twitter
rss


4.4 COMMUNITY-BASED MODELS
The Information Systems literature points to an abundance ofKMstrategies in the category of Computer Mediated Communication (CMC). Such systems provide the infrastructure for enabling the interactions needed for a group’s knowledge synergies and interactive activities [Maier, R., 2002] and may include bulletin boards, electronic meeting/conferencing, or online chat.
Further, such CMC interactions allow for the creation of persistent records [Robins, J., 2002] of the interactions. Chat and other kind of social media transcriptions can be preserved too as another example. To the extent that discourse occurs through such interactions, the dialectics can be archived for future reference and subsequent “reuse.” However, as Hislop, D. [2002] points out, while technology may provide the tools for interaction and communication, the application of technology alone may not be a sufficient condition for sustaining the creation and sharing of knowledge.
Group Decision Support Systems (GDSSs) were originally conceived of as collaborative tools where groups came together, participated in brainstorming and then, through human facilitation, voted on items and issues important to the organization.These systems allowed for anonymous voting that moved decisions along rapidly by prioritizing topics more easily than trying to do so without the system’s assistance. Participants’ knowledge and experience contributed to the democratic process.
Another advantage of Group Decision Support Systems, in general, is the ability for each person to speak (through entering opinions via a keypad, or original ideas via a keyboard) anonymously without fear of being politically incorrect or worrying about speaking in opposition to the manager. Contributions could be confidential with the shy on an even plane with the extroverts.
Other dependable DSSs have used the expertise of meteorologists to predict storms, knowledge of cattle managers to give advice on culling herds, or the know-how of environmentalists on managing water resources. No doubt, these systems will be replaced by others as technology advances, and their capabilities and functionality will increase.

4.5 REPOSITORY MODEL
The knowledge management repository, a space to store and retrieve knowledge objects has long been a standard in KM programs. It is a model that emphasizes the creation of quality knowledge content in online repositories with re-use as a goal. Markus, M. [2001] argues that the purpose and content of knowledge records in repositories often differ depending on who needs the documentation: the content producer, similar others, or dissimilar others.
A great deal of effort is required to produce quality content, and, as such, part of the burden of documenting and packaging knowledge objects can be transferred to intermediaries, saving time and energy of the organization’s staff. In addition, adding context is also another aspect of making content more usable. Proposes the roles of human intermediaries in what she terms as “repurposing” of repositories to make them more appropriate for use by others.
Examples of activities that could be performed include abstracting, indexing, authoring, and sanitizing or scrubbing content. Because of the costs involved in repackaging and making repository knowledge content more usable to the knowledge seeker,Markus looks to an expanded role for technological support of core competencies of librarians, archivists, data curators, and other information professionals.

4.6 ACTIVITY-BASED MODELS
While there has been significant work done in terms of Information Systems support for the coordination of work [Winograd,T., 1988], the next logical progression would be to link knowledge production and capture with work processes. For example, Blackler, F. [1995] considers knowledge in organizations as socially distributed collective activity systems, and emphasizes the significance of incoherence and dilemma as the key issues in social systems. Similarly, Engeström, Y. [1999] research, using activity systems as cycles of expansive learning in work practices, also points to the importance of activities as providing the necessary context for grounding organizational knowledge.
Based on such a historical-cultural perspective of activity, Hasan, H. [2003] proposed rudiments of a KM system influenced by activity-based models that would link work activities with people and content. Continued development of the model would focus on the motivation of people to contribute content and the meaningfulness of information and knowledge that can be extracted from the contents of such an activity-based system. Incorporating workflow support with a knowledge repository, Kwan and Balasubramanian [2003] take the notion a step further; they propose the design of a KMsystem they call KnowledgeScope that provides integrated workflow support to capture and retrieve knowledge as an organizational process within the context it is created and used.
They also propose a meta-model knowledge structure called Knowledge-In-Context that specifies relationships among processes. The model was implemented with limited workflow functions at a global telecommunications company.While repositories and workflow support have largely developed with limited integration, designs such as this, grounded in case implementations, provide some empirical validity as to the appropriateness and value of incorporating activity as context for knowledge reuse. This emphasis upon context can be seen as part of the maturation of KM as described above in the discussion of stage IV of KM development.

end chapter 4
source:
Knowledge Management (KM)
Processes in Organizations
Theoretical Foundations and Practice

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar