This essay argues that the success of organizations depends on their ability to design themselves as social learning systems and also to participate in broader learning systems such as an industry, a region, or a consortium. It explores the structure of these social learning systems. It proposes a social definition of learning and distinguishes between three `modes of belonging' by which we participate in social learning systems. Then it uses this framework to look at three constitutive elements of these systems: communities of practice, boundary processes among these communities, and identities as shaped by our participation in these systems.
TEAM MEMBERS
Etienne Wenger
Author
Independent Researcher
Citation
DOI
:
10.1177/135050840072002
Publication Name:
Organization
Volume:
7
Number:
2
Page Number:
225
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