Monday, 15 June 2026

Lecture note on the Action Research approach as a research methodology: for MBA students

Lecture note on the Action Research approach as a research methodology: for MBA students

 

My question posted to generative AI: Highlight 5 main ideas of the Action Research approach (Kurt Lewin's version) as a research methodology in the context of doing MBA dissertation projects, and offer 4 practice advices to the MBA student-researcher.

5 Main Ideas of Kurt Lewin’s Action Research for MBA Dissertations

Kurt Lewin’s Action Research is a problem-centered, cyclical, and interventionist methodology designed to produce both practical change and new knowledge. For MBA dissertation projects, its five core ideas are:

Idea

What it means

Why it matters for MBA dissertations

1. Problem-centered & action-oriented

Research starts with a real organizational problem, not abstract theory; the goal is to solve it through intervention 

MBA work values practical impact—your dissertation directly improves a business process, strategy, or governance issue 

2. Cyclical/iterative spiral (planning → action → observation → reflection)

Lewin designed a repeatable cycle: diagnose, plan change, implement, evaluate, reflect, then re-plan 

Allows you to refine your intervention mid-project and demonstrate adaptive management—key for showing research rigor 

3. Collaborative & democratic participation

Stakeholders (employees, managers, teams) are co-researchers, not passive subjects; they help diagnose and change 

Builds stakeholder theory alignment; strengthens validity through multiple perspectives and reduces researcher bias 

4. Reflective learning after each action

Every intervention is followed by structured reflection on “what happened and why” 

Generates the theoretical insight your dissertation needs—you're not just fixing a problem but explaining how and why change occurred 

5. Empirically grounded & data-driven

Change decisions are based on collected data (qualitative + quantitative), not just intuition 

Satisfies academic rigor requirements; you can triangulate data sources for stronger conclusions 

Lewin saw action research as linking theory development with practice—producing “authentic critiques of practice” while advancing social/int organizational knowledge.


4 Practice Advices for the MBA Student-Researcher

Given your MBA context (part-time study, real organization access), here are four targeted recommendations:

1.    Start with a significant, accessible problem you can actually intervene in

Choose a problem relevant to your field with clear impact on practice (e.g., team conflict, supply-chain inefficiency, governance gap). Ensure you have managerial permission to implement change—action research fails if you can't act.

2.    Maintain a reflexive action-research journal throughout

Record observations, notes, decisions, and reflections after each cycle. This journal becomes critical evidence for your dissertation’s methodology chapter and demonstrates your learning process.

3.    Be open-minded and flexible; adapt based on feedback

Action research requires willingness to change your approach when participants or outcomes reveal new insights. Don't rigidly stick to your initial plan—if data shows the intervention isn't working, modify it and document the adaptation.

4.    Use multiple data sources and maintain ethical standards

Combine qualitative (interviews, focus groups) and quantitative (metrics, surveys) data for comprehensive understanding. Obtain informed consent, protect participant anonymity, and be transparent about your dual role as researcher AND change agent.


Bottom line: Lewin's Action Research lets you do management while studying it—perfect for MBA dissertations where practical relevance and academic rigor must coexist. Your key challenge is balancing the "action" (solving the problem) with the "research" (generating generalizable knowledge).

 


** A collection of lecture notes on the subject of research methods for MBA students, 2026 June


A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.

 

Lecture note on the ethnographic approach as a research methodology: for MBA students

Lecture note on the ethnographic approach as a research methodology: for MBA students

 

My question posted to generative AI: Highlight 5 main ideas of the ethnographic approach as a research methodology in the context of doing MBA dissertation projects, and offer 4 practice advices to the MBA student-researcher.

 

5 Main Ideas of the Ethnographic Approach for MBA Dissertations

1.    Immersion in Natural Context

Ethnography requires the researcher to enter and spend time in the real-world setting where the phenomenon occurs (e.g., a corporate office, supply chain site, or startup), observing behavior “in situ” rather than in artificial lab conditions.

2.    Participant Observation as Core Method

The researcher doesn’t just observe from the outside; they actively engage in conversations, participate in day-to-day activities, and may conduct informal or formal interviews, building trust and acceptance within the group.

3.    Culture-Centered Understanding

The goal is to produce a detailed, complex description of a group’s culture—including shared values, norms, attitudes, and meanings—from the participants’ own perspectives, emphasizing cultural relativism rather than external judgment.

4.    Interpretive, Emergent, and Flexible Design

Ethnography is not hypothesis-testing; it is exploratory and interpretive. Research questions, data collection methods, and even focus can evolve as themes emerge from field notes and ongoing analysis, often using thematic or constant-comparison analysis.

5.    Rich, Narrative, First-Person Account

The final dissertation should offer a rich, authoritative narrative that convinces readers the observations are representative of reality, foregrounding participants’ viewpoints and documenting intricate patterns of social interaction.


4 Practical Advice for MBA Student–Researchers Using Ethnography

1.    Start with Feasibility and Access

Before designing your study, ensure you can gain sustained access to the organization or group. Negotiate entry early, clarify ethical boundaries, and confirm that your part-time MBA timeline allows for the extensive fieldwork ethnography demands.

2.    Maintain Critical Reflexivity and Field Notes

Keep detailed, systematic field notes during or immediately after observations, including both factual data (times, behaviors, comments) and your own reflections. Regularly practice critical reflexivity: question your assumptions, record your involvement, and guard against subjectivity.

3.    Use Key Informants and Triangulate Data

Identify knowledgeable informants who can guide you into the community and explain hidden norms. Combine multiple data sources (observations, interviews, documents) to triangulate findings and strengthen the credibility of your interpretations.

4.    Align Ethnography with MBA Relevance and Scope

Choose a research topic where deep cultural understanding adds clear value to business practice (e.g., organizational change, leadership culture, consumer behavior). Keep the scope narrow enough for a dissertation: focus on one organization, team, or process rather than a whole industry.

 



** A collection of lecture notes on the subject of research methods for MBA students, 2026 June


A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.

 

Lecture note on value-free researcher vs. value-laden researcher: for MBA students

Lecture note on value-free researcher vs. value-laden researcher: for MBA students

 

My question posted to generative AI: Highlight 3 main ideas and then offer 3 practice advices on the following two topics in the context of MBA dissertation projects: 1. a value-free researcher 2. a value-laden researcher.

Based on Max Weber's foundational work and contemporary management research debates, here are the 3 main ideas distinguishing value-free and value-laden researchers, followed by 3 practice advices for MBA dissertation projects:

3 Main Ideas

1. Core Definition & philosophical stance

Aspect

Value-Free Researcher

Value-Laden Researcher

Definition

Keeps personal beliefs, ethics, and social values completely separate from scientific investigation 

Acknowledges that ethical, social, and cultural values inevitably influence research from topic selection to interpretation 

Philosophy

Rooted in Weber's sociology; objectivity is the primary goal 

Recognizes neutrality in management is under pressure; values are unavoidable in science 

2. Influence on research stages

Research Stage

Value-Free Approach

Value-Laden Reality

Topic selection

Should be neutral, based on scholarly gaps

Driven by researcher's interests, social concerns, ethical priorities 

Methodology

Methods chosen purely for technical appropriateness

Values shape method choice (e.g., participatory research for equity) 

Interpretation

Facts interpreted without bias

Values influence what findings are emphasized or how they're framed 

3. Feasibility in management research

Dimension

Value-Free Ideal

Value-Laden Reality

Objectivity goal

Still primary goal in scientific work 

Increasingly recognized as impossible; organizational interests and underlying values frequently influence decision-making 

Management context

Traditional positivist approach

Growing awareness among academics of unavoidable presence of values 


3 Practice Advices for MBA Dissertation Projects

1. Explicitly state your research philosophy in your methodology chapter

·                  Don't pretend to be purely value-free if you're not; instead, acknowledge your values transparently

·                  Write a dedicated section explaining whether you lean toward positivism (value-free ideal) or pragmatism/ interpretivism (value-acknowledging)

·                  This strengthens your dissertation's rigor and helps ethics committees understand your approach

2. Apply value-awareness at each research stage

·                  Topic selection: Ask "Why does this matter to me?" and document your motivations

·                  Data collection: Recognize how your presence, questions, and participant selection reflect values

·                  Analysis: Use triangulation (multiple methods/data sources) to reduce single-value bias

·                  Interpretation: Consider alternative explanations that your values might have obscured

3. Embrace ethical responsibility over false neutrality

·                  Follow the call for "more thoughtful and morally responsible approach to research"

·                  When values inevitably influence your work (as they do), document this in your limitations section

·                  In management research, acknowledge that organizational interests and stakeholder values shape findings

·                  This honest approach is stronger for MBA dissertations than claiming impossible neutrality

This balanced approach aligns with qualitative research standards for business and management dissertations, where acknowledging values strengthens rather than weakens your academic rigor.



** A collection of lecture notes on the subject of research methods for MBA students, 2026 June


A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.