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Learning in and from projects: the learning modes and a learning capability model
Authors:Adil Eltigani  Paul Gardiner  Richard Kirkham  Terry Williams  Lixiong Ou  Antonio Calabrese
Institution:1. SKEMA Business School, Université C?te d’Azur, Paris, France;2. adil.eltigani@skema.edu;4. SKEMA Business School, Université C?te d’Azur, Lille, France;5. Department of Mechanical, School of Engineering, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK;6. Hull University Business School, University of Hull, Hull, UK;7. School of Management, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Shaanxi, China;8. Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy
Abstract:Abstract

The notion of ‘project delivery’ is well embedded in and across the management and organizational sciences literature – generating a narrative that reflects and recognizes the instrumental nature of projects and programmes in strategy execution. Project management, as a distinct and well-established body of research enquiry, has increasingly sought to focus our attention on the impacts of complexity, risk and uncertainty in projects; the corollary being a desideratum to strengthen our theoretical understanding of how insight and learning from projects may influence improvements to organizational efficiency. The wider literature suggests that organizational learning remains a challenging proposition, particularly in the context of organizations operating in environments of high complexity. In this paper, we enhance the conversation on organizational learning through a series of case studies, generating evidence of thirteen ‘learning modes’. The paper proposes that mature organizations tend to exhibit a greater number of learning modes and that there is a tendency to capture and socialize knowledge with a greater emphasis on the context of the learning situation rather than the learning artefact in isolation. The empirical evidence gathered in this paper forms the basis of a capability model, characterized by the thirteen modes of learning. The model intimates that learning occurs, and is more effective, when knowledge and information are enacted in practice through the learning modes which form a nucleus of the organizational learning capability. The research concludes with a 'call to action' that emphasizes the strategic importance of learning practices and routines in project oriented-organizations.
Keywords:Learning  knowledge management  learning capability  modes of learning  dynamic capabilities  structuration practice
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