Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Lecture note on reflexivity: for MBA students

Lecture note on reflexivity: for MBA students

 

My query posted to generative AI: Highlight 4 main ideas on reflexivity and 3 practice advices in each of the fields of (1) anthropology and (2) critical management science.

Here are the main ideas and practice advice on reflexivity in anthropology and critical management science, in a form you can use for dissertation notes.

Anthropology

4 main ideas

1.    Reflexivity means examining how the anthropologist’s own beliefs, identity, and judgments shape the research process and findings.

2.    The researcher is not neutral or outside the field; the researcher is part of the research relationship and influences what is observed and interpreted.

3.    Reflexivity goes beyond ordinary reflection because it asks the researcher to examine the assumptions behind their own judgments, not just the data itself.

4.    It also matters ethically, because awareness of positionality can improve trust, honesty, and respect in relationships with participants.

3 practice advices

·        Keep a reflexive field journal and record your immediate reactions, assumptions, and emotional responses during fieldwork.

·        Explicitly note your positionality, including how gender, ethnicity, age, class, or other identities may affect access and interpretation.

·        Use reflexivity to improve the account, but avoid over-centering the self; the point is better understanding of the field, not methodological narcissism.

Critical management science

4 main ideas

1.    Critical reflexivity means thinking about how your assumptions, values, and actions shape others and shape organizational reality.

2.    It treats reality as socially constructed, so management knowledge is not purely objective or value-free.

3.    It works at both the personal level and the structural level: self-reflection plus critique of practices, policies, and power relations in organizations.

4.    It aims to support more collaborative, responsible, and ethical management rather than instrumental control.

3 practice advices

·        Use journaling to examine how your decisions, language, and assumptions affect colleagues and organizational outcomes.

·        Ask critical questions such as “for what and to whom are we accountable?” to reveal ethical and power issues in management practice.

·        Reflect not only on your own behavior but also on the wider organizational systems, norms, and knowledge bases that shape what seems “normal.”

Compact contrast

Anthropology usually emphasizes the researcher’s position in relation to field participants, while critical management science more often extends reflexivity to organizational power, leadership, and ethics. Both fields treat reflexivity as a way to produce more honest, accountable, and context-sensitive knowledge.


My question posted to generative AI: How could these reflexivity advices in the fields of anthropology and critical management science be employed in the context of doing MBA dissertation projects? Or, are these advices also relevant to the MBA dissertation project works?

Yes — these reflexivity advices are directly relevant to MBA dissertation projects, especially if your dissertation involves qualitative research, interviews, case studies, ethnography, or practice-based inquiry. In MBA work, reflexivity helps you show how your role, assumptions, and access may shape the research, which strengthens methodological rigor and credibility.

How to use them in an MBA dissertation

·        From anthropology, use reflexivity to examine your positionality: why you chose the topic, how your workplace background affects access, and how participants may see you as a student, manager, insider, or outsider.

·        From critical management science, use reflexivity to question the organizational and ethical implications of your study: whose interests your research serves, what power relations are involved, and how your findings may affect practice.

·        In practical terms, keep a reflexive journal during proposal, data collection, and analysis so you can track assumptions, decision points, and changes in your thinking.

·        If your dissertation is practice-based, reflexivity can help you bridge “real-life” management problems and academic analysis, which is exactly the tension highlighted in DBA and executive MBA contexts.

Why it matters for MBA work

These advices are not only relevant; they are often useful for making an MBA dissertation more defensible and more original. Reflexivity helps you avoid presenting your findings as if they were purely objective when they were actually shaped by your access, managerial experience, and interpretive choices.

A simple way to apply it

You could add a short reflexivity section in your methodology chapter with three parts: your background and relationship to the topic, how this may influence data collection and interpretation, and what steps you took to manage bias or partiality. This is especially appropriate for qualitative or mixed-method MBA dissertations, but even quantitative projects can benefit from a brief positionality note.

Example for an MBA project

If you are studying employee engagement in your own organization, anthropology-style reflexivity would ask how your insider status affects what people tell you, while critical management reflexivity would ask how your role and the organization’s hierarchy shape participation and interpretation. That combination makes your dissertation more transparent and academically stronger.



My question posted to generative AI: “Suggest 3 illustrative examples how the reflexivity outcomes of an MBA student could be employed in the writing of the MBA dissertation report chapter 5 (discussion of research findings).

 

Here are 3 illustrative examples of how reflexivity outcomes can be used in Chapter 5 (Discussion of Research Findings) of an MBA dissertation:


Example 1: Explaining Consensus and Disagreements Among Participants

Where in Chapter 5: Section 5.3 ("Significance of Findings") — 5.3.1 Key Agreements and 5.3.2 Main Areas of Disagreement

How reflexivity is employed:

If your reflexive journal reveals that you are an insider manager in the organization studied, use that to explain why participants might agree on certain topics (e.g., trust in management) but disagree on others (e.g., fairness of performance appraisal).

Example text:

"A key finding was that 8 out of 10 interviewees agreed that leadership communication had improved. Reflexivity shows that as an insider manager, I had access to senior leaders who may have framed responses positively. This insider status may have encouraged consensus on leadership-related topics. In contrast, participants disagreed more strongly on performance appraisal fairness. My reflexive notes suggest employees may have been more willing to express criticism about systems they perceived as less directly tied to my role, reducing the insider bias effect."

This shows how your positionality shaped patterns of agreement/disagreement.


Example 2: Interpreting Findings That Confirm or Contradict Literature

Where in Chapter 5: Section 5.4 ("Comparison with Literature Review") — 5.4.1 Confirmation and 5.4.2 Contradictions

How reflexivity is employed:

If your reflexivity reveals strong prior beliefs about a management theory (e.g., you initially believed empowerment always improves engagement), use this to interpret why some findings confirm the literature while others contradict it.

Example text:

"The literature strongly supports the link between employee empowerment and engagement (e.g., Robinson & Smith, 2020). My findings confirm this for 70% of participants but contradict it for senior managers, who reported no significant change. Reflexively, I recognize that I entered this project with strong beliefs about empowerment's benefits, possibly shaping how I framed questions. My reflexive journal notes that I initially struggled to interpret senior managers' scepticism. Re-reading transcripts with this awareness, I see that senior managers faced different constraints (budget limits, regulatory pressures) that empowerment alone could not address. This suggests the literature's general claim may not apply equally across hierarchical levels."

This uses reflexivity to show how your assumptions were challenged and how you adjusted your interpretation.


Example 3: Drawing Policy and Strategic Implications with Awareness of Positionality

Where in Chapter 5: Section 5.5 ("Policy and Strategic Implications") — 5.5.1 Recommendations and 5.5.2 Strategic Implications

How reflexivity is employed:

If your reflexivity reveals you have a vested interest in the organization's outcomes (e.g., you're applying for a promotion related to the project), use this to shape how you frame recommendations and acknowledge limitations.

Example text:

"Based on findings, I recommend introducing structured career development pathways to improve engagement. However, reflexivity requires acknowledging that as an employee seeking advancement, I have a vested interest in recommendations that support career progression. My reflexive notes from Week 8 show I initially favoured more ambitious recommendations but tempered them after recognising this bias. The recommendations are therefore framed to balance employee needs with organisational constraints, and I suggest further validation through an external consultant to reduce insider bias."

This demonstrates critical management reflexivity by questioning whose interests your recommendations serve and addressing power dynamics.


Summary Table: Where Reflexivity Appears in Chapter 5

Reflexivity outcome

Chapter 5 section

Purpose

Insider/ outsider positionality

5.3 Agreements & Disagreements

Explain patterns in participant responses

Prior theoretical beliefs

5.4 Comparison with Literature

Interpret confirmations/contradictions with awareness of assumptions

Vested interest in outcomes

5.5 Policy & Strategic Implications

Frame recommendations critically and acknowledge bias in recommendations

Using reflexivity in these ways makes your discussion more transparent, methodologically rigorous, and credible for an MBA dissertation.


 


** Two related video: good reflexivity practices; how to write a reflexive research diary.


** 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.

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.