Title: Knowledge Management COM910M1
1Knowledge ManagementCOM910M1
- Dr. Sandra Moffett
- School of Computing and Intelligent Systems
- University of Ulster at Magee
- Tel 028 7137 5381
- E-Mail sm.moffett_at_ulster.ac.uk
2Aim of Module
- To develop the intellectual and practical skills
of the learner in the understanding, analysis and
critical evaluation of the current issues
relevant to managing in a knowledge-based economy
3Learning Outcomes of the Module
- Critically evaluate the concepts of the learning
company, organisational learning and knowledge
management. - Synthesise, analyse, interpret and evaluate
information from a variety of sources - lecture
material, web-sites, bibliographic searches
4Learning Outcomes contd
- Plan, conduct and report current literary
research - synthesise the theoretical and
practical components of the concepts of the
learning organisation and knowledge management - Develop a prototype application suitable for
Semantic Web
5Teaching Plan
- Week 1 Module Overview, the relevance of
Management Research - Week 2 The concept of the Learning Organisation
LO - Week 3 Introduction to Knowledge Management KM
- Week 4 The Human Side of KM
- Week 5 Technology, Information and Collaboration
6Teaching Plan contd
- Week 6 Content Management for Business
Intelligence - Week 7 The Semantic Web
- Week 8 E-Commerce
- Week 9 Creativity and Innovation
- Week 10 Measurement
- Week 11 Demonstrations of Assignment 2 Websites
- Week 12 Revision and Examination Overview
7Website
- http//www.infm.ulst.ac.uk/sandra
- Follow the link for COM910M1
8Assessment
- Assignment 1 Literature Review, due on Thursday
26th October (week 5), worth 40 of total CW mark - Assignment 2 Practical Exercise using XML, due
on Thursday 30th November (week 10), worth 60 of
total CW mark
9Writing a Literature Review
- Need for critical reflection
- Incorporation of relevant evidence/ examples/
claims - Ensure that material used is meaningful
- Provide evidence to support claims
- Use up-to-date evidence
10Writing a Literature Review contd
- Identify biases or distortions
- Compare different views and information
- Do not include personal anecdotes
- Avoid generalising from one source
- Present a balanced view
11Guidelines for Literature Reviews
- Remain within the parameters of the subject area
- Avoid a study-by-study summary of findings -
should be integrated discussion of key issues - Organise the review around key issues
- State clearly what is known and what is not known
12Guidelines for Literature Reviews
- Include recent work and early studies
- Attempt to explain inconsistencies in the
literature - Present a balanced view - incorporate alternative
perspectives
13Presenting a Literature Review
- Clear Introduction - state what you intend to
achieve in the literature review - Present a clear and logical argument - put your
ideas in order - Provide evidence for what you want to say -
present relevant information - Present alternative views - avoid a bias
discussion - Draw conclusions - summarise discussion
14Being Critically Evaluative
- Question the assumptions or key points in the
question - Establish what your opinions are with regard to
the subject area - have you questioned these? - Decide on the conclusion you want to reach
15Recommended Reading
- Collinson, C. and Parcell, G. (2004), Learning to
Fly Practical Knowledge Management from Leading
and Learning Organisations, ChichesterCapstone,
2004, Library ref HD30.2.C65 - Davenport, T. and Prusak, L. (1998), Working
Knowledge How Organisations Manage What They
Know, Harvard Business School Press, Boston
Library ref HD58.82.D28 (3 copies available) - Drucker, P. (1999), Managing Challenges for the
21st Century, Harper Business, New York - Groff, T.R. and Jones, T.P. (2003), Introduction
to Knowledge Management KM in business,
Butterworth-Heinemann Publishers, Library ref
Oversize 0 HD30.2.G76
16Selection of Leading Journals
- Journal of Management Learning
- British Journal of Management Organization
- Academy of Management Review
- Journal of the Learning Organisation
- Journal of Knowledge Management
- Journal of Knowledge and Process Management
- Journal of Information Technology and Management
17Recommended Reading Practical Aspect
- Erl, T. (2004), Service-Oriented Architecture A
Field Guide to Integrating XML and Web Services,
Pearson Education Prentice Hall, Library ref
QA76.9.A73E75 - Daconta, M.C., Obrst, L.J. and Smith, K.T.
(2003), The Semantic Web, Wiley Publishers,
London, Library ref TK5105.88815.D22 - Foggon, D. Maharry, Ullman and Watson, (2004),
Programming Microsoft.NET XML Web Services,
Microsoft Press, Library ref QA76.76.H94P76 - Harold, E.R. and Means, W. Scott, (2004), XML In
a Nutshell, 3rd Edition, O'Reilly Publishers,
Library ref QA76.76.H84H27
18Characteristics of the Subject Area
- Relatively recent interest in the area
- Interdisciplinary nature conflict with regard
to definition - Academic and practitioner interest
- Different perceptions
19Modernism
- Theories and ideas began to emerge in the C17th
- Knowledge accumulated over time
- C18th Enlightenment philosophers -
characteristics of rationality and empiricism
20Post-modernism
- Relatively recent phenomenon
- Cultural and intellectual movement
- Challenges orthodox approaches to knowledge
production - Questions the existence of a grand meta-narrative
21Conceptual Schema of Cognitive Dimensions
(Becher, 1989 Biglan, 1973)
- Hard versus soft - relates to extent to which
a body of theory is subscribed to by all members
within a discipline - Pure versus applied - attempts to capture the
difference between knowing what at the expense
of knowing how
22Conceptual Schema of Cognitive Dimensions
(Becher, 1989 Biglan, 1973)
- convergent versus divergent - considers the
social organisation of knowledge - urban versus rural - assess the people to
problem ratio
23The Nature of Management Research
- Soft - heterogeneous nature of field
- Applied - building knowledge which documents,
codifies and articulates a problem attempt to
understand improve practice - Divergent - wide range of ontological
epistemological positions represented - Rural - broad intellectual territory
24Knowledge Production Systems
- Mode 1 - Knowledge generation results from the
pursuit of an academic agenda within particular
disciplines knowledge resides in universities
distinction made between fundamental and applied
research (Gibbons et al, 1994)
25Knowledge Production Systems
- Mode 2 is characterised by the constant flow
back and forth between the fundamental and the
applied, between the theoretical and the
practical. Typically, discovery occurs in
contexts where knowledge is developed for, and
put to use, while results - which would have been
traditionally characterised as applied - fuel
further theoretical advances (Gibbons et al,
1994)
26Knowledge Production Systems
- Mode 3 - Need to work on the bigger questions
which deepen an intellectual understanding of
the relation between activities in business and
the major issues of human existence (March,
2000) - to assure survival and promote the common good
at various level of social aggregation (Huff and
Huff, 2001) - Funding from philanthropy, university, business
and government
27Management Research - its relevance?
- Users believe that research can benefit them - do
not consider many topics as focusing on key
issues - Research does not contribute to their managerial
role - perceived need for prescriptive statements - Lack of awareness of the results of research
28Valuable Knowledge
- What makes knowledge valuable to organisations
is ultimately the ability to make better
decisions and action taken on the basis of
knowledge. If knowledge doesnt improve decision
making, then whats the point? (Davenport
Prusak, 1998) - If the duty of the intellectual in society is to
make a difference, the management research
community has a long way to go to realize its
potential (Pettigrew, 2001)
29The Reflective Practitioner
- Learning and Wisdom (Montaigne)
- Learning - logic, etymology, grammar, Latin and
Greek - Wisdom - a far broader, more elusive and more
valuable kind of knowledge, everything that could
help a person to live well
30Conclusion
- Establish context
- Introduce module and assessment
- Consider knowledge production and relevance of
management research