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Executive Reading Brief: Creating learning organizations: a systems perspective

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Aziz Shuaib Ausi (2026). Executive Reading Brief: Creating learning organizations: a systems perspective. academic_derived (ACADEMIC_DERIVED-2026-00026). Aziz Shuaib Ausi. https://www.azizshuaib.com/verify/ACADEMIC_DERIVED-2026-00026

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Publication No.
ACADEMIC_DERIVED-2026-00026
Version
v1.0
Classification
Public
Language
EN
Author
Aziz Shuaib Ausi
Published
7/10/2026
> **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 # Architecting the Learning Organization: A Systems Perspective ## Executive Summary While Peter Senge’s "Five Disciplines" provided a visionary blueprint for the learning organization (LO), translating these poetic concepts into measurable management strategies has long been a challenge. Research by **Bui and Baruch (2010)** bridges this gap by applying **Open Systems Theory** to Senge’s framework. By identifying specific inputs, moderators, and performance outcomes, the authors transform abstract philosophy into a causal model. For leadership, this provides a rigorous roadmap to move beyond "learning for learning's sake" toward a structured system that creates sustainable competitive advantage. --- ## Context: From Inspiration to Infrastructure Traditional management often views organizational learning as a vague cultural ambition. Bui and Baruch argue that the LO is a multi-layered system—operating at individual, collective, and organizational levels—where specific "antecedents" (inputs) drive "disciplines" (processes), which eventually yield "measurable outcomes." The study uses an **Inputs-Process-Outputs (IPO)** model to deconstruct the five disciplines: 1. **Personal Mastery** (Individual) 2. **Mental Models** (Cognitive) 3. **Team Learning** (Collective) 4. **Shared Vision** (Organizational) 5. **Systems Thinking** (The Integrator) --- ## Key Insights: The Causal Mechanics of Learning ### 1. The Individual as the Catalyst Learning begins with **Personal Mastery**, but it is not a random occurrence. Bui and Baruch identify specific drivers: individual values, intrinsic motivation, and formal training. When these are present, the outcome is increased self-efficacy and superior individual performance. ### 2. Cognitive Reframing through Mental Models Mental models are the internal "maps" employees use to navigate reality. The authors suggest that for these to be effective, organizations must foster an environment of psychological safety where assumptions are surfaced and challenged without penalty. This process turns static knowledge into dynamic adaptability. ### 3. The Moderating Role of Environment A critical finding is that learning does not automatically lead to performance. The relationship is **moderated** by: * **Communication Quality:** Clear, transparent channels are essential for "Team Learning." * **Learning Culture:** An environment that tolerates failure as a data point ensures that individual mastery translates into collective intelligence. ### 4. Systems Thinking: The "Fifth Discipline" Bui and Baruch emphasize that Systems Thinking is the glue. It allows leaders to see the "flywheel" effect—how a small change in mental models can lead to a massive shift in team output. It acts as a holistic lens that prevents "siloed" thinking and identifies the underlying structures of complex problems. --- ## Why It Matters for MEMA-AIGMIS Leadership As an organization operating at the intersection of complex policy, member services, and institutional governance, MEMA-AIGMIS faces "wicked problems" that cannot be solved through vertical directives alone. * **Evidence-Based Management:** This research provides a framework to measure the ROI of professional development by linking "Mastery" to "Performance." * **Breaking Silos:** The focus on "Shared Vision" and "Team Learning" offers a mechanism to align disparate departments under a single strategic umbrella. * **Adaptive Resilience:** By formalizing "Systems Thinking," leadership can move from reactive firefighting to proactive structural design, ensuring the organization anticipates market or regulatory shifts rather than just responding to them. --- ## Executive Actions ### 1. Audit the Antecedents Evaluate the current inputs of Personal Mastery. Are professional development schemes aligned with individual employee motivations? Ensure that HR policies transition from "mandatory compliance training" to "personal growth pathways" that foster self-efficacy. ### 2. Operationalize "Shared Vision" Move beyond a mission statement on the wall. According to Bui and Baruch, a Shared Vision requires a foundation of "Personal Visions." Leadership should conduct workshops where individual goals are mapped against organizational objectives to create genuine buy-in. ### 3. Implement "Mental Model" Reviews Integrate "Reflective Inquiry" into high-stakes decision-making. Before major projects, require teams to document their underlying assumptions. This practice surfaces hidden biases and enables the "Creative Holism" necessary for innovation. ### 4. Optimize the Communication Moderator Review internal communication flows. If information is bottlenecked, even the smartest individual learners cannot contribute to "Team Learning." Invest in collaborative platforms and flat hierarchies during brainstorming phases to ensure the "learning environment" is optimized for knowledge transfer. --- ## Source Bui, H., & Baruch, Y. (2010). Creating learning organizations: a systems perspective. *The Learning Organization*, 17(3), 208-227. https://doi.org/10.1108/09696471011034919