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Move along please - there is nothing new here!

Bednar, Peter LU and Welch, Christine (2009) ECRM 2009. The 8th European Conference on Research Methods in Business and Management p.48-54
Abstract
This paper considers how researchers can best establish a forward trajectory in their work, individually and collectively. The suggestion is sometimes made in academic circles that it is inappropriate to present work that revisits an area previously discussed within the field. While we accept that any published paper should make an original contribution to what is collectively known about a particular area of inquiry, we nevertheless believe that it is both necessary and desirable to revisit and discuss again topics of significance. Only through reflection upon our own past work and that of others can we build productive learning spirals. Only in this way can we establish and extend a reflexive relationship to future practice. Whilst... (More)
This paper considers how researchers can best establish a forward trajectory in their work, individually and collectively. The suggestion is sometimes made in academic circles that it is inappropriate to present work that revisits an area previously discussed within the field. While we accept that any published paper should make an original contribution to what is collectively known about a particular area of inquiry, we nevertheless believe that it is both necessary and desirable to revisit and discuss again topics of significance. Only through reflection upon our own past work and that of others can we build productive learning spirals. Only in this way can we establish and extend a reflexive relationship to future practice. Whilst research needs to maintain an agenda of innovative inquiry, we should also remind ourselves of a need to ‘stand upon the shoulders of giants’ - good research should include reflection upon the accumulated wisdom of our predecessors. In pursuit of inquiry, we should also be open-minded and therefore prepared to revisit ideas and issues previously discarded or forgotten, in the light of fresh evidence or contexts. We believe, therefore, that research methodology should explicitly incorporate opportunities for such reflection. We draw upon examples from our own field of Information Systems research to illustrate these views. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
reflection, problem-solving, orders of learning, critically informed research
host publication
Proceedings of ECRM 2009. The 8th European Conference on Research Methods in Business and Management
editor
Azzopardi, Joseph
pages
8 pages
publisher
ACI Academic Conferences International
conference name
ECRM 2009. The 8th European Conference on Research Methods in Business and Management
conference location
Valletta, Malta
conference dates
2009-06-22 - 2009-06-23
ISBN
978-1-906638-31-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f6e39f57-0218-4644-934c-64565bb38a16 (old id 1482871)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 11:29:44
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:05:13
@inproceedings{f6e39f57-0218-4644-934c-64565bb38a16,
  abstract     = {{This paper considers how researchers can best establish a forward trajectory in their work, individually and collectively. The suggestion is sometimes made in academic circles that it is inappropriate to present work that revisits an area previously discussed within the field. While we accept that any published paper should make an original contribution to what is collectively known about a particular area of inquiry, we nevertheless believe that it is both necessary and desirable to revisit and discuss again topics of significance. Only through reflection upon our own past work and that of others can we build productive learning spirals. Only in this way can we establish and extend a reflexive relationship to future practice. Whilst research needs to maintain an agenda of innovative inquiry, we should also remind ourselves of a need to ‘stand upon the shoulders of giants’ - good research should include reflection upon the accumulated wisdom of our predecessors. In pursuit of inquiry, we should also be open-minded and therefore prepared to revisit ideas and issues previously discarded or forgotten, in the light of fresh evidence or contexts. We believe, therefore, that research methodology should explicitly incorporate opportunities for such reflection. We draw upon examples from our own field of Information Systems research to illustrate these views.}},
  author       = {{Bednar, Peter and Welch, Christine}},
  booktitle    = {{Proceedings of ECRM 2009. The 8th European Conference on Research Methods in Business and Management}},
  editor       = {{Azzopardi, Joseph}},
  isbn         = {{978-1-906638-31-3}},
  keywords     = {{reflection; problem-solving; orders of learning; critically informed research}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{48--54}},
  publisher    = {{ACI Academic Conferences International}},
  title        = {{Move along please - there is nothing new here!}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}