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<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="../part2stratml.xsl"?><StrategicPlan><id/><Name>Learning Organizations</Name><Description/><OtherInformation/><StrategicPlanCore><Organization><Name>Learning Organizations</Name><Acronym>LO</Acronym><Identifier>_e869c254-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><Description>A learning organization is the term given to a company that facilitates the learning of its members and continuously transforms itself.Learning organizations develop as a result of the pressures facing modern organizations and enables them to remain competitive in the business environment.</Description><Stakeholder><Name>Peter Senge</Name><Description>The Learning organization concept was coined through the work and research of Peter Senge and his colleagues</Description></Stakeholder></Organization><Vision><Description>Remaining competitive in a business environment.</Description><Identifier>_e869c434-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier></Vision><Mission><Description>To facilitate learning and continuous transformation of organizations.</Description><Identifier>_e869c4fc-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier></Mission><Value><Name>Interconnection</Name><Description>It encourages organizations to shift to a more interconnected way of thinking.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Communities</Name><Description>Organizations should become more like communities that employees can feel a commitment to.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Hard Work</Name><Description>They will work harder for an organization they are committed to.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Learning</Name><Description>Organizations ... organically develop into learning organizations; there are factors prompting their change. As organizations grow, they lose their capacity to learn as company structures and individual thinking becomes rigid.  When problems arise, the proposed solutions often turn out to be only short-term (single loop learning) and re-emerge in the future.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Competitiveness</Name><Description>To remain competitive, many organizations have restructured, with fewer people in the company.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Effectivenss</Name><Description>This means those who remain need to work more effectively.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Responsiveness</Name><Description>To create a competitive advantage, companies need to learn faster than their competitors and to develop a customer responsive culture.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Knowledge</Name><Description>Argyris identified that organizations need to maintain knowledge about new products and processes, understand what is happening in the outside environment and produce creative solutions using the knowledge and skills of all within the organization.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Co-operation</Name><Description>This requires co-operation between individuals and groups, free and reliable communication, and a culture of trust.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Communication</Name><Description/></Value><Value><Name>Trust</Name><Description/></Value><Goal><Name>Systems Thinking</Name><Description>Measure the performance of the organization as a whole and of its various components.</Description><Identifier>_e869c592-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The idea of the learning organization developed from a body of work called systems thinking. This is a conceptual framework that allows people to study businesses as bounded objects.  Learning organizations use this method of thinking when assessing their company and have information systems that measure the performance of the organization as a whole and of its various components.  Systems thinking states that all the characteristics must be apparent at once in an organization for it to be a learning organization. If some of these characteristics are missing then the organization will fall short of its goal. However, O'Keeffe believes that the characteristics of a learning organization are factors that are gradually acquired, rather than developed simultaneously.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name/><Description/><Identifier>_e869c646-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator/><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation/></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Personal Mastery</Name><Description>Develop a culture where personal mastery is practiced in daily life.</Description><Identifier>_e869c6e6-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The commitment by an individual to the process of learning is known as personal mastery.  There is a competitive advantage for an organization whose workforce can learn more quickly than the workforce of other organizations.  Individual learning is acquired through staff training, development and continuous self-improvement; however, learning cannot be forced upon an individual who is not receptive to learning.  Research shows that most learning in the workplace is incidental, rather than the product of formal training, therefore it is important to develop a culture where personal mastery is practiced in daily life.  A learning organization has been described as the sum of individual learning, but there must be mechanisms for individual learning to be transferred into organizational learning.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name/><Description/><Identifier>_e869c786-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator/><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation/></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Mental Models</Name><Description>Replace confrontational attitudes with an open culture that promotes inquiry and trust.</Description><Identifier>_e869c826-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The assumptions held by individuals and organizations are called mental models.  To become a learning organization, these models must be challenged. Individuals tend to espouse theories, which are what they intend to follow, and theories-in-use, which are what they actually do. Similarly, organizations tend to have 'memories' which preserve certain behaviours, norms and values.  In creating a learning environment it is important to replace confrontational attitudes with an open culture that promotes inquiry and trust. To achieve this, the learning organization needs mechanisms for locating and assessing organizational theories of action.  Unwanted values need to be discarded in a process called 'unlearning'.  Wang and Ahmed refer to this as 'triple loop learning.'</OtherInformation><Objective><Name/><Description/><Identifier>_e869c8d0-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator/><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation/></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Shared Vision</Name><Description>Create a common identity that provides focus and energy for learning.</Description><Identifier>_e869c970-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The development of a shared vision is important in motivating the staff to learn, as it creates a common identity that provides focus and energy for learning.  The most successful visions build on the individual visions of the employees at all levels of the organization, thus the creation of a shared vision can be hindered by traditional structures where the company vision is imposed from above.  Therefore, learning organizations tend to have flat, decentralized organizational structures.  The shared vision is often to succeed against a competitor; however, Senge states that these are transitory goals and suggests that there should also be long-term goals that are intrinsic within the company.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name/><Description/><Identifier>_e869ca1a-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator/><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation/></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Team Learning</Name><Description>Accumulate individual learning.</Description><Identifier>_e869cac4-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>5</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The accumulation of individual learning constitutes Team learning.  The benefit of team or shared learning is that staff grow more quickly and the problem solving capacity of the organization is improved through better access to knowledge and expertise.  Learning organizations have structures that facilitate team learning with features such as boundary crossing and openness.  Team learning requires individuals to engage in dialogue and discussion; therefore team members must develop open communication, shared meaning, and shared understanding.  Learning organizations typically have excellent knowledge management structures, allowing creation, acquisition, dissemination, and implementation of this knowledge in the organization.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name/><Description/><Identifier>_e869cb6e-c824-11e4-8913-917bf5d5dec3</Identifier><SequenceIndicator/><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation/></Objective></Goal></StrategicPlanCore><AdministrativeInformation><StartDate/><EndDate/><PublicationDate>2015-03-11</PublicationDate><Source>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Learning_organization</Source><Submitter><FirstName>Owen</FirstName><LastName>Ambur</LastName><PhoneNumber/><EmailAddress>Owen.Ambur@verizon.net</EmailAddress></Submitter></AdministrativeInformation></StrategicPlan>
