Tuesday, 26 May 2026

A note about the historical background knowledge on MBA dissertation investigation practice

A note about the historical background knowledge on MBA dissertation investigation practice


How does some basic background knowledge about (1) the scientific revolution, (2) the age of enlightenment period and (3) the industrial movement, and (4) Post-WWII philosophical thinking enable MBA students to better comprehend the contemporary dissertation project investigation practices? Could you offer a brief discussion of it?

Yes — that historical/philosophical background helps MBA students read, design, and defend contemporary dissertations more clearly and critically. Below is a concise, structured discussion linking each period to practical dissertation practices MBA students use today.

Direct answer

·        Learning the Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment, Industrial Revolution, and Post‑WWII philosophy gives MBA students the intellectual tools to evaluate evidence, choose methodologies, justify assumptions, and situate managerial problems in wider social and ethical contexts.

1.    Scientific Revolution — methods and reproducibility

·        What it contributed: the rise of empirical observation, hypothesis testing, the experimental method, and norms of reproducible reporting in science.

·        Why it matters for dissertations: MBA students adopt the same expectation that claims be supported by observable data, transparent procedures, and reproducible analysis when designing empirical studies or evaluating evidence. This underpins choices like operational definitions, data collection protocols, and clear reporting of results.

2.    Age of Enlightenment — reason, critique, and public argument

·        What it contributed: emphasis on rational critique, secular inquiry, individual rights, and broadening access to education and debate (salons, print culture) that spread ideas and scrutiny.

·        Why it matters for dissertations: students learn to frame research questions with logical argumentation, justify normative claims (e.g., about governance or ethics), and communicate findings to both specialist and broader audiences — skills needed for literature reviews, theory-building, and defending implications for practice and policy.

3.    Industrial Revolution — context, scale, and social consequences

·        What it contributed: large‑scale structural change, new economic institutions, and social problems that motivated systematic social inquiry and formation of disciplines like economics and sociology.

·        Why it matters for dissertations: many MBA topics (supply chains, organizational change, labor, technology adoption) are shaped by industrialization’s legacy; students must link micro choices to macro structures, choose appropriate unit(s) of analysis, and consider externalities and social impacts when proposing managerial interventions.

4.    Post‑WWII philosophical thinking — paradigms, reflexivity, and methodological pluralism

·        What it contributed: debates about positivism vs interpretivism, the rise of critical theory, constructivism, and attention to researcher reflexivity and value-ladenness after WWII.

·        Why it matters for dissertations: modern research methods textbooks and examiners expect students to state their epistemological stance (e.g., positivist, interpretivist, pragmatic), justify methodological choices (quantitative, qualitative, mixed), and reflect on bias and ethical implications — all shaped by Post‑WWII philosophical developments.

Practical implications for MBA dissertation work

·        Framing research questions: use Enlightenment-style critical reasoning to make questions logical, precise, and socially relevant.

·        Choosing methods: apply Scientific Revolution norms for empirical rigor when using experiments or quantitative analysis, and Post‑WWII pluralism when qualitative or mixed methods better fit the question.

·        Reporting and reproducibility: follow scientific reporting norms — transparent methods, data handling, and limitations — to allow replication or credible critique.

·        Situating contribution: connect micro findings to industrial-era structural issues and modern societal concerns, and make normative claims cautiously with ethical justification.

·        Reflexivity and ethics: acknowledge researcher position, potential biases, and broader consequences — a Post‑WWII expectation for responsible scholarship.

Illustration (brief)

·        Example: a dissertation on digital gig‑work could (a) adopt an empiric testable hypothesis about earnings effects (Scientific Revolution), (b) argue why the question matters for worker rights and policy (Enlightenment values), (c) analyse how platformization continues industrial-era labor shifts (Industrial Revolution linkage), and (d) justify a mixed-methods design and reflect on researcher stance and ethics (Post‑WWII pluralism).



A note on the MBA dissertation project literature review tasks of comparison, synthesis and framework-building: on staff reduction

A note on the MBA dissertation project literature review tasks of comparison, synthesis and framework-building: on staff reduction

 

I am a part-time MBA student, currently learning to do dissertation project. I have a query about the literature review task. Specifically, please suggest 4 ideas on each of the following literature review tasks: 1. how to compare and contrast 2 to 4 relevant academic theories 2. how to conduct literature synthesis arising from the review of a few relevant academic theories 3. how to construct a theoretical framework from the review of a few relevant academic theories. It would be useful to also clarify your ideas a bit more with reference to the MBA research theme of "to investigate how to effectively and ethically carry out staff reduction tactics, notably on the gen y employees, arising from the introduction of AI applications in the financial services sector in Hong Kong"

Yes — for an MBA dissertation literature review, you can treat those three tasks as different levels of analysis: comparison, synthesis, and framework-building. For your AI-and-staff-reduction topic in Hong Kong financial services, I suggest using theories that let you connect technology adoption, employee reactions, ethics, and organizational decision-making.

1. Comparing and contrasting theories

1.    Compare theories by their core unit of explanation.
Ask whether each theory explains individual attitudes, managerial decisions, organizational processes, or ethical outcomes. For your topic, for example, one theory may explain why Gen Y employees react negatively to AI-led downsizing, while another explains why firms justify the tactic as efficiency-driven. This gives you a clean basis for contrast rather than listing theories one by one.

2.    Compare theories by assumptions about people and organizations.
Some theories assume employees are rational responders to incentives; others assume they interpret fairness, identity, or trust. In your topic, this helps you contrast a “productivity/efficiency” view of staff reduction with a “justice/psychological impact” view.

3.    Compare theories by what they predict in the same situation.
Use the same Hong Kong AI adoption context and ask: what would each theory predict about morale, turnover intention, resistance, or ethical acceptability? If one theory predicts acceptance because of perceived organizational efficiency, while another predicts resistance because of perceived breach of fairness, you have a strong comparison.

4.    Compare theories by their explanatory limits.
Identify what each theory cannot explain well. For example, one theory may explain technology acceptance but not moral legitimacy; another may explain ethics but not operational implementation. This is especially useful in your topic because AI-driven staff reduction is both a technological and ethical issue.

2. Synthesizing theories

1.    Synthesize by finding shared themes across theories.
Look for overlap, such as all theories pointing to the importance of perceived fairness, transparency, or managerial communication. In your topic, you could synthesize theories into a common argument that successful AI-related staff reduction depends not only on cost logic but also on employee trust and ethical process.

2.    Synthesize by building a layered explanation.
Put the theories into levels: one theory explains organizational drivers, another explains employee reactions, and a third explains ethical evaluation. For example, AI adoption may create restructuring pressure, which then triggers employee perceptions of insecurity, which in turn shapes judgments about fairness and legitimacy.

3.    Synthesize by identifying tensions and resolving them.
Literature reviews should highlight agreement and disagreement, not just summarize sources. In your case, the tension may be between efficiency-centered theories and people-centered/ethical theories; your synthesis can argue that both are necessary to understand “effective and ethical” staff reduction.

4.    Synthesize by converting separate theories into themes or propositions.
Rather than discussing each theory separately, group them into themes such as “technology pressure,” “employee vulnerability,” “perceived justice,” and “ethical governance.” This makes the review read like an integrated argument and helps you move toward a dissertation question.

3. Building a theoretical framework

1.    Build the framework as a cause-and-effect chain.
Start with the independent driver: AI introduction in financial services. Then trace effects through organizational restructuring, staff reduction decisions, employee perceptions, and outcomes such as commitment, resistance, or ethical acceptance. This works well if your dissertation wants to explain both effectiveness and ethics.

2.    Build the framework as a set of interacting constructs.
Show how AI adoption, management strategy, communication quality, perceived fairness, and employee outcomes relate to one another. For your topic, the framework could show that AI does not directly “cause” acceptable staff reduction; rather, the outcome depends on how management handles the process.

3.    Build the framework around mediators and moderators.
A useful dissertation-style framework often includes mediating variables like perceived organizational justice or trust, and moderating variables like employee age cohort, job type, or Hong Kong’s financial-sector norms. In your topic, Gen Y status may moderate how strongly staff reduction is experienced as threatening or unfair.

4.    Build the framework from a gap in the literature.
End the review by showing what existing theories miss, then position your framework as the bridge. For example, prior studies may discuss AI adoption, downsizing, or ethics separately, but not together in the Hong Kong financial-services setting with a focus on Gen Y employees. That gap justifies your framework and your research questions.

A useful way to organize the review

For your topic, a practical sequence is:

1.    explain the AI-driven business context;

2.    review 2 to 4 theories;

3.    compare them on assumptions, scope, and limits;

4.    synthesize them into 3 to 5 themes;

5.    convert those themes into a framework with variables or propositions.
That structure matches common dissertation guidance on classifying literature by theory, comparing studies, and identifying unresolved issues.

Suggested theory types

For your specific theme, the most relevant theory mix would usually include:

·        one theory about technology adoption or organizational change;

·        one theory about employee attitudes or reactions;

·        one theory about justice, ethics, or legitimacy;

·        optionally one theory about strategic HR or downsizing decisions.

That combination gives you enough breadth to discuss why the firm adopts AI, how staff reduction unfolds, and whether the process is perceived as effective and ethical.

 



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Monday, 25 May 2026

A note on some methods used for studying academic articles and books with regard to the literature review task: for MBA students

A note on some methods used for studying academic articles and books with regard to the literature review task: for MBA students

 

I am a part-time MBA student, currently learning to do my dissertation projects. While acknowledging the usefulness of learning generative AI advices on learning academic theories and ideas, I understand that it is also important to study academic articles and books direct for the literature review task of doing dissertation projects. In this regard, could you offer 5 advices on how to more effectively study academic articles and books?

Here are five practical, research-backed ways to study academic articles and books more effectively as a dissertation-stage MBA student.

1. Read with a clear question and role in mind

Instead of “reading to understand everything,” decide what role each source will play in your dissertation before you start. For example: theory background, definitions, methodological example, empirical evidence for/against your hypothesis, or context for your case. Students who use self-regulated strategies like setting specific goals for each reading tend to get more out of AI-supported and traditional reading alike.

A simple routine:

·        Before reading, write 1–2 questions: “What is the main argument?” “What does this say about X in Hong Kong?”

·        Decide: “Is this article mainly for theory, method, or evidence in my dissertation?”

·        While reading, highlight only what helps answer those questions.

What is one typical question you could write at the top of your next article to keep your reading focused?

2. Use structured passes instead of one heavy read

Many study-skills guides now recommend a multi-pass approach (e.g., preview → detailed → selective re-read) to academic reading, especially for dense journal articles in graduate work.

You can adapt it like this:

·        Pass 1 (5–10 minutes): Skim title, abstract, headings, figures, and conclusion. Write a one-sentence guess of the core contribution.

·        Pass 2 (20–30 minutes): Read introduction, theory/literature section, and discussion carefully, but skim methods/results unless they are central to your dissertation.

·        Pass 3 (targeted): Re-read only the parts relevant to your chapter (e.g., their conceptual framework if you are building your own).

Over time, this helps you quickly decide whether to keep, park, or discard a source for your literature review.

How do you currently read a typical journal article, and where in that process do you think a structured “three-pass” approach could help most?

3. Build concept maps and compare sources, not just summarize them

Dissertation-quality literature reviews must show how studies relate to each other, not just list them. Guidance for graduate writing shows that students who interact recursively with tools and strategies (e.g., mapping, comparing, revisiting notes) produce stronger, more synthetic writing than those who only use tools for surface tasks.

Practical habits:

·        After reading 2–3 articles on the same topic (e.g., “employee engagement in SMEs”), draw a quick concept map: key constructs, arrows for relationships, and where each author stands.

·        Keep a “differences notebook”: for each article, note how its theory, context, or findings differ from others you’ve read.

·        Try to write one short “compare and contrast” paragraph after each cluster of papers, focusing on agreements, contradictions, and gaps.

If you chose one narrow concept from your topic (for example, “affordable housing satisfaction” or “REIT governance”), what two recent papers could you put side-by-side to compare in this way?

4. Take notes for future writing, not for the present reading

Research on AI and graduate writing shows that the biggest gains happen when tools are combined with self-regulated strategies like paraphrasing, organizing, and drafting, rather than just checking grammar. This aligns with classic advice from academic skills centres: take notes that you can almost paste into your dissertation as building blocks.

A simple note template for each source:

·        Full reference

·        One-sentence “thesis” of the paper (their main claim)

·        Type of contribution: theory / method / case / evidence

·        3–5 bullet points in your own words: key ideas or findings

·        1–2 direct implications for your dissertation: “This supports my idea that…”, “This suggests a possible variable…”, “This method could be adapted for…”

This way, every time you read, you are also drafting your literature review and methodology chapter indirectly.

How do you currently take notes from articles, and what is one change you could make so your notes are more “ready to use” in your dissertation?

5. Integrate AI deliberately, but always return to the text

Recent guidance from universities emphasizes using generative AI as a scaffold for reading and writing (e.g., clarifying concepts, suggesting questions), while insisting that students still engage closely with original sources for evidence and citation. Studies on graduate-level AI use suggest that the strongest outcomes arise when AI is used recursively—students ask, refine, and check ideas, rather than letting AI replace their own reading.

In practice, that can mean:

·        Before reading: asking AI to explain unfamiliar theories in simple terms so you can recognize them in the article.

·        After reading: asking for help to test your understanding (“Here is my summary—what might I be missing?”), not to generate the summary from scratch.

·        During writing: using AI to brainstorm alternative structures or wording, then checking every claim against the original article before keeping it.

Given your interest in doing a serious MBA dissertation, using AI as a thinking partner while keeping the article or book as the “final authority” is a strong, ethical balance.



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