Chapter 13 Rebuilding Relationships between Data, Method, and Theories

In both Management and I/O Psychology, contributions to theory remain an important, and in many cases, sole criterion for evaluating submissions to top journals. In many ways, the definition of theory and the primacy of theory in the organizational sciences is an outlier; in most sciences, articles...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cucina, Jeffrey M. (auth)
Other Authors: Nester, Mary Anne (auth)
Format: Electronic Book Chapter
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2022
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Summary:In both Management and I/O Psychology, contributions to theory remain an important, and in many cases, sole criterion for evaluating submissions to top journals. In many ways, the definition of theory and the primacy of theory in the organizational sciences is an outlier; in most sciences, articles rarely even mention theories, much less build themselves around advancing theory. We propose that the classic description of the scientific methods provides a better guide to understanding the relationships between data, methods and theory than our current model, which often starts and ends with proposing a theory, which may never again be referenced or tested. We describe a pyramid of types of evidence that is useful for assessing the reliability and worth of particular sorts of data and show how this approach to evidence informs the scientific method and assists in identifying and building useful theories.
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (43 p.)
ISBN:9781003015000-17
9780367857707
9780367857646
Access:Open Access