Posts Tagged ‘learning’

Learning to lead learning

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Another piece of research, published by Good practice Ltd (www.goodpractice.com) explores how managers learn and stresses the strong link between learning and performance.  It reveals that most learning is informal on-the-job learning, very much about how to get better at doing the job.

This supports what we have always stressed, that the best medium of learning is the work to be done. Indeed the meta-levels of such learning are about re-focusing the work to be done to better meet it’s purpose and then evolving the purpose itself – raising the game!

We see this phenomenon in competitive sports (witness the winter Olympics) where people learn to perform and then learn to be among the leaders before, just possibly breaking new ground and learning to take things to a new level. Everyone has a quest to be as good as they can be and therefore has an appetite for learning.

Not all learning is of the same kind.  We need first to learn how to do a job and then how we need to learn to change in ourselves, in order to do it better.  Finally we enable the whole process to become more fit for the world.  In hierarchical control and command organisations, these three levels of learning are often divided.  Those low in the hierarchy are expected to just do as directed.  Middle level people have the job of getting people to get better results. Only the top folk occasionally think about the name of the game.  This division fails to tap into the creative potential of the vast majority of people.  How much better that senior people devolve all three learnings throughout the organisation.  The work of leadership is to lead learning.

So how does this happen?  If leaders are not leading learning, what are they doing? How can people be encouraged to have an appetite for learning and meta-learning?

Learning to Learn

Monday, December 7th, 2009

We all believe we learn from experience but it does not happen automatically.  Laying blame, making excuses or giving explanations are ways in which we avoid learning, endemic in organisations, the media and society at large.  The result is that mistakes are repeated and systemic faults are perpetuated.  Hence we need to learn to learn from experience instead of abolishing the impact of the errors that inevitably happen.

The most appropriate medium for learning is the work that you do.  However, learning to learn is best done by using experience that is not career limiting or impacting on clients.  This can be almost any activity so long as lessons are drawn from it. Tasks that involve collaboration and problem solving are likely to yield the most learning.  If you want a comprehensive development process be sure to root it in experience rather than just theory. The activity needs to be well chosen according to learning needs and carefully reviewed to draw out salient lessons.

For twenty years Centre For Management Creativity  has successfully incorporated experiential learning, using a great variety of media, including outdoor activities, into strategy innovation, team and leadership development.

getting experience as the basis of learning

Getting Experience as the Basis of Learning

The Space Between The Parts

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

I recall many years ago, in the Architectural Review, an article entitled, ‘I can play you the Doges Palace’ – a correspondence between physical form and music. I have also puzzled over Christopher Alexander’s notions of ‘life’ in design. I think perhaps he kids himself but that there is something in it.

I have experienced ‘life emerging’ in what I would not have expected to show signs of life – in our own residential management centre, for instance, something touches people who come. The place really does have a life of its own. I am fascinated by this. I think it has to do with understanding and growing systems – holistic systems are living systems.

Being living systems ourselves, we can intuit much about relationships without being directly aware of their nature. Perceptives, such as Debussy who spoke of the music being between the notes, may be aware of them directly. We are so conditioned by reductionism that we think in ‘parts’ and strain to consider the relationships between them (relationships are what can fill the space between). Life emerges in the ’space between’ the inanimate bits and manifests as what Csikzentmihalyi calls ‘Flow’. I think this is something we can and must all learn to do – to develop ‘new organs of perception’!

When it comes to bringing organisational vision to life, CMC has used a whole variety of techniques to get people out of their mindset. Mindset is an efficiency of mind but it also inhibits novelty. I like to use collage but have also used photographs to stimulate free-thinking. Gordon Lawrence uses Social Dreaming. We have made extensive use of outdoor experience. I think a good principle here is that to open up minds you need to get people out of their heads and into emotional, physical or other domains of experience.

John Varney 23.9.2009

The Supreme Art Of Dialogue-Structures Of Meaning

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Book Review: Anthony Blake DuVersity Publications 2008       Price £15 from www.duversity.org

Dialogue is a special kind of interaction between people – amounting to much more than conversation or discussion.  It crops up in management literature and practice but, as a process for exploring deep meaning, is often treated superficially.  Blake is uniquely qualified to scan the whole field, having studied aspects of Dialogue over many decades.  He thus brings a critical and discerning eye to his observations and insights.  

He ranges between the innovators and leading lights of Dialogue in a historical context, making valuable comparisons and contributing to our understanding.  The overall thesis that, as meaning lies between entities, Dialogue is fundamental to discovering the structures of meaning that constitute our culture and our society.  Only so far as we enter into Dialogue can those structures evolve to accommodate emergent issues or enable us to grapple with complexity.  Where conventional discourse, largely conditioned by a reductionist perspective, fails to deal with our realities, Dialogue offers hope. 

A perhaps surprising conclusion is that Logovisual Technology (LVT) is a form of dialogue process, making visible some of the patterns and structures of meaning.  Evolved from Structural Communication, LVT may be a significant methodology for making a new world.  

A valuable exploration of a fascinating subject, this book is recommended heartily to anyone with a serious interest in organisational learning.

surpreme_art_dialogue

The Supreme Art Of Dialogue