Feature
posted 1 Mar 2000 in Volume 3 Issue 6
Your Say:
New Age learning
As we move into the age of
the 'knowledge worker' what role will traditional forms of learning
play when organisations have access to cheap and efficient
knowledge management solutions? Consider, for a moment, the role training has
typically played until now. A large proportion of training courses rely, or have relied, on
students memorising correct procedures, rules, facts or functions. Much of the course dealt
with the 'how to do it' as much as the 'why to do it' . Yet
when we consider how poor most manuals are, how out of date,
how complex and how little used, it is not difficult to understand why things
have to change.
Let us consider
for a moment the promise of knowledge management; that memorisation of any kind
of factual information will become unnecessary. This is essentially what
knowledge management technology, excluding collaboration, is about - the
collection, storage and retrieval of factual information. In some cases, there
is also an attempt to interpret the meaning or subject of a document, but this
is really only another way of trying to refine the ubiquitous search engine.
This, then, is the first fallacy of knowledge management. It does not matter how
sophisticated the technology is At this stage it is only managing information
assets, it is not managing knowledge. There is quite a distinction. Now, why do
I draw it?
In some definitions, data (raw facts) becomes information when it
is categorised, analysed, summarised and placed into a business context. For example, we
sold so many somethings in this geographical area over such-and-such a period
of time, and it is part of a trend of increasing sales in somethings.
All very interesting stuff, but it is not knowledge - no matter how cleverly
I store, index, retrieve or present it. It only becomes knowledge when I can
answer the question 'why?' with a sentence containing 'because'. Computers cannot do this -
they cannot interpret information and transform it into knowledge; people
(knowledge workers) do this. Of course, once we have made the interpretation,
gained an insight, reached a conclusion, made a decision and so on, we can go
back to the technology to help us work together, share our findings and execute
our plans, which is where the human comes in again.
My point, therefore, is that
knowledge management of any kind, cannot work without the vital ingredient of
the 'knowledge worker' - something often forgotten when business looks for its next
IT panacea. However, the change required in human behaviour to leverage the
potential of knowledge management is enormous, as is the challenge for trainers
and 'learning organisations' . We have to break the cycle, started in school,
of reliance on memory. Instead, we should concentrate on where people add value,
in being ingenious, cynical, intuitive, multi-dimensional, empathic,
creative, inventive, critical, valuing, reasoning and so on. When was the last time
you heard of a computer described as any of these things? And if this all sounds
a bit 'new age', perhaps it is because we are in a new age.
Peter Dorrington is a principal
consultant for ECsoft UK Ltd. He can be contacted at:Peter.Dorrington@ecsoft.co.uk
denotes premium content | May 24 2013 



