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There is nothing so practical as …: building myths in community psychology.

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There is nothing so practical as …: building myths in community psychology. / Bishop, Brian J.; Browne, Alison L.
In: The Australian Community Psychologist, Vol. 18, No. 3, 12.2006, p. 68-73.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Bishop BJ, Browne AL. There is nothing so practical as …: building myths in community psychology. The Australian Community Psychologist. 2006 Dec;18(3):68-73.

Author

Bishop, Brian J. ; Browne, Alison L. / There is nothing so practical as …: building myths in community psychology. In: The Australian Community Psychologist. 2006 ; Vol. 18, No. 3. pp. 68-73.

Bibtex

@article{7e302e6794234b889bb257133683d741,
title = "There is nothing so practical as …: building myths in community psychology.",
abstract = "Kurt Lewin{\textquoteright}s comment about the need to integrate psychological theory and practice famously has been mythologised in academic psychology in a distorted, self-serving form. Myths may serve to create a sense of collective identity, but in professional arenas myths can lead to distortions of the nature of theory and practice. We argue that some central tenets of community psychology have developed mythical status and, as such, perform social as well as conceptual functions. We argue that the unexamined status of these myths can lead to difficulties in praxis, the theory-practice interface. This has led to misunderstandings of people and community. For example, although community psychology was to be operationalised at broader levels (i.e., societal, community and organisational) as well as the individual, the prevailing zeitgeist of positivistic psychological thinking dominated actual practice and community psychology{\textquoteright}s myths have contributed to the failure to recognise the dominance of individualistic thinking, with little conceptualisation and operationalisation occurring beyond the individual level. This has led to poor implementation of the ecological approaches epitomised by contextualism.",
author = "Bishop, {Brian J.} and Browne, {Alison L.}",
year = "2006",
month = dec,
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "68--73",
journal = "The Australian Community Psychologist",
issn = "1320-7741",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - There is nothing so practical as …: building myths in community psychology.

AU - Bishop, Brian J.

AU - Browne, Alison L.

PY - 2006/12

Y1 - 2006/12

N2 - Kurt Lewin’s comment about the need to integrate psychological theory and practice famously has been mythologised in academic psychology in a distorted, self-serving form. Myths may serve to create a sense of collective identity, but in professional arenas myths can lead to distortions of the nature of theory and practice. We argue that some central tenets of community psychology have developed mythical status and, as such, perform social as well as conceptual functions. We argue that the unexamined status of these myths can lead to difficulties in praxis, the theory-practice interface. This has led to misunderstandings of people and community. For example, although community psychology was to be operationalised at broader levels (i.e., societal, community and organisational) as well as the individual, the prevailing zeitgeist of positivistic psychological thinking dominated actual practice and community psychology’s myths have contributed to the failure to recognise the dominance of individualistic thinking, with little conceptualisation and operationalisation occurring beyond the individual level. This has led to poor implementation of the ecological approaches epitomised by contextualism.

AB - Kurt Lewin’s comment about the need to integrate psychological theory and practice famously has been mythologised in academic psychology in a distorted, self-serving form. Myths may serve to create a sense of collective identity, but in professional arenas myths can lead to distortions of the nature of theory and practice. We argue that some central tenets of community psychology have developed mythical status and, as such, perform social as well as conceptual functions. We argue that the unexamined status of these myths can lead to difficulties in praxis, the theory-practice interface. This has led to misunderstandings of people and community. For example, although community psychology was to be operationalised at broader levels (i.e., societal, community and organisational) as well as the individual, the prevailing zeitgeist of positivistic psychological thinking dominated actual practice and community psychology’s myths have contributed to the failure to recognise the dominance of individualistic thinking, with little conceptualisation and operationalisation occurring beyond the individual level. This has led to poor implementation of the ecological approaches epitomised by contextualism.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 68

EP - 73

JO - The Australian Community Psychologist

JF - The Australian Community Psychologist

SN - 1320-7741

IS - 3

ER -