lecture 5 organisational learning
DESCRIPTION
B418 Lecture 5TRANSCRIPT
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.1
Analysis 1: Evidence and the Nature of Knowledge in the Digital Age
Topic: Organisational Learning
Topic Number: 5
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.2
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
• To explain common theories on how we learn as individuals
• To describe the difference between discussion and dialogue in team learning
• To distinguish between processes of knowledge acquisition, information distribution, information interpretation and organisational memory
• To assess the role of politics in organisational learning
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.3
Questions to Think During the Session
• How do you learn best as an individual?
• Have you ever explored your learning style?
• If so, how would you describe your optimal learning?
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.4
KOLB’S (1984) LEARNING CYCLE
Figure 5.1 The Lewinian experiential learning model (Kolb 1984)
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.5
HOW DO WE LEARN IN ORGANISATIONS?
‘There is something paradoxical here. Organizations are not merely collections of individuals, yet there are no organizations without such collections. Similarly, organizational learning is not merely individual learning, yet organizations learn through the experience and actions of individuals. What then, are we to make of organizational learning? What is an organization that it may learn?’
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.6
ORGANISATIONAL LEARNINGSINGLE- AND DOUBLE-LOOP LEARNING
• Behavioural learning – ‘single-loop learning’ involves maintaining an organisation’s ‘theory-in-use’
• Cognitive learning – ‘double-loop learning’ involves questioning assumptions and values
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.7
SUCCESS & FAILURE: WHAT DRIVES OL?
Figure 5.3 Success and failure in organisations
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.8
SENSEMAKING
• Making sense of ambiguous situations of high complexity and uncertainty e.g. nuclear attack
• Involves process of ‘situational awareness’ to understand linkages between people, placesand events
• Allows inferences to be made of future scenarios• Lack of situational awareness is primary factor
affecting human error
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.9
SENSEMAKING (CONTINUED)
• Use mental models from previous experiences• ‘Cognitive gap’ between mental models and new
observations or circumstances• World is different from expectations• Meaning arises from labelling and characterisation –
socially defined• Not about truth or accuracy but updating plausible
stories through dialogue• Identity shapes our mental models and actions
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.10
SENSEMAKING (CONTINUED)
Figure 5.4 Sensemaking and situational awareness
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.11
ORGANISATIONAL LEARNINGHuber (1991)
• Knowledge acquisition
• Information distribution
• Information interpretation
• Organisational memory
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.12
KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION
• Congenital learning• Experiential learning (experiments, self-appraisal,
unintentional, learning curve)• Vicarious learning• Grafting• Searching and noticing (scanning, focused search,
performance monitoring)
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.13
INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION
• Links with organisational communication• Probability that A will rout information to B (member or
unit)• Probability of delay in routing information by A to B• Probability and extent of information distortion by A
when communicating to B
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.14
INFORMATION INTERPRETATION
• Cognitive maps and framing• Media richness – variety of cues medium can convey
and rapidity of feedback• Information overload – detracts from effective
interpretation• Unlearning – discarding obsolete and misleading
knowledge
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.15
ORGANIZATIONAL MEMORY
• Personnel turnover results in loss of organisational memory
• Non-anticipation of future needs means that memory may not be stored
• Who has the information I want?• Storing and retrieving information• Computer-based organisational memory
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.16
REALIST CONCEPTION OF OL
• Gunpowder has the ‘necessary power’ to explode but does not explode. Needs ‘contingent condition’ of a spark to explode
• Necessary power : Experiential learning, vicarious learning, congenital learning, organisational memory, learning curves
• Contingent condition: Unlearning, information interpretation, information distribution, experimenting organisations
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.17
UNLEARNING (Hedberg, 1981)
• ‘Unlearning is a process through which learners discard knowledge. Unlearning makes way for new responses and mental maps’
• Challenge and negate processes to unlearn world views
• Challenge and negate connections between stimuli and responses
• Challenge and negate connections between responses
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.18
ORGANISATIONAL ROUTINES(Cohen & Bacdayan, 1994)
• ‘Organizational routines-multi-actor, interlocking, reciprocally triggered sequences of action are a major source of the reliability and speed of organizational performance’
• Sub-optimal performance when applied to inappropriate situations
• Link to procedural memory and skill and habit• Example of ‘single-loop’ learning?
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.19
ORGANISATIONAL ROUTINES (CONTINUED)
Figure 5.10 Organisational routines (adapted from Cohen and Bacdayan 1994; Feldman and Rafaeli 2002)
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.20
DYNAMIC CAPABILITY(Zollo & Winter, 2002)
• ‘…is a learned and stable pattern of collective activity through which the organisation systematically generates and modifies its routines in pursuit of improved effectiveness’
• Double-loop learning?• Learning mechanisms (experience, knowledge
articulation and codification) lead to dynamic capabilities which, in turn, lead to evolution of operating routines
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.21
SOCIAL PERSPECTIVE OF OL(Gherardi & Nicolini, 2001)
• Learning takes place through interactions between people shaped by cultural norms
• Social and political processes impact on organisation’s ability to absorb new knowledge and practices
• Similarities with social capital?
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.22
ABSORPTIVE CAPACITY
• Ability of organisations to absorb and apply new knowledge
• Capacity to learn and solve problems• Knowledge capacity driven by high previous
experience, diversity and commonality• Knowledge capability driven by problem solving and
knowledge transfer abilities• Gatekeepers important to transfer knowledge across
boundaries
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.23
ABSORPTIVE CAPACITY (CONTINUED)
Figure 5.11 Absorptive capacity processes
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.24
POLITICS & OL
Figure 5.12 Politics and organisational learning (adapted from Coopey and Burgoyne2000; Jashapara 2003; Vince 2001)
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.25
Reading and preparatory work to be done
Read:• Jashapara, A. (2011) “ Knowledge Management:
An Integrated Approach” Pearson Education, Chapter 5
Work to be done before the seminar:• Carry out all the reading above• Answer the questions on the handout• Bring your work to the seminar
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.26
Essential work for next week
• Please consult the OLE for details of:– Essential readings*– Seminar/workshop preparation work*– Recommended further readings– Any additional learning
* Essential readings and preparation work must always be completed in time for the next session
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Jashapara, Knowledge Management: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition, © Pearson Education Limited 2011
Slide 5.27
End of presentation
© Pearson College 2013