Table of Contents - Field Manual
for a Learning Historian
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS vii
1. INTRODUCTION TO LEARNING HISTORY THEORY AND PRACTICE 1 - 1
WHAT IS A LEARNING HISTORY? 1
THE VALUE OF A LEARNING HISTORY 5
ANATOMY OF A LEARNING HISTORY PROJECT 9
CREATING "REFLECTIONABLE KNOWLEDGE" 12
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF LEARNING HISTORY WORK 13
Organizations today have a choice - "Slash and burn" or "learn" -- 14
Learning takes place from experience, but collective learning from experience is inherently problematic 14
Communication that fosters learning must embody research, mythic and pragmatic imperatives 14
No one voice provides "the answer" - people accept other's viewpoints in the context of their own 14
"You are not alone" - all particular instances are reflections of universal patterns 15
Organizations "know" what they need to hear but lack the capacity to listen15
Organizations need an established infrastructure for reflection. 15
Learning involves change, and change may be difficult. 15
Stories convey intangibles15
WHAT IS, AND IS NOT, A LEARNING HISTORY 17
Use of "noticeable results" 18
Intended for an audience broader than the participants in the story. 18
Data generated through reflective conversations 19
The Jointly-Told Tale 19
The Two-Column Format 19
A Team of Insiders and Outsiders 20
Linking attributions to observable data 21
A means to better conversation 21
Distinguishing assessment, measurement, and evaluation from each other. 21
INFLUENCES ON LEARNING HISTORY WORK 25
The U.S. Army historian work 25
The "Listening Project" 26
THE BACKGROUND OF THIS FIELD MANUAL 26
2. THE NATURE OF ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING: CONTEXT FOR LEARNING HISTORIES 2 - 1
AN INFRASTRUCTURE FOR LEARNING 1
AN OVERVIEW OF ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING THEORY 2
LEARNING IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PILOT PROJECT UNDER EVALUATION 4
2. The learning is aimed at increasing capability 4
3. The aim is "double-loop" learning 5
Figure 2-A: The learning process 5
4. The organization is concerned about its values 6
OPERATING AS ACTION RESEARCHERS 9
The "OADI" learning cycle 9
Figure 2-B: OADI Learning Cycle 10
Figure 2-C: OADI Learning Cycle in Large System Change 11
We adhere to these principles from intervention theory and method: 12
We adhere to these principles from action research
theory and method: 12
3. CREATIVE IMPERATIVES FOR LEARNING HISTORY WORK 3 - 1
Figure 3-A: The three imperatives 1
THE RESEARCH IMPERATIVE: RIGOR AND INTEGRITY 2
THE MYTHIC IMPERATIVE: GETTING THE PURE ÏSTORYÓ 4
THE PRAGMATIC IMPERATIVE: GIVING THE AUDIENCE WHAT THEY NEED TO
MOVE FORWARD 7
BALANCING THE "MYTHIC," "RESEARCH," AND "PRAGMATIC" IMPERATIVES 8
IMPLICATIONS OF THE "JOINTLY-TOLD TALE" 1
FORMATS FOR A LEARNING HISTORY: THE TWO-COLUMN FORMAT 3
ANATOMY OF A TWO-COLUMN FORMAT STRUCTURE. 6
EXAMPLE OF THE TWO-COLUMN FORMAT: "THE LEARNING LAB ATTACK" 8
The Learning Lab's "trickle-out" effect 8
IMPERATIVES OF THE TWO-COLUMN FORMAT. (WHAT IT REQUIRES YOU TO DO.) 11
AN ALTERNATIVE TO TWO COLUMNS: THE STAGGERED FORMAT 12
MULTIPLE PERSPECTIVES 13
Integrating multiple perspectives 14
Figure 4-C: Two alternate perspectives represented as circles 14
Figure 4-D: Two alternate perspectives where overlap is area of compromise 14
Figure 4-E: Dominant overshadows alternative perspective 15
Figure 4-F: Accepting alternative perspectives defines a larger territory 15
THE LEARNING HISTORIAN'S POINT OF VIEW 16
5. PROJECT DESIGN AND PLANNING 5 - 1
THE INITIAL CONTACT: ENGAGING WITH THE CHAMPION 1
INITIAL MEETINGS WITH THE CHAMPION 2
ESTABLISHING A LEARNING HISTORY TEAM 3
Composition of the team: 4
SETTING UP THE LEARNING HISTORY PROCESS 6
Single external learning historians 6
EXAMPLE OF A SINGLE-LEARNING HISTORIAN ROLE DEFINITION: 6
A SAMPLE LARGE-SCALE LEARNING HISTORY AGREEMENT AND
BUDGET. 11
6. AUDIENCES FOR A LEARNING HISTORY 6 - 1
AUDIENCE A: MEMBERS OF THE PILOT TEAM 1
AUDIENCE B: NEWCOMERS TO THE PILOT GROUP 2
AUDIENCE C: THE ORGANIZATION (THE "ENTITY") AS A WHOLE 3
WHAT MAKES FOR A GOOD ORGANIZATION WITH WHICH TO DO A LEARNING HISTORY? 7
DIFFERENT PIECES FOR DIFFERENT PURPOSES 8
BALANCING THE PILOT TEAM'S VIEW WITH THE LARGER SYSTEM VIEW 9
Figure 10-B: Insiders' perspective on the organization. 10
Figure 10-C: Organization's perspective
on learning team 11
7. NOTICEABLE RESULTS 7 - 1
WHY NOTICEABLE RESULTS? 2
THE LANGUAGES OF NOTICEABLE RESULTS. 3
CHARACTERISTICS OF "NOTICEABLE RESULTS" 4
SOME EXAMPLES OF NOTICEABLE RESULTS 5
Describing noticeable results in your document: 6
CONSIDERING THE CAUSES OF NOTICEABLE RESULTS 9
BALANCING INDUCTIVE WITH DEDUCTIVE REASONING 1
Phase 1: Discovery (Inductive) 4
Phase 2: Demonstration (Deductive) 4
Figure 8-A. The Ïnomological net:Ó a framework showing the necessary ways of testing for validity. 6
Phase 3: Refutation 9
Phase 4: Replication 9
BUILDING ON THE RESEARCH OF PREVIOUS LEARNING HISTORY AND CASE STUDY EFFORTS. 10
9. THE INTERVIEWING PROCESS 9 - 1
Contact: 3
SAMPLE LETTER OF INTRODUCTION BEFORE INTERVIEWS 4
BEGINNING THE INTERVIEW 6
SAMPLE INTERVIEW GROUND RULES 9
THE INTERVIEW PROTOCOL 9
CONDUCTING THE INTERVIEW 11
SUGGESTED INTERVIEW QUESTIONS 13
CLOSING THE INTERVIEW: 17
PRESENCE OF MIND: AN EXAMPLE OF A REAL INTERVIEW 18
AFTER THE INTERVIEW 22
WRITING INTERVIEW FIELD NOTES 22
TAPE RECORDERS AND TRANSCRIPTIONS 23
TELEPHONE INTERVIEWS 23
OVER THE COURSE OF MULTIPLE INTERVIEWS: 24
INTERVIEWING RELUCTANT PEOPLE 25
CONDUCTING REAL-TIME OBSERVATIONS 26
10. DISTILLATION 10 - 1
THE RESEARCH IMPERATIVE IN DISTILLATION: 3
THE MYTHIC IMPERATIVE IN DISTILLATION: 4
THE PRAGMATIC IMPERATIVE IN DISTILLATION: 4
THE OVERALL DISTILLATION PROCESS: 4
FIRST RESEARCH PASS: DRAWING FORTH CONCEPTS (ÏOPEN CODINGÓ BY INDIVIDUALS) 5
The "extraterrestrial attitude" 6
Coding interviews 6
Phrasing the concepts 7
Some frequently asked questions about coding: 8
Sample open coding: An interview transcript 10
B. Grouping 12
C. Axial analysis 13
FIRST MYTHIC PASS: WRITING THE STORY 18
A FINAL THREE PASSES. 20
SORTING 21
11. WRITING THE LEARNING HISTORY 11 - 1
COMPONENTS OF THE WRITING PROCESS 1
THE WRITER'S SORT: FROM "STUFF" TO A PRELIMINARY OUTLINE 2
THE COMPONENTS OF A LEARNING HISTORY 3
The purpose and audience statement 3
Opening "Curtain-raisers" -- to the piece as a whole, and to the theme. 4
"Nut Grafs" -- to the piece as a whole, and to the theme. 4
The exposition 5
The plot 5
The right-hand column (narrative) 5
The left-hand column (commentary) 6
The closing 6
WRITING AND EDITING 7
Conveying voice 8
The learning historianÌs voice 11
Word-smithing 12
Some alternatives for handling quotes in a document
12
QUOTE-CHECKING 2
CONFIDENTIALITY: BALANCING PROTECTION OF SOURCES AGAINST GENERIC UNDERSTANDING. 5
VALIDATION WORKSHOP 7
13. DISSEMINATION 13 - 1
THE THEORY BEHIND DISSEMINATION WORKSHOPS 2
DISTRIBUTION 3
Presenting and transferring information to others 3
Sequences for distributing learning histories 3
Dissemination Workshop Process 4
PREPARING FOR THE DISSEMINATION WORKSHOP 11
LEARNING HISTORY DISSEMINATION WORKSHOP 16
Reflection on Field Experiences 18
14. PUBLICATION AND OUTREACH 14 - 1
PROPOSAL: THE LEARNING HISTORY LIBRARY 5
WHAT IS A "LEARNING HISTORY?" 5
LEARNING HISTORIES AT THE PRESENT MOMENT 6
THE MIT LEARNING HISTORY EFFORT 9
AUDIENCE 10
HOW A LEARNING HISTORY IS CREATED 11
The "confessional" tale 2
The "impressionist" ethnography 3
EXAMPLES OF LEARNING HISTORY LIKE MATERIALS: 5
BIBLIOGRAPHY: 6
APPENDIX C: SUPPLEMENTAL READINGS 9
APPENDIX D: THE LEARNING HISTORY CRITIQUE SESSIONS
13
APPENDIX E: RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 14