Juliana Schroeder is a behavioral scientist whose research exploring how people make social inferences about others both informs—and is informed by—her MBA classes in Negotiations and Conflict Resolution.
In addition to her work in the Management of Organizations group at Haas, Juliana is affiliated with the Social Psychology Department, the Cognition Department, and the Center for Human-Compatible AI at UC Berkeley. The recipient of the International Social Cognition Network Early Career Award in 2018, she also has won awards for teaching excellence at Haas, was a Poets & Quants “40 under 40” top business school professor, and is a member of Club 6, an award given to Haas faculty who receive mean teaching evaluations greater than six on a seven-point scale.
I would call it ‘teaching through service.’ I think it is crucial to put students’ needs first. If anyone has difficulty with the material, the burden is on you as the professor to improve. You have to be willing to admit that you may have made a mistake or did not present a topic clearly enough.
We are all here by choice. I’ve chosen to teach and, because my class is an elective, the students have chosen to take it. We all have to respect those choices and make it worth each other’s while. My responsibility is serving the students and providing them with the learning outcomes they desire. The students’ responsibility is to care about the material, to be engaged and excited.
As long as one person in a conversation has a goal, that conversation is a negotiation."
I make the class as interactive as possible. I typically present a mix of theory and research, practice, and tools in each session.
The research component provides empirically founded insights that research has shown to be effective. Learning by doing is essential. I can tell you the answer, but it doesn’t sink in until you have done it and practiced and adjusted the model to fit your needs. Finally, students take away a framework for every negotiation they are going to have in their life.
I love hearing from students that they are using the techniques and frameworks we explore. Not just in important career situations like salary negotiations, but also in negotiations with their roommates and family members.
Negotiation is such a useful topic. In truth, as long as any one of the people in a conversation has a goal, that conversation is a negotiation. And of course, we all negotiate with ourselves!
The Negotiation class has 10 modules, each presented in a three-hour class. Each class has a case exercise. We start with a simple one-on-one negotiation, for example a buyer and a seller. My colleague Holly Schroth writes most of the cases and she excels in making them Berkeley-centric, like a Berkeley café owner negotiating with a supplier of yerba mate tea.
As the course progresses, the cases get more complex. Students encounter what happens when one side gets angry or lies or trust breaks down. The final exercise involves teams of 10 people who negotiate during the week between classes. The teams need to think about coalitions and office politics as they complete a high-stakes internal negotiation.
At the end of each exercise, we look at the outcomes in real-time using the iDecisionGames platform. We use the data displays to examine the team and individual outcomes and frame takeaways for the students to use later.
I love MBA students. They are giving up a lot to be in the program and are very committed. They are not afraid to engage deeply and thoughtfully. I also love that they bring their own work experiences to the table.
Our relationship is reciprocal. I stay in touch with students long after they graduate. We brainstorm on negotiations they encounter on the job or when they change jobs. And through them, I gain insights into how negotiations play out in the real world, which I can then bring back into the classroom.
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