Title: Critical Thinking
1Critical Thinking
- The Ultimate Key Success Factor
2Agenda
- What is critical thinking?
- How does the brain work?
- What are some of the critical thinking techniques
that I can easily learn and use?
3Why is critical thinking important?
- It is a means of improving your ability to learn
- It can help you better understand what you read
- It can help you to make more convincing arguments
- It facilitates communication
- It can help you to address the three basic
questions
4Critical Thinking Socrates
- From Socrates, we get great emphasis on argument
and critical thinking. Socrates chose to make
argument the main thinking tool. Within argument,
there was to be critical thinking - Why do you say that?
- What do you mean by that?
"To find yourself, think for yourself." --
Socrates
5Critical Thinking Aristotle
- From Aristotle we get a type of logic, based on
identity and non-identity, as well as on
inclusion and exclusion.
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to
entertain a thought without accepting it." --
Aristotle
6Critical Thinking Plato
- From Plato we get the notion that there is the
"truth" somewhere but that we have to search for
it to find it. - The way to search for the truth is to use
critical thinking to attack what is untrue.
Knowledge is true opinion. -- Plato
7Critical Thinking Belardo
- Critical Thinking is purposeful goal directed
thinking. - It is an art of thinking about
- what one is thinking about
- in order to make it more
- accurate, clear and defensible
8How Does the Mind Work?
9Your Brain
- The brain is the organ of destiny. It holds
within its humming mechanism secrets that will
determine the future of the human race. - -- Wilder Penfield
- (from The Second Career, 1963)
10How do you Think? ? The Brain
The human brain, then, is the most complicated
organization of matter that we know. Isaac
Asimov (from the foreword to The Three-Pound
Universe by J. Hooper and D. Teresi, 1986)
11Brain Intelligence - Historical
- Aristotle believed that brain size was related to
intelligence. - Broca believed that cranial volume reflected
intelligence, hence - Women were inferior to men (smaller brain sizes)
- Non-Europeans were inferior to Europeans
- Brocas work was superceded by the neuronal
doctrine (Waldayer) - Neurons are the processing units of the brain.
12The Brain Complexity
Human
Jack Rabbit
The human brain is generally regarded as a
complex web of adaptations built into the nervous
system, even though no one knows how. Michael
S. Gazzaniga (from The Minds Past, 1998)
13The Brain A Computer?
- The human brain is an amazing piece of
engineering that allows us to process billions of
bits of information within a compact, powerful,
continuously changing computer that we carry on
our shoulders our entire lives - -- Nancy C. Andreasen
14The Brain A Network of Cells
- The adult human brain weights about 3 pounds
and consists of about 100 billion nerve cells or
neurons. These neurons are responsible for the
transmission of information throughout the brain.
The outer wrinkled mantle of the brain called the
cerebral cortex contains about 30 billion of
these neurons connected to each other by means of
a million billion neuronal connections called
synapses. The neurons communicate with each other
via these connections.
15Neurons
The brain evolves further than any other organ.
Beginning as the simplest sort of connecting
center for the nerves, it elaborates into a
surpassingly complex structure, with many levels
of activity, and untold trillions of possible
circuits Wendell J.S. Krieg (from Functional
Neuroanatomy, 1942)
16Brain Intelligence - Neurons
- Current models postulate that intelligence and
complexity are the result of the properties of
neurons and how they are connected. - Not only the number of neurons but physiological
properties of neurons are also relevant
channels, cable properties, and the type of
synapses. -
There are billions of neurons in our brains, but
what are neurons? Just cells. The brain has no
knowledge until connections are made between
neurons. All that we know, all that we are, comes
from the way our neurons are connected. Tim
Berners-Lee (from Weaving The Web the original
design and ultimate destiny of the world wide web
by its inventor, 1999)
17Synapses
The human brain is estimated to have about a
hundred billion nerve cells, two million miles of
axons, and a million billion synapses, making it
the most complex structure, natural or artificial
on earth -- Tim Green, Stephen F. Heinemann and
Jim F. Gusella (from a paper in Neuron, vol.
420, page 427, 1998)
18Functional Area of Brain
19Brain Principles
- Contralaterality
- The brain is divided into two mirror-image halves
(hemispheres) when viewed from above. - The receptive and control centers for one side of
the body are located in the opposite hemisphere
of the brain. - Hemispheric Specification
- Each hemisphere specializes in different manners
of processing information and maintains different
abilities. - The percentage of each hemisphere used varies by
individual.
20Left Right Brain
Left Right
Visual, focusing on images, patterns Verbal, focusing on words, symbols, numbers
Intuitive, led by feelings Analytical, led by logic
Process ideas simultaneously Process ideas sequentially, step by step
'Mind photos' used to remember things, writing things down or illustrating them helps you remember Words used to remember things, remember names rather than faces
Make lateral connections from information Make logical deductions from information
See the whole first, then the details Work up to the whole step by step, focusing on details, information organized
Organization ends to be lacking Highly organized
Free association Like making lists and planning
Like to know why you're doing something or why rules exist (reasons) Likely to follow rules without questioning them
Source http//painting.about.com/library/blpaint/
blrightbraintable.htm
21Left Right Brain Contd
Left Right
No sense of time Good at keeping track of time
May have trouble with spelling and finding words to express yourself Spelling and mathematical formula easily memorized
Enjoy touching and feeling actual objects (sensory input) Enjoy observing
Trouble prioritizing, so often late, impulsive Plan ahead
Unlikely to read instruction manual before trying Likely read an instruction manual before trying
Listen to how something is being said Listen to what is being said
Talk with your hands Rarely use gestures when talking
Likely to think you're naturally creative, but need to apply yourself to develop your potential Likely to believe you're not creative, need to be willing to try and take risks to develop your potential
Source http//painting.about.com/library/blpaint/
blrightbraintable.htm
22Intelligence
- Intelligence is the ability to learn from
experience and adapt to the surrounding
environment. Some well-known intelligence
theories are - Spearmans Monarchic Theory of Intelligence
- General factor (g) present in all intelligences
- g is the ability to see relationships between
things and manipulate these relationships (this
is required for problem solving) - Different problems require different abilities to
solve them - Based on correlations
- Cattells Fluid Intelligence/Crystalized
Intelligence - Thought g was made up of two intelligences
- Fluid Intelligence (the ability to reason and use
intelligence it declines at age 20) - Crystalized Intelligence (acquired skills and
knowledge from past problem solving and
application in specific domains it increases
with age) - Gardiners Theory of Multiple Intelligences
- Eight different types of intelligences
- People have varying levels of skills/intelligences
Source http//comp.uark.edu/todegar/PSYC2003/int
elligence.html
23Gardiners Multiple Intelligences
Intelligence Strengths Likes to Learns by
Verbal-Linguistic reading, writing, telling stories, memorizing dates, thinking in words read, write, talk, memorize, work at puzzles reading, hearing and seeing words, speaking, writing, discussing and debating
Math-Logic math, reasoning, logic, problem-solving, patterns solve problems, question, work with numbers, experiment working with patterns and relationships, classifying, categorizing, working with the abstract
Spatial reading, maps, charts, drawing, mazes, puzzles, imaging things, visualization design, draw, build, create, daydream, look at pictures working with pictures and colors, visualizing, drawing
Bodily-Kinesthetic athletics, dancing, acting, crafts, using tools move around, touch and talk, body language touching, moving, processing knowledge through bodily sensations
Musical singing, picking up sounds, remembering melodies, rhythms sing, hum, play an instrument, listen to music rhythm, melody, singing, listening to music and melodies
Interpersonal understanding people, leading, organizing, communicating, resolving conflicts, selling have friends, talk to people, join groups sharing, comparing, relating, interviewing, cooperating
Intrapersonal understanding self, recognizing strengths and weaknesses, setting goals work alone, reflect, pursue interests working alone, doing self-paced projects, having space, reflecting
Naturalist understanding nature, making distinctions, identifying flora and fauna be involved with nature, make distinctions working in nature, exploring things, learning about plants and natural events
Source http//www.gigglepotz.com/mi8.htm
24Knowledge
- Knowledge is a gigantic and ever-growing sphere
in space and time, made up of millions of
interconnecting, crisscrossing pathways - -- James Burke
25Learning
- Learning is a process by which we acquire new
knowledge - Learning occurs by creation of neurons and
associations between existing neurons. - If you stop learning your overall mental capacity
and performance will decline. This is because of
the weakening and eventual loss of brain networks - Over varying periods of time youll notice a
gradual but steady decrease in your mental
agility if you do not nourish and enhance these
networks
Whenever you read a book or have a conversation,
the experience causes physical changes in your
brain. Its a little frightening to think that
every time you walk away from an encounter, your
brain has been altered, sometimes
permanently. -- E. Roy John (from Mechanisms of
Memory, 1967)
26Attention
Attention is the spotlight that our brains use
to identify stimuli within the context of time
and space to select what is relevant and to
ignore what is irrelevant
- Attention is a Limited Mental Resource
- Neurons fatigue in 3-5 min. of sustained activity
- Recover, but become inefficient in a few cycles
- Brain tunes off when only factual information is
provided to it - Key to stay focused is to stimulate different
parts of the brain - Critical thinking spreads neuronal load across
the brain
27The Cocktail Party Effect
- In a classroom or any public situation (i.e. a
cocktail party), it is important to filter out
the important and non-important information. - Filtering or Selecting
- Mental process of eliminating distractions or
unwanted messages - Differences between sight and hearing
- Sight selection can be focused with eye movement
- Hearing selection is more cognitive
28Information Processing Model
Long-Term Memory
Attention
Stimulus Information
Sensory Memory
Short-Term Working Memory
Response
Revised information processing model adapted from
Neisser (1976). Source Mark H. Ashcraft, (2002)
Cognition
29Memory
- We are our memories
- It is the process by which we retain knowledge
over time - Episodic Memory
- Semantic Memory
- Memory is established in multiple stages
- Short Term
- Long Term
- Memory is not perfect
Memory is the most important function of the
brain without it life would be a blank. Our
knowledge is all based on memory. Every thought,
every action, our very conception of personal
identity, is based on memory Without memory, all
experience would be useless. -- Edridge-Green,
1900
30The Magical Number 7
- Problem
- Large amounts of sensory information can be
experienced - Large amounts of information can be stored long
term - Transfer of information between sensor to long
term memory imposes severe limitations on the
amount of information that we are able to
receive, process and remember - Basically, the limit of information that can be
processed easily into short term memory is 7 plus
or minus 2.
The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two
Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing
Information -- George Miller. (1956)
31Improving Memory
- What do you do when
- You are introduced to someone new?
- Recycle the name for a few seconds, or
- Use it in conversation and try to find a
mnemonic connection - You are reading text?
- Process words at a simple level of understanding,
or - Search for connections and relationships that
will make the material more manageable
32Brain Exercise
You know youve got to exercise your brain just
like your muscles -- Will Rogers
The more you use your brain, the more brain you
will have to use -- George A. Dorsey
33Sleep and Learning
- Research has shown that
- Learning a new skill and then sleeping will lead
to better performance3 - What is learned when awake is replayed and
rehearsed when asleep2 - Quality of sleep matters2
- At least 6 hours of sleep improves performance2
- It is better to study and get a good nights
sleep before an exam than to cram the whole night!
Sleep affords the opportunity, within certain
limits, for the brain to act of itself, and
dreams are the result -- Edward Clarke (from
Vision A Study of False Sight, 1878)
1 http//www.apa.org/monitor/oct01/sleeponit.html
2 http//www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/07/02/hea
lth/main514038.shtml
34Can Learning be Enhanced?
- Key to increasing your mental abilities is to
increase your cognitive skills. - Cognition refers to your ability to attend,
identify and act. - It also refers to thoughts, moods, inclination,
decisions, and actions - It includes alertness, concentration, speed,
learning, memory, problem solving, creativity and
mental endurance.
35Thinking Styles
- Every thinking style has its strengths and its
weaknesses. The first step in using your
strengths is understanding and accepting them.
Stop thinking that you are different or think
differently. You are what you are and you think
in your own style.
Thinking Style Attributes
Synthesist Enjoys conflict. Can come up with solutions to unsolvable problems. Look at problems from different perspectives. Come up with creative solutions
Idealist Coaching style of leadership and a nurturer. Work in supportive collaborative way instead of a highly structured, hierarchical manner.
Pragmatist Resourceful and creative. Problem solver and creator of solution. Take more risks than synthesists which are more innovative and with more potential gain.
Analyst Great troubleshooters and detail oriented. Deal best with factual information. Do things in a step-by-step manner and by thinking through problems.
Realist Provide practical solutions to problems quickly. Blunt. Good understanding of situations and how to react.
Source http//sern.ucalgary.ca/courses/seng/693/W
98/alang/minor.html
36Cognition Critical Thinking?
- One demonstrated way to increase cognitive skills
is to use a collection of tools and techniques
that can be classified under the rubric critical
thinking - These tools were developed by philosophers and
thinkers over the last three thousand years - Business leaders do not relate well to these
tools
37Critical Thinking
- We propose to introduce a Rosetta Stone for
Critical Thinking which will be more orthogonal
to the managerial mindset
Classical Critical Thinking
Blooms Taxonomy
Applied Critical Thinking
- Syllogisms
- Truth Table
- Chain Arguments
- Inductive Reasoning
- Deductive Reasoning
- Experimentation
- Reasoning
- Communication
- Cognitive
- Affective
- Psychomotor
38(No Transcript)
39Blooms Taxonomy?
40Critical Thinking
- Why is critical thinking so important?
Entrepreneur
Asking the Right Questions
It can help you become a visionary
Critical Intellectual Traits
It can help you succeed in important relationships
Basic Learning Skills
It can help you in your business
studies Marketing, Finance, Information Systems,
etc.
Employee
41Critical Thinking Basic Learning Skills
- Blooms Taxonomy
- Cognitive Domain deals with the development of
ascending levels of intellectual abilities and
skills. - Affective Domain describes levels of the
internalization process of the learners
interests, attitudes, values, appreciations and
behavior. - Motor Skills Domain Deals with physical activity
requiring coordination.
42Critical Thinking Basic Learning Skills
- Blooms Taxonomy The Cognitive Domain
- Knowledge I can define it
- Comprehension I understand it
- Application I have used it
- Analysis I know how each part works
- Synthesis I can adapt it to other uses
- Evaluation I know when to use it
43Critical ThinkingBasic Learning Skills Blooms
TaxonomyThe Cognitive Domain
- Knowledge
- It is rote learning ranging from the recall of
specific facts to knowledge of conventions and
theoriesa rich vocabulary - Comprehension
- Encompasses meaningful integrated learning. At
this level, the learner has made the material
part of his/her own frame of referenceones own
words - Application
- Application means that the person can employ the
idea, theory, practice, etc. - Analysis
- Analytical skills enable the individual to
discern unstated assumptions - Synthesis
- At this level the individual is able to adapt
his/her knowledge to other uses - Evaluation
- Making judgments about the value or worth of
something
44Critical Thinking Basic Learning Skills
Blooms TaxonomyThe Cognitive Domain
- In Finance Net Present Value
- Knowledge I have heard the term before. Isnt
that a method for ranking investment proposals. - Comprehension The Net Present Value is equal to
the present value of future returns, discounted
at the marginal cost of capital, minus the
present value of the cost of the investment. - Application I used it recently to help make a
decision concerning two investment proposals. - Analysis The equation consists of several
factors the net cash flows, the marginal cost of
capital, the initial cost of the project, and the
projects expected life. - Synthesis I believe that this method can also be
used as part of a method to determine the value
of a firms intangible assets. - Evaluation I know when to use NPV and when to
use the IRR method
45Critical ThinkingBlooms Taxonomy Action Verbs
Action Verbs for Active Learning
Evaluation
Judge Appraise Rate Value Revise Estimate Assess S
elect Critique
Synthesis
Compose Plan Design Propose Arrange Assemble Prepa
re Collect Create Set up Organize
Analysis
Analyze Compare Diagram Experiment Differentiate T
est Inspect Debate Question Relate Examine Disting
uish Between Calculate
Application
Translate Interpret Apply Employ Use Demonstrate D
ramatize Practice Illustrate Operate Sketch
Comprehension
Restate Discuss Describe Recognize Explain Tell Ex
press Identify Report
Knowledge
Know Define Memorize Repeat List Recall
46Critical Thinking Basic Learning Skills
- Activities for Using Blooms Taxonomy in TQM
-
- Knowledge Level
- List or record terms related to TQM
- List three functions of your job that relate to
other departments in the organization - Define the various acronyms associated with TQM
(e.g., SPC, CQI) -
- Comprehension Level
- Discuss the advantages of TQM with coworkers
- Identify three departments that are customers of
your department - Review the major objective achieved in each
training session - In a role-play, tell what you have learned in
this session to your immediate supervisor -
- Application Level
- Demonstrate how four of the analysis
tools could be used to locate quality problems in
one - activity of your work
- Dramatize how you would facilitate a
meeting to introduce concepts of TQM to your - department
47Critical Thinking Basic Learning Skills
- Activities for Using Blooms Taxonomy in TQM
-
- Analysis Level
- Diagram a process flow chart of the activities
for a task in your work - Differentiate those processes in your
task environment that can be improved with TQM
from - those where TQM cannot be applied
- Examine the present departmental activities and
determine which one currently use TQM -
- Synthesis Level
- Prepare an article for the company newsletter
describing TQM training - Design a proposal for policy changes reflecting
TQM to be presented to top executives - Collect and compile data from department
activities that support implementation of TQM -
- Evaluation
- Critique a present training program and revise
it to suit the needs of your organization - Estimate a budget that would be necessary to
implement TQM changes for your department. - Rate the leadership in your department as to its
readiness to implement TQM
48Critical Thinking Can Help You Succeed in
Important Relationships
- Critical Intellectual Traits and the Affective
Domain - Receiving Getting to 50
- Responding Seeing the Value
- Valuing Understanding the Value
- Organization Comparing Values Making Sense
- Characterization Practice Consistency
49Critical Thinking Can Help You Succeed in
Important Relationships
- Critical Intellectual Traits
- Humility Having a consciousness of the limits of
ones knowledge. We should not claim to know more
than we know. It implies the lack of
pretentiousness or conceit. - Courage This requires that individuals challenge
what they learn rather than accept it at face
value. This implies the need to look more deeply
into various viewpoints that run counter to those
that we hold. Willing to learn, to change, to
unlearn, but to have the courage of right founded
convictions. - Empathy Recognizing the need to put oneself in
the place of others. It requires a consciousness
of our egocentric tendencies to identify truth
with our perception of previous experience and
beliefs. - Integrity One must apply the same standards when
looking at opposing points of view as when
looking at their own arguments. Honestly
admitting errors in ones thought and actions.
- Perseverance Recognizing the need to employ
intellectual standards in spite of the
difficulties and obstacles this may present.The
recognition that it may take time to make sense
of confusing situations and to develop a
necessary deeper understanding or insight.
50Critical Thinking Can Help You Succeed in
Important Relationships
- To be effective in business it is essential that
individuals and organizations focus on two
primary objectives. - Improve Organizational Effectiveness
- What business should we be in?
- Improve Organizational Efficiency
- Who are we in business with, and what must
we do in order to gain a competitive advantage?
51Critical Thinking Can Help You Succeed in
Important Relationships The Importance of Trust
in Ensuring Efficiency Effectiveness
- Efficiency
- Trust should be viewed as an important component
of social capital because - low trust cultures incur a higher cost of doing
business than do high trust - cultures. Low trust cultures are simply less
efficient. - Francis Fukuyama TrustThe Social Virtues and
the Creation of Prosperity - Effectiveness
- If everyone cheated, trust would not exist.
Every party to every transaction - would be suspicious of everyone else and in such
a system, people would - spend valuable time energy and resources on
protection and retaliation. In - such a system, there would be no incentive to
take risks and innovate. - Magda RatajskiVital Speeches
52 Critical ThinkingThe Importance of Trust
- All ethical systems are designed to ensure trust,
and with trust, the - cooperation and collaboration necessary to ensure
prosperity and survival. - The Ten Commandments
- The Bill of Rights
- The Hippocratic Oath, etc.
53 Critical ThinkingThe Importance of Trust
- An ethical system is a set of rules that helps
guide behavior. Ethical systems - exist along a continuum ranging from those that
focus on the ends - (teleological), and those that focus on the
means (deontological). They differ - on the basis of
- The extent to which they focus on the individual
or on the broader society - The extent to which complete and accurate
information is shared - The extent to which rules that guide behavior are
universally practiced - The extent to which duty determines behavior
- These four elements can be described as
inclusiveness, truthtelling, - consistency and discipline. These are then the
values that help ensure that - people share knowledge with their colleagues and
build upon one anothers - ideas.
-
54The Importance of TrustInclusivenessWe must
all hang together or assuredly, we will all hang
separatelyBenjamin Franklin July 4, 1776
- Why is inclusiveness important?
- Cross Functional Teams
- How do you know whether your organization
practices inclusiveness? - How many of the following stakeholders are
identified in your company credo? - Policy Holders, Managers, Suppliers, Customers,
Employees, etc. - In how many broad areas are employees allowed to
participate? - Setting goals, Making decisions, Solving
problems, Making changes, etc. - How can you ensure inclusiveness?
- Empower, Distribute responsibility
55The Importance of TrustInclusiveness
- In matters of morality we are not judges about
others, but nature - has given us the right to form judgements about
others. She has - ordained that we should judge ourselves in
accordance with - judgements that others form about us. The man who
turns a deaf ear - to other peoples opinions of him is base and
reprehensible. - From The Lectures of Immanuel Kant
56The Importance of TrustInclusiveness
- Johnson and Johnson Company Credo
- We believe our first responsibility is to
doctors, nurses and patients, - to mothers, and all others who use our products
and services. - We are responsible to our employees, the men and
women who work - with us throughout the world.
-
- We are responsible to the communities in which we
live and work, - and to the world community as well. Our final
responsibility is to our - stockholders. Bowie, 1987
57The Importance of TrustInclusiveness
- Examples
- Jethros Advice to Moses
- Johnson and Johnson Company Credo
- Wayne Huizenga and Waste Management
- Bob Gebo at ATT
- Steven Coveys 7 Habits of Highly Effective
People -
58The Importance of TrustInclusiveness
- Practices
- Distribute responsibility
- Process ownership at Chaparal steel has paid of
handsomely. Workers at Chaparal require 1.6 hours
to produce one ton of steel whereas the industry
average is 4.4 hours per ton. - Seek first to understand
- Dells Direct Model means that they spend more
time with the customer before they actually make
the product. This way hey know exactly what the
customer wants. - Encourage collaboration
- Honda and Rover benefited from their
collaboration. Rover learned how to improve
quality and productivity, and Honda learned how
to develop and market a luxury car, the Acura
Legend. -
59The Importance of TrustTruthtelling
- Truth is the secret of eloquence and virtue, the
basis of moral authority it is the highest
summit of art and life. - Henri Frederic Amiel, 1883
- Why is truthtelling important?
- Individual and Team Learning
- How do you know whether your organization
practices truthtelling? - A falsehood ceases to be a falsehood when it is
understood on all sides - that the truth is not expected to be spoken.
- How can you ensure truthtelling
- Admit your mistakes quickly and publicly.
60The Importance of TrustTruthtelling
- If a man spreads false news though he does no
wrong to anyone in - particular, he offends against mankind because if
such practices were - universal, mans desire for knowledge would be
frustrated. For apart - from speculation there are only two ways I can
increase my fund of - knowledge, by experience, and by what other
people tell me. - From the Lectures of Immanuel Kant
61The Importance of TrustTruthtelling
- Examples
- Nixon and Clinton
- Donald Douglas of McDonald Douglas
- Scott Cook of Intuit
- Edmund Schweitzer of SEL, etc.
62The Importance of TrustTruthtelling
- Practices
- Admit your mistakes quickly and publicly
- Toms of Main produced a deodorant that actually
made body odor worse. Toms recalled their
product and issued an apology. It cost 400,000
or 30 of their projected profits for the year.
No loss of market share, in fact it went up. - Humility is the best guarantor of truth and
learning - Self disclosure is important to open
communication and learning. When students
approached strangers at an airport and tried to
communicate with them, the more personal the
messages they communicated, the more revealing
the comments. - Do not give the impression of stealth or
impropriety - Gerber baby Foods and the blue ceramic chip.
63The Importance of TrustConsistency
- The secret of success is constancy of purpose
- Benjamin Disraeli, 1872
- Why is consistency so important?
- Behavior characterizes individuals as well as
organizations. - How do you know whether your organization
practices consistency? - Measure the number of complaints or law suits
brought against the firm. - How can you ensure consistency?
- Set incredibly high standards.
64The Importance of TrustConsistency
- The first rule was never to accept anything as
true unless I recognized it to - be evidently such that is carefully avoid all
precipitation and pre-judgement - and to include nothing in my calculations unless
it presented itself so clearly - and distinctly in my mind that there was no
reason to doubt it. - The second was to divide each of the difficulties
which I encountered into as - many parts as possible, and as might be required
for easier solution. - The third part was to think in an orderly fashion
when concerned with the - search for truth, beginning with the things that
were simplest and easiest to - understand and gradually by degrees reaching
toward more complex - knowledge even treating as though ordered
materials which were not so. - The last was both in the process of searching and
in reviewing when in - difficulties, always to make enumerations so
complete and reviews so general - that I would be certain that nothing was
omitted. - Rene DesCartes
65 The Importance of TrustConsistency
- Examples
- Wal-Mart
- Hubble Telescope
- MacDonalds, etc.
66 The Importance of TrustConsistency
- Practices
- Choose a task worthy of your efforts
- The one thing successful companies have in common
is a worthy purpose. This is the companys
reason for being. For SONY it is To have people
experience the joy of advancing and applying
technology for the benefit of the public. - Believe in yourself
- Drucker states that knowledge workers must
believe in themselves. This way they take
serious, the need to keep learning, to constantly
seek out new knowledge. - Set your standards high
- General Electric, Monsanto Intel, etc. employ
stretch goals. One company set a goal of reducing
hazardous wastes by 5. Once achieved everyone
slacked off. Monsanto set a goal of zero
emissions. While scientifically impossible this
stretch goal helped Monsanto striving for the
best.
67The Importance of TrustDiscipline
- Discipline is the soul of an army, it makes
small numbers - formidable, procures success to the weak and
esteem to all - George Washington, 1759
- Why is discipline important?
- It ensures the other three values
- How do you know whether your organization
practices discipline? - Does your organization make public their
performance toward their goals? - How can you ensure discipline?
- Establish goals and make them explicit
68The Importance of TrustDiscipline
- Men are qualified for civil liberty in exact
proportion to their disposition to - put moral chains upon their own appetites in
proportion as their love of - justice is above rapacity in proportion as their
soundness and sobriety of - understanding is above their vanity and
presumption as they are disposed - to listen to the counsels of the wise and good in
preference to the flattery of - knaves. Society cannot exist unless a controlling
power upon will and appetite - be placed somewhere and the less there is within,
the more there must be - without. It is ordained in the eternal
constitution of things that men of - intemperate minds cannot be free, their passions
forge their fetters. - Edmond Burke
69The Importance of TrustDiscipline
- Examples
- Harvard Graduates
- Jack Welch
- The United States Marines, etc.
70The Importance of TrustDiscipline
- Practices
- Know your limits
- Young companies must learn not to promise the
market place too much. Brian Farrell, CEO of THQ,
a video game seller complained that if you grow
at 15, the first thing Wall street asks, is if
you can grow at 25. - Establish goals and make them explicit
- Accountability should be seen as a tool that
inspires a company and its employees to to learn
and work harder rather than a form of
organizational policing. - Make your goals and performance public
- In 1989, Dupont Chairman Edward Woolard publicly
stated that they would reduce toxic air emissions
by 60, carcinogens by 90 and hazardous wastes
by 35. They then announced that they cut these
emissions and wastes by 605, 75 and 46
respectively. The moralMeasure what you do and
report the results publicly.
71Critical Thinking
- Asking the Right Questions
- Who
- What
- Where
- When
- Why
- How
72Critical Thinking
- Asking the Right Questions
- Managing Conflict
- Who has conflict?
- What kind of conflict?
- Where is the conflict
- When is the conflict?
- Why is there conflict?
- How can conflict be resolved?
73Critical Thinking
- Asking the Right Questions
- Managing Conflict
- Who has conflict?
- Workers, husbands and wives
- What kind of conflict?
- Emotional, substantive
- Where is the conflict?
- On the job, at home
- When is there conflict?
- Working together, making a major purpose
- Why is there conflict?
- Differences in values
- How can conflict be resolved?
- Or in what ways can persons who interact with one
another better achieve their mutual objectives
74Critical Thinking
- Asking The Right Questions
- Cutting Grass
- Who has grass?
- What kind of grass?
- Where is the grass?
- When does it need cutting?
- Why cut the grass?
- How can the grass be cut?
75Critical Thinking
- Asking The Right Questions
- Cutting Grass
- Who has grass?
- Homeowners, municipalities
- What kind of grass?
- All kinds
- Where is the grass?
- In yards, parks, golf courses
- When does it need cutting?
- When its over three inches high
- Why cut the grass?
- To control weeds, for a nicer looking yard
- How can the grass be cut?
- Or, in what ways can grass be made to stop
growing after it reaches a height of three inches?
76Critical Thinking Asking the Right Questions
What Firm Must Do
What Firm Must Know
Strategy Gap
Knowledge Gap
What Firm Knows
What Firm Can Do