Riding a bike and knowledge…

Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

Thanks to a post from Lee at Headshift by way of Joy London I read Zen and the Art of Knowledge Management. I particularly enjoyed this:

In the courses we teach about knowledge management we have our students attempt to write a set of instructions about ‘how to ride a bicycle’. What they come up with are inevitably awful. And that of course, is the point. What we are really trying to do with this exercise is show the course participants the limitations of explicit knowledge. In this regard, the exercise is our own kind of Zen koan.

Once we demonstrate the inadequacy of their instructions, we then get the participants to tell us how they learned to ride a bike (or how they taught their own children to ride one. Their answers commonly involve a mix of the following elements:

They were instructed by someone who knew what they were doing

There was some modeling what to do as well as instructing

They were taken somewhere where it was safe to make mistakes

They attempted to do what they were told and shown

Mistakes were made

More instruction and modeling followed

After a number of trials, they were successful

In this example, what our course participants have done is demonstrate that it is possible to pass on tacit knowledge even though it is problematic to turn it into the kind of explicit knowledge that would fit with a knowledge repository. For organisations to be able to do this all they need to do is recreate the same kind of learning culture and environment that is present when people learn to ride a bike.

Great lesson. I find myself increasingly sceptical about complicated models that purport to explain how to lead, how to market etc according to formulae – becasue they simply cannot capture the the tacit things that underpin human experience and behaviour. I’m more for rules of thumb and a willingness to be wrong than hard rules that make bogus claims to precision about the imprecise…

Share Post

More Posts

Leading from the clown

I shot this in a single eight-minute take, which is in the spirit of an experience of Ralf Wetzel’s workshop, Leading from the Clown. Clown training is probably the deepest and most challenging work I’ve done. Enjoy.

Noticing

The power of small gestures and noticing

Small p presence

Getting away from grandiosity or solemnity. small p presence is about being open to the life around us

Small i improv

Facilitation is often about small, subtle acts of noticing and experimenting

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

HR and branding

I’ve long thought that marketing and human resources directors should collaborate much more. So I’m interested in Regina Miller’s blog HR’s brand new experience. (Spotted by Jennifer) Regina is focussing

Johnnie Moore

Marlborough Sound

Apologies for the travelogue for those looking for meatier posts… yesterday’s stop on the tour of NZ found me boating on the Marlborough Sound on the north east end of

Johnnie Moore

Forward or back?

Mike Weaver compares and contrasts these two thoughts: The improvisor (story teller) has to be like a man walking backward. He sees where he has been but he pays no

a series of hands placed on a log

Citizens

connections between unhurried conversations and the idea of citizens