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Page 1: Learning Organizations and You

Learning Organizations and You

October 2, 2012

Colleen Wheeler, Wheaton

D. Grainger Wedaman, Brandeis

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Outline• The Gap Quiz Experiment• The Idea• Characteristics and Tensions• Learning Organization Academy

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The GapAn Experimental quiz

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QuizThink about the time in your life you learned best. What were the details of that experience? What did it feel like?

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QuizA.Name the context in two words(like “chess with my uncle”).

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QuizB. Pick a word to describe how it felt to learn.

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QuizC.Compare your learning experience to your general experience of work. Plot it on a 1 – 10.

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ResultsSafety, trust, risk tolerance, small group, feedback, reflective, intellectually challenging, motivating, sense of growth, humor, passion, insight, fun . . .

Similarity to work? Uh – oh!

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The Ideaof the Learning Organization

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“We must become able not only to transform our institutions, in response to changing situations and requirements; we must invent and develop institutions which are ‘learning systems’, that is to say, systems capable of bringing about their own continuing transformation.”Donald Schon, Beyond the Stable State

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ideaA collective enterprise in which learning is the organizational principle.

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rather than• Other organizing principles!• Alternating states of change and stability.• Being disrupted.

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historyRobert Hutchins, The Learning Society, 1970Donald Schon, Beyond the Stable State, 1973Peter Senge, The Fifth Discipline, 1990.

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characteristicsand

tensions

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problemLearning is in many ways contradictory to workplace norms.

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balanceYou need consistent activities for identity and coherence. Learning disrupts consistence.

Learning Orgs balance these.

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anxietyLearning new ways to work causes

a lot of anxieties.

Learning Orgs are open about this and help manage it.

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competenceA primal fear in the workplace: been seen as a failure or incompetent.

Learning requires incompetence.

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talkTo learn, people need

“psychologically safe” places, to be able to say

what they think, to discuss, to disagree.

Learning Orgs create these.

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motivationYou learn best when “instrinsically”

motivated. The workplace uses extrinsic motivation.

Learning Organizations find ways to let people explore the things they care

about.

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passionPeople learning together experience happiness – joy – passion. Reluctantly allowed by the workplace.

Learning Orgs encourage and appreciate passion.

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playPlay, experimentation,

construction combine learning, discovery, and fun. They don’t

happen much.

Learning Orgs provide “Duckworth” environments.

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mindfulnessPaying attention to yourself, your feelings, your triggers, your hopes, is crucial to learning. Workplaces don’t reinforce self-awareness.

Learning Orgs promote mindfulness

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reflectionFeedback and reflection are necessary for learning. Most workplaces avoid these activities.

Learning Orgs promote both.

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ideasContinual change requires a flow of

generative ideas. Workplaces don’t have ways to create and manage an idea flow.

Learning Orgs are gardeners of ideas.

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sumNo perfect example

We all know of moments

Learning Organization is a goal

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LOALearning Organization Academy

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historyInfamous 2010 Focus Group

LOA Formed 2012

First cohort in session

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modelSummer immersion in learning, mindfulness, joy

Year-long inquiry projects

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examplesBuilding DH community of practiceImplementing “exploration time”Creating on-boarding programVisual thinking in portfolio management

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examplesRevamping customer relationship managementSupporting creativity in the workplaceDeveloping “learning” consultants

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Learning Organizations and YouColleen Wheeler, Wheaton

D. Grainger Wedaman, Brandeis