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Modes of Personal and Organisational Learning in VirtualBuisinessTeams. Hans van der Vleugel Jack Gerrissen Darco Jansen Peter Sloep Wim van Petegem project “Virtual Company” Science & Technology Departement Open University of the Netherlands. Presentation content.
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Modes of Personal and Organisational Learning in VirtualBuisinessTeams Hans van der Vleugel Jack Gerrissen Darco Jansen Peter Sloep Wim van Petegem project “Virtual Company” Science & Technology Departement Open University of the Netherlands
Presentation content • Concepts that triggered our ideas • Projecteam-philosophy for VBT-s • VBT-workstation • Modes of learning in a VBT • deployment modes/motives for VBT-s Warning: pilots, but no “formal proof”
Professional Training • Becoming a psychologist (regular university) • first year at the university: everything but psychology! • 4 years study period • 6 month practical work: the real thing! • When did learning and growth of expertise have its peaks?
“Traditional” Distance Teaching • Open University of the Netherlands • guided selfstudy • “open”-ness in admission • little pacing and time constraints • early ICT-adoption • working students
Changes in pedagogical concepts • Open University of the Netherlands • experimenting towards constructivist, “competency-based” learning • learning while doing: authenticity • no learning without error: quality control • just-in-time resources: coaching and knowledge-management • assignment of project-tasks
Working Communities • Projectteams: • Different expertises and roles of project members • Aiming at (collective) competencies • Support and compensation for each others individual weaknesses • Development of individual expertise, group competencies, and organisational knowledge • Coordination via synchronous interaction
Work-for-Learning Communities • Professional learning in projectteams: • authentic tasks and roles • collecting information on a “need-to-know-basis” (JIT-learning) • peer-support and coaching • development of individual expertiseand group competencies • documentation of “lessons learned” • important for organisation as a whole
Network-for-Learning Communities • Supportive ICT-infrastructure and groupware allowing for: • dislocated team-members • asynchronous team-interaction • information retrieval (intranet & Internet) • accumulating repositories of resources • asynchronous coaching
Network-for-Learning Communities Repository of learning resources Task/function assignment Trainee at location A VIRTUALWORK-FOR-LEARNINGCOMMUNITY Trainee at location B Repositoryof coachingcapacity Personal growth assessment Trainee at location C
VirtualBusinessTeams • Our VBT-s consist of: • trainees with authentic, project-tasks • for a sponsor in the real world (about!) • who’s roles are allocated to honour an expressed wish or need for expertise-growth • by practicing that field of expertise • with a high quantity of asynchonous work • and assessment of both product and process
Virtual Work-for-Learning Communities ICT-Networks enable: • Asynchronous work • Asynchronous training and coaching • Direct transfer of training • Flexible window for intake on the basis of expressed needs (individual/group)
Typical VBTeam workstation Communicate& coordinate Co-work tools & objects Corporate knowl. identity / rules Competence analysis, monitoring & assessment Just-in-time learning & coaching
Typical VBTeam workstation Communicate& coördinate Peer-learning Co-work tools & objects Corporate knowl. identity / rules Knowledge management oriented learning Competence analysis, monitoring & assessment Just-in-time learning & coaching Assessment based learning
Three submodes of VBT-learning • Supportive conditions for building expertise • Heterogeniety • peer-learning • Interactions • tacit knowledge more explicit and inter-related • assessment of competence “in the field” • Linking of different knowledge resources to: • individual nomological networks • organisational “body of knowledge”
Realism and motivation Competence growth demand Stack of product/service orders Task component addressing growth profile
Deployment modes (motives) 1. Business-task paced learning 2. Learning at work Virtual Company 3. Organisational prototyping 4. Knowledge manage- ment for competencegrowth
VBT - modes (1) Business-task paced learning From knowledge delivery to personal development Direct competence-development instead of indirect management (traditional HRM) Specific professional practices Just-in-time learning
VBT - modes (2) Learning at work a-synchronous trainers/ heterogenous groups minimal agenda- and/or travel-problems direct “Transfer of Training” Competence assessment in existing tasks Just-in-time learning
VBT - modes (3) Organisational prototyping Migration to new functions and/or new tools Knowledge-base with “best practices” Competence assessment in new functions
VBT - modes (4) Knowledge management towards competence growth Merging of individual and organisational “Bodies-of-Knowledge” Knowledge-base with “best practices” Permanent updating of organisational memory
Overview 1. Business-task paced learning 2. Learning at work Virtual Company 3. Organisational prototyping 4. Knowledge management for competencegrowth
Conclusions on VBT-s • a highly motivating way of combininglearning and working • a rich source for both individual and organisational learning • makes need for knowledge management appearent • ICT for asynchronous communication may make available tacit knowledge easier explicit • “off the shelf” groupware can be used, but interaction design helps
Modes of Personal and Organisational Learning in VirtualBuisinessTeams Hans van der Vleugel (ao) project “Virtual Company” hans.vandervleugel@ouh.nl Science & Technology Departement Open University of the Netherlands