Abstract

The purpose of this article is to highlight the use of innovation sprints, flash teams, and inter-disciplinary collaboration in sport management programs that reduce the apparent proficiency gaps that exist between the expectations of industry and the college graduate. Companies in a variety of industries are using these tools to solve complex problems as the velocity of change and volume of data are increasing at a rate that makes constant innovation a necessity. However, higher education traditions and curricular silos appear to be causing graduates to fall further behind the needs of industry. Two innovation sprints have shown the ability to provide students with improved skills for industry while enhancing their understanding of sport management competencies through rapid prototyping, human-centered design, and flash teams. One innovation sprint involved a cross-campus collaborative experience. The second focused on a multi-college/university collaboration within sport management. Though both experiences produced better-than-expected results, the inter-disciplinary sprint may have produced a higher level of outputs. Furthermore, faculty and students alike appear to benefit from inter-disciplinary interactions as everyone learns more about each field represented and allows everyone to have an equal voice through a common lens. If sport management programs remain in their designated silo, their graduates may be falling further behind the expectation of employers. Previous literature suggests the benefits of innovative practices significantly enhance learning and drive creative problem-solving. Therefore, sport management programs may want to exploreusing innovation sprints, flash teams, and inter-disciplinary collaboration practices as viable practices to enhance student learning outcomes.

Highlights

  • Larry JinkinsThe purpose of this article is to highlight the use of innovation sprints, flash teams, and inter-disciplinary collaboration in sport management programs that reduce the apparent proficiency gaps that exist between the expectations of industry and the college graduate

  • The National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE; 2018) published that a significant competency gap exists between how college graduates perceive their competencies and how employers perceive those same competencies relative to career readiness

  • Financial resources and tradition may not provide the flexibility needed to meet the rapid changes occurring in business, suggesting an alternative structure may be required to fully prepare students for shifts occurring in business and society as well as advancing innovations in higher education

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Summary

Larry Jinkins

The purpose of this article is to highlight the use of innovation sprints, flash teams, and inter-disciplinary collaboration in sport management programs that reduce the apparent proficiency gaps that exist between the expectations of industry and the college graduate. Two innovation sprints have shown the ability to provide students with improved skills for industry while enhancing their understanding of sport management competencies through rapid prototyping, human centered design, and flash teams. The second focused on a multi-college/university collaboration within sport management. Though both experiences produced betterthan-expected results, the inter-disciplinary sprint may have produced a higher level of outputs. Sport management programs may want to explore using innovation sprints, flash teams, and interdisciplinary collaboration practices as viable practices to enhance student learning outcomes

Introduction
Interdisciplinary Flash Teams
Multidisciplinary Team Roles
Innovation Sprints
Expected Skills
Findings
Conclusion

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