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Key Concepts: Creating learning organizations: a systems perspective

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Aziz Shuaib Ausi (2026). Key Concepts: Creating learning organizations: a systems perspective. academic_derived (ACADEMIC_DERIVED-2026-00024). Aziz Shuaib Ausi. https://www.azizshuaib.com/verify/ACADEMIC_DERIVED-2026-00024

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ACADEMIC_DERIVED-2026-00024
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v1.0
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Confidential — Executive Only
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EN
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Aziz Shuaib Ausi
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> **Derived from an academic source (private repository).** > Bui, H., & Baruch, Y. (2010). Creating learning organizations: a systems perspective. The Learning Organization, 17(3), 208-227. https://doi.org/10.1108/09696471011034919 # Synthesizing the Learning Organization: A Systems Framework While Peter Senge’s "Five Disciplines" are widely celebrated in management circles, they are often viewed as abstract ideals rather than measurable strategies. Research by Bui and Baruch (2010) bridges this gap by applying a **systems perspective** to these concepts, transforming them into a causal model of inputs, processes, and outputs. Below are the five core pillars of the learning organization (LO) as analyzed through this multi-level framework. --- ## 1. Personal Mastery * **Plain-English Definition:** A lifelong commitment to personal growth, focusing on deepening one’s vision and viewing current reality with total objectivity. * **Why It Matters:** According to Bui and Baruch, an organization cannot learn unless its individual members learn first. It serves as the psychological foundation for all other disciplines; without self-aware individuals, the organization remains stagnant. * **Applied Example:** A software engineer notices their coding language is becoming obsolete. Instead of ignoring the shift, they objectively assess their skill gap and enroll in an advanced certification course to align their abilities with their long-term career vision. ## 2. Mental Models * **Plain-English Definition:** The internal "scripts" or deeply ingrained assumptions we hold about how the world works, which dictate how we take action. * **Why It Matters:** These models act as filters. If an employee’s mental model views change as a threat, they will resist innovation. The researchers argue that surfacing and challenging these assumptions is necessary to foster a flexible, responsive corporate culture. * **Applied Example:** A veteran sales manager believes that "customers only care about the lowest price." By testing this model against data, the team realizes customers actually value post-sale support more, leading to a total shift in their sales pitch strategy. ## 3. Shared Vision * **Plain-English Definition:** A collective sense of purpose and future identity that is genuinely held by all members of a group, rather than just being a top-down mandate. * **Why It Matters:** It provides the "focus and energy for learning." While personal mastery focuses on the individual, shared vision binds people together through a common aspiration, ensuring that diverse efforts move in a unified direction. * **Applied Example:** Rather than a CEO merely emailing a mission statement, a department holds workshops where every employee identifies how their personal goals overlap with the company’s green energy initiative, creating a "pull" toward a sustainable future. ## 4. Team Learning * **Plain-English Definition:** The process of aligning and developing the capacity of a group to create results that its members could not achieve individually. * **Why It Matters:** In modern institutions, the fundamental unit of learning is the team, not the individual. Bui and Baruch highlight that for team learning to occur, effective communication and a supportive environment must act as moderators to translate dialogue into collective action. * **Applied Example:** During a "post-mortem" meeting after a failed product launch, a cross-functional team avoids blaming individuals. Instead, they use open dialogue to discover how the breakdown in communication between design and manufacturing occurred, preventing the error in the next cycle. ## 5. Systems Thinking * **Plain-English Definition:** The ability to see the "big picture"—recognizing the complex web of interrelationships and patterns rather than seeing events as isolated incidents. * **Why It Matters:** Often called "The Fifth Discipline," this is the force that integrates the other four. It helps managers understand that small changes in one area can lead to significant impacts elsewhere, preventing "quick fixes" that cause long-term damage. * **Applied Example:** Instead of just cutting the marketing budget to save money this quarter, a director uses systems thinking to realize that this cut will reduce lead generation in six months, eventually leading to a massive revenue shortfall that exceeds the initial savings. --- ## Source **Authors:** Hong Bui and Yehuda Baruch **Year:** 2010 **Journal:** *The Learning Organization* **DOI:** [10.1108/09696471011034919](https://doi.org/10.1108/09696471011034919) **Full APA-7 Citation:** Bui, H., & Baruch, Y. (2010). Creating learning organizations: a systems perspective. *The Learning Organization*, 17(3), 208-227. https://doi.org/10.1108/09696471011034919