A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.

Knowledge sharing is an essential element of organisational learning, knowledge creation, and knowledge management. It prevents the reinvention of the wheel in the organisation, ensures the spread of best practices throughout the organisation, and avails private knowledge to the problem-solving pro...

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Main Author: Lee, Chu Keong.
Other Authors: Foo, Schubert Shou Boon
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2008
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14258
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-142582019-12-10T13:41:37Z A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing. Lee, Chu Keong. Foo, Schubert Shou Boon Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Library and information science::Knowledge management Knowledge sharing is an essential element of organisational learning, knowledge creation, and knowledge management. It prevents the reinvention of the wheel in the organisation, ensures the spread of best practices throughout the organisation, and avails private knowledge to the problem-solving process. Unfortunately, knowledge sharing is often problematic, and has been labeled as “unnatural acts”. Research so far has surfaced two main conclusions about knowledge and people. First, knowledge is sticky in that it is stubbornly immobile, and transferring it from one person to another is often difficult and slow. Second, people are generally stubborn, refusing to share their knowledge, preferring to rely on it as their power base (the “knowledge is power” syndrome) and refusing to use knowledge that they did not create themselves (the “not invented here” syndrome). In this research, an in-depth case study was carried out to develop a grounded theory for voluntary and informal knowledge sharing (VIKS) in an academic context. VIKS is a specific type of knowledge sharing characterised by serendipity (VIKS occurs without pre-planning), spontaneity (participation in VIKS is one’s choice), and extemporaneousness (participation in VIKS is unrehearsed). As such, VIKS is a narrower and more focused form of knowledge sharing. Data were elicited through semi-structured interviews with twenty-four academics from the College of Engineering at the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. The respondents were selected from seven categories of academics, namely, non-tenured academics, academics without PhD, academics who teach ancillary subjects, female academics, newly hired academics, academics who pursued their doctoral studies in a language other than English, and academics holding administrative positions. The data were transcribed, and analysed using the coding procedures prescribed by the grounded theory methodology. Doctor of Philosophy (SCI) 2008-11-12T01:55:19Z 2008-11-12T01:55:19Z 2008 2008 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14258 en 333 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Library and information science::Knowledge management
spellingShingle DRNTU::Library and information science::Knowledge management
Lee, Chu Keong.
A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.
description Knowledge sharing is an essential element of organisational learning, knowledge creation, and knowledge management. It prevents the reinvention of the wheel in the organisation, ensures the spread of best practices throughout the organisation, and avails private knowledge to the problem-solving process. Unfortunately, knowledge sharing is often problematic, and has been labeled as “unnatural acts”. Research so far has surfaced two main conclusions about knowledge and people. First, knowledge is sticky in that it is stubbornly immobile, and transferring it from one person to another is often difficult and slow. Second, people are generally stubborn, refusing to share their knowledge, preferring to rely on it as their power base (the “knowledge is power” syndrome) and refusing to use knowledge that they did not create themselves (the “not invented here” syndrome). In this research, an in-depth case study was carried out to develop a grounded theory for voluntary and informal knowledge sharing (VIKS) in an academic context. VIKS is a specific type of knowledge sharing characterised by serendipity (VIKS occurs without pre-planning), spontaneity (participation in VIKS is one’s choice), and extemporaneousness (participation in VIKS is unrehearsed). As such, VIKS is a narrower and more focused form of knowledge sharing. Data were elicited through semi-structured interviews with twenty-four academics from the College of Engineering at the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. The respondents were selected from seven categories of academics, namely, non-tenured academics, academics without PhD, academics who teach ancillary subjects, female academics, newly hired academics, academics who pursued their doctoral studies in a language other than English, and academics holding administrative positions. The data were transcribed, and analysed using the coding procedures prescribed by the grounded theory methodology.
author2 Foo, Schubert Shou Boon
author_facet Foo, Schubert Shou Boon
Lee, Chu Keong.
format Theses and Dissertations
author Lee, Chu Keong.
author_sort Lee, Chu Keong.
title A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.
title_short A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.
title_full A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.
title_fullStr A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.
title_full_unstemmed A grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.
title_sort grounded theory of voluntary and informal knowledge sharing.
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14258
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