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From continuous improvement to organisational learning :

By: MURRAY, Peter.
Contributor(s): CHAPMAN, Ross.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: West Yorkshire, England : MCB University Press, 2003Subject(s): Qualidade | Ciclos de AprendizagemThe Learning Organization : an international journal 10, 4 and 5, p. 272-282Abstract: As a learning theory, the continuous improvement (CI) discourse has benefited countless manufacturing enterprises to improve and adapt their methods of production. As one of the pillars of total quality management, it has generally included a range of dynamic concepts from high involvement teamwork and production enablers, to other social and technical capabilities such as innovation techniques. Such methodologies have been promoted in the literature as potential manifestos that can transform existing capabilities from simple representations of capability, to dynamically integrated ones (often labelled “full CI capacity”). The latter term in particular deserves more attention in the literature. Since CI techniques cannot be separated from organisational learning methodologies, it follows that CI methods should underpin holistic learning. This paper explores whether CI methodologies have advanced far enough to beAbstract: considered as integrated and holistic in their ownAbstract: right. If not, it follows that new theories,Abstract: challenges and discourses should be considered for exploration in the CI literature
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As a learning theory, the continuous improvement (CI) discourse has benefited countless manufacturing enterprises to improve and adapt their methods of production. As one of the pillars of total quality management, it has generally included a range of dynamic concepts from high involvement teamwork and production enablers, to other social and technical capabilities such as innovation techniques. Such methodologies have been promoted in the literature as potential manifestos that can transform existing capabilities from simple representations of capability, to dynamically integrated ones (often labelled “full CI capacity”). The latter term in particular deserves more attention in the literature. Since CI techniques cannot be separated from organisational learning methodologies, it follows that CI methods should underpin holistic learning. This paper explores whether CI methodologies have advanced far enough to be

considered as integrated and holistic in their own

right. If not, it follows that new theories,

challenges and discourses should be considered for exploration in the CI literature

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