如何促进包容、集体智慧和民主

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Action Learning Pub Date : 2023-05-04 DOI:10.1080/14767333.2023.2218131
Helen Baxter, Daniela Cialfi, J. Edmonstone, M. Pedler, H. Wilson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期《华尔街日报》的评论共同批判了商业和组织世界的语言和实践,并提出了通过促进包容、集体智慧和民主来改善这个世界的建议和方法。印度尼西亚STAIN大学的Fadhila Yonata及其同事在一篇文章中评论了Antoinette Gagne等人的《批判行动研究:挑战新自由主义语言和文化教育》,这篇文章说明了行动方法对知识和学习的影响日益广泛。虽然本书的作者在教育背景下讨论了“批判行动研究”,但安德森认为,这些发现与社区和组织环境同样相关。一个有趣的章节报告了教师作为研究人员如何通过使用当地语言作为教学媒介来挑战新自由主义语言和“威望语言”(英语)的使用。相比之下,商学院的世界似乎是批判性行动研究和学习尚未到达的地方。在对马丁•帕克的《关闭商学院:管理教育出了什么问题》的评论中,克里斯•布兰顿指出,帕克指责商学院将制度权力正常化,加剧了社会分裂,而不是让学生更加意识到他们入学是为了实现未来,并为社会利益而不是为个人利益而教育他们。对帕克来说,商学院仍然是“为资本主义组织生产员工的工厂,是制造一种非常特殊的未来的机器”。这一核心功能仍然没有得到解决,正如布兰顿在他的批评中指出的那样,帕克没有探究他的“组织学校”所需要的各种学习。行动研究和行动学习是明显的候选人,它们既包容又务实,同时也灌输民主和道德的工作方式。约翰·埃德蒙斯通继续探讨我们的专业和机构如何通过“资本主义的变化趋势”来鼓励私人利益,回顾了玛丽安娜·马祖卡托和罗西·科林顿的《大骗局:咨询业如何削弱我们的企业,使我们的政府变得像孩子一样,扭曲了我们的经济》。大型咨询公司在公共部门“改革”的时代获得了巨大的利润,这是基于整个部门效率低下、无效和缺乏创新的神话,并且不知何故获得了不可或缺的声誉。作者的结论是,政府不应该以这种方式浪费数十亿美元,而应该投资于创建有能力的组织,促进学习,让人们有能力承担风险。“现在是时候投资于公共部门的集体智慧,一劳永逸地结束咨询欺诈了。”为了结束他的回顾,Edmonstone展示了行动学习的哲学和实践是如何完美地适用于这一重要任务的。发展“集体智慧”的一个关键部分是在工作场所培养包容性和多样性。我们的第四篇评论是最新版的《管理多样性:迈向全球包容性的工作场所》,作者是米歇尔·莫尔·巴拉克。综述了
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How to promote inclusion, collective intelligence and democracy
The reviews in this edition of the Journal have in common a critique of the language and practices of the business and organizational world, together with suggestions and approaches to improve that world through the promotion of inclusion, collective intelligence and democracy. In a contribution which illustrates the increasingly wide reach of action approaches to knowledge and learning, Fadhila Yonata and colleagues from STAIN University in Indonesia review Critical Action Research: Challenging Neoliberal Language and Literacies Education by Antoinette Gagne ́ et al. Whilst the authors of this book discuss ‘Critical Action Research’ in the context of educational settings, Anderson argues that the findings are equally relevant to community and organizational environments. One interesting chapter reports on how teachers as researchers working with critical action research challenged the use of neoliberal language and ‘the language of prestige’ (English) by using local languages as the medium of instruction. By contrast, the world of the Business Schools seems to be somewhere that critical action research and learning have yet to reach. In his review of Martin Parker’s Shut Down the Business School: What’s Wrong with Management Education, Chris Blantern notes Parker’s accusation that the Business Schools serve to normalize institutional power and reinforce divisions in society rather than enabling students to be more aware of the futures they are being enrolled to deliver and educating them for the benefit of society rather than for private gain. For Parker, the Business School remains ‘a factory for producing employees for capitalist organizations, a machine for producing a very particular kind of future.’ This core function remains critically unaddressed and yet, as Blantern points out in his critique, Parker doesn’t inquire into the kinds of learning that would populate his ‘school for organizing’. Action research and action learning are obvious candidates, being inclusive and pragmatic whilst also inculcating democratic and ethical ways of working. Continuing the theme of how our professions and institutions serve to encourage private gain via ‘surfing capitalism’s changing trends’, John Edmonstone reviews Mariana Mazzucato and Rosie Collington’s The Big Con: How the Consulting Industry Weakens our Businesses, Infantilizes our Governments and Warps our Economies. The big consultancies have profited greatly in the era of public sector ‘reforms’, based on the myth that the entire sector is inefficient, ineffective and un-innovative, and have somehow gained a reputation for being indispensable. The authors’ conclusion is that instead of wasting billions in this way, governments should invest in creating capable organizations that foster learning where people are empowered to take risks: ‘It is time to invest in the collective intelligence of the public sector and end the consulting con once and for all.’ To close his review, Edmonstone shows how the philosophy and practices of action learning are ideally suited to this vital task. A key part of the development of ‘collective intelligence’ is the fostering of inclusion and diversity in workplaces. Our fourth review is of the latest edition of the well-established text Managing Diversity: Toward a Globally Inclusive Workplace by Michalle Mor Barak. Reviewed
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来源期刊
Action Learning
Action Learning EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
40.00%
发文量
47
期刊最新文献
Critical incident technique and action learning to enable organizational learning How to facilitate critical action learning How to promote inclusion, collective intelligence and democracy Action learning aiding innovation In memoriam – Professor John Burgoyne
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