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  • The Oxford Handbook of Group and Organizational Learning

    The Oxford Handbook of Group and Organizational Learning by Argote, Linda; Levine, John M.;

    Series: Oxford Library of Psychology;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 112.50
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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 20 February 2020

    • ISBN 9780190263362
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages704 pages
    • Size 257x191x48 mm
    • Weight 1429 g
    • Language English
    • 20

    Categories

    Short description:

    Groups and organizations vary dramatically in their ability to learn. Some acquire substantial knowledge as a function of experience, while others do not. Failing to learn from experience can have significant consequences for organizations and their members. The goal of this handbook is to bring together cutting-edge theoretical and empirical work on group and organizational learning by leading scholars from several disciplines. The handbook advances understanding of the causes and consequences of learning in collectives of varying size and complexity. The handbook provides insights about how to overcome barriers to learning in groups and organizations and thereby, to improve their performance.

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    Long description:

    Groups and organizations vary dramatically in their ability to learn. Some acquire substantial knowledge as a function of experience, while others do not. In groups, learning can occur at the level of the individual member and/or the group as a whole. In organizations, learning can occur at both of these levels as well as that of the wider collective. Besides varying in the amount and kind of information they acquire, groups and organizations also vary regarding their success in retaining knowledge and transferring it to other units. In general, groups and organizations that are proficient in acquiring, retaining, and transfering knowledge are more productive and more enduring than their less able counterparts.

    The goal of this handbook is to bring together cutting-edge theoretical and empirical work on group and organizational learning by leading scholars from several disciplines. Because many of the same processes influence learning in groups and organizations, including both kinds of learning in the same volume has the potential to facilitate the integration of knowledge and the cross-fertilization of ideas. These benefits are reciprocal, in that research at the group level can shed light on how organizations learn whereas research at the organizational level can illuminate how groups learn. By clarifying similarities and differences in the processes that underlie learning in groups and organizations, the handbook advances understanding of the causes and consequences of learning in collectives of varying size and complexity.

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    Table of Contents:

    PART I. Introduction
    1. John M. Levine and Linda Argote, Group and Organizational Learning: Past, Present, and Future
    2. Psychological Foundations of Group and Organizational Learning
    Zur Shapira
    PART II. Processes of Group and Organizational Learning
    Mindfulness of Learning Processes
    3. Deliberate Learning
    Michael A. Lapré and Ingrid M. Nembhard
    4. Organizational Learning and Organizational Improvisation
    Anne S. Miner and Jay O'Toole
    Information Sampling and Search
    5. Attention, Knowledge, and Organizational Learning
    William Ocasio, Luke Rhee, and Daniel Milner
    6. Sampling Biases Explain Decision Biases
    Jerker Denrell
    7. Organizational Learning From Failure: Present Theory and Future Inquiries
    Vinit M. Desai, David Maslach, and Peter M. Madsen
    Information Processing and Interpretation
    8. Information Sharing Within Groups in Organizations: Situational and Motivational Influences
    James R. Larson, Jr. and Amanda C. Egan
    9. Learning While Deciding in Groups
    R. Scott Tindale and Jeremy R. Winget
    10. Team Reflexivity
    Michaéla C. Schippers, Amy C. Edmondson, and Michael A. West
    11. Advancing Team Learning: Process Mechanisms, Knowledge Outcomes, and Implications
    Steve W. J. Kozlowski and Bradford S. Bell
    Training
    12. Team Training in Organizations: It Works-When Done Right
    Eduardo Salas, Denise L. Reyes, and Amanda L. Woods
    13. Team Training in the Organizational Context
    Norbert K. Semmer and Franziska Tschan
    Remembering and Retaining Knowledge
    14. How Interacting Groups Remember: Implications for Learning by Groups in Organizations
    Verlin B. Hinsz, Kevin R. Betts, Miriam Sánchez-Manzanares, and R. Scott Tindale
    15. Is Organizational Memory a Useful Capability?: An Analysis of Its Effects on Productivity, Absorptive Capacity, and Adaptation
    Amit Jain
    Performance Feedback and Social Comparisons
    16. Performance Feedback in Organizations and Groups: Common Themes
    Henrich R. Greve and Vibha Gaba
    17. Social Comparison and Learning From Others
    Christine M. Beckman and Hyeun J. Lee
    Learning from Others and Transferring Knowledge
    18. Personnel Movement as a Mechanism for Learning in Organizations and Teams
    Aimée A. Kane and Floor Rink
    19. Knowledge Transfer: Barriers, Methods, and Timing of Methods
    Gabriel Szulanski and Sunkee Lee
    Innovation and Creating Knowledge
    20. Group and Intergroup Creativity
    Paul B. Paulus and Jared B. Kenworthy
    21. Team Innovation Cycles
    Martine R. Haas and Jonathon N. Cummings
    22. Collective Paradoxical Frames: Managing Tensions in Learning and Innovation
    Ella Miron-Spektor and Susannah B. F. Paletz
    PART III. Contextual Influences on Group and Organizational Learning
    Unit Composition
    23. Team Emotions and Team Learning
    Dorthe Døjbak Håkonsson, Panagiotis Mitkidis, and Sebastian Wallot
    24. Team Diversity and Learning in Organizations
    Daan van Knippenberg and Julija N. Mell
    25. Collective Intelligence and Group Learning
    Anita Williams Woolley and Ishani Aggarwal
    Structures and Routines
    26. Organizational Routines and Organizational Learning
    Markus C. Becker
    27. Organizational Structure and Organizational Learning
    Phanish Puranam and Boris Maciejovsky
    28. How and When Can Social Hierarchy Promote Learning in Groups?
    J. Stuart Bunderson and Bret Sanner
    29. Learning in Chains and What We Can Learn From It
    Anne Marie Knott
    Intergroup Contexts
    30. A Social Identity Model for Education
    Dominic Abrams, Diane M. Houston, Barbara M. Masser, and Blake M. McKimmie
    31. Learning Who We Are From Our Leaders: How Leaders Shape Group and Organizational Norms and Identities
    Michael A. Hogg
    32. Organizational Learning and Multiteam Systems
    Leslie A. DeChurch, Gina M. Bufton, Sophie A. Kay, Chelsea V. Velez, and Noshir S. Contractor
    Online Environments
    33. Learning in Virtual Teams
    Yuqing Ren
    34. Theorizing Knowledge Collaboration in Online Communities
    Ann Majchrzak, Sirkka L. Jarvenpaa, and Samer Faraj

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