Learning, as a self-organizing process
requires that the system (personal or organizational learning systems)
“be informationally open, that is, for it to be able to classify
its own interaction with an environment, it must be able to change its
structure…” (p.4). Wiley and Edwards acknowledge the importance
of self-organization as a learning process: “Jacobs argues that
communities self-organize is a manner similar to social insects: instead
of thousands of ants crossing each other’s pheromone trails and
changing their behavior accordingly, thousands of humans pass each other
on the sidewalk and change their behavior accordingly.”. Self-organization
on a personal level is a micro-process of the larger self-organizing knowledge
constructs created within corporate or institutional environments. The
capacity to form connections between sources of information, and thereby
create useful information patterns, is required to learn in our knowledge
economy.