Special Topics: Dania Al - Falah Dr. Ala'Aldin Alrowwad
Special Topics: Dania Al - Falah Dr. Ala'Aldin Alrowwad
Special Topics: Dania Al - Falah Dr. Ala'Aldin Alrowwad
Dania Al.Falah
Dr. Ala’Aldin AlRowwad
University Of
Jordan/Aqaba
Building a learning organization
Chapter 11
Building a Learning Organization
Building a learning organization
Chapter Outline
1- Identify the learning organization.
2- The environment of learning organization.
3- Pillars of a learning organization.
4- Learning organization related with multiple concepts
Identify the learning organization
In business management, a learning organization is a company that facilitates the learning of its
members and continuously transforms itself. The concept was coined through the work and
research of Peter Senge and his colleagues.
Learning organizations may develop as a result of the pressures facing modern organizations; this
enables them to remain competitive in the business environment.
Introduction
In a Word Learning is the key to success—some would even say survival—in today’s
organizations. Knowledge should be continuously enriched through both internal and external
learning. For this to happen, it is necessary to support and energize organization, people,
knowledge, and technology for learning.
Introduction
For organizations wishing to remain relevant and thrive, learning better and faster is critically
important. Many organizations apply quick and easy fixes often driven by technology. Most are
futile attempts to create organizational change. However, organizational learning is neither
possible nor sustainable without understanding what drives it. The below figure shows the
subsystems of a learning organization: organization, people, knowledge, and technology. Each
subsystem supports the others in magnifying the learning as it permeates across the system.
Building a Learning Organization
organization .1
organization .1
The supreme accomplishment is to blur the line between work and play.
—Arnold Toynbee
Organization (cont)
A learning organization values the role that learning can play in the development of
organizational effectiveness. It demonstrates this by having an inspiring vision for learning and
a learning strategy that will support the organization in achieving its vision.
The leadership of a learning organization is committed to the importance of learning and
clearly communicates that learning is critical to organizational success. The leadership
recognizes the importance of providing the motive, means, and opportunity for learning:
(1) the motive being the “why?”—the purpose and reason for learning;
(2) the means being the “how and what?”—the models, methods, and competencies required;
and
(3) the opportunity being the “where and when?”—the spaces for learning. Leaders take an
exemplary leading role in creating and sustaining a supportive learning culture.
Organization (cont)
The structure of a learning organization takes into account the common obstacles to learning so it is
carefully aligned with strategy, avoiding the development of “silos” and minimizing unnecessary levels
of hierarchy. Communication systems are used to facilitate the lateral transfer of information and
knowledge across formal structural boundaries. In decentralized and geographically spread
organizations, particular care is taken to use communication to encourage lateral communication and
to overcome the increased danger of the development of “silos”.
Adequate resources are allocated for learning in terms of time, space, specialist support staff, and
budgets for knowledge management and learning infrastructure, formal and informal communities of
practice1 and other value networks (both internal and external),2 and learning and development
programs. Support to communities of practice, for example, is extended in a structured manner
throughout their life cycle.
Organization (cont)
To stimulate creativity and generate new insights and innovative practices, a learning organization
takes a balanced approach to the importance of both planned and emergent learning. Planned learning
is addressed through the careful development of strategy, structure, systems, procedures, and plans. In
a learning organization, planning is based on careful reflection through probing questions that draw on
data and information from monitoring, review, and self- and independent evaluation.
Emergent learning is equally important but takes an inherently more speculative and opportunistic
approach. It is dependent on encouraging a passion for learning and knowledge sharing among staff
members, developing learning competencies, creating opportunities for informal sharing, and
cultivating a supportive learning culture.
Discussion
—Albert Einstein
People (cont) .2
A learning organization needs people who are intellectually curious about their work, who actively
reflect on their experience, who develop experience-based theories of change and continuously test
these in practice with colleagues, and who use their understanding and initiative to contribute to
knowledge development. In short, it needs people who are reflective practitioners. Reflective
practitioners understand their strengths and limitations and have a range of tools, methods, and
approaches for knowledge management and learning, individually and in collaboration with others.
People (cont) .2
Reflective practice flourishes when people experience a high level of psychological safety and trust,
and it is undermined when people feel exposed to unfair negative criticism and when they believe that
they cannot rely on colleagues. Teamwork is, therefore, a vital ingredient of a genuine learning
organization. Indeed, one characteristic of teams in learning organizations is that they operate as
learning communities in which sensitively expressed dissent, conflict, and debate are encouraged as
positive sources of learning. Developing the safety and trust upon which reflective practice and
positive teamwork depend requires careful attention to relationship building and the management of
individual and collective performance.
People (cont) .2
To grow and protect the investment made in staff members, a learning organization pays careful
attention to developing and retaining its people. Closely linked to development and retention of
staff members are the importance of recognition and incentives for learning. Learning
organizations ensure that time and effort spent on effective knowledge management and learning
are recognized as core activities in the organization’s time and performance management
systems. Rewards for contributing to learning and knowledge development can be more
conventional (e.g., career advancement, increased income, and greater formal status) or may be
less conventional (e.g., informal peer status, time made available for study, or public
acknowledgement for an innovative contribution made).
People (cont) .2
Learning organizations also provide a wide range of opportunities for individual and collective
learning and development. Learning and development programs are available to ensure that individuals
and teams develop the competencies of reflective practice and collaborative learning. While learning
and development systems may focus on more formal programs, a learning organization is one where
the maximum benefit is also leveraged from other learning opportunities such as day-to-day work
experiences, team meetings, short-term secondments, and membership of task groups.
People (cont) .2
In a learning organization, an important source of individual learning and development is coaching and
mentoring support from managers, specialists, and other experienced colleagues. High quality
coaching and mentoring can help reflective practice flourish. However, both involve skills that cannot
be taken for granted and must be consciously developed in the organization. It cannot be assumed that
good contract managers and technical specialists automatically make good coaches and mentors.
Learning organizations require and encourage the development of leadership competencies at all levels
in the organizational hierarchy, not just at the top. Leadership is viewed as a valuable skill that is based
on the possession of expertise and knowledge, not simply positional status.
Discussion
—The Panchatantra
Knowledge (cont) .3
Knowledge is a critical asset in every learning organization. Because learning is both a product of
knowledge and its source, a learning organization recognizes that the two are inextricably linked and
manages them accordingly.
The units of knowledge production are both the individual and the collective. Learning
organizations understand that while knowledge is created in the minds of individuals, knowledge
development thrives in a rich web of social contact among individuals, groups, and organizations. A
learning organization provides creative opportunities for this knowledge to be developed and shared
with others through interpersonal contact and access to documentation.
An organization’s main repositories of knowledge are the design and delivery of its products and
services and the strategies, systems, and procedures it has developed to guide its decision-making.
Learning organizations know how best to take a learning approach to the development of this embedded
knowledge by putting in place the necessary systems and infrastructure for knowledge management.
Knowledge (cont) .3
Feedback is the dynamic process of presenting and disseminating information to improve
performance. Feedback mechanisms are increasingly being recognized as key elements of learning.
Key (and often underutilized) sources of knowledge in organizations are the data and information that
emerge from monitoring systems and the analyses, conclusions, and recommendations that arise from
self- and independent evaluations. Learning organizations have sophisticated ways of designing
evaluations with learning (as well as accountability) in mind. Methods such as after-action reviews and
retrospects4 are successfully adopted and generate lessons that are carefully targeted at specific
audiences. Learning organizations have systems that ensure that the outputs of self- and independent
evaluations are made widely available, used to question orthodox thinking, and trigger creativity and
innovation. Most significant changes are collected, systematically selected, and interpreted.5 Peer
assists,6 drawing on individuals’ expertise and documented lessons learned, are used in planning new
initiatives to reduce the likelihood of repeated unintended negative outcomes. Action learning is used
to tackle more intractable challenges.
Knowledge (cont) .3
A learning organization recognizes the importance of a resilient organizational memory. Learning
organizations ensure that individuals and teams are encouraged to use a range of ways of surfacing their
tacit knowledge and making it available to others through carefully targeted documentation and
collaborative working practices. Recognizing that organizations change in the direction in which they
inquire, they leverage the powers of appreciative inquiry.8 Documentation is made accessible to others in
the organization with a range of user-friendly information and communications technology.
Learning organizations are networked with the wider world. They know how to create and run
partnerships.9 Collaborative mutual learning arrangements with other organizations are common and
fruitful.
Discussion
—Jonas Salk
Technology (cont) .4
Learning organizations know how to harness the power of information and communications
technology—without the technology constraining knowledge management and learning. In a learning
organization, information and communications technology is used, among other purposes, to
strengthen organizational identity; build and sustain learning communities; keep staff members,
clients, and others informed and aware of corporate developments; create unexpected, helpful
connections between people and provide access to their knowledge and ideas; encourage innovation
and creativity; share and learn from good practices and unintended outcomes; strengthen
relationships; develop and access organizational memory; share tools, methods, and approaches;
celebrate successes; identify internal sources of expertise; and connect with the outside world.
Technology (cont) .4
The creative use of information and communications technology such as shared document drives,
intranet pages, online communities and networks, wikis and other collaborative work spaces, blogging
and online storytelling, staff profile pages, online webinars, podcasts, and social network analysis
indicates that an organization takes learning seriously.
Technology (cont) .4
Finally, In a learning organization, sufficient opportunities are provided for staff members to learn how to
make use of available information and communications technology for knowledge management and
learning.
Discussion