oriented to emerging organisational forms and innovation ecosystems. We aim to educate leaders who can speak both languages: the language of technology and the language of industry, capital, markets and management.
The year ahead will not deliver final answers about the future of management education. But it will provide clear signals. Enrolment trends, curricular choices, research priorities and institutional experiments will all indicate whether business schools are adapting to structural change, or merely reacting to it.
What I am keeping an eye on in 2026 is whether business schools treat this moment as a challenge to defend their past, or as an opportunity to redefine their future. The institutions that thrive will not compete with STEM disciplines. They will collaborate with them, helping societies turn technological potential into durable organisational capability and long-term value creation.
(本文轉(zhuǎn)載自中國(guó)科學(xué)技術(shù)大學(xué)科技商學(xué)院 ,如有侵權(quán)請(qǐng)電話(huà)聯(lián)系13810995524)
* 文章為作者獨(dú)立觀點(diǎn),不代表MBAChina立場(chǎng)。采編部郵箱:news@mbachina.com,歡迎交流與合作。
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