Learning in Adulthood. Sharan B. Merriam

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Learning in Adulthood - Sharan B. Merriam страница 31

Learning in Adulthood - Sharan B. Merriam

Скачать книгу

how to employ the knowledge generated through individual and group learning. Today, all organizations are grappling with issues that include “generating innovation, integrating new technologies, improving existing processes, predicting and adapting to turbulent conditions, restructuring staff, improving performance, ensuring equitable opportunity, and fostering quality of work” (Fenwick, 2005, p. 448).

      Although learning has always gone on in organizations, it was not until the publication in 1990 of Peter Senge's book The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization that the notion of the learning organization became a popular concept capturing the imagination of organizations worldwide. Senge defined it as

      a place where people continually expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration is set free, and where people are continually learning how to act together. (p. 3)

      Implicit in this definition is the recognition that the learning organization is a vibrant, social entity; further, individuals learning in conjunction with each other has a synergistic effect—the overall learning is greater than a single individual's.

Diagram depicting list of six action imperatives to sustain learning organizations.

      SOURCE: Adapted from Watkins and Marsick (1993), p. 15.

      A recent description of the learning organization by Sarder (2016) focuses on the embeddedness of learning throughout the organization:

      A learning organization differentiates itself by valuing and supporting organization-wide learning from the top down. Learning is more than a menu of classes and online programs that employees can participate in when they need to close a performance gap. Instead it is embedded in every aspect of the organization in ways in which decisions are made, problems are addressed, information is shared, the organization is structured, and the physical space is organized (p. 28).

      Today the learning organization goes by a number of names, including adaptive, resilient, and innovative organizations (Marsick & Watkins, 2005). However it is conceptualized, there are some consistent features of a “healthy” learning organization. These include:

      (a) openness across boundaries, including an emphasis on environmental scanning, collaboration, and competitor benchmarking; (b) resilience or the adaptability of people and systems to respond to change; (c) knowledge/expertise creation and sharing; and (d) a culture, systems and structures that capture learning and reward innovation. (p. 357)

      In thinking about the process of building and sustaining learning organizations, Dixon (1997) offers the metaphor of the hallway as a useful analogy. She defines hallways as “places where collective meaning is made—in other words, meaning is not just exchanged, it is constructed in the dialogue between organizational members” (p. 25). She goes on to outline seven critical elements that characterize hallway learning: (a) reliance on discussion, not speeches; (b) egalitarian participation; (c) encouragement of multiple perspectives; (d) nonexpert-based dialogue; (e) use of a participant-generated database; (f) the creating of shared experiences; and (g) the creation of unpredictable outcomes. This last element is especially intriguing; it asks those who choose to create learning organizations to move away from the predictable aspects of learning and into the realm of reframing problems in unexpected ways and finding possibilities never thought of before.

      As we have just seen, it is not possible to talk of the learning organization without reference to organizational learning. We believe that the concepts of organizational learning and the learning organization offer a way of working and thinking for educators in both formal and nonformal settings. It allows us to move beyond planning just for individuals and groups of learners in terms of affecting both learning processes and outcomes. Creating learning organizations, whether we are associated with educational, quasi-educational, or noneducational institutions, provides a way to foster learning communities that are open to change and innovative practices.

      In recent years nearly all people, and especially those of us in education, have heard the terms lifelong

Скачать книгу