Generative AI Emerges as a Cognitive Partner in Business Education
Management education faces mounting pressure to prepare students for problems that span strategy, finance, marketing, operations, and ethics. A new study published in The International Journal of Management Education demonstrates that a carefully designed generative artificial intelligence tool can help MBA teams build stronger interdisciplinary connections during complex case analysis.
The research, led by Yanyi Wu, Xinyu Lu, and Chenghua Lin, examined how a pedagogically tuned GenAI partner influenced 84 MBA students working in 28 teams on an ill-structured strategic case. The findings appear in the December 2026 issue of the journal.
Study Design and Participants
Researchers conducted a mixed-methods randomized controlled trial. Teams were randomly assigned to use either a customized GenAI partner or traditional search resources. The intervention lasted 180 minutes and combined quantitative evaluation of final reports with epistemic network analysis of collaborative discourse and post-task interviews.
Baseline checks confirmed no significant differences between groups in gender, age, work experience, or attitudes toward AI.
Key Performance Outcomes
AI-supported teams produced higher-quality strategic reports. Scores improved particularly in interdisciplinary integration and innovation. The GenAI tool supplied prompts that teams used for debate, critique, and synthesis rather than simple fact retrieval.
Epistemic network analysis revealed more densely connected discourse patterns among AI-supported teams. These patterns linked information retrieval, cross-disciplinary reasoning, integrative synthesis, and critical evaluation more effectively than in the control condition.
Human-in-the-Loop Approach Proves Essential
The study emphasizes that benefits emerged from a structured, human-in-the-loop design. Students moved low-level information foraging into higher-order evaluative and synthetic discussion. The tool did not replace reasoning; it scaffolded it.
Interview data indicated that teams valued the AI partner for generating alternative frames and surfacing connections across functional areas, while still requiring peer scrutiny and judgment.
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Implications for Curriculum and Assessment
Management educators are advised to assess reasoning processes alongside final products. The research suggests shifting focus from polished outputs to the quality of collaborative discourse and evidence integration.
Programs may benefit from embedding GenAI in tasks that explicitly require cross-functional synthesis rather than treating the technology as a generic productivity aid.
Broader Context in Management Education
Business schools increasingly recognize that real-world challenges such as circular-economy transitions and supply-chain disruptions demand integrated perspectives. Traditional functional courses often reward isolated mastery over coordinated judgment.
This study provides empirical evidence that targeted GenAI interventions can support the socio-constructivist processes through which students negotiate meaning across disciplinary boundaries.
Limitations and Future Directions
The intervention was brief, so results reflect task-specific collaboration rather than permanent cognitive changes. Longer-term studies are needed to determine whether repeated exposure builds durable interdisciplinary habits.
Future work could explore variations in prompt design, team composition, and disciplinary mix to refine best practices.
Recommendations for Educators
Institutions should develop clear guidelines for human-AI collaboration in case-based learning. Training faculty to design prompts that prompt critique and synthesis can maximize value.
Assessment rubrics that reward evidence of integrative reasoning may encourage productive use of the technology.
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Student Perspectives
Participants described the GenAI partner as a catalyst for discussion rather than a substitute for their own analysis. Many noted that the tool helped surface overlooked connections but required active verification.
Teams that engaged critically with AI outputs reported richer interdisciplinary dialogue.
Looking Ahead
As generative AI tools evolve, management education stands at an inflection point. The evidence from this randomized trial indicates that thoughtful integration can enhance students’ ability to connect knowledge across domains when problems are ambiguous and multifaceted.
Read the full study here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1472811726001291
