2: Mainstream thinking about learning and knowledge creation in organizations

  • Transmitting knowledge between individuals, diffusing it across an organization, and storing it in explicit forms
  • Constructing knowledge and making sense in communities of practice
  • Conclusion

As Chapter 1 has pointed out, the past few decades have witnessed a dramatic increase in the popularity of notions of learning and the creation and management of knowledge/intellectual capital in organizations. Two writers have played a prominent role in this growing popularity, namely, Senge’s (1990) exposition of the learning organization and Nonaka’s (1991; Nonaka and Takeuchi, 1995) model of knowledge creation in organizations. Senge’s framework draws heavily on systems ...

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