TRANSACTIVE MEMORY SYSTEM PROPOSAL TO FOSTER
COLLABORATIVE LEARNING AND KNOWLEDGE SHARING
INTO ORGANIZATIONS
Arturo Mora-Soto, Maria-Isabel Sanchez-Segura, Fuensanta Medina-Dominguez
and Antonio Amescua
Carlos III University of Madrid, Avenida Universidad 30, Leganes (Madrid), Spain
Keywords: Transactive memory systems, Learning organizations, Knowledge management.
Abstract: Knowledge management on learning organizations is a broad area that still needs more research in order to
offer to organizations a set of methodologies, technologies and strategies that allow them to capitalise their
knowledge. This paper proposes as a solution the development of a transactive memory system to allow
organizations and their members to collectively encode, store, and retrieve knowledge in a smart manner,
where every piece of knowledge could be accessible to all organization members in order to help them to
perform their daily activities, and at the same time to allow organizations to assess the quality of their
knowledge as well as to represent, use and reuse all their know-how towards their organizational and
business goals.
1 INTRODUCTION
It is stated that people is the most important asset
into organizations; every person is important due to
his skills and abilities to perform his daily work,
nevertheless, when a person leaves an organization,
he or she leaves with all his know-how in his brain,
this fact constitutes a big problem for organizations,
the typical productivity cost of an employee leaving
is 85% of their base salary due to the mistakes
committed by his replacement (Yelden & Albers
2004).
The first step for organizations to overcome this
problem is to recognize that organization members
are a great source of knowledge and innovation, the
synergy of all the ideas that come from all the
people across the organizations is fostering the rise
of a new kind of society where knowledge plays an
important role; nevertheless organizations need a
global strategy to improve knowledge management
in order to ensure the accessibility, usability,
learnability and reusability of organizational
knowledge. This global strategy, supported by the
information technologies, must ensure that all the
knowledge generated in organizations could be
accessed, reused and improved in a simple and
usable manner. Moreover, this global strategy must
ensure the maturity of the generated knowledge in
order to foster innovation; also knowledge usage
must be tracked and measured in order to allow
knowledge to become intellectual capital, which is
one of the most valuable assets of organizations
(Paradise 2008), (Strong, Davenport & Prusak
2008), (Argote, McEvily & Reagans 2003), (Ajmal
& Koskinen 2008), (Viedma, 2004).
According to the American association for
Training & Development (Paradise, 2008) the
investment in training and institutional knowledge
management and transference had shown that the
business leaders are aware of the value of
knowledge for their success. In spite of this
recognition, organizations in general, independently
of the sector, are not achieving the desired results
and the advantages expected from the investment in
management and transference of corporative
knowledge (Strong, Davenport & Prusak 2008).
The reasons behind organizations’ problems
managing their learning and knowledge assets are
the following (Jacobson & Prusak 2006), (Cohen
2006), (Paradise 2008), (Strong, Davenport &
Prusak 2008), (Argote, McEvily & Reagans 2003),
(Ajmal & Koskinen 2008), (Fontaine & Lesser
2002): (1) The value of the identification of learning
and knowledge assets to the organization is lower at
the senior and executive levels because people at the
non-executive level spend a lot of time searching
271
Mora-Soto A., Sanchez-Segura M., Medina-Dominguez F. and Amescua A. (2010).
TRANSACTIVE MEMORY SYSTEM PROPOSAL TO FOSTER COLLABORATIVE LEARNING AND KNOWLEDGE SHARING INTO ORGANIZATIONS.
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education, pages 271-276
DOI: 10.5220/0002858802710276
Copyright
c
SciTePress
their information sources through on-line education
or knowledge portals; sometimes this time effort is
not appreciated by the directive level of
organizations, and for this reason they do not value
the possibility of identify organizational knowledge
and learning units as assets. (2) It does not exist an
institutional culture that promotes the share of
knowledge at an interpersonal, inter-group or inter-
department level into organizations. So it is
necessary the definition of procedures and
mechanisms to promote and to encourage
knowledge sharing across organization. (3) The
return of the investment (ROI) in knowledge
management is something not appreciated by
organizations because the use of organizational
knowledge is hard to measure; also there is no
connection between the knowledge used to produce
a product and the strategic goals of the organization.
(4) The organization splits learning and training
courses from their know-how, when both elements
are the two sides of the same coin. The know-how is
not identified as an organization asset and the
material of training courses for the members of the
institution is disconnected from the organization
know-how.
As can be seen problems described above are
beyond e-learning, since they entail not only
learning issues, but also organizational issues related
with the necessity to create a culture of knowledge
management into organizations in order to allow the
assessment of the impact or benefit that knowledge
management has on organizations that are interested
in constitute their intellectual capital.
In order to solve the mentioned problems, a
combination of information technologies and ideas
from different disciplines is needed; the remainder
of this paper will show some of the current solutions
for these problems, as well as the authors’ proposal
to overcome the same problems in a novel way.
2 CURRENT SOLUTIONS TO
SUPPORT ORGANIZATIONAL
KNOWLEDGE
Nowadays there are several research efforts and
technologies that could be used to support
organizational knowledge, nevertheless this section
emphasises those that are most relevant or
recognised. First an analysis of the existent
technological solutions to satisfy the knowledge
transfer and foster transactive memory systems is
presented, later some scientific solutions related with
knowledge management are analysed.
Currently we are immersed in an information
society where new models and paradigms to manage
knowledge are essential (Fundación Telefónica,
2009). In order to overcome this fact, leader
information technology (IT) companies are working
on the development of a set of software tools and
platforms in order to encode, store, and retrieve
knowledge. Following, some of the most relevant
efforts are briefly described below.
Sun Open Learning Center (Sun Microsystems
2009): It offers training courses regarding the tools,
operative systems and programming languages
developed by Sun Microsystems. The training is
done through videos that combine theory, practice
and tests. An outstanding innovation in this learning
offer is the possibility to share acquired knowledge
among users, and to promote self-learning as well as
collective learning through the user communities
that exist in the platform
Microsoft E-Learning (Microsoft Corporation
2009): It is a self-training environment intended to
acquire knowledge and expertise in Microsoft
products and technologies. It offers a set of training
courses that contain theoretical explications,
narrations, videos, tests and games; all of them
intended to empower an effective self-learning
environment. It lacks from a collaborative interface
to interact with other students or instructors.
Cisco Training & Events (Cisco Systems 2009):
This is one of the best offers in learning and
knowledge transfer; it uses a complete set of tools
that foster collaboration and promotes self-training
as well as group-training by combining multimedia
content, collaborative environments and live events
that are broadcasted on the Web. This learning
framework is open to professionals, practitioners and
students all over the world, and is complemented in
some countries by the Cisco Networking Academy,
a common effort between Universities, Governments
and Cisco Systems to create a global education
program.
Oracle University Live Virtual Class (Oracle
2009): This knowledge management offer consists
on a set of videoconference courses where users can
learn directly from the Oracle’s experts. Courses are
taught using a collaborative tool where users can
chat among them, assess their skills in virtual labs
and share applications to facilitate the
communication and sharing of ideas or questions. As
a complement to these courses, Oracle offers a large
knowledge base where users can access additional
education sources to improve their learning. This
CSEDU 2010 - 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education
272
learning framework could be accessed all over the
world.
Besides the technological solutions for
knowledge management described above, there are
several scientific and research efforts that have been
made in order to help society and its institutions to
deal with information and knowledge management,
following some of the most relevant that have some
connection with authors’ proposal are briefly
described.
elearningeuropa.info (European Commission
2009): It is an initiative of the European
Commission’s Directorate-General for Education
and Culture, aiming to promote the use of IT for
lifelong learning; it is focused to promote the use of
multimedia technologies and Internet at the service
of education and training. It offers an open platform
where its users can obtain information, share
experiences, and discuss ideas.
InCaS - Intellectual Capital Statement for
Europe (InCaS Consortium 2009): It is a
collaborative business project between leading
academic institutes, such as London School of
Economics and Political Science, Fraunhofer
Institute and Polytechnic University of Catalonia
(UPC), and a number of SME associations in five
countries working with SME companies. InCaS aims
to develop a way of being able to understand, value
and represent Intellectual Capital for the benefit of
companies internally but also to outside groups such
as the financial community for further and better
exploitation.
e-Learning Research Group at UCM (E-UCM
2009): This research group is part of the Department
of Software Engineering and Artificial Intelligence
at the Complutense University of Madrid. Its
research is focused on developing methods,
techniques and tools to simplify the production and
maintenance of standards-compliant educational
applications and e-learning systems. In this line, the
<e-UCM> group is involved in several projects in
the e-learning arena, where the key aspects are web-
based systems applied to education.
As can be seen, most prominent companies in
the IT area have focused their efforts to transfer
knowledge mainly using e-learning solutions, they
are not addressing at all the necessity of manage the
intellectual capital of organization in a very effective
manner and promote the development of transactive
memory systems. From the technological point of
view, despite the evolution of information
technologies, there are some issues that must be
addressed in order to improve the learning
experience, to encourage knowledge sharing and to
foster intellectual capital management towards the
development of transactive memory systems.
Following is a list of some aspects that could be
improved in the existing technological solutions and
that want to be covered by authors’ proposal:
(1) They lack of learning contents based on
standards, like SCORM (Advanced Distributed
Learning 2009), to make easier their incorporation in
existent e-learning and training environments. (2)
Most of the content is incompatible with the
accessibility rules and policies defined by the World
Wide Web Consortium (2009). (3) The knowledge
units or training contents are static, their knowledge
does not evolve as the organisation does, so that,
feedback from knowledge users is not always taken
into account to improve the learning experience. (4)
Multiplatform or multi-device access is not ensured.
(5) Knowledge presented by the existing
technological solutions is not connected with the
strategic objectives and business goals of the
organization, so that it is not possible to measure the
return of investment on training. This fact could
discourage organizations to invest on knowledge
management initiatives. (6) There are no
connections between the knowledge that people
acquire through training courses and the know-how
of the organizations. This leads to squander the skills
and knowledge that are learned in training or
learning courses when they want to be used at work.
From the scientific point of view, some of the
unsolved issues encountered in the existing solutions
are the following: (1) There is a gap between the
training and learning resources that are used to
transfer knowledge and the know-how of
organizations, despite both are an essential part of
the intellectual capital of institutions. (2) Most of the
organizational knowledge remains as tacit
knowledge; this is another gap that must be covered
in order to allow the creation of an effective strategy
to represent organizational knowledge in order to
transform that knowledge into intellectual capital
and to create a transactive memory system. A
mechanism to encapsulate, store, share and find the
explicit and tacit knowledge of institutions in a
formal and structured is needed. (3) Nowadays most
of the know-how of organizations is inaccessible and
unusable, regardless it is represented in some way.
(4) The investment to provide to institutions a new
culture that promotes the identification of learning
and knowledge assets with the appropriate
technological focus on human assets and their social
relationship is a investment which return of
investment is nowadays intangible.
It can be conclude that current technologies are
so powerful, nevertheless they are still unable to
TRANSACTIVE MEMORY SYSTEM PROPOSAL TO FOSTER COLLABORATIVE LEARNING AND
KNOWLEDGE SHARING INTO ORGANIZATIONS
273
assess the value that knowledge has to institutions;
on the other hand, there several laudable scientific
and research efforts that have proposed interested
solutions, but managing the intellectual capital of
organizations in order to create a transactive
memory system is a broad area that still needs more
research in order to offer to organizations a set of
methodologies, technologies and strategies that
allow them to capitalise their knowledge.
3 PROMISE: TRANSACTIVE
MEMORY SYSTEM PROPOSAL
In order to overcome the issues identified in Section
2, authors propose to create a transactive memory
system (TMS) (Wegner 1987) to allow organizations
and their members to collectively encode, store, and
retrieve knowledge in a smart manner, where every
piece of knowledge could be accessible to all
organization members in order to help them to
perform their daily activities, and at the same time to
allow organizations to assess the quality of their
knowledge as well as to represent, use and reuse all
their know-how towards their organizational and
business goals. Authors’ proposal includes a
methodological and a technological framework, for
the management of knowledge and its effective
practice in organizations with the following features:
(1) Accessible so that the knowledge could be
efficiently recovered. (2) Reusable (usable) so that
the knowledge could be used and reused in project’s
management into the organizations. (3) Learnable
(transferable), it is related with the ability to learn,
and it is dependent on the profile that people play
into organizations and their interest in doing
something. Quantifiable (measurable), so that the
project’s activities that were developed using the
business assets could be related to the strategic goals
of the organization and therefore the value of those
activities could be quantified. These four features
have never been taken into account together and
even quantification of knowledge use is a novel and
very promising approach in order to improve
institutions productivity and innovation.
The key components of authors’ proposal, are
related to:
Information technologies, focusing on: (1)
Software technology to support the
architecture, procedures and methodologies
to be defined along this project. (2)
Software Engineering to define the
processes to be deployed and to elicit tacit
knowledge to be transformed into
knowledge units for the institution.
Knowledge management and organizational
behaviour, focusing on: (1) Knowledge
representation, to have a common
knowledge depiction. (2) Organizational
learning and behaviour, to identify and to
deal with the barriers that could impede that
the knowledge can flow along the
organization levels. (3) Management of
knowledge to transform it into intellectual
capital. (4) Transactive memory systems
that allow the definition of collective
structures to share knowledge.
Authors propose the definition of an architectural
model for knowledge sharing and collaborative
learning driven by levels and roles to ensure the
learnability of knowledge. This model has four
levels:
Level 1: Lifelong Learning Level, which
will ease the access to the explicit
organizational knowledge and will provide
a representation mechanism for tacit
knowledge based on Product Patterns
(Amescua et al, 2006).
Level 2: Operative Level, which will ease
the access to the formative or initial
knowledge as well as the tacit knowledge
of organizations. At this level, knowledge
units will be developed including
experiences and data of real projects.
Level 3: Social Level, which will define the
necessary protocol to share across the
organization all the knowledge gathered
and generated by members when they solve
a problem together. The knowledge defined
by this protocol will be registered as an
institutional asset.
Level 4: Proactive Level, which will define
the strategy to make all the existing
knowledge into the collective
organizational repository, accessible to
everyone in an accurate manner according
to the profile and competences of each
member in the organization.
Authors have also defined three novel methods
to improve learning, coaching and knowledge
quality assessment, in order to deploy the four levels
defined in the PROMISE TMS; these methods
constitute one of the most important contributions of
authors’ proposal. Following is a brief description of
these methods that will allow organizations to share
knowledge and to ease collaborative learning.
Live Learning (Mora-Soto et al, 2009) method
(Figure 1), which entails three main phases: Phase 1
CSEDU 2010 - 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education
274
“Knowledge Live Transferring”, in this phase
knowledge is transmitted through a master class that
could be hold in-person or via videoconference. It is
mandatory to include during the master class real-
world examples where the knowledge that is
transferred to people has been applied in real
projects. In order to ensure the accessibility and
usability of the examples presented in the master
class, they are stored in a standardized format in a
knowledge base that could be accessed through any
e-learning or collaborative platform compatible with
SCORM (Advanced Distributed Learning 2009). In
Phase 2, “Knowledge Live Explanation”, the
strength of knowledge transference is validated; this
phase implies figuring out an example, which
authors named “Live Example”, where the key
concepts previously explained in Phase 1 could be
applied. Instructors and students solve the example
in parallel in order to promote a group-learning
environment where, if there is a question from any
student, the instructor or any student could solve it
immediately. The purpose of the live example
resolution is to promote knowledge assimilation; it
also allows students to have a chance to apply the
explained concepts in order to corroborate by
themselves the validity of what they have learned.
Phase 3, “Collaborative Learning Experience”, is the
most collaborative phase of the proposed method; in
this phase people have the opportunity to experiment
a computer supported collaborative work
environment while solving a problem applying the
case study method. Instructors and students use a
social network as collaborative work platform;
everybody is a user in the social network,
nevertheless they play different roles. Instructors
play as coaches or mentors during the case studies
resolution while students are organized into working
groups to solve the case study.
It is important to note that offered learning
courses and content used in the Live Learning
Method will be connected with the know-how of
organizations. Also this method will ease the access
to the learning courses as well as the sharing of
knowledge regarding recommended best practices
when daily work activities are assigned and
developed.
Live Coaching method, which will provide the
mechanisms to ensure that the learned knowledge is
properly used during its deployment in daily tasks
and will also ensure that any organization member
will be assisted in case some new information
regarding their daily activity is needed.
Live Quality Management method, which will
keep track of the activities performance through
relevant quality indicators, aligned with the
Figure 1: Live Learning Method Phase 3.
strategic objectives of the institution. This method
will use Six Sigma techniques and non-intrusive
information gathering mechanisms.
The most remarkable technological
contributions of authors’ proposal are the following:
(1) Collaborative work platform, which could be
used from any operating system or dispositive,
besides the use of the platform by blind or deaf
people. (2) Enterprise social networks incorporation
using Web 2.0 tools. (3) Implementation of the
methods Live Coaching, Live Learning and Live
Quality Management for their validation in real
environments.
4 PROPOSAL VALIDATION
Right now there are some organizations interested in
this research work such as CIMAT (Center for
Research in Mathematics, Mexico) and the SEI
(Software Engineering Institute, USA); also some
enterprises are interested in the results of this
research work, such as: Tinval (Spain) and Syngular
(Mexico). They are interested in: (1) The PROMISE
architectural model by levels to implement in one of
their processes of software projects management. (2)
The PROMISE strategic models of collaborative
work development. (3) The PROMISE technological
platform that will implement all the mentioned
models and strategies.
In the long term, it could be possible to transfer
the results of this project to other institutions
because the models and theories developed are
intended to be independent of organizational models
or industrial sector.
5 CONCLUSIONS
In this paper authors have wanted to highlight the
TRANSACTIVE MEMORY SYSTEM PROPOSAL TO FOSTER COLLABORATIVE LEARNING AND
KNOWLEDGE SHARING INTO ORGANIZATIONS
275
importance that knowledge has for organizations and
the necessity to create not only knowledge
management tools and frameworks, but also a
transactive memory system that organizations
members could use to collectively encode, store, and
retrieve knowledge to foster collaborative learning.
Authors proposed PROMISE TMS as a transactive
memory system where every piece of knowledge
could be accessible to all organization members in
order to help them to perform their daily activities,
and at the same time to allow organizations to assess
the quality of their knowledge as well as to
represent, use and reuse all their know-how towards
their organizational and business goals. Despite
further work is needed to validate authors’ proposal,
they believe that this multidisciplinary approach
could offer a novel mechanism to help organizations
to constitute their intellectual capital.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was partially funded by the Spanish
Ministry of Industry through project PPT-430000-
2008-54 and the Spanish Ministry of Science and
Technology through the TIN2009-10700 project.
REFERENCES
Advanced Distributed Learning (2009). Home SCORM
[online]. Available from:
http://www.adlnet.gov/Technologies/scorm/ [Accessed
18/12/2009]
Ajmal, M. & Koskinen, K. (2008). Knowledge Transfer in
Project-Based Organizations: An Organizational
Culture. Project Management Journal. 39 (1). p. 7
Amescua, A et al (2006). A pattern-based solution to
bridge the gap between theory and practice in using
process models. In PROSIM 2006, Software Process
Simulation and Modelling Conference. Shanghai,
China, Saturday 20
th
to Sunday 21
th
May 2006.
Argote, L., McEvily, E. & Reagans, R. (2003). Managing
knowledge in organizations: an integrative framework
and review of emerging themes. Management Science.
49 (4). Special Issue on Management Knowledge in
Organizations, Creating, Retaining, and Transferring
knowledge p 571-582.
Cisco Systems (2009). Cisco Training & Events [online].
Available from: http://www.cisco.com/web/learning
[Accessed 12/12/2009]
Cohen, D. (2006). What's Your Return on Knowledge.
Harvard Business Review. (December).
E-UCM (2009). e-Learning Research Group at UCM
[online]. Available from: http://www.e-ucm.es/
[Accessed 12/12/2009]
European Commission (2009). Elearningeuropa.info
[online]. Available from:
http://www.elearningeuropa.info [Accessed
12/12/2009]
Fontaine, M & Lesser, E. (2002). Managing
organizational knowledge [online]. IBM Institute for
Knowledge-Based Organizations. Available from:
http://www-935.ibm.com/services/ph/igs/pdf/g510-
3234-00-esr-managing-organizational-knowledge.pdf
[Accessed 12/12/2009]
Fundación Telefónica (2009). La Sociedad de la
Información en España 2009 [online] Available from:
http://e-libros.fundacion.telefonica.com/sie09/
[Accessed 28/11/2009]
InCaS Consortium (2009). InCaS - Intellectual Capital
Statement for Europe [online]. Available from:
http://www.psych.lse.ac.uk/incas/ [Accessed
12/12/2009]
Jacobson, A. & Prusak, L. (2006). The Cost of Knowledge.
Harvard Business Review. (November).
Microsoft Coporation (2009). Microsoft E-Learning
[online]. Available from:
https://www.microsoftelearning.com [Accessed
12/12/2009]
Mora-Soto, A et al (2008). Collaborative learning
experiences using social networks. In International
Conference on Education and New Learning
Technologies (EDULEARN 2009). Barcelona, Spain,
Monday 6
th
to Wednesday 8
th
July 2009.
Oracle (2009). Oracle University Live Virtual Classroom
[online]. Available from:
http://ww.oracle.com/education [Accessed
12/12/2009]
Paradise, A. (2008). State of the Industry Report. USA:
ASTD (American Association for Training &
Development).
Strong, B., Davenport, T. & Prusak, L. (2008).
Organizational Governance of Knowledge and
Learning. Knowledge and Process Management. 15
(2) p. 150–157.
Sun Microsystems (2009). Sun Open Learning Center
[online]. Available from:
http://www.sun.com/training/solc/ [Accessed
12/12/2009]
Viedma, J. (2004). CICBS: a methodology and a
framework for measuring and managing intellectual
capital of cities. A practical application in the city of
Mataro. Knowledge Management Research &
Practice. (2) p. 13 – 23.
Wegner, D. (1987) Transactive memory: A contemporary
analysis of the group mind. Theories of Group
Nehavior. Springer-Verlag, New York. p. 185–205.
World Wide Web Consortium (2009). Web Accessibility
Initiative (WAI) [online]. Available from:
http://www.w3.org/WAI/ [Accessed 12/12/2009]
Yelden, E. & Albers, J. (2004). The Business Case For
Knowledge Management. Journal of Knowledge
Management Practice [online] (August). Available
from: http://www.tlainc.com/articl69.htm [Accessed
15/12/2009]
CSEDU 2010 - 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education
276