{"title":"Action learning and innovation","authors":"George Boak","doi":"10.1080/14767333.2022.2130721","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"‘Innovation is an essential assumption in Revans’ action learning, and implicit in his calls for fresh thinking, fresh questions and questioning insight in the face of intractable problems and challenging opportunities’ (Pedler and Brook 2017, 221). Innovation has been defined simply as the process of coming up with good new ideas and making themwork technically and commercially (Tidd andBessant 2018), or as ‘the introduction of new and improved ways of doing things’ (West et al. 2003, 394). Both these short definitions capture the essence of innovation, but gloss over the uncertainties, difficulties and pressures that often arise when we try to innovate. Popular literature on innovation frequently focuses on novel products that embody new technologies, but many innovations concern new processes, including changes in management or professional practices (OECD 2018). Innovation has long been considered important to the long-term success of organisations (Crossan and Apaydin 2010; Uhl-Bien and Arena 2018) to enable them to survive in changing environments and to solve recurring problems. We have seen this recently, when the initial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic created radical problems for organisations and communities and stimulated innovative solutions, including the development of vaccines with unprecedented speed, the repurposing of manufacturing facilities, the move to online working practices and online education, and entrepreneurial social initiatives to support the more vulnerable (Cohen and Campbell 2021; George, Lakhani, and Puranam 2020; Heinonen and Strandvik 2021; Netz, Reinmoeller, and Axelson 2022). Pedler and Brook’s (2017) paper in an earlier issue of this journal explored literature on action learning and innovation, and the connections between them, and argued that action learning could not only stimulate the creative aspect of innovation – the collective learning processes enabling people to escape from old mindsets – but could also provide support for the challenges of implementing new ideas and actually bringing about change. Studies of innovation have drawn on ideas from theories of organisational learning, in particular that there is a need both for a search for new knowledge and ideas (known in this literature as ‘exploration’) and also the implementation of knowledge the organisation already possesses (known as ‘exploitation’). There is a tension between exploration and exploitation, not least in that they compete for resources, and the ability to maintain a balance between these two competing forces has become known as ambidexterity (March 1991). The idea of ambidexterity has also been applied to individual behaviours, where exploration means opening up areas for inquiry and creativity, and exploitation means closing down possibilities, developing objectives and plans and implementing them (Rosing, Frese, and Bausch 2011; Havermans et al. 2015; Zacher, Robinson, and Rosing 2016). The dialogue in the action learning set can provide a supportive structure for these opening and closing behaviours, as it encourages set members to challenge assumptions and to think differently about an issue, and also leads them to make choices, and develop and implement plans. Jeff Gold’s paper in this issue of the journal explains how an innovative idea was introduced into the daily practice of officers in a UK police force, and how action learning was used as a","PeriodicalId":44898,"journal":{"name":"Action Learning","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Action Learning","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14767333.2022.2130721","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
‘Innovation is an essential assumption in Revans’ action learning, and implicit in his calls for fresh thinking, fresh questions and questioning insight in the face of intractable problems and challenging opportunities’ (Pedler and Brook 2017, 221). Innovation has been defined simply as the process of coming up with good new ideas and making themwork technically and commercially (Tidd andBessant 2018), or as ‘the introduction of new and improved ways of doing things’ (West et al. 2003, 394). Both these short definitions capture the essence of innovation, but gloss over the uncertainties, difficulties and pressures that often arise when we try to innovate. Popular literature on innovation frequently focuses on novel products that embody new technologies, but many innovations concern new processes, including changes in management or professional practices (OECD 2018). Innovation has long been considered important to the long-term success of organisations (Crossan and Apaydin 2010; Uhl-Bien and Arena 2018) to enable them to survive in changing environments and to solve recurring problems. We have seen this recently, when the initial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic created radical problems for organisations and communities and stimulated innovative solutions, including the development of vaccines with unprecedented speed, the repurposing of manufacturing facilities, the move to online working practices and online education, and entrepreneurial social initiatives to support the more vulnerable (Cohen and Campbell 2021; George, Lakhani, and Puranam 2020; Heinonen and Strandvik 2021; Netz, Reinmoeller, and Axelson 2022). Pedler and Brook’s (2017) paper in an earlier issue of this journal explored literature on action learning and innovation, and the connections between them, and argued that action learning could not only stimulate the creative aspect of innovation – the collective learning processes enabling people to escape from old mindsets – but could also provide support for the challenges of implementing new ideas and actually bringing about change. Studies of innovation have drawn on ideas from theories of organisational learning, in particular that there is a need both for a search for new knowledge and ideas (known in this literature as ‘exploration’) and also the implementation of knowledge the organisation already possesses (known as ‘exploitation’). There is a tension between exploration and exploitation, not least in that they compete for resources, and the ability to maintain a balance between these two competing forces has become known as ambidexterity (March 1991). The idea of ambidexterity has also been applied to individual behaviours, where exploration means opening up areas for inquiry and creativity, and exploitation means closing down possibilities, developing objectives and plans and implementing them (Rosing, Frese, and Bausch 2011; Havermans et al. 2015; Zacher, Robinson, and Rosing 2016). The dialogue in the action learning set can provide a supportive structure for these opening and closing behaviours, as it encourages set members to challenge assumptions and to think differently about an issue, and also leads them to make choices, and develop and implement plans. Jeff Gold’s paper in this issue of the journal explains how an innovative idea was introduced into the daily practice of officers in a UK police force, and how action learning was used as a
“创新是Revans行动学习的一个基本假设,在面对棘手的问题和具有挑战性的机遇时,他对新思维、新问题和质疑洞察力的呼吁中隐含着创新”(Pedler和Brook 2017, 221)。创新被简单地定义为提出好的新想法并使其在技术和商业上发挥作用的过程(Tidd and bessant 2018),或者是“引入新的和改进的做事方式”(West et al. 2003, 394)。这两个简短的定义都抓住了创新的本质,但掩盖了我们尝试创新时经常出现的不确定性、困难和压力。关于创新的流行文献经常关注体现新技术的新产品,但许多创新涉及新流程,包括管理或专业实践的变化(OECD 2018)。长期以来,创新一直被认为是组织长期成功的重要因素(Crossan和Apaydin 2010;Uhl-Bien and Arena 2018)使他们能够在不断变化的环境中生存并解决反复出现的问题。我们最近已经看到了这一点,COVID-19大流行的初步影响给组织和社区带来了根本性的问题,并刺激了创新的解决方案,包括以前所未有的速度开发疫苗,重新调整生产设施的用途,转向在线工作实践和在线教育,以及支持弱势群体的创业社会倡议(Cohen和Campbell, 2021年;George, Lakhani和Puranam 2020;Heinonen and Strandvik 2021;Netz, Reinmoeller, and Axelson 2022)。Pedler和Brook(2017)在本刊早期的一篇论文中探讨了行动学习和创新的文献,以及它们之间的联系,并认为行动学习不仅可以激发创新的创造性方面-使人们摆脱旧思维的集体学习过程-而且还可以为实施新想法和实际带来变化的挑战提供支持。创新研究借鉴了组织学习理论的观点,特别是需要寻找新的知识和想法(在本文献中称为“探索”),也需要实施组织已经拥有的知识(称为“利用”)。在勘探和开发之间存在着紧张关系,尤其是它们争夺资源,而在这两种竞争力量之间保持平衡的能力已被称为“两面性”(1991年3月)。双重性的概念也适用于个人行为,其中探索意味着为探究和创造力开辟领域,而利用意味着关闭可能性,制定目标和计划并实施它们(Rosing, Frese, and Bausch 2011;Havermans et al. 2015;Zacher, Robinson, and Rosing 2016)。行动学习集合中的对话可以为这些开放和关闭行为提供支持结构,因为它鼓励集合成员挑战假设,以不同的方式思考问题,并引导他们做出选择,制定和实施计划。杰夫·戈尔德在本期杂志上的论文解释了一个创新的想法是如何被引入到英国警察部队的日常实践中,以及行动学习是如何被用作一种