TY - JOUR
T1 - QUESTIONING UNQUESTIONED HABITS OF MIND
T2 - HOW EXECUTIVES LEARN NEW APPROACHES TO FAMILIAR SITUATIONS THROUGH TRANSFORMATIVE LEARNING
AU - Kim, Najung
AU - Kang, Seung Wan
AU - Kim, Sang Joon
AU - Park, Hun Joon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Academy of Management Learning & Education.
PY - 2023/9
Y1 - 2023/9
N2 - This study explores how affective and cognitive experiences in an executive MBA (EMBA) course facilitate executives' transformative learning. Using data collected from in-depth interviews with 35 executive learners who took a transformative learningoriented course, we found four affective experiences-feeling respected, safe, excited, and energized-interacting with two cognitive processes-self-learning and peer learning- culminating in transformation-inducingmomentum. Thismomentuminvolved cognitively realizing the limits of their habit ofmind and feeling ashamed by its limits yet feeling courageous about transforming it. The theoretical model derived from this inductive study demonstrates howexecutives can resolve the dilemma of transforming their habits of mind when an educator provides an arena in which they can learn about others' varying habits of mind, critically reflect on their own habit of mind, and develop the shame and courage to challenge it. Executives who reached this transformation-inducing momentum interpreted familiar situations with a different habit of mind or enacted a new habit of mind. The findings on the interplay of cognitive and affective experiences leading to these accomplishments of transformative learning contribute to management learning and education literature by illuminating the role of affect in the transformative-learning building process.
AB - This study explores how affective and cognitive experiences in an executive MBA (EMBA) course facilitate executives' transformative learning. Using data collected from in-depth interviews with 35 executive learners who took a transformative learningoriented course, we found four affective experiences-feeling respected, safe, excited, and energized-interacting with two cognitive processes-self-learning and peer learning- culminating in transformation-inducingmomentum. Thismomentuminvolved cognitively realizing the limits of their habit ofmind and feeling ashamed by its limits yet feeling courageous about transforming it. The theoretical model derived from this inductive study demonstrates howexecutives can resolve the dilemma of transforming their habits of mind when an educator provides an arena in which they can learn about others' varying habits of mind, critically reflect on their own habit of mind, and develop the shame and courage to challenge it. Executives who reached this transformation-inducing momentum interpreted familiar situations with a different habit of mind or enacted a new habit of mind. The findings on the interplay of cognitive and affective experiences leading to these accomplishments of transformative learning contribute to management learning and education literature by illuminating the role of affect in the transformative-learning building process.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85174243947&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5465/amle.2021.0035
DO - 10.5465/amle.2021.0035
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85174243947
SN - 1537-260X
VL - 22
SP - 481
EP - 506
JO - Academy of Management Learning and Education
JF - Academy of Management Learning and Education
IS - 3
ER -