Post on 18-Nov-2014
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Peter Michael Senge
Born 1947, Stanford, California.
Received a B.S. in Aerospace engineering from Stanford
University.
Earned an M.S. in social systems modeling from MIT in 1972.
Ph.D. from the MIT Sloan School of Management in 1978.
Founding chair of the Society for Organizational Learning (SoL).
The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization
(1990)
Convert companies into LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS.
Group problem solving using the systems thinking method .
The five disciplines represent approaches :-
Developing three core learning capabilities:
○ Fostering aspiration,
○ Developing reflective conversation,
○ Understanding complexity
The Learning Organization
Organizations where people continually
expand their capacity to create the results
they truly desire.
New and expansive patterns of thinking
are nurtured.
Collective aspiration is set free.
People are continually learning to see the
whole together.
The Learning Organization
Adaptive Learning
Generative Learning
Learning Organization
In a Learning Organization
Flexibility
People
Staff Opinions
Exchanging information
Learn new skills
Opportunities exist
Learning Occur
A company that needs to learn…
1. Employees seem unmotivated or uninterested
in their work.
2. Workforce lack the skill and knowledge to
adjust to new jobs.
3. Workforce simply follow orders.
4. Lack communication between each other.
5. Teams argue constantly
and lack real productivity.
The Five Disciplines
Distinguishes the learning organisation from traditional
ones on the basis of the mastery of five disciplines.
All five are concerned with a shift in focus from people
as ‘helpless reactors’ to ‘active participants’.
Who create the future instead of reacting to the
present.
Five Basic Disciplines
PERSONAL MASTERY
MENTAL MODELS
SHARED VISION
TEAM LEARNING
SYSTEMS THINKING
1. Personal mastery
Measured by the difference
between our goals and our current
reality.
Relieve the tension by reducing
your goals to match your current
reality.
Change your perception of your
current reality to be closer to your
goal.
2. Mental Models
Deeply ingrained assumption,
generalizations, or even pictures of
images that influence how we understand
the world and how we take action.
The widely acknowledged truth that
many good ideas never get past the
drawing board.
Senge explains reason for this with
people’s profoundly held ‘mental models’
which reject anything untried or
unfamiliar.
3. Shared Vision Shared vision is the difference between people doing work
because they are told to and doing it because they want to.
Vision must be dictated to the organisation through a ‘top-down’
process.
An organisational vision is not truly shared until it connects with
the personal visions of everyone inside the organisation
3. Shared Vision Allows the group to discover insights not attainable individually.
Is a shared vision only when it connects with the personal vision of people
throughout the organization.
Shows group how to recognize the patterns of interaction that undermine
learning.
Vision creates the spark; the excitement that lifts an organization out of
the mundane.
Fosters risk taking and experimentation.
Encourages building personal vision-personal mastery
4. Team Learning
Pooling knowledge, expertise and intellect to produce results which are
beyond the sum of the individual parts.
Begins with the practice of ‘dialogue’, “the capacity of members of a
team to suspend assumptions and enter into a genuine ‘thinking
together’ .
When teams are effectively learning they are producing successful
results.
Individual team members are growing faster than they could have on
their own.
If teams can not learn, neither can the organization.
4. Team Learning
5. Systems Thinking
Fifth Discipline that integrates the other four:-
Is a language for learning and acting.
Helps us see how we create our reality.
Points to higher leverage solutions to problems.
Helps us understand and describe complex issues.
One can only understand a system by stepping back and viewing it
from a distance
The Laws of the Fifth Discipline
Today’s problems come from yesterday’s “solutions.”
The harder you push, the harder the system pushes back.
Behavior grows better before it grows worse.
The cure can be worse than the disease.
Faster is slower.
Contd....
Cause and effect are not closely related in time and
space.
You can have your cake and eat it too--but not at once.
Dividing the elephant in half does not produce two small
elephants.
There is no blame.
(Senge (1990) pp.. 57-67)
The Learning Disabilities:
Most organizations learn poorly and create fundamental learning
disabilities
The seven learning Disabilities:-
1. "I am my position."
2. "The enemy out there."
3. The Illusion of Taking Charge
4. The Fixation of Events
5. The Parable of the Boiling Frog
6. The Delusion of Learning from Experience
7. The Myth of the Management Team
1. I am my Position
Trained to be loyal to our job and confuse them with our own
identities.
Tendency to see responsibilities as limited to the boundaries of
position.
When people in organizations focus only on their position, they
have little sense of responsibility for the results produced when all
positions interact.
2. THE ENEMY IS OUT THERE
The propensity to find someone or something outside ourselves to
blame when things go wrong.
Thou shall always find an external agent to blame.
Marketing blames manufacturing blames engineering blames
marketing.
This syndrome is a by-product of "I am my position”.
3. THE ILLUSION OF TAKING CHARGE
Proactiveness is reactiveness in disguise.
Aggressive fighting the ‘enemy out there’ means we
are reacting.
True proactiveness comes from seeing how we
contribute to our own problem.
4. THE FIXATION ON EVENTS
• Focusing on events distract from seeing the longer-term patterns
of change.
• Distracts from understanding the cause of those patterns.
• Cave men needed to react to events quickly for survival-ability.
• Generative learning cannot be sustained in an organization if
people's thinking is dominated by short-term events.
5. The Delusion of Learning from Experience
Practice makes permanent, rather
than perfect
6. THE PARABLE OF THE BOILED FROG
We are adept at responding to sudden changes in
our environment.
We are terrible at assessing slow, gradual changes,
even when they threaten our survival.
7. The Myth of the Management Team
The team may function quite well with routine
issues.
But when they confront the complex issues that
may be embarrassing or threatening, the
teamness seems to go to pot.
Avoiding anything that will make them look bad
personally
Pretending that everyone is behind the team’s
collective strategy.
Books by him
The Fifth Discipline Field book: Strategies and Tools for
Building a Learning Organization (1994).
The Dance of Change.
The Challenges to Sustaining Momentum in Learning
Organizations (1999).
Schools That Learn (2000).
THANK YOU