LED 603 National University Week 3 Developing Capacities for Leadership Discussion - Humanities
So the attachments for the learning material and the part 3 of the book should help you answer the below prompt for this weeks discussion topic. Please make sure you cite and reference the materials. One page of writing would be enough. ThanksWhat is an adaptive challenge and why does it require leadership in order to work on it?What do Heifetz and Laurie mean by Balcony Perspective? Additionally, what do the authors say about the dance floor?
the_fifth_discipline_by_peter_senge.pdf
week_3_learning_materials.docx
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In the long run, the only sustainable
source of competitive advantage is
your organizations ability to learn
faster than its competition.
Founder and Director of the Center
for Organizational Learning at MITs
Sloan School of Management, which
boasts such members as Intel, Ford,
Herman Miller, and Harley Davidson,
author Peter M. Senge has found a means
of creating a learning organization. In
THE FIFTH D I SC I P L I N E , he draws
the blueprints for an organization where
people 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 learn together. THE
FIFTH DISCIPLINE fuses these features
into a coherent body of theory and
practice, making the whole of an
organization more effective than the sum
of its parts.
Company after company, from Intel to
AT&T to Procter & Gamble to Coopers
and Lybrand, have adopted the
disciplines of the learning organization to
rid themselves of the learning
disabilities
C O N T I N U E D ON B A C K
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F L A P
2 ze 412
THE
FIFTH
DISCIPLINE
THE ART AND
PRACTICE
OF
THE LEARNING
ORGANIZATION
P e t e r M. S e n g e
CURRENCY
DOUBIEDAY
New York London Toronto Sydney Auckland
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TO DIANE
For more information on Currency Doubledays new ideas on business, please write:
Currency Doubleday
1540 Broadway—Eighteenth Floor
New York, New York 10036
A CURRENCY PAPERBACK
PUBLISHED BY DOUBLEDAY
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. 1540
Broadway, New York, New York 10036
CURRENCY and DOUBLEDAY
are trademarks of Doubleday,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc.
The Fifth Discipline was originally published in hardcover by Currency Doubleday, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc., in 1990.
BOOK DESIGN BY RICHARD ORIOLO
Permission to reprint Navajo sand painting given by the
Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Santa Fe,
New Mexico, Photography by Kay V. Weist.
The Library of Congress has cataloged the Currency hardcover edition as follows:
Senge, Peter M. The fifth discipline: the art and practice of
the learning organization/Peter M. Senge. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
A Currency book—T.p. verso. 1. Organizational effectiveness.
2. Work groups. I. Title. II. Title: Learning organization.
HD58.9.S46 1994
658.4-dc20
90-2991
CIP
ISBN 0-385-26095-4 Copyright ©
1990 by Peter M. Senge
Introduction to the Paperback Edition and Some Tips for First-Time Readers copyright © 1994
by Peter M. Senge
All Rights Reserved Printed in
the United States of America
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CONTENTS
Introduction to the Paperback Edition
Some Tips for First-Time Readers
ix
xxi
PART
I
HOW OUR ACTIONS CREATE OUR
REALITY . . . AND HOW WE CAN
CHANGE IT
1 Give Me a Lever Long Enough … and Single-Handed I Can Move
the World
3
2 Does Your Organization Have a Learning Disability?
17
3 Prisoners of the System, or Prisoners of Our Own Thinking?
27
PART
II
THE FIFTH DISCIPLINE: THE
CORNERSTONE OF THE LEARNING
ORGANIZATION
57
4 The Laws of the Fifth Discipline
68
5 A Shift of Mind
6 Natures Templates: Identifying the Patterns
93
That Control Events
114
7 The Principle of Leverage
127
8 The Art of Seeing the Forest and the Trees
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PART
I I I
THE CORE DISCIPLINES: BUILDING
THE LEARNING ORGANIZATION
9
10
11
12
Personal Mastery
Mental Models
Shared Vision
Team Learning
139
174
205
233
PART
IV
PROTOTYPES
13
14
15
16
17
18
Openness
273
Localness
287
A Managers Time
302
Ending the War Between Work and Family
306
Microworlds: The Technology of the Learning Organization 313
The Leaders New Work
339
PART
CODA
19 A Sixth Discipline?
20 Rewriting the Code
21 The Indivisible Whole
Appendix 1. The Learning Disciplines
Appendix 2. Systems Archetypes
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index
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V
363
364
368
373
378
391
411
414
6 ze 412
P A R T
I
How Our Actions
Create Our Reality..
and How We Can
Change It
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1
GIVE ME A LEVER
LONG ENOUGH.. . A N D
SINGLE-HANDED I CAN
MOVE THE WORLD
From a very early age, we are taught to break apart problems, to fragment the world.
This apparently makes complex tasks and subjects more manageable, but we pay a
hidden, enormous price. We can no longer see the consequences of our actions; we lose
our intrinsic sense of connection to a larger whole. When we then try to see the big
picture, we try to reassemble the fragments in our minds, to list and organize all the
pieces. But, as physicist David Bohm says, the task is futile—similar to trying to
reassemble the fragments of a broken mirror to see a true reflection. Thus, after a while
we give up trying to see the whole altogether.
The tools and ideas presented in this book are for destroying the illusion that the
world is created of separate, unrelated forces. When we give up this illusion—we can
then build learning organizations, organizations 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 learn together.
As Fortune magazine recently said, Forget your tired old ideas about leadership. The
most successful corporation of the 1990s will be something called a learning
organization. The ability to learn faster than your competitors, said Arie De Geus,
head of planning for Royal Dutch/Shell, may be the only sustainable competitive
advantage. As the world becomes more interconnected and business becomes more
complex and dynamic, work must become more learningful. It is no longer sufficient
to have one person learning for the organization, a Ford or a Sloan or a Watson. Its
just not possible any longer to figure it out from the top, and have everyone else
following the orders of the grand strategist. The organizations that will truly excel in
the future will be the organizations that discover how to tap peoples commitment and
capacity to learn at all levels in an organization.
Learning organizations are possible because, deep down, we are all learners. No one
has to teach an infant to learn. In fact, no one has to teach infants anything. They are
intrinsically inquisitive, masterful learners who learn to walk, speak, and pretty much
run their households all on their own. Learning organizations are possible because not
only is it our nature to learn but we love to learn. Most of us at one time or another
have been part of a great team, a group of people who functioned together in an
extraordinary way— who trusted one another, who complemented each others
strengths and compensated for each others limitations, who had common goals that
were larger than individual goals, and who produced extraordinary results. I have met
many people who have experienced this sort of profound teamwork—in sports, or in
the performing arts, or in business. Many say that they have spent much of their life
looking for that experience again. What they experienced was a learning organization.
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The team that became great didnt start off great—it learned how to produce
extraordinary results.
One could argue that the entire global business community is learning to learn
together, becoming a learning community. Whereas once many industries were
dominated by a single, undisputed leader —one IBM, one Kodak, one Procter &
Gamble, one Xerox—today industries, especially in manufacturing, have dozens of
excellent companies. American and European corporations are pulled forward by the
example of the Japanese; the Japanese, in turn, are pulled by the Koreans and
Europeans. Dramatic improvements take place in corporations in Italy, Australia,
Singapore—and quickly become influential around the world.
There is also another, in some ways deeper, movement toward learning organizations,
part of the evolution of industrial society. Material affluence for the majority has
gradually shifted peoples orientation toward work—from what Daniel Yankelovich
called an instrumental view of work, where work was a means to an end, to a more
sacred view, where people seek the intrinsic benefits of work.1 Our grandfathers
worked six days a week to earn what most of us now earn by Tuesday afternoon, says
Bill OBrien, CEO of Hanover Insurance. The ferment in management will continue
until we build organizations that are more consistent with mans higher aspirations
beyond food, shelter and belonging.
Moreover, many who share these values are now in leadership positions. I find a
growing number of organizational leaders who, while still a minority, feel they are part
of a profound evolution in the nature of work as a social institution. Why cant we do
good works at work? asked Edward Simon, president of Herman Miller, recently.
Business is the only institution that has a chance, as far as I can see, to fundamentally
improve the injustice that exists in the world. But first, we will have to move through
the barriers that are keeping us from being truly vision-led and capable of learning.
Perhaps the most salient reason for building learning organizations is that we are only
now starting to understand the capabilities such organizations must possess. For a long
time, efforts to build learning organizations were like groping in the dark until the
skills, areas of knowledge, and paths for development of such organizations became
known. What fundamentally will distinguish learning organizations from traditional
authoritarian controlling organizations will be the mastery of certain basic disciplines.
That is why the disciplines of the learning organization are vital.
DISCIPLINES OF THE LEARNING ORGANIZATION
On a cold, clear morning in December 1903, at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, the
fragile aircraft of Wilbur and Orville Wright proved that powered flight was possible.
Thus was the airplane invented; but it would take more than thirty years before
commercial aviation could serve the general public.
Engineers say that a new idea has been invented when it is proven to work in the
laboratory. The idea becomes an innovation only when it can be replicated reliably on
a meaningful scale at practical costs. If the idea is sufficiently important, such as the
telephone, the digital computer, or commercial aircraft, it is called a basic innovation,
and it creates a new industry or transforms an existing industry. In these terms, learning
organizations have been invented, but they have not yet been innovated.
In engineering, when an idea moves from an invention to an innovation, diverse
component technologies come together. Emerging from isolated developments in
separate fields of research, these components gradually form an ensemble of
technologies that are critical to each others success. Until this ensemble forms, the
idea, though possible in the laboratory, does not achieve its potential in practice.2
The Wright Brothers proved that powered flight was possible, but the McDonnell
Douglas DC-3, introduced in 1935, ushered in the era of commercial air travel. The
DC-3 was the first plane that supported itself economically as well as aerodynamically.
During those intervening thirty years (a typical time period for incubating basic
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innovations), myriad experiments with commercial flight had failed. Like early
experiments with learning organizations, the early planes were not reliable and cost
effective on an appropriate scale.
The DC-3, for the first time, brought together five critical component technologies
that formed a successful ensemble. They were: the variable-pitch propeller, retractable
landing gear, a type of lightweight molded body construction called monocque, radial
air-cooled engine, and wing flaps. To succeed, the DC-3 needed all five; four were not
enough. One year earlier, the Boeing 247 was introduced with all of them except wing
flaps. Lacking wing flaps, Boeings engineers found that the plane was unstable on takeoff and landing and had to downsize the engine.
Today, I believe, five new component technologies are gradually converging to
innovate learning organizations. Though developed separately, each will, I believe,
prove critical to the others success, just as occurs with any ensemble. Each provides a
vital dimension in building organizations that can truly learn, that can continually
enhance their capacity to realize their highest aspirations:
Systems Thinking. A cloud masses, the sky darkens, leaves twist upward, and we
know that it will rain. We also know that after the storm, the runoff will feed into
groundwater miles away, and the sky will grow clear by tomorrow. All these events are
distant in time and space, and yet they are all connected within the same pattern. Each
has an influence on the rest, an influence that is usually hidden from view. You can
only understand the system of a rainstorm by contemplating the whole, not any
individual part of the pattern.
Business and other human endeavors are also systems. They, too, are bound by
invisible fabrics of interrelated actions, which often take years to fully play out their
effects on each other. Since we are part of that lacework ourselves, its doubly hard to
see the whole pattern of change. Instead, we tend to focus on snapshots of isolated
parts of the system, and wonder why our deepest problems never seem to get solved.
Systems thinking is a conceptual framework, a body of knowledge and tools that has
been developed over the past fifty years, to make the full patterns clearer, and to help
us see how to change them effectively.
Though the tools are new, the underlying worldview is extremely intuitive;
experiments with young children show that they learn systems thinking very quickly.
Personal Mastery. Mastery might suggest gaining dominance over people or things.
But mastery can also mean a special level of proficiency. A master craftsman doesnt
dominate pottery or weaving. People with a high level of personal mastery are able to
consistently realize the results that matter most deeply to them— in effect, they
approach their life as an artist would approach a work of art. They do that by becoming
committed to their own lifelong learning.
Personal mastery is the discipline of continually clarifying and deepening our
personal vision, of focusing our energies, of developing patience, and of seeing reality
objectively. As such, it is an essential cornerstone of the learning organization—the
learning organizations spiritual foundation. An organizations commitment to and
capacity for learning can be no greater than that of its members. The roots of this
discipline lie in both Eastern and Western spiritual traditions, and in secular traditions
as well.
But surprisingly few organizations encourage the growth of their people in this
manner. This results in vast untapped resources: People enter business as bright, welleducated, high-energy people, full of energy and desire to make a difference, says
Hanovers OBrien. By the time they are 30, a few are on the fast track and the rest
put in their time to do what matters to them on the weekend. They lose the
commitment, the sense of mission, and the excitement with which they started their
careers. We get damn little of their energy and almost none of their spirit.
And surprisingly few adults work to rigorously develop their own personal mastery.
When you ask most adults what they want from their lives, they often talk first about
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what theyd like to get rid of: Id like my mother-in-law to move out, they say, or Id
like my back problems to clear up. The discipline of personal mastery, by contrast,
starts with clarifying the things that really matter to us, of living our lives in the service
of our highest aspirations.
Here, I am most interested in the connections between personal learning and
organizational learning, in the reciprocal commitments between individual and
organization, and in the special spirit of an enterprise made up of learners.
Mental Models. Mental models are deeply ingrained assumptions, generalizations,
or even pictures or images that influence how we understand the world and how we
take action. Very often, we are not consciously aware of our mental models or the
effects they have on our behavior. For example, we may notice that a co-worker dresses
elegantly, and say to ourselves, Shes a country club person. About someone who
dresses shabbily, we may feel, He doesnt care about what others think. Mental
models of what can or cannot be done in different management settings are no less
deeply entrenched. Many insights into new markets or outmoded organizational
practices fail to get put into practice because they conflict with powerful, tacit mental
models.
Royal Dutch/Shell, one of the first large organizations to understand the advantages
of accelerating organizational learning came to this realization when they discovered
how pervasive was the influence of hidden mental models, especially those that become
widely shared. Shells extraordinary success in managing through the dramatic changes
and unpredictability of the world oil business in the 1970s and 1980s came in large
measure from learning how to surface and challenge managers mental models. (In the
early 1970s Shell was the weakest of the big seven oil companies; by the late 1980s it
was the strongest.) Arie de Geus, Shells recently retired Coordinator of Group
Planning, says that continuous adaptation and growth in a changing business
environment depends on institutional learning, which is the process whereby
management teams change their shared mental models of the company, their markets,
and their competitors. For this reason, we think of planning as learning and of
corporate planning as institutional learning.3
The discipline of working with mental models starts with turning the mirror inward;
learning to unearth our internal pictures of the world, to bring them to the surface and
hold them rigorously to scrutiny. It also includes the ability to carry on learningful
conversations that balance inquiry and advocacy, where people expose their own
thinking effectively and make that thinking open to the influence of others.
Building Shared Vision. If any one idea about leadership has inspired organizations
for thousands of years, its the capacity to hold a shared picture of the future we seek to
create. One is hard pressed to think of any organization that has sustained some
measure of greatness in the absence of goals, values, and missions that become deeply
shared throughout the organization. IBM had service; Polaroid had instant
photography; Ford had public transportation for the masses and Apple had computing
power for the masses. Though radically different in content and kind, all these
organizations managed to bind people together around a common identity and sense of
destiny.
When there is a genuine vision (as opposed to the all-too-familiar vision
statement), people excel and learn, not because they are told to, but because they want
to. But many leaders have personal visions that never get translated into shared visions
that galvanize an organization. All too often, a companys shared vision has revolved
around the charisma of a leader, or around a crisis that galvanizes everyone temporarily.
But, given a choice, most people opt for pursuing a lofty goal, not only in times of
crisis but at all times. What has been lacking is a discipline for translating individual
vision into shared vision—not a cookbook but a set of principles and guiding
practices.
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The practice of shared vision involves the skills of unearthing shared pictures of the
future that foster genuine commi ...
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