The University--an organization that facilitates learning and continously transforms itself.
Palos, Ramona ; Munteanu, Anca
1. INTRODUCTION
Educational organizations have a particular status. On the one
hand, they need to learn in order to cope with the extremely competitive
social and economic environment in which they function and, on the other
hand, they "produce" learning and disseminate knowledge
enabling their services beneficiaries to better cope with the
socio-economic context. In other words, not only do they adapt and
develop in this environment, but they are the ones promoting and
supporting competitivity growth. The teacher represents the
"interface" between these institutions and the beneficiaries
of the services they provide that is, the students. Organizational
learning is achieved through employees, but it is not just a simple
cumulus of individual learning results. Therefore, our research aims to
investigate such aspects which relate to the cognitive dimension of
those teaching in this kind of institutions. Having knowledge of a
person's thinking style gives information regarding the way in
which they "govern" or conduct daily activities, manner which
provide a certain psychological comfort and which they have the tendency
to perpetuate. Understanding the cognitive complexity or that of the
personal system of representation enables predictions to be made
regarding a person's behavior, the ways they interpret new
information according to previous experience or present context, their
availability in various learning situations and involvement resolutions
in this process.
In terms of a society based on knowledge, learning becomes
essential for survival. Organizations, just like people, need to learn
permanently. An organization which learns further creates learning
opportunities, encourages collaboration and team learning, facilitates
knowledge dissemination, promotes inquiry and dialogue. Through
organizational learning, the employees and organization adapt and
develop (Glaveanu, 2008). This complex process consists of acquiring
knowledge (through direct experience, others' experience, or via
organizational memory), disseminating it, "transferring" it to
others and implementing the new information in concert (Dale, 1994, as
cited in Armstrong, 2003).
Argyris speaks about a single loop learning, adaptive, efficient in
daily activities, by error diagnosis and correction without fundamental
changes; a double loop learning generative, which implies reflection on
the results, on the need to change them and not just on deviation
corrections, involving critical thinking and creativity, leading to
fundamental changes; triple loop learning or
deuteron-learning--considered a higher level of learning, focused on
learning how to learn (Knowles, Holton & Swanson, 1998).
2. RESEARCH DESIGN
2.1 Objectives and hypothesis of the research
The aim of this pilot research is to determine to what degree
university teachers promote and assert continuous learning in what they
themselves are concerned, as well as at an organizational level, through
adopted behavior. The appointed objectives for the achievement of this
purpose are: identifying the thinking and learning styles of teachers
from university technical departments; identifying the impact these
variables exert on the promotion of an organizational learning culture.
The research sample consists of 50 university teachers from technical
departments and 70 teachers from secondary education technical
departments, aged 30 to 65, with a minimum of 5 years' teaching
experience. The tests portfolio consists of: Honey and Mumford
questionnaire (1986), made up of 40 items which require
"yes"/"no" answers and evaluate four learning
styles--active, reflexive, theoretic and pragmatic; thinking style
questionnaire (elaborated by Sternberg & Wagner in 1994), a 7 level
Likert scale-type test, consisting of 65 items which evaluate 13
thinking styles--legislative, executive, judiciary, monarchical,
hierarchical, oligarchic, anarchical, local, global, internal, external,
conservative and progressive; teaching styles for successful
intelligence questionnaire (Palos & Maricutoiu, 2006) made up of 32
items, a 6 level Likert scale-type test, which determines the
teacher's preference for teaching activities which stimulate the
student's reproductive, analytical, creative and pragmatic
abilities.
2.2 Analysis and interpretation of the results
O1. Identifying the thinking and learning styles of teachers from
university technical departments.
H1. The professors teaching technical subjects in university
express a preference for theoretical and pragmatic learning styles.
Following the statistical processing of data (by using SPSS 15.00 and
AMOS 4.0) we determined that differences emerge between university and
secondary education teachers in respect to the reflexive learning style
(table 1). Therefore, we conclude that secondary education level
teachers are concerned with the stocking of large amounts of
information, of minute and solid analyses, with a tendency to maximize
certainty. This also reflects upon the manner in which they teach the
informational contents, imprinting a rather theoretical character upon
this level of education. This statement is also supported by the
positive correlation with the preference for teaching situations which
stimulate reproductive thinking in pupils, with emphasis on memorizing
throughout the process of learning (r=.399**, p=.000). Unfortunately,
our hypothesis was not confirmed. Nevertheless, the obtained results
prove, once more, the educational reality and the need for reformation
at a teaching and evaluation level, in order for useful labor market competences to be formed and evaluated, emphasizing the pragmatic
character of these specializations.
H2. Professors teaching technical subjects in university express a
preference for global thinking style. Various research works have
identified significant relations between the teachers' style of
thinking, the academic level at which they teach, the teaching
experience and the subject concerned. In our case, we can observe that
those who teach at an academic level express a preference for the global
thinking style, whilst high school teachers show a preference towards
the monarchical and conservative thinking styles (table 2). People who
exhibit a global thinking style, present superior analytical and
conceptualization skills. Considering the amount of information operated
at an academic level, the ability to structure and synthesize become
compulsory. Sternberg and Zhang (2005) consider the global thinking
style as one which favors creativity, highlighting the need to overcome
conventions, to do things different from others. The thinking style
leaves a mark on the manner in which the professor learns and teaches
after he has learned. Distinctive for these teachers are the active
learning style (r=.271**, p=.004), in a constant pursuit of the
"thrill" of new activities, of continuous challenge.
The preference for monarchic and conservative thinking style is
specific to those who focus on singular goals, feeling at ease by acting
according to already given rules and procedures, by minimizing change
and searching for the familiar, for routine. In what the learning style
is concerned, a preference for the theoretical and reflexive style can
be noted among high school teachers, which highlights a concern for all
possible aspects and indications before acting (r=.551**, p=.000;
respectively r=.409**, p=.000). The monarchical and conservative styles
are regarded as styles which inhibit creativity, being characteristic
for those people who live by the rules.
O2. Identifying the impact these variables exert upon the promotion
of an organizational learning culture.
An organization learns if its employees are involved in continuous
learning, and its benefits find themselves in the improvement of
personal performances, in the growth of the employee's value, of
his carrier development opportunities. The university is an organization
which facilitates learning for all its members, continuously
transforming itself, but also "producing" learning for those
involved in the initial and continuous training--its students.
Following this pilot research work, we can say that a number of
differences regarding educational activity between the academic
technical department and that of secondary education level stand out.
Hence, in secondary level, the teacher emphasizes his pupils' need
to stock and reproduce information, the theoretical aspect, he himself
being a person who requires certainties, familiar situations. The
university teacher does not forgo the amount of knowledge, but
stimulates search for new information, its analysis, a global wholesome
perspective on knowledge. Unfortunately, neither here do we find, to a
greater extent, the prevailing pragmatic character, which should be
specific for technical education, that is, adjusting knowledge to the
requirements of the labor market. In return, the student's
involvement in the development of his own knowledge is encouraged.
Detecting aspects related to the cognitive dimension (thinking and
learning styles) enables predictions regarding a person's behavior
to be made, in situations characterized through well defined parameters.
If for secondary level we could rather talk about a single loop
learning--which allows for efficient action in daily activities to be
taken, allowing the person to automatically respond to certain
situations, by following rules and procedures, at an academic level this
acquires a generative character (double loop learning). Through this
type of learning, the individual starts to change his mental pattern and
open up towards alternate ways of dealing with things, in order to find
more appropriate solutions. Hence, the university--through its
teachers--is more open towards actively building up knowledge as a
partnership with its student beneficiaries and in agreement with the
requirements of a society based on knowledge.
2.3 Limits of the study
Among the limitation of the inquiry research we mention: an uneven
representation of the technical university departments; an uneven
representation of the participants, according to teaching academic level
and gender variable.
3. CONCLUSIONS
Learning, as promoted at high school level, is of an adaptive kind,
in which errors are detected and corrected, without the occurrence of
any fundamental changes. At an academic level, learning acquires a
generative aspect. This type of learning is relevant with complex
problems, being often followed by radical changes, which grant these
organizations the ability to adapt more quickly and efficiently to the
exigencies of the socio-economic environment.
Considering the results obtained, we have decided to continue the
study by identifying the degree in which the system of values and coping
mechanism developed by teachers influence their resistance to change and
that of the organizations they belong to. This will help us understand
the differences between organizational types of learning, promoted in
the Romanian educational institutions.
4. REFERENCES
Armstrong, M. (2003). The Handbook of Human Resource Management
Practice (translation), CODECS Publishing House, ISBN 973-8060-60-5,
Bucharest, Romania
Glaveanu, V.P. (2008). Learning organizations, In
Organizational-managerial Psychology. Present tendencies, Avram, E &
Cooper, C.L. (Eds.), pp. 871-900, Polirom Publishing House, ISBN
978-973-46-0808-9, Iasi, Romania.
Honey, P. & Mumford, A. (1986). Learning style
questionnaire-Scoring, In The Manual of Learning Styles, Maidenhead:
Homey
Knowles, M.S.; Holton, E. & Swanson, R. (1998). The Adult
Learner, Gulf Publishing Company, ISBN 0-88415-115-8, Houston, Texas.
U.S.A.
Palos, R. & Maricutoiu, L. (2006). The impact of teacher's
thinking and learning styles upon his/her teaching style. Available at:
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/ educol/documents/158827.pdf
Sternberg, R.J. & Zhang, Li. (2005). The Threefold Model of
Intellectual Styles, In Educational Psychology Review, vol.17, no 1, pp.
1-53, ISSN 10648-005-1635-4
Tab. 1. Differences according to the tag-variable "learning
style"
Learning Tag variable Mean Std. t p
style dev.
Reflexive University 13.77 3.982 -2.020 0.03
Secondary 15.49 4.625
Tab. 2. Differences according to the tag-variable "thinking
style"
Thinking Tag Mean Std. t p
style variable dev.
Monarchical University 16.36 3.066 -2.944 0.004
Secondary 17.91 2.512
Global University 19.80 2.906 2.196 0.003
Secondary 18.71 2.317 2.086
Conservative University 16.41 2.975 -2.806 0.006
Secondary 18.13 3.310