In today’s classrooms, the focus is shifting from knowledge recall to decision fluency. At Queen Mary University of London, Dr. Andrew Woon redesigned a final-year Strategic Analysis and Practice module, combining Edumundo’s Phone Ventures business simulation with guided use of generative AI tools.
The result was a safe yet challenging environment where students practiced making high-stakes choices while developing critical employability skills.
Discover the full discussion with Dr. Andrew Woon and Dr. Esther Jubb, where they explain how this approach unfolded in practice.
Students worked in teams of five to run a phone brand across multiple countries using PhoneVentures. Each workshop followed a deliberate rhythm:
Three pillars made the approach effective:
Competition with reflection
Weekly rankings energized participation, but grades emphasized reasoning quality, not leaderboard position.
Co-creation with AI
Students practiced writing clear prompts, verifying outputs, and aligning AI insights with simulation data.
Assessment alignment
Activities were weighted within coursework, ensuring engagement was consistent and meaningful.
This design reflects the principles set out in Dr. Andrew Woon’s AACSB article “AI-Driven Simulations Build Decision-Making Skills”.The article highlights how pairing simulations with AI cultivates higher-order judgment and work-ready confidence.
Students left with more than just stronger strategic management knowledge. They built:
Teamwork and negotiation skills through collaboration under pressure
Critical and analytical thinking through scenario evaluation and reflective debriefs
Ethical AI literacy, learning how to integrate tools responsibly rather than rely on them blindly
This dual focus on soft skills and AI-augmented decision-making mirrors the evolving demands of global employers.
For institutions considering a similar model, four practices stand out:
Provide simple entry points such as a simulation handbook and “how-to” videos
Begin AI integration with low-stakes tasks, escalating to higher-order analysis
Make the theory–practice link explicit each week
Reward reflection and rationale more than simulation scores
Explore how this approach could be adapted to your programme in conversation with our experts.