
Peter Senge es un gurú muy reconocido a nivel mundial por su libro “Quinta Disciplina” el cual es lectura obligatoria para todos aquellos interesados en el Management o en el Pensamiento Sistémico. Además de los libros que ha escrito, regularmente dicta conferencias a ejecutivos en todo el mundo que son grabadas y luego vendidas en formato DVD.
En el año 2002, en la ciudad de Sao Paulo (Brasil) en el marco del ExpoManagement dictó una conferencia titulada “Learning Organization”. Aquí presentamos la transcripción de lo que nos pareció más interesante, espero sea útil para ustedes.
Most of us who ride bicycles still have no idea how we do it. Why is it so difficult to learn to ride a bicycle? The first reason is that we all learned walking before we learned bicycle riding. When we walk, if we start to lose our balance, what do we do?, we move in direction, if you are walking and you start to stumble, what do you do?, you slow down and try to regain your balance. If you are riding a bicycle, and your bicycle starts to tip in a direction, what do you do? you actually turn into that direction, and if your bicycle starts to fall or you lose your balance, you actually have to speed up. It’s totally crazy from the stand point of walking. Learning to ride a bicycle is a crazy activity only because we first learned to walk, because the principles that govern bicycle riding are actually different than the principles that govern walking. So there are two points, I’d like you to think about from my simple example.
The first is that what appears difficult initially is difficult because of what we have learned in the past. Many people would say that real learning requires unlearning. Because in essence to ride a bicycle you have to unlearn some of what we learned about walking. But secondly, almost all of us, did learn to ride bicycles, it becomes natural, because, in fact, we have the capacity to ride bicycles, because we are products of nature, and the laws of motion are part of nature, and of course, most importantly of all, we all know how learning occurs. It does not occur through listening to somebody’s ideas and then go and implementing them, ever!. It occurs through taking action and failing. We learned to walk through falling down, we learned to ride bicycles through falling down. There is no subtitute, we learn through doing, all of us. Sometimes ideas might be helpful, sometimes ideas can actually slow the process down.
We also learn through our relationships, learning is always personal. A learning process is a process where a learner goes from not being able to do something the learner really wants to do, to being more able to do something the learner wants to do. Learning is a process of enhancing our capacity. However, we learned to ride bicycles by entering a community of bicycle riders. Learning is both intimate or personal and social or collective. Human beings learn in the context of large social networks or networks of relationships. We learned to walk by entering a community of walkers, we learned to talk by entering a community of talkers. And this morning we’ll learn a bit about learning organizations by becoming a community of learners.
Almost all of us, in one time or another, have been part of a group of people working together in a extraordinary way. In fact, let me just ask you, if you think of your whole life, this might go back to a football team you were part of when you were a student, or something at work, and ask this question: have I ever been part of a group who worked together in a extraordinary way, who were really exceptional in their effectiveness, in what they were able to achieve, and created a kind of enviroment that was really exciting to be part of. There is one more question I need to ask:
Did the group or the team start with that level of capability? When they first came together, did they have that ability?So you were part of a “Learning Organization”, you were part of a group of people who enhance their capacities to create types of result they truly want to create. However, we don’t necessarily appreciate the principles that even operate in our own experience. Often times these things happen and we don’t give a lot of thought to them.
One of the features of great teams is a lot of conflict. But there is a special nature of the conflict, it’s conflict that becomes productive. It’s conflict that leads us to see the world in different ways. The first principle of effective teams is: to create great teams, you must first create space for individuals.
How do we build the learning organization?
–Talk about your aspirations.
–Create space and openness for reflecting our mental models.
–Keep asking the question: what are the systems we are part of? how can we contribute to those systems?
Fuente: Learning Organization DVD — Peter Senge



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