1. Introduction: professionalising education in Organisation Studies and Human Resource Management PART I Practising differently: OS and HRM learning, teaching and assessment in physical and virtual space 2. Engaging and enthusing students in the physical and virtual classroom 3. It’s a game of skill: playful learning through board game design 4. Giving it a go: introducing authenticity into Human Resource Management assessments 5. The experiential approach to undergraduate OHRM 6. Module design, delivery and assessment for large student numbers Student opinion pieces A. Bringing learning to life through stories: the shoemakers’ tale B. Engendering real learning through practice C. Strategic interpretation of lectures PART II Conceptualising differently: reframing OS and HRM learning, teaching and assessment 7. Enriching learning through interactive technologies in the online, blended and face-to-face contexts 8. Problem-based learning: is it possible to transplant teaching practice between countries? 9. Classroom experience as an open system 10. Developing praxis through active blended learning and authentic assessment 11. The HR consultant – an experiential learning approach: a case study approach of HR students working on live client projects 12. Developing entrepreneurial talent through pedagogical innovations: insights from three international case studies Student opinion pieces D. The challenges of student cross-cultural integration E. Enabling knowledge sharing in culturally diverse teams F. Peer learning within the multi-cultural classroom PART III Educating differently: directions in OS and HRM education towards a new normal post-pandemic 13. Failing better: learning from failure and learning to fail in the Doctorate of Business Administration 14. Designing learning and technology spaces for educating Gen-Z university students 15. An exercise for evaluating virtual team member performance 16. Mind the gap: conceptualising and experiencing the space between academic and practice communities in HRM/D education 17. It takes a team: student-staff partnerships in learning and teaching in higher education 18. Developing graduates as critical professionals: professional development ++ Student opinion pieces G. Peer-assisted learning approaches to enabling multicultural integration and learning H. Forming professionals instead of graduates: the value of experiential learning for future employment I. The value of partnership: a constructive dialogue J. Differing curriculum foci at top and mid-tier academic institutions K. Liberated or detained in remote learning? Conclusion 19. Conclusion: the future for OS and HR educational excellence