Organizational learning (OL) is receiving increasing attention from researchers and practitioners alike. In fact, some have suggested that the only sustainable competitive advantage is a firm's ability to learn faster than its competitors. In spite of OL's promise, the field has been slow to evolve. The primary impediments to the development of OL theory are that inconsistent terminology is used for comparable concepts and that different definitions are used to describe the phenomenon. Furthermore, many theorists have neglected to make explicit their underlying assumptions about the phenomenon. Employing an inductive approach, this review surfaces the implicit and explicit assumptions of OL researchers, identifying three key dimensions that differentiate perspectives: (1) unit of analysis—individual, group, organizational, and inter organizational; (2) cognitive/behavioral emphasis; and (3) the learning‐performance relationship.
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1 April 1995
This article was originally published in
The International Journal of Organizational Analysis
Review Article|
April 01 1995
ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING: DIMENSIONS FOR A THEORY
Mary M. Crossan;
Mary M. Crossan
University of Western Ontario
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Henry W. Lane;
Henry W. Lane
University of Western Ontario
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Roderick E. White;
Roderick E. White
University of Western Ontario
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Lisa Djurfeldt
Lisa Djurfeldt
University of Western Ontario
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2576-0785
Print ISSN: 1055-3185
© MCB UP Limited
1995
The International Journal of Organizational Analysis (1995) 3 (4): 337–360.
Citation
Crossan MM, Lane HW, White RE, Djurfeldt L (1995), "ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING: DIMENSIONS FOR A THEORY". The International Journal of Organizational Analysis, Vol. 3 No. 4 pp. 337–360, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb028835
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