I have been thinking about the difficulties those coming into career practice from the hard sciences or engineering have in bridging their thinking into the psychology/counselling theory space; from science to social science. Suddenly in career practice, 'theories' have a different flavour: they are not the more easily evidenced, readily observable, quite measurable facts, such as E=mc2; they are less solid, increasingly vague, more contextual attributes, such as "has a tendency to not complete when...".
Not only do we have this shift from solid to vague, but there are a number of theories where the concepts or components are similar. I think this is a meta-theory - a "theory about theory", which gives us a structure so we can think about the world around us, and to consider our "assumptions about the nature of reality, and of knowledge, that stand behind specific theories and the[...] concepts" those theories relate to (Given et al., 2023, p. 121). Effectively, meta-theories help us to see what assumptions we make, and how we might go about unpicking them to see how they really work (Edwards, 2008). The idea of meta-theories may help us find connections between psychology/industrial psychology/organisational behaviour, where career development sits, and the harder sciences. The meta-theories I began thinking about are relationship versus task (Ceri-Booms et al., 2017); and rationality versus emotionality (Daft, 2008).
In the 1940s and 50s the organisational behaviour field begins researching behaviour theories in leadership: what behaviours we show, such as the Iowa Studies (Kurt Lewin) which considered the autocratic, democratic and laissez faire attributes of leadership; the Ohio State Studies (Harris Fleishman) exploring consideration & initiating structure; the University of Michigan Studies (Renis Likert) which looked at employee-centered, and job-centered attributes; and the University of Texas Blake & Mouton Leadership Grid (1964) which focused on concern for people versus concern for results (Daft, 2008). The meta-theory of the behaviouralists is task behaviours versus relationship behaviours (Ceri-Booms et al., 2017).
We can also consider leadership styles and theories on a continuum of rationality versus emotionality; where management is at the blue end of the spectrum, and charismatic leadership is at the red end. Charismatic leadership can be hot, emotional and may lack rationality. Transformational leadership styles, which are more relational styles, but are more rational than charismatic leadership may become, sit in the middle, in the lavender zone: neither hot nor cold. And of course, when we say 'rational' we know we are not actually rational; but imagined to be possibly closer to rational than emotional – and as shown in the image accompanying this post (Daft, 2008).
We end up with these vaguely similar ideas for many different theories, and perhaps meta-theory might give us more "overall coherency" (Edwards, 2008, p. ii); maybe being to aligned to a particular theory means we become "prisoners caught in the framework of our theories", and "that these conceptual prisons are self-made and that we need to find ways to 'break out' of them" (p. 1).
It is difficult research work to do, but many of us see the glimmer of similarity, even if we are unable to undertake the research. We know someone will crack that nut one day. And by finding the commonalities, we can think about a much larger picture - not the individual theory - and break our ideas free.
Here's to jailbreaking the scientists into the social sciences :-)
Sam
References:
Ceri-Booms, M., CurÅŸeu, P. L., & Oerlemans, L. A. (2017). Task and person-focused leadership behaviors and team performance: A meta-analysis. Human Resource Management Review, 27(1), 178-192. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2016.09.010
Daft. R. L. (2008). The Leadership Experience (4th ed.). Thomson South-Western.
Edwards, M. G. (2008). An Integral Metatheory for Organisational Transformation. [Doctoral thesis, University of Western Australia]. https://api.research-repository.uwa.edu.au/ws/portalfiles/portal/3220635/Edwards_Mark_Gerard_2008.pdf
Given, L. M., Case, D. O., & Willson, R. (2023). Chapter 4: Metatheories, Theories, and Models. In Looking for Information: Examining Research on How People Engage With Information (pp. 121-178). Emerald Publishing Limited.
Tannenbaum, R. & Schmidt, W. (1973). How to Choose a Leadership Pattern. Harvard Business Review, 51(3), 162-180.
















