Towards better understanding and narrowing of the science-practice gap: A practitioner-centered approach to management knowledge creation

Author(s):  
Katerina Božič ◽  
Alexandre Anatolievich Bachkirov ◽  
Matej Černe
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stacy Freheit ◽  
Gisel G. Suarez Bonilla ◽  
Christopher S. Vye ◽  
Bruce E. Clark

2017 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 1032-1055 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diana Bertuol-Garcia ◽  
Carla Morsello ◽  
Charbel N. El-Hani ◽  
Renata Pardini

2018 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. S28-S35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher M. Callahan ◽  
Daniel R. Bateman ◽  
Sophia Wang ◽  
Malaz A. Boustani

2011 ◽  
pp. 135-153
Author(s):  
Robert J. Cabin

Author(s):  
José G. R. Hernández ◽  
María J. García ◽  
Gilberto J. Hernández

The main contribution of this chapter is the study of the generation and management knowledge, emphasizing the social aspects, from an area of the Logistic Model Based on Positions (LoMoBaP). The area to use is the Inverse logistics, which is integrated for the Reverse logistics manager, the Compilation and Reception manager and the Classification and use manager. The analysis will be done via dynamic knowledge, studying the upward spiral of knowledge creation, tacit to explicit to tacit. To do this will be constructed tables where the functions of these three positions will be identified and will be discussed, as these functions are involved in the process of management and generation of knowledge, following the processes of Socialization, Externalization, Combination and Internalization, simultaneously that are located in the Ba and knowledge assets are analyzed: Experimental, Conceptual Systemic and Routine Knowledge.


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
PD Steyn ◽  
ASA Du Toit

The knowledge economy impacts on the way enterprises should address their business requirements, forcing many of them to review the potential mechanisms they could employ to improve their competitive advantage. The business incubator approach is one such mechanism. This article explores the application of knowledge management, knowledge creation and innovation in a corporate incubator. It focuses on the process of knowledge management, to ensure that a culture and appropriate strategies conducive to enhancing knowledge creation are developed in an enterprise. Innovation as a strategic imperative is considered, as well as the challenge of driving it within an enterprise. The purpose of this empirical survey was to determine whether the corporate incubator model applied by Eskom conforms to the attributes of knowledge management, knowledge creation and innovation, and whether the synergies to be exploited amongst these disciplines can be harnessed to give Eskom a competitive advantage.  


Author(s):  
Scott O. Lilienfeld ◽  
Lorie A. Ritschel ◽  
Steven Jay Lynn ◽  
Robin L. Cautin ◽  
Robert D. Latzman

2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul E. Levy ◽  
Stanley B. Silverman ◽  
Caitlin M. Cavanaugh

The scientist–practitioner model of training in industrial and organizational psychology provides the foundation for the education of industrial and organizational psychologists across the world. This approach is important because, as industrial and organizational psychologists, we are responsible for both the creation and discovery of knowledge and the use or application of that knowledge. In multiple articles recently published in this journal, Pulakos and her colleagues (Pulakos, Mueller Hanson, Arad, & Moye, 2015; Pulakos & O’Leary, 2011) have argued that performance management (PM), as applied and implemented in organizations, is broken. This is not a unique take on the state of PM in organizations, as others have been arguing for many years that PM is no longer working in organizations the way that we would like it to work (Banks & Murphy, 1985; Bretz, Milkovich, & Read, 1992). Further, for many years and in many Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology conference panels and debates in the literature, we have been inundated with discussions and conversations around the science–practice gap and around the gap being especially evident in PM.


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