How Do Rocket Scientists Learn?
Rocket scientists, software developers, systems engineers, and all the other people that work at Goddard helping us better understand the earth and space are smart. That’s a given. But how do they improve their practice, learn from each other, and continue to improve on overwhelmingly complex tasks?
In a huge and complex organization such as Goddard, Knowledge Management is usually a core component of organizational learning. I’ve done some work in Knowledge Management in the past, and obsessively read Harvard Business Review articles on the topic, but I was really excited to dig into it in the context of space exploration. I spent a few weeks reading as much as I could on the topic, and was fortunate enough to attend an internal workshop led by the extraordinary Ed Rodgers, head of Knowledge Management at Goddard.
Here’s what I learned.
Knowledge Management at Goddard is About People
NASA creates things that don’t exist yet. Doing that takes incredible talent. At NASA, the talent lies not in its complex technologies, shuttles, spaceships, or intranets, but rather in its people. The products are certainly breathtaking and wondrous, but the success of the things that come out of NASA are a reflection of the knowledge of and collaboration between thousands of brilliant people. This point was really driven home at the Knowledge Management conference I attended…according to one participant:
“we didn’t hire smart people so we could tell them what to do; we hired them to tell us what to do.”
NASA’s work is organized around Missions. When a Mission is stood up people from across the center are brought together to work on the project. In theory, people with similar backgrounds and skills should be interchangeable. That’s where knowledge management comes in – to make sure that anyone from a particular unit that is assigned to a project has all the skills and knowledge developed in that content area within the unit. Each mission should get the knowledge of the whole department when you work with an individual.
The case study ”Goddard Space Flight Center: Building a Learning Organization (B)”[1] summarizes this point really well:
Knowledge Management is “better application of collective knowledge to the individual problem. So we need to develop some systems and do a little more work to share collective knowledge and make us smarter.”
It makes sense then, that Knowledge Management at NASA Goddard is people-centric:
The chart appeared in “The NASA Learning Organization – How NASA Reapplies Its Knowledge for Mission Success” (2009) and describes how Goddard reapplies its knowledge.
Here’s the same chart, broken up another way:
So as an individual trying to learn, I have my own experiences, which I can reflect on and share with others during pause-and-learns, through job rotations, case studies, and lessons learned documents. In turn, I can learn from case studies and lessons learned from other projects, which I can engage with by simply reading about, attending workshops, or engaging with my peers.
Main Takeaway: In some places, Knowledge Management is about creating systems that get around people’s knowledge deficiencies. At Goddard, it really seems like it is about empowering people to share and reflect on what they know best. It’s a subtle distinction, but I really like that they put people in the center of this work, and start from a place of abundant knowledge in people rather than a lack of information in systems.
Social Media Can Enhance Learning (but relationships matter)
The Knowledge Management life-cycle at Goddard seems solid to me; the focus is on the individual’s learning processes, structures, and needs, rather than content management systems, which is already leaps and bounds ahead of the curve, and there are many practices and resources to facilitate the process. Because of that, the system is unique in that is dovetails nicely with a socialized knowledge management system. People are already used to residing within a learning organization, and social software will enhance the on-the-ground process that are already so robust.
Kent Greenes made a presentation at the KM workshop I attended, and strengthened my intuition with an interesting discussion about how social media can interact with Knowledge Management and learning:
The is a very simple chart that goes a long way in explaining how Social Networks can enhance knowledge management and learning.
The important thing to note is that whether you collaborate or simply connect, the strength of your ties will have an impact on what you are able to do. If you really want to be able to get rapid, trustworthy answers or enhance or accelerate results on a project, it will be important to develop those strong ties.
Main Takeaway: Social media has a lot of potential, but you need to think about how to facilitate different kinds of (online and offline) relationships between people so that their thinking is improved, innovation occurs, they can get quick answers to complex problems, in order to enhance and accelerate business outcomes.
Learning in Public is Hard, but Worth It.
One of the great benefits of using social media as a KM tool is that you are creating and capturing the knowledge at the same time. However, in order for this to truly work people have to be willing to collaborate in the open throughout the project lifecycle. “Learning in Public” is scary for many reasons – people can find and cling to outdated information and users are exposing their knowledge during a vulnerable time in the project (i.e. when they don’t yet have all the answers). However, during this part of the process is when learning can be most valuable. If you share what you know and what you don’t know in the middle of a project, you give people an opportunity to share specific knowledge that can help you in the moment. If it works, this can help save time and money.
I haven’t looked into how this happens at Goddard, but at our humble little firm, we are all about learning in public – we developed our business out in the open, are growing out in the open, and are projects are experimental and very public. So far, this philosophy has helped us tremendously.
Main Takeaway: Sometimes learning in public is a difficult process, but the feedback, support, and resultant improvements are worth it.
With that, as always, your comments and thoughts on this post are much appreciated and adored.
Best,
Yasmin
[1] Gerry Yemen and Professor James G. Clawson Darden Business Publishing University of Virginia Daren School Foundation, Charlottesville, VA 2005 Back to post
IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: All opinions and opinion-like ideas in this blog are mine alone and NOT those of NASA or Goddard Space Flight Center or ASRCfederal or ARTS or any other person, agency, or organization. Furthermore, links to websites posted on this blog do not imply endorsement of those websites by NASA, or any other agency or organization listed in this disclaimer. Its just me!



Informative post. What are the specific ways that NASA shares its knowledge, aside from face to face meetings? And do they post the findings from these meetings in a place where others can build upon them?
Thanks for your comment, Ethan! At Goddard, there are several ways that knowledge is physically shared. Check out this link for more specific info about the different tools (technical and non-technical) they use: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/about/organizations/OCKO/about/index.html
This is really great stuff Yasmin – I really liked the table that highlights the differences between weak and strong ties. I think that sometimes in the Web 2.0 world too much focus gets put on the “magic” associated with weak ties and we forget the fundamentals of change (be it organizational, societal, etc.) are rooted in strong ties.
Thanks for your comment, Ryan! Beneath the social media is the social, and we definitely have to remember that. The more I work in this space the more important I am finding it to focus on the core of human behavior – why and how do people interact and work together, and how can you leverage to improve govt? Good to hear from you, and hope you’re well!
Yasmin,
Great post as always. I look forward to reading your report and here’s to hoping that they (Donahue, etc) take some of your words of wisdom. Go byo!
Jon
Yay, thanks so much, Jon!
Did anyone notice that each circle in the Venn diagram has overlap with the other two … but that there is no overlap with all three?
That would mean that there is not one single aspect of our world that exists in all three kinds of knowledge.
Here’s one that I know from experience, and that other people also: Goddard Space Flight Center is in Maryland.
Yasmin, I’d be interested to know the reaction of the KM people at NASA about my assessment that their Venn Diagram needs modification (e.g., something that some people did not know). Would you please invite them to comment here about it?
If anyone feels that I am misunderstanding the diagram, then please let me know here.
vr,
Stephen Buckley
an Engineer from Purdue (“School of Astronauts”)