LEARNING STRATEGY
1] Team Learning: Virtually all important decisions occur in groups. Teams, not individuals, are the fundamental learning units. Unless a team can learn, the organisation cannot learn. Team learning focuses on the learning ability of the group. Adults learn best from each other, by reflecting on how they are addressing problems, questioning assumptions, and receiving feedback from their team and from their results. With team learning, the learning ability of the group becomes greater than the learning ability of any individual in the group.
2] Shared Visions: To create a shared vision, large numbers of people within the organisation must draft it, empowering them to create a single image of the future. All members of the organisation must understand, share and contribute to the vision for it to become reality. With a shared vision, people will do things because they want to, not because they have to.
3] Mental Models: Each individual has an internal image of the world, with deeply ingrained assumptions. Individuals will act according to the true mental model that they subconsciously hold, not according to the theories that they claim to believe. If team members can constructively challenge each other’s ideas and assumptions, they can begin to perceive their mental models, and to change these to create a shared mental model for the team. This is important as the individual's mental model will control what they think can or cannot be done.
4] Personal Mastery: Personal mastery is the process of continually clarifying and deepening an individual's personal vision. This is a matter of personal choice for the individual and involves continually assessing the gap between their current and desired proficiencies in an objective manner, and practising and refining skills until they are internalised. This develops self esteem and creates the confidence to tackle new challenges.
5] Systems Thinking / Holism/ 5th sense: This is the ability to see the bigger picture, to look at the interrelationships of a system as opposed to simple cause-effect chains; allowing continuous processes to be studied rather than single snapshots. It shows us that the essential properties of a system are not determined by the sum of its parts but by the process of interactions between those parts. It says that 1+1 could be equal to 3, 4, 5 or even more. It is important to view the organisation as a whole unit and then solve the problems in it.
The Laws of the Systems Thinking:
Today's problems come from yesterday's solutions.
Solutions shift problems from one part of a system to another.
The easy way out usually leads back in.
Familiar solutions that are easy to implement usually do not solve the problem.
The cure can be worse than the disease.
Faster is slower.
The optimal rate of growth is much slower than the fastest growth possible.
You can have your cake and eat it too - but not at once.
Problems viewed from a systems point of view, as opposed to a single snapshot, can turn out not to be problems at all.
Dividing an elephant in half does not produce two small elephants.
1] Team Learning: Virtually all important decisions occur in groups. Teams, not individuals, are the fundamental learning units. Unless a team can learn, the organisation cannot learn. Team learning focuses on the learning ability of the group. Adults learn best from each other, by reflecting on how they are addressing problems, questioning assumptions, and receiving feedback from their team and from their results. With team learning, the learning ability of the group becomes greater than the learning ability of any individual in the group.
2] Shared Visions: To create a shared vision, large numbers of people within the organisation must draft it, empowering them to create a single image of the future. All members of the organisation must understand, share and contribute to the vision for it to become reality. With a shared vision, people will do things because they want to, not because they have to.
3] Mental Models: Each individual has an internal image of the world, with deeply ingrained assumptions. Individuals will act according to the true mental model that they subconsciously hold, not according to the theories that they claim to believe. If team members can constructively challenge each other’s ideas and assumptions, they can begin to perceive their mental models, and to change these to create a shared mental model for the team. This is important as the individual's mental model will control what they think can or cannot be done.
4] Personal Mastery: Personal mastery is the process of continually clarifying and deepening an individual's personal vision. This is a matter of personal choice for the individual and involves continually assessing the gap between their current and desired proficiencies in an objective manner, and practising and refining skills until they are internalised. This develops self esteem and creates the confidence to tackle new challenges.
5] Systems Thinking / Holism/ 5th sense: This is the ability to see the bigger picture, to look at the interrelationships of a system as opposed to simple cause-effect chains; allowing continuous processes to be studied rather than single snapshots. It shows us that the essential properties of a system are not determined by the sum of its parts but by the process of interactions between those parts. It says that 1+1 could be equal to 3, 4, 5 or even more. It is important to view the organisation as a whole unit and then solve the problems in it.
The Laws of the Systems Thinking:
Today's problems come from yesterday's solutions.
Solutions shift problems from one part of a system to another.
The easy way out usually leads back in.
Familiar solutions that are easy to implement usually do not solve the problem.
The cure can be worse than the disease.
Faster is slower.
The optimal rate of growth is much slower than the fastest growth possible.
You can have your cake and eat it too - but not at once.
Problems viewed from a systems point of view, as opposed to a single snapshot, can turn out not to be problems at all.
Dividing an elephant in half does not produce two small elephants.