[Neurons] 2018 Neurons #33 COLLECTIVE LEARNING

Michael Hall meta at acsol.net
Sun Aug 5 23:46:51 EDT 2018


From: L. Michael Hall

2018 Neurons #33

August 5, 2018

 

COLLECTIVE LEARNING

 

You can learn, but can you learn with others?  If we are to develop
effective groups, we need to be able to get people to first think together
and then secondly, to learn together.  In Neuro-Semantics we have focused on
these skills in our Meta-Coach Training of Group and Team Coach Training.
These are both group coaching skills and, simultaneously, leadership skills.
To this point, Arie de Geus of Royal Dutch/Shell, tells this story in his
book, The Living Company.

In the early 1900s, milkmen in England would deliver bottles of milk to the
door of each country home.  At the time the bottles had no cap, and two
different species of British garden songbirds- the titmouse and the red
robin- learned to siphon the sweet, rich cream from the top.

Then between the two world wars, dairy distributors began placing aluminum
seals on the bottles.  Cut off from the rich, abundant food source, the
individual birds - both robins and titmice-occasionally figured out how to
pierce the seals.

By the 1950s the entire titmouse population in the United Kingdom-almost a
million birds -had learned how to pierce the seals.  However, although
individual robins had been as innovative in breaking the seals as individual
titmice, the red robins as a group never regained access to the cream.  The
knowledge never passed from the individual innovators who had learned to
pierce the milk bottle seals to the rest of the species.

 

Now that's interesting and scientists were curious about why.  Here's what
they found out:

This difference in learning behavior could not be attributed to the birds'
ability to communicate.  As songbirds, both the titmice and the red robins
had the same range of communication.  But was different were their social
organizations, in fact, they differed greatly.  Red robins are territorial
birds.  A male robin will not allow another male to enter its territory.
When threatened, the robins sends a warning as if to say, "Keep the hell out
of here."  They communicate in an antagonistic manner, with fixed boundaries
they do not cross.

Titmice, by contrast, are a social species.  They live in couples in the
spring, until they have reared their young.  By early summer, when the young
titmice are flying and feeding on their own, the birds move from garden to
garden in flocks of eight to ten.  These flocks seem to remain intact,
moving together around the countryside.  The conclusion of the scientists
who studied this case: Birds that flock seem to learn faster.  They increase
their chances to survive and evolve more quickly.

 

"Flocking," as cooperating and collaborating, not only increases learning,
it accelerates the speed of our learning and adapting.  Arie de Geus, drew
these conclusions:

"Any organization with several hundred people is bound to have at least a
couple of innovators.  There are always people curious enough to poke their
way into new discoveries, like the titmice finding their cream.  However,
keeping a few innovators on hand is not enough, in itself, for institutional
learning ....  Even if you develop a high-caliber system of innovation, you
will still not have the institutional learning until you develop the ability
to flock." (Arie de Geus, The Living Company.  Boston: Harvard Business
School Press. 1997.  Jeff S. Wyles, Joseph G. Kimbel, and Allan C. Wilson.
Birds: Behavior and Anatomical Evolution, Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (July, 1993).

              

Now while learning can be can a solitary activity, when individuals engage
in that kind of learning they can only go so far in terms of group learning.
For real progress, we have to learn together-to learn the process and art of
collaborative learning.  That's an entirely new phenomenon and it is an
experience that requires collaborative leadership. 

 

It requires collaborative leadership because in traditional organizations
there are numerous barriers that block this kind of mutual and shared
learning. For example, there is the myth that "informaiton is power," there
is the rule about giving information only "as needed."  There is the lack of
feedback about the actions that people take and there is the lack of
information about "what might have happened from the result of actions not
taken."  All of these things prevent collaborative learning.

 

Such collaborative learning will require establishing feedback loops.  It
also requires experimenting to discover what works and what doesn't.  We
also need a learning culture within groups and organizations, one where
people can challenge ideas and hidden assumptions.

 

Collaborative learning inherently involves sharing what we're learning, and
spreading our insights and  discoveries.  Yet how many are paranoid of this!
They fear that someone will "steal"their ideas and not give them credit.
And that does happen.  That's why we have to have a trusting community and
collaborative leaders who, in turn, prevent such things from happening.

 

              For more - see the books The Collaborative Leader and Group
and Team Coaching.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




L. Michael Hall, Ph.D., Executive Director 

Neuro-Semantics 

P.O. Box 8

Clifton, CO. 81520 USA                             

               1 970-523-7877 

                    Dr. Hall's email:
<mailto:meta at acsol.net\hich\af31506\dbch\af31505\loch\f31506> meta at acsol.net


    ISNS new logo

    

 

Dr. L. Michael Hall writes a post on "Neurons" each Monday.  For a free
subscription, sign up on www.neurosemantics.com.   On that website you can
click on Meta-Coaching for detailed information and training schedule.   To
find a Meta-Coach see  <http://www.metacoachfoundation.org>
www.metacoachfoundation.org.   For Neuro-Semantic Publications --- click
"Products," there is also a catalog of books that you can download.   

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20180805/9d32b520/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 10627 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20180805/9d32b520/attachment-0001.jpg>


More information about the Neurons mailing list