- Видео 97
- Просмотров 234 240
New Scholars
Великобритания
Добавлен 3 окт 2020
New Scholars aims to nurture management scholarship which moves the world. We seek to help emerging and aspiring scholars to conduct credible and relevant research to advance management theory and practice which can benefit our societies and organizations. We organize discussions between established and emerging scholars to explore ideas and discuss insights that stimulate a richer and meaningful management scholarship. More details on www.newscholars.network
The Management Research Canvas: How to Conduct and Report Empirical Research
Speakers:
- Sinziana Dorobantu (New York University)
- Marc Gruber (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne)
- Davide Ravasi (University College London)
- Ned Wellman (Arizona State University)
Despite tremendous variation in management research, all successful research projects share some common elements. In this webinar, the panel comprising editors of the Academy of Management Journal will discuss the “core elements” of empirical management research and offer a guidance in a form of a “canvas” for management and organizational research.
Recommended reading:
- Dorobantu S, Gruber M, Ravasi D, and Wellman N (2024) The AMJ Management Research Canvas: A Tool for Conducting and Reporting E...
- Sinziana Dorobantu (New York University)
- Marc Gruber (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne)
- Davide Ravasi (University College London)
- Ned Wellman (Arizona State University)
Despite tremendous variation in management research, all successful research projects share some common elements. In this webinar, the panel comprising editors of the Academy of Management Journal will discuss the “core elements” of empirical management research and offer a guidance in a form of a “canvas” for management and organizational research.
Recommended reading:
- Dorobantu S, Gruber M, Ravasi D, and Wellman N (2024) The AMJ Management Research Canvas: A Tool for Conducting and Reporting E...
Просмотров: 471
Видео
Reimagining Management Theory and Practice - part 3
Просмотров 182Месяц назад
Speaker: Hector Rocha (IAE Business School) What to do next? An Emergent Paradigm. In this webinar, we will discuss the influence and impact of management theories on management practice and the common good. We will: a) discuss the assumptions underlying the dominant management theories, especially in the economic, sociological, and psychological realms; b) reflect on the impact of management t...
Reimaging Management Theory and Practice - part 2
Просмотров 191Месяц назад
Why is this happening? Dominant paradigm. Speaker: Hector Rocha (IAE Business School) In this webinar, we will discuss the influence and impact of management theories on management practice and the common good. We will: a) discuss the assumptions underlying the dominant management theories, especially in the economic, sociological, and psychological realms; b) reflect on the impact of managemen...
Reimaging Management Theory and Practice - part 1
Просмотров 362Месяц назад
Speaker: Hector Rocha (IAE Business School) This webinar is part 1 of 3. In this webinar, we will discuss the influence and impact of management theories on management practice and the common good. We will: a) discuss the assumptions underlying the dominant management theories, especially in the economic, sociological, and psychological realms; b) reflect on the impact of management theory on m...
From Impact to Impacting: How to build a research program and a career that moves the world
Просмотров 4172 месяца назад
Speakers: - Tima Bansal (Ivey Business School) - Garima Sharma (American University) - Ju Young Lee (Ivey Business School) - Alice Mascena Barbosa (EADA Business School) Management scholars are increasingly seeking to impact business practice and public policy through their research. Based on our experience of Innovation North at Ivey Business School, we will discuss how management scholars can...
How Pragmatist Philosophy Can Advance Organization Studies
Просмотров 3902 месяца назад
Speaker: Philippe Lorino (ESSEC) Western culture is founded on rationalist idealism, according to which rational representations can have a status of truth to which “simple” experience cannot lay claim. The more complex and uncertain situations become, particularly when facing grand challenges, the more this dogma leads to serious setbacks. We'll be looking at alternative approaches, inspired b...
How Philosophy Informs and Makes Organization Studies More Impactful
Просмотров 5013 месяца назад
Speaker: Jorgen Sandberg (Queensland) One of the most distinctive features of philosophy is its systematic and critical approach to the assumptions, beliefs, and values we typically accept-and take for granted-in various areas of life. In this webinar, I will discuss how philosophy provides resources that not only help us break free from the multitude of preconceived concepts, perspectives, and...
Using Historical Methods in Organisation Studies
Просмотров 3573 месяца назад
Speaker: David Kirsch This talk explores the increasing prominence and use of historical methods in management research. In recent years, management scholars have turned to historical methods to uncover how organisations and industries evolve, how past events and decisions shape contemporary organisational behaviour, and how institutional and cultural legacies influence management practices. Pr...
Writing is Reading: How to Join a Theoretical Conversation
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.4 месяца назад
Speaker: Tammar Zilber (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) In this webinar, I will focus on one challenge in the writing process theoretical positioning and literature review. I used to ask my Ph.D. students - early when they were writing their research proposal, and again once they started to analyze their empirical materials - to read previous research and come back to me with ideas on how they ...
Genarative AI, LLMs and the Future of Management Research
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Speakers: - Eva Boxenbaum (Copenhagen Business School) - Teppo Felin (Utah State University) - Matthew Grimes (Cambridge Judge Business School) - Christine Moser (VU Amsterdam) - Christopher Wickert (VU Amsterdam) Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly impacting scientific research and scholarly work. As advanced AI systems capable of mimicking elements of human reasoning, LLMs may autom...
Prospective Theorizing and Speculative Rigour
Просмотров 7557 месяцев назад
Speaker: Juliane Reinecke (Oxford) With the looming planetary emergency, the future will be anything but an extension of the past. Yet theorizing the future poses a peculiar problem. By definition, it is not present yet. The conundrum of the future is that it requires conceptualizing and theorizing what is not (yet) observable and does not (yet) exist. While scholars have called for more impact...
In What Ways Should I Try to Be Relevant? (5 of 5) - supplemental material
Просмотров 4018 месяцев назад
In What Ways Should I Try to Be Relevant? (5 of 5) - supplemental material
Theorizing Time as (and in) Process
Просмотров 7258 месяцев назад
Speaker: Tor Hernes (Copenhagen) We know a lot about time as a backdrop for organizational life. We know much less about how time constitutes organizational life. Emergent views of organizations and time invite reflections on the different roles of time for strategizing, identity, materiality, practices, and narratives. Our understanding of time also influences how we study and analyse organiza...
In What Ways Should I Try to Be Relevant? (5 of 5)
Просмотров 4398 месяцев назад
Speaker: Mikko Ketokivi (IE Business School) In this session, we explore the notion of relevance by asking, “In whose eyes should I try to be relevant?” In particular, we examine the elusive idea of the practical relevance of academic research. When we use the term practically relevant, who exactly are we thinking about? This complements the first four sessions that focus primarily on how schol...
How is My Argument Evaluated? (4 of 5) - supplemental material
Просмотров 3208 месяцев назад
How is My Argument Evaluated? (4 of 5) - supplemental material
The Cooperative Economy A Solution to Societal Grand Challenges
Просмотров 4058 месяцев назад
The Cooperative Economy A Solution to Societal Grand Challenges
How is My Argument Evaluated? (4 of 5)
Просмотров 5258 месяцев назад
How is My Argument Evaluated? (4 of 5)
How Do I Structure My Argument? (3 of 5) - Supplemental material
Просмотров 5688 месяцев назад
How Do I Structure My Argument? (3 of 5) - Supplemental material
How Do I Structure My Argument? (3 of 5)
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.8 месяцев назад
How Do I Structure My Argument? (3 of 5)
How Do I Reason? (2 of 5) - Supplemental material
Просмотров 5859 месяцев назад
How Do I Reason? (2 of 5) - Supplemental material
How Do I Make a Scholarly Contribution? (1 of 5) - Supplemental material
Просмотров 9789 месяцев назад
How Do I Make a Scholarly Contribution? (1 of 5) - Supplemental material
How Do I Make a Scholarly Contribution? (session 1 of 5)
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.9 месяцев назад
How Do I Make a Scholarly Contribution? (session 1 of 5)
Contributing to Theory Progress: Introduction
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.9 месяцев назад
Contributing to Theory Progress: Introduction
New Work in Gender and Inequality Research, and What’s Ahead
Просмотров 40410 месяцев назад
New Work in Gender and Inequality Research, and What’s Ahead
Using Experimental Methods for Impactful Research
Просмотров 46111 месяцев назад
Using Experimental Methods for Impactful Research
Using Sports Data to Advance Management Theory
Просмотров 642Год назад
Using Sports Data to Advance Management Theory
Canons of Beauty in Organization and Management Theory
Просмотров 726Год назад
Canons of Beauty in Organization and Management Theory
Excellent learning for a beginner researcher like me. Thank you!
A very insightful and helpful webinar! I considerably appreciated how Prof. Barney went through the individual steps of the process, one paragraph at a time. I also greatly appreciated his honesty about journal rejections and the loneliness of the writing process. It's a worthwhile watch, especially for doctoral students and junior scholars.
In regard to the nature of research review question, do the differ by the type of review used?
This is a great session, as I am rewatching it I realize how good and insightful it is - thanks to the New Scholars team and Tammar for making this session possible
Very useful video. Thanks, Philippe :-)
how can i attend the sessions online
This is an excellent introduction to Pragmatism, presented not as a philosophical discourse but instead demonstrating pragmatism as a "humble tooL' for reconsidering and reconstructing problems and complex opportunities. Your use of an extended empirical example in an organizational setting was illuminating and sparked a great Q&A on pragmatism as being focused on "practical effectiveness in the pursuit of social transformation rather than established truth". Ours is a troubled time, one that requires truly creative responses to complex issues, and in response we are offering a sub-theme at EGOS 2025 for which we invite developmental as well as more mature paper submissions, on a wide range of possible research domains. Sub-theme 79 addresses "Creatively Transforming Challenging Situations: Insights through Pragmatism", and we chose to offer it in Hybrid form to be more inclusive and also creatively "play" with the hybrid nature of the session. Possibly interested? Please see the Call for Papers: www.egos.org/jart/prj3/egos/main.jart?rel=de&reserve-mode=active&content-id=1721760205556&subtheme_id=1701662512270 . More information is also available at our 'Pragmatism and Organization Studies' website: www.egos.org/jart/prj3/egos/main.jart?rel=de&reserve-mode=active&content-id=1721760205556&subtheme_id=1701662512270 and also the community's LinkedIn site: www.linkedin.com/groups/12923177/
Very insightful Prof. Sandberg...thank you for your immense contributions and for enriching organizational science by infusing philosophy...brings depth and enlivens the field...
Thank you for the excellent video. If I am studying 4 cases and will search for similarities between them - should I use Gioia or thematic analysis ? Do I have to code 1st and 2nd orders case per case or all together ? And should I analyse them case per case then regroup similarities in the discussion or differently ? thank you
Many thanks to the channel new scholars; you have shaped my Phd journey. Looking to participate i a love session if you still host them.
They way Prof Jay, made the intro for shared leadership on the stop was amazing. 1:03:49
Very much liked the quote in the 16th minute: "Theory has a different purpose, from representation to more *intervening* in the world, a technique for *coping* with a complex, uncertain world."
Thank you so much!
Brilliant and to the point
Such an amazing practical webinar. Thank you!
Hi! Thanks fir the useful video. How can we perform a sensitivity analysis in an integrative review since meta-analytic methods are not applied? If the purpose of the integrative review is to propose a theoretical framework, how can someone validate the proposes model with a case study?
Great!
It is unfortunate that you have decided to borrow the term ‘cooperative economy’ and use it as a cover under which to assemble and present your ideas. With this you bring unnecessary confusion, instead of suggesting a novel designator for the exchange system that you propose. You seem to disregard (hope not in denial) that cooperative economy has been a subject of attention for decades. There exists cooperative scholarship and substantial effort has been put into studying cooperative forms of organising and cooperative organisations and enterprise.
AI is developed by humans. The former can never be smarter than the latter. If AI is smarter, for what purpose? Or for whose purpose?
If there is no need to produce knowledge just for the sake of producing knowledge when it does not have any impact, is there a need to protect a profession just for the sake of protecting it when the profession does not have any impact?
Really insightful discussion. Thanks for organising and sharing
Extremely helpful session. Thank you for sharing!
Hi Professor, Thank you for the enlightening session. I am intrigued by how you juxtaposed design science with theoretical science in your 2009 paper to bridge practical and theoretical knowledge. This approach resonated with me and was reflected in my initial research papers as well. Could you recommend any readings on transforming 'practical relevance' into 'practical utility,' as mentioned in your summary? Additionally, I would like to share a reflection on writing 'managerial implications' as an early-career researcher. It appears that many practitioners seldom read academic papers, likely due to the vast number of journals available. When they do engage, they tend to seek direct answers in specific sections rather than cramming through 20-30 pages of a paper. This reality ironically makes the managerial implications section “relevant”. And while some might view this reflects researchers' arrogance, I believe such a view is quite harsh, particularly for early researchers. Writing this section not only targets practitioners but also challenges researchers to bridge the gap with their audience effectively. Thank you, Prof, once again for the series of theory contributions.
Wow , what an important subject , and to only have 15 likes or no comments yet , to me is astonishing, as I feel it should be an essential knowledge taught to all people
Thanks a lot for the great content. Please talk about introduction section and how do you recommend motivating and problematizing study.
The Locke & Golden-Biddle article (which I discuss in the Session 1 recording) does a stellar job of discussing this topic! If you familiarize yourself with the two key processes discussed by Locke & Golden-Biddle (Structuring the Intertextual Field and Problematizing the Situation), you are well on your way.
As part of a PhD class, I was tasked to do an article review. I attempted to use Toulmin's model to that paper and deconstructed the main claim along with its warrants, backings and empirical observation. I was able to point out certain backings and warrants which were not considered in the paper but were in the literature giving a different perspective to the empirical observation. It made the article review manageable and engaging at the same time. Thank you Professor Ketokivi!
I have had similar experiences when I applied the Toulmin model. Grounds and claims have always been salient to me, but warrants and backings haven't. Yet, they are just as central in the argument structure, for a simple reason: without warrants (and backings), there is no claim!
In dissertations, students usually declare the -ologies and -isms in the methodology section. Examiners may even expect to see this. I agree with your point five but how do I overcome this in my dissertation?
Yes, I have seen students "declare their isms" in the introductions of their dissertations; as a pre-examiner and committee member I have seen these passages. The problem is I learn nothing by reading them. However, I have also seen numerous dissertation manuscripts that do not include these sections, so I am not entirely convinced they are required. My first recommendation is to speak with your dissertation adviser about this.
Thank you!
Thanks from everyone who will watch and learn from this seminar. This is a real contribution.
Listening to this session turned me away from the thought of completely avoiding biases because it itself is a bias in terms of black-and-white thinking. If I try to trace back (to the way of seeing), it will lead to nowhere rather than how I see the world (i.e., my ontology), which ‘no one sitting around the table cares”. Thus, it is how I perceive the limitations in my claims (the qualifiers) and make my reasoning and argumentation process transparent to our audience that matters more. Thank you, Prof. :)
Thanks.
Thanks Mikko for uploading the video which is very useful for junior researcher
Thanks for putting this session online.
Thank you for your comments! I think the notion of bias deserves a closer look. The Toulmin model and the examples I talked about in Session 3 (economic inequality and the Schwinn antitrust case) can be used to illustrate how some biases are simply unavoidable (prescription: make these biases explicit) but others are avoidable (prescription: try to mitigate these biases). I have posted a follow-up reflection on this.
Thanks for sharing. Not able to join the live session because of my classes.
Again, this is a great and extensive seminar. I believe incorporating ' reasoning' and 'argumentation' into our practice will help us avoid biases, as stated in summary number 5. Thank you so much, Prof. Ketokivi! :)
Such an underrated channel! Must watch for anyone interested in research.
"Food for thoughts", indeed. Before viewing this session, I did confound the ways of reasoning and the ways of doing research (research design). It made me contemplate what we claim deductive or inductive research design and the 'extreme state' of generalising and contextualising. Is that extreme generalisation actually a high level of contextualisation in one way or another? Now I can find the answer thanks to your transparent explanation. :) Thank you Prof. Ketokivi, and I really look forward to your subsequent sessions.
Thank you, and I hope to see you again next Friday! In the follow-up reflection on this session (which was just posted), I make the point that not acknowledging the use of abductive reasoning and thinking it's induction, we end up "overplaying our reasoning hand" in that we mistakenly believe our reasoning to be stronger than it actually is. This leads to confirmation bias. If we are going to be biased, we should try to be biased toward being conservative in our reasoning.
@@MikkoKetokivi Totally agree!
Oops... theoretical-model abduction appears twice on the slide at 5:06. Of course, whether there are 35 or 36 variants of abduction hardly changes the point I am trying to make. And in fact, this list is probably far from complete. If you come across more variants of abductive reasoning, go ahead and add them in the comment section, and let us crowd-source a more complete list.
Let me make a clarification on the claim I present at 4:42. Instead of "deduction, induction, and abduction are forms of reasoning, not ways of doing research," a better formulation would have been, "deduction, induction, and abduction are forms of reasoning, not research designs." Saying "I do deductive research" is misleading, because what we casually call "deductive research" incorporates inductive and abductive reasoning as well. The same observation applies to "inductive research" and "abductive research."
Thanks for sharing. I was not able to join for this session. I had a class.
This is exactly why the lectures are recorded. I understand the timing of the live sessions may be problematic.
you may have wanted to talk about something else, but I think it is very helpful to deny the audience's evaluation of the importance of truth 🙂
Thank you so much for the series - looking forward to the new sessions and perhaps join in on one of them if time permits. Based in Asia so it's a little late for me :)
Thank you for your kind words! Yes, the timing can be challenging for some participants, which is another reason for recording the lecture parts and making them available online. We thought 4 PM CET would be the best time, although it is very early for some and very late for others.
The follow-up reflection of Session 1 (and the concept of truth in particular) is now available both at the New Scholars channel and my personal webpage for this seminar (it looks like comments with URLs in them are deleted, so I cannot post the link in this comment).
Thank you Professor. I really enjoy your videos and watched them multiple times. I am in awe of how you use your words diligently. Thank you for making it available on RUclips. I really liked the Sutton and Staw (1995) article on "What theory is not" and Weicks (1995) on "What theory is not, theorizing is". However, your having a conversation on a table analogy makes so much sense and simplifies the concept. I would be grateful if you can teach the art of theorizing in social science. Thank you Professor once again.
Thank you for the kind words. I try to be maximally precise with my use of language and specific terms throughout the sessions -- conceptual rigor is in my view essential to mutual understanding. And yes, Sutton & Staw and Weick are both great articles!
Much appreciate New Scholars for your recording and editing. It's simply brilliant of your work. And thank you, Prof. Ketokivi, for the very captivating session. Look forward to upcoming sessions. :)
Thank you for your comment, and I hope to see you again next Friday! I will post a short follow-up reflection on the notion of truth (I was pretty sure Davis' thesis would raise a few eyebrows and objections). I will get the follow-up reflection posted by Monday at the latest.
Love it. Thanks. I think many researchers will sign up.
As I went through this again, I realized that misspoke referring to Charmaz's coding as descriptive- it should be focused. In adddition, CARMA is the Consortium (not Center) for the Advancement of Research Methods and Analysis.
Thank you for the introduction, and for the next live session dates. Are you able to please supply a reference for Barney?
Barney, Jay B. 2005. "Where does inequality come from? The personal and intellectual roots of resource-based theory." In Great Minds in Management: The Process of Theory Development, edited by K. G. Smith and Michael A. Hitt, 280-303.
@@MikkoKetokivi Thank you so much!!
How can we join the seminar online? Any links?