Article ID: | iaor20042235 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 34 |
Issue: | 2 |
Start Page Number: | 351 |
End Page Number: | 384 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2003 |
Journal: | Decision Sciences |
Authors: | Janz Brian D., Prasarnphanich Pattarawan |
Keywords: | learning, organization, information theory, knowledge management |
Within the context of knowledge management, little research has been conducted that identifies the antecedents of a knowledge-centered culture – those organizational qualities that encourage knowledge creation and dissemination. In this study, the existing literature on organizational climate, job characteristics, and organizational learning (in the form of cooperative learning theory) are linked with the current thinking and research findings related to knowledge management to develop a theoretical model explaining the relationships among organizational climate, the level of cooperative learning that takes place between knowledge workers, and the resulting level of knowledge created and disseminated as measured by team performance and individual satisfaction levels. The study goes on to empirically test the proposed research model by investigating the climate of organizations, and seeks to understand the linkage between a set of organizational and individual characteristics and knowledge-related activities found in cooperative learning groups and the resulting work outcomes. The hypothesized research model is tested using LISREL with data collected from 203 information systems (IS) professionals engaged in systems development activities. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications the results have for future research and managerial practice.