The learning organization is a concept that is becoming
an increasingly widespread philosophy in modern
organizations, from largest multinationals to the
smallest ventures. As initially conceived by Senge
(1990), the learning organization has a strongly
humanist orientation, being a place where people
continually expand their capacity to create the results
they truly desire, where new and expansive patterns of
thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration is
set free, and where people are continually learning how
to learn together. In order to implement learning
organization techniques, public universities should
tackle the five disciplines essential to a learning
organization – team learning, shared vision, mental
models, personal mastery and systems thinking. This
paper poses the following questions: how are public
universities committed to the following: creating
continuous learning opportunities; promoting inquiry and
dialogue; encouraging collaboration and team learning;
est0ablishing systems to capture and share learning;
empowering people towards a collective vision, and
connecting the organization to its environment? The
paper proposes the need for radical re-thinking and
re-engineering of the core functions of public
universities in developing countries.
Key words:
Learning Institutions, Learning organizations,
Leadership.