Synopses & Reviews
Review
“Swanson and Chermack argue that applied disciplines falter when either theory or practice dominates. The method of theory building in applied disciplines presented and detailed in this book is simple yet powerful.”
—Wayne F. Cascio, Robert H. Reynolds Chair in Global Leadership and Professor of Management, Business School, University of Colorado Denver
“Theory Building in Applied Disciplines is a long-overdue book. Swanson and Chermack have made a truly significant contribution to the development of practice-based theories that will enrich applied disciplines.”
—Marshall Scott Poole, Professor of Communication, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
“This book practices what it preaches by meshing theory and practice in an accessible and rigorous way. Scholars and graduate students will benefit from the advice and examples provided.”
—Kevin Dooley, Distinguished Professor of Supply Chain Management, Arizona State University
“This is a welcome addition to the growing conversation on the role of theory and theory development in applied disciplines.”
—David Whetten, Jack Wheatley Professor of Organizational Studies, Brigham Young University
“Swanson and Chermacks excellent presentation and expansion of the phases of theory building in applied disciplines represents a significant contribution to the scholarly literature.”
—Pedro Reyes, Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, The University of Texas System
Synopsis
When facing important professional problems, practitioners regularly respond with the latest gimmick, or by throwing everything and anything at the problem. In contrast, scholars regularly slice problems into small segments to study and explain them, without directly addressing the practical problem itself. Both approaches miss the target of sound theory and practice.
Most theory development methodologies are incomplete, inappropriate, or totally overwhelming. This book presents a complete, five-stop methodology for developing sound theory that can be employed with any applied discipline—it is not discipline-specific. This methodology engages input from practitioners and scholars. By fusing them, a complete and accurate understanding of the phenomena being investigated results an understanding that meets the standards of both scholarship and practice.
Synopsis
Theory matters in applied disciplines—fields that apply scholarly research to professional practice, such as management, social work, health care, human resource development, education, and many others. Because these disciplines deal with human beings in the real world, a flawed theory can result in actual harm to people and institutions.
When faced with a professional problem, practitioners resort to the latest fad or simply throw everything and anything at it because of the lack of sound theory. Scholars deal with problems by slicing them into small segments to study them but fail to address the practical implications. Whats needed is a way to unite research and practice to create robust theory.
This is exactly what Richard Swanson and Thomas Chermack offer here: a complete, five-step method for developing sound, field-tested theory in applied disciplines. Unlike many existing methods, which cover only the initial conceptualization of a theory, the authors offer a complete approach, from conceptualizing a theory to creating relevant assessment criteria, establishing a research agenda to test the theorys validity, applying the theoretical concepts in the real world, and using that experience to further refine and improve the theory. The method is not restricted to any single discipline, nor is it beholden to any research ideology.
Swanson and Chermack provide a set of tools for each phase of the process, making this book accessible and applicable to a wide audience. And in addition to examples in each chapter, they offer two extended case examples of complete theory building. With flawed theories impeding the development of many applied disciplines, this book is desperately needed.
Synopsis
A Comprehensive Method, Tools, and Techniques for Building Sound TheoryRichard Swanson and Thomas Chermack present a complete five-step approach for developing sound theory in applied disciplines, from conceptualizing a theory to creating relevant assessment criteria, establishing a research agenda to test the theorys validity, applying the theoretical concepts in the real world, and using that experience to further refine and improve the theory. The method is not restricted to any single discipline, nor is it limited by any research ideology. The authors provide a set of tools for each phase of the process, making this book accessible to a wide audience. And in addition to examples in each chapter, they offer two extended case examples of full theory building.
About the Author
Richard A. Swanson is Professor Emeritus of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of fourteen books.Thomas J. Chermack is Associate Professor of Organizational Performance and Change and Director of the Scenario Planning Institute at Colorado State University. He is the author of Scenario Planning in Organizations.
Table of Contents
PART ONE - FOUNDATIONS OF THEORY BUILDING
Chapter 1 -- To Hell with Gravity
Chapter 2 -- Foundations and Definitions of Theory Building
Chapter 3 -- The General Method of Theory Building in Applied Disciplines
Contributed by Susan A. Lynham
PART TWO - PHASES OF THEORY BUILDING
Chapter 4 -- Conceptualize Phase
Chapter 5 -- Operationalize Phase
Chapter 6 -- Confirm Phase
Chapter 7 - Apply Phase
Chapter 8 -- Refine Phase
PART THREE - SUCCESSFUL THEORY BUILDING
Chapter 9 - Case Example: Marsick and Watkins Learning Organization Theory
Chapter 10 - Case Example: Chermacks Scenario Planning Theory
Chapter 11 - Figuring out the Present Status of a Theory
Chapter 12 - Whacha Gonna Do?