orgstud-contribution-framing
GitHub用于精炼组织研究论文的理论贡献,将实证发现转化为可复用的理论推进。适用于引言、讨论和摘要中贡献表述不清或仅罗列结果时,确保声明具有理论高度且前后一致。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill orgstud-contribution-framing -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "orgstud-contribution-framing",
"description": "Use when sharpening the one-sentence theoretical contribution of an Organization Studies (OS) manuscript and the intro\/discussion claims that carry it. Frames the contribution; it does not build the theory (see orgstud-theory-development) or run analysis."
}
Contribution Framing (orgstud-contribution-framing)
When to trigger
- The theory and evidence are settled but the paper cannot say its contribution in one sentence
- The intro lists findings rather than a theoretical move; the discussion restates results
- A reviewer says "I don't see the contribution," "this is incremental," or "what does this add to theory?"
- The contribution is described as a finding ("we find X") rather than a usable theoretical move
At OS, the contribution is a theoretical move others can use
The single most important sentence in an OS paper is: "We contribute to [conversation] by [the theoretical move], which shows that [the new understanding]." The move must be something a reader elsewhere can pick up and apply — a new mechanism, a reconceptualized construct, a process model, a resolved tension, a boundary that wasn't seen. A finding is not a contribution; a finding plus what it changes in how we theorize organizing is.
OS distinguishes sharply between empirical contribution ("we found this happens") and theoretical contribution ("this changes how the field should think"). OS desk-rejects papers whose contribution is only the former. Frame the move at the level of the theory, then use the evidence as warrant.
Calibrating the size of the claim
| Claim type | OS verdict | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| "First study of X in setting Y" | weak (empirical novelty only) | Reframe as a theoretical move the setting enabled |
| "We extend theory T to context C" | risky (often incremental) | Specify what about C forces an amendment to T |
| "We reconceptualize construct K" | strong if earned | Show a puzzle that dissolves under the new conception |
| "We theorize a new process/mechanism M" | strong | State M's logic and a non-obvious implication |
| "We bridge conversations A and B" | strong if usable | Give the bridge a name and show what it newly explains |
Avoid both under- and over-claiming. Under-claiming buries a real move under hedges; over-claiming ("we overturn institutional theory") invites reviewers to find the move smaller than advertised. Match the claim to exactly what the mechanism and evidence support (orgstud-data-analysis sets that ceiling).
Where the contribution must appear
- Abstract — the move stated plainly within the 300-word unstructured limit.
- Intro — the puzzle, why existing theory fails, and the one-sentence contribution, landed on the first page or two.
- Discussion — the contribution developed: implications for the conversation, boundary conditions, and what new questions it opens (generativity, not a findings recap).
- The same move should read consistently across all three; drift between abstract, intro, and discussion is a common reviewer flag.
Checklist
- The contribution fits the sentence "We contribute to [conversation] by [move], showing [new understanding]"
- It is a theoretical move others can use, not just a finding or an empirical first
- The claim size matches what the mechanism + evidence support (no under/over-claiming)
- The move is stated consistently across abstract, intro, and discussion
- The discussion develops the contribution and opens questions, rather than restating results
- Boundary conditions and scope of the contribution are explicit
- The framing is unmistakably OS (theory-first), not an empirical-journal framing
Anti-patterns
- "Contribution" stated as a finding or as empirical novelty ("first study of...")
- Burying a real theoretical move under hedges and qualifications
- Over-claiming relative to the evidence — inviting reviewers to shrink the contribution
- A discussion that recaps results instead of developing the theoretical move
- Abstract/intro/discussion describing three subtly different contributions
- Framing that would suit AMJ/Org Science empirics rather than OS theory
Referee pushback mapped to the framing fix
- "I don't see the contribution." → The intro states findings, not a move. Rewrite the contribution sentence at the level of the theory and put it on page one or two.
- "This is incremental / well-known." → The claim is an extension, not a reconceptualization. Show what about your case forces an amendment the prior account cannot make.
- "The contribution is overstated." → The claim exceeds the evidence ceiling. Pull it back to exactly what the mechanism supports (
orgstud-data-analysissets that ceiling). - "The discussion just repeats the results." → Develop the move instead: implications for the conversation, boundary conditions, and the new questions it opens.
Output format
【Contribution sentence】We contribute to [conversation] by [move], showing [new understanding]
【Move type】new mechanism / reconceptualization / process model / resolved tension / bridge
【Claim calibration】matched to evidence ceiling? (under / right / over)
【Where stated】abstract / intro / discussion — consistent? (Y/N)
【Generativity】the new questions it opens
【Next skill】orgstud-tables-figures
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:09


