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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A paper which looks at the theory of concept mapping and the way it can be applied to the findings in three research papers from business journals, with specific reference to transnational business organisations and culturally diverse workforces. Bibliography lists 6 sources
Page Count:
13 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JL5_JLcmap.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
is useful to look first of all at the principles which underlie concept mapping and why it is of particular validity in the context of assessing HRM frameworks and structures,
both as a theoretical method and as a basis for organisational strategies. Concept mapping
has several elements in common with mind mapping, which is familiar to most people from one of its simpler forms, brainstorming, which is used at all educational and business levels
from secondary education onwards. In mind mapping, one takes a central concept and then derives five or ten linked or associated concepts from it. Each of these sub-concepts is then
used as the central point from which to derive several sub-concepts of its own: the overall structure is that of a tree, with the central node being the original concept.
Concept mapping is amore complex variation of this idea, in which there is not necessarily a single main concept, but several, so that the overall structure is a network rather
than a tree. As Lanzing (2003) points out, there are various ways in which the
concepts and their links may be categorised or identified. The links can be uni-, bi- or non-directional and can be associative, specific, divided into levels of causal relationships and so
on. It is evident that concept mapping offers a lot more scope for interrelationships between concepts to be set out and defined than does mind-mapping, which does not have such
a flexible network structure. Lanzing notes that concept mapping originated from the work of Ausubel, who maintained that one must have prior knowledge in order to learn about new concepts:
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