For decades, many academicians have expressed concern about the gap between themselves and practitioners. In those decades, much has been written about the probable causes of and methods for narrowing this gap. Despite the dialog and the efforts to narrow it, the gap remains. This paper explores four assumptions related to the gap. We use paradigm theory to examine the academic world and the practitioner world and to explain how the separate worlds perpetuate the gap. We then propose that academicians either accept the gap or legitimize the pracademic viewpoint. a paradigm that reconciles the differences between the academic and practitioner paradigms. Specific suggestions are provided regarding the establishment and development of the ...
There is consensus about the existence of an academic–practitioner gap in management studies. Howeve...
This paper raises pertinent issues regarding an obvious gap that prevails between theory and practic...
In marketing, as in other areas of management studies, there is a feeling abroad that lines of commu...
For decades, many academicians have expressed concern about the gap between themselves and practitio...
Jean M. Bartunek and Sara L. Rynes note the recent spike in journal articles across management schol...
Some concerns in the field of Business Management regarding the gap between theory and practice have...
There is a “knowledge gap ” between academic researchers and practitioners. Managers frequently expe...
Management researchers and management practitioners increasingly appear to be talking past each othe...
There is a “knowledge gap” between academic researchers and practitioners. Managers frequently exper...
In this essay we challenge standard approaches to the academic–practitioner gap that essentially pit...
This paper lays out a framework for understanding the academia-practitioner gap. In this framework, ...
textThe academician-practitioner gap has been long discussed within the advertising community. There...
Drawing on growing voices calling academics to move closer to practical settings, this article striv...
The Information Systems (IS) field has struggled to achieve a functional relationship between acade...
Purpose This article aims to explore dimensions and tensions in the relationship between theory (usu...
There is consensus about the existence of an academic–practitioner gap in management studies. Howeve...
This paper raises pertinent issues regarding an obvious gap that prevails between theory and practic...
In marketing, as in other areas of management studies, there is a feeling abroad that lines of commu...
For decades, many academicians have expressed concern about the gap between themselves and practitio...
Jean M. Bartunek and Sara L. Rynes note the recent spike in journal articles across management schol...
Some concerns in the field of Business Management regarding the gap between theory and practice have...
There is a “knowledge gap ” between academic researchers and practitioners. Managers frequently expe...
Management researchers and management practitioners increasingly appear to be talking past each othe...
There is a “knowledge gap” between academic researchers and practitioners. Managers frequently exper...
In this essay we challenge standard approaches to the academic–practitioner gap that essentially pit...
This paper lays out a framework for understanding the academia-practitioner gap. In this framework, ...
textThe academician-practitioner gap has been long discussed within the advertising community. There...
Drawing on growing voices calling academics to move closer to practical settings, this article striv...
The Information Systems (IS) field has struggled to achieve a functional relationship between acade...
Purpose This article aims to explore dimensions and tensions in the relationship between theory (usu...
There is consensus about the existence of an academic–practitioner gap in management studies. Howeve...
This paper raises pertinent issues regarding an obvious gap that prevails between theory and practic...
In marketing, as in other areas of management studies, there is a feeling abroad that lines of commu...