The Necessary Revolution

February 10, 2009

Just got to a book last night which has been on my “anti-library” shelf for several months–Peter Senge’s The Necessary Revolution (2008)–which I highly recommend. Here’s an article from Business Week‘s “Innovation” section which reviewed the book last summer and spurred me to acquire a copy of it.

The following paragraphs from the book’s first chapter, “A Future Awaiting Our Choices,” provide a good introduction to the nature and scope of Senge’s recent work.

The Industrial Age has often been called the “machine age” because the rise of machines and the way they operated transformed the way people thought and worked. It wasn’t long before people were expected to work like machines and the assembly line became the icon of efficiency and standardization for all organizations. Gradually, machine thinking shaped much more than manufacturing: Economic progress became synonymous with increases in efficiency and productivity; cultural advance became equated with dazzling new technologies; and nature, including the other creatures with whom we share the earth, was reduced to ‘natural resources,’ inputs to the economic machine.

A sustainable world, too, will only be possible by thinking differently. With nature and not machines as their inspiration, today’s innovators are showing how to create a different future by learning how to see the larger systems of which they are a part and to foster collaboration across every imaginable boundary. These core capabilities–seeing systems, collaborating across boundaries, and creating versus problem solving–form the underpinnings, and ultimately the tools and methods, for this shift in thinking.

For over a quarter of a century our work, first at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and then through the Society for Organizational Learning (SoL) global network, has involved helping organizations of all sorts to “learn how to learn”–which naturally leads to the question, “Learning for what?” For many years, precedent provided the answer: learning so that companies could be more innovative and profitable, so that schools could help students learn, so that governmental organizations could better serve their constituencies. For the past decade, however, we have begun to also see a larger answer: shaping a sustainable, flourishing world for life beyond the Industrial Age. This represents perhaps the greatest learning challenge humans have ever faced, and it will require extraordinary leadership from institutions of all sorts.

This is not pie-in-the-sky rhetoric or intellectual idealism, but in fact is reflected in ways organizations and individuals are already working together. The organizations and people you will meet in the pages that follow are starting to enact new ways of managing, leading, and ultimately creating value, not just for today’s real needs but for tomorrow’s, and their practices are spreading to hundreds of businesses and non-business organizations of all sizes around the world. There is no silver-bullet formula for putting these ideas into practice widely, but there are principles, practices, and ways of getting started.

I once was guided professionally by Senge’s idea of the “learning organization” in my own organizational development / knowledge management work. I’m guided again by him, this time by his idea that the environmental and social challenges we face create an unprecedented opportunity for us to bring about real, sustainable (and “revolutionary”) change in the ways we work and live.


Best Green Blogs

January 11, 2009

This link to Best Green Blogs came to me in a tweet from humanvillage on Twitter this morning. Few who declare themselves to be “green” these days, especially many of the money-rich, large corporate advertisers, are ready to communicate how difficult it is (will be) for most folks to change their habitual economic behaviors to collectively create more environmentally sustainable local communities embedded in “green” societies globally. Here are some blogs communicating the challenges and opportunities.


Ecopolis: City of the Future

January 11, 2009

I’m watching a re-broadcast of Dr. Daniel Kammen’s six-part series on cable’s Science Channel titled Ecopolis. Here’s how it’s described: “A blueprint for city life in the year 2050, Ecopolis can benefit from new ‘green’ technologies being explored today that will lead to a more sustainable urban experience tomorrow.” Wow, I’m thankful for a Nobel Prize winning geek with a bent for communication and activism and a group of science video programmers who produce for cable TV broadcasting such positive visions of real possibilities for sustaining ourselves in cities of the future.


culture, politics, and education

December 30, 2008

I’ve grown very curious about how American politics has played out over the time since WW2 that I’ve been alive. Although a student of politics during my college days, the recent U.S. Presidential election campaign re-engaged me in reading and thinking about American politics and even how it might be a subject for exploration by students of elementary school age.

I’ve just begun reading Rick Perlstein‘s Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America. I had read Perlstein’s Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus and liked it. Although I am a liberal progressive who welcomes the end of the Reagan-inspired political practices and socioeconomic ideology, I have a more detached and longstanding historical interest in what some have called “The Southern Nation” which is still so evident on the U.S. map of November’s electoral results. (See also the eye-opening history, Slavery By Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans From the Civil War to World War II.) Today’s still deep-seated political divide is explainable from a long history of cultural divide. And the educational world is not immune from the effects of those divides.

I’m not sure yet what I’m going to do (and write) with the societal divides I’ve been curious and concerned about in the U.S. for a long time. I just want whoever reads my blog to know that it is one of the important themes in my overall thinking about how to move our existing cultural understandings and behaviors in positive and constructive ways toward the new sustainability/inclusivity (“we the people”) paradigm I consider nearly imperative for global good. There are many tangents off this connected sphere of thinking and exploration. Many of them interestingly relate to the topics close to the Worldchanging perspective and agenda; others relate to questions of dead-ending militarism/imperialism and consumerism/addictive marketing and (non-)education for living superficial and dangerously manipulable/suggestible life-styles. I’m far from being a puritanical fundamentalist, but I do believe that those who claim to be educators of one kind or another need to be consciously aware of the close connection between cultural values and politics and education, as have been all of the historically great thinkers/practitioners on education and society.


Main Street Recovery Program

December 25, 2008

OurFuture.org describes the Main Street Recovery Program document it produced (see below) in these terms:

The Obama administration has promised to boldly tackle today’s economic crisis. To help make that promise a reality, we present this Main Street Recovery Program, and call for independent support from economists, public officials and citizens everywhere who fight on behalf of the every day Americans suffering the worst of this crisis.

Progressive economists and organization leaders drafted this Main Street Recovery Program to meet urgent needs unaddressed by efforts to shore up Wall Street financial institutions. This program calls for a substantial, strategic, and sustained effort to not only address the impact the of current recession on the real economy but to reshape the economy for the 21st century.

View this document on Scribd

significance of the design of learning space

December 9, 2008

This short film by Kontent Real highlights the significance of learning in a green school, as told by the students of the Sidwell Friends school.


IBM’s Smarter Planet Series

December 9, 2008

IBM’s Smarter Planet Series is at this moment in time into its fourth conceptual presentation, Setting the table for a smarter planet. The Series started with Planet: A mandate for change is a mandate for smart, which was followed by Energy: Smarter power for a smarter planet, then by Traffic: Roads to a smarter planet. It’s good to see government and industry thought leaders speak transparently about smart strategies to transform our planet into a sustainable, productive, and justly happy place to live.


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