Either passively or intentionally, we mere overworked and underpaid mortals consume a fairly consistent feed of extraordinary claims from one day to the next.
"Social media is a great place to connect with others!" - Is it?
"We're reducing our carbon footprint and making real changes around here!" - Oh, are you?
"We need to raise your heating/electric/food bill!" - Do you now? Sorry, you'll have to speak up - I can't hear you over the CEO banking his bonus.
At the risk of upsetting the ghost of Carl Sagan, sometimes extraordinary claims are made without extraordinary evidence to back them up. Other times, extraordinary evidence inexplicably does not seem to beget extraordinary claims - even when well deserved. What are some claims you hear at work and see no evidence to support it?
In this episode, I'll give you some examples of claims that do not match their evidence with a desperate imbalance on one side or the other. I'll also give you some considerations for work that are bizarrely not extraordinary claims.
The citation for the article I quote is:
Julian Decius, Michael Knappstein & Katharina Klug (2023): Which way of
learning benefits your career? The role of different forms of work-related learning for different
types of perceived employability, European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology,
DOI: 10.1080/1359432X.2023.2191846
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