| LEARNING
TO LEARN
Every
year seems to bring a range of significant developments for VBNK. Some
are new beginnings, which of course means that there are also some endings
that are cause for some reflection. In 2000 the organisation's first three-year
funding phase came to an end and with it the first set of long-term plans
that had been devised when VBNK was just an idea, not a reality. The transition
from being a new organisation in start-up mode to one with a history of
achievement behind it was very significant. We moved into a new phase
ready to start implementing strategic plans which included starting a
unit to offer consultancy services to our target community. This represented
a huge shift in our own organisational development as we stopped being
an organisation with a single focus and became one that works on a broader
range of issues. Another ending was the time in our first office, which
we had outgrown, and we started operating in a much bigger and more suitable
building. Since then we have started another new unit in order to include
research and publications in our range of services and now we are moving
to our third office.
These
and other developments, most notably the increase in our workload, prompt
regular reflection and action on the important issue of being a learning
organisation. As the organisation matures and develops a history, and
its staffing, structure and workload grow the need to give real time and
attention to being a learning organisation also grows. It is a simple
fact that we must be able to learn if we are to be effective in training
and advising others. And this is an issue not only for VBNK but also for
every organisation working in development and the sector as a whole. Without
reflection and learning how will any of us ever be able to assess whether
or not what we are doing is truly effective, or find ways to improve our
practice? Everywhere in the sector the needs and demands on time and resources
are such that a task orientation predominates and little time or value
is given to reflection or learning processes. Yet interventions into other
peoples' lives and development should demand careful thought and planning
based on learning from what has gone before and other sources.
As
an institute offering training and consultancy to other organisations
it is imperative that VBNK learns from every available source of knowledge
and experience: its own internal activities, the wealth of knowledge and
experience that participants bring to the training room, and all the many
and varied external opportunities that are available to us. Yet doing
so it not an easy task. Not only separate units but also individuals within
units can all too easily become so engrossed in their own work that they
forget to communicate in order to learn from each other.
Without
exception all the variations of the learning cycle call for a stage of
reflection or thinking. We know this but it is a fact that prompts questions
rather than providing answers. We have reflection processes built into
many aspects of our work but how can we be sure that reflection leads
to learning? How can we develop quality learning processes that will lead
us to new insights and understanding and improved practice? How can we
be sure that new staff are properly oriented to our learning practices?
How can we be sure that old staff do not become complacent? Reflection
and learning take time and it can be extremely difficult in the face of
the pressures of urgent deadlines to make space for the processes that
lead to learning. It is all too easy to slip into the habit of reflections
being mechanistic with a focus on activities and outcomes rather than
on the experience and connections that lead to learning. Making the connections
between the activity, the experience and the learning and gaining learning
from them is both a skill and a real challenge for all development practitioners.
Much of the literature on the subject of learning organisations is not
particularly relevant for the NGO sector in Cambodia - it needs substantial
adaptation to make it useful and workable. So we struggle to find ways
to reflect and learn that are meaningful in the cultural context within
which we are working.
Whatever
learning processes or devices an organisation chooses nothing effective
will happen to integrate learning into practice without the total commitment
of senior management. Unless organisational leaders are able visibly to
demonstrate their commitment by mandating the time and resources for learning
and by value the results achieved it will not happen. This can sometimes
mean that hard choices have to be made between hitting targets for outputs
and making the time for reflective processes. For VBNK - an organisation
that has to earn a significant part of its own operating budget from its
activities - these choices seem at times especially hard, yet in reality
there can be no choice at all. We have to find the time for reflection
and learning because being a learning organisation is essential to our
long-term sustainability and we must never stop. We do not yet feel that
we have fully integrated being a learning organisation into our organisational
culture and daily practice, but we are working on it, and would be happy
to share ideas and experiences with others who are working to achieve
the same goal.
Source: 2001 Annual Report
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