MSIM Reading Seminar
MSIM Reading Seminar and
Community Books
... the gift that is not used will be lost, while the one that is passed along remains abundant*
Reading together is a gift.
In the MSIM Reading Seminar, you will have an opportunity to read and discuss a text on leadership, organizations, and work in the future, and to participate in a community of readers. You can take the reading seminar for two credits or simply participate, for no credits.
Current Book: Syllabus Download Syllabus | Facilitator Sign-up Links to an external site.
Upcoming and Recent Books
“He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that"
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Spring 2025 Wednesday 5:30 - 7:20 PM Blackwell, A. (2024). Moral Codes: Designing Alternatives to AI. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. [ISBN-13: 978-0-262-54871-7] [About $35.00 at the usual places | UW Library Links to an external site.] Alan Blackwell makes the case that to benefit from artificial intelligence we need to develop better tools, including programming languages. In this reading seminar, we'll read Moral Codes slowly, and explore how tools augment human intellect and expand human creativity. And, we'll gain perspective on the possibilities for artificial intelligence.
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Winter 2025 Tuesday 4:00 - 5:20 PM Kane, G. C., Phillips, A. N., Copulsky, J. R., and Andrus, G. R. (2019). The Technology Fallacy: How People are the Real Key to Digital Transformation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. [ISBN-13: 978-0262039680] [About $20.00 at the usual places | UW Library Links to an external site.] The Technology Fallacy outlines how digital technologies are disrupting organizations of every size and kind. Based on four years of research, the book argues that the “best way to respond to digital disruption is by changing the company culture to be more agile, risk tolerant, and experimental.” In this reading seminar, we will examine this thesis and its consequences for information management. |
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Autumn 2024 Tuesday 4:30 - 6:00 PM Pacific Sinek, Simon. Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action. Penguin Books, New York, 2011. [ISBN-13: 978-1591846444] [About $15.00 at the usual places | UW Library Links to an external site.] Simon Sinek offers a framework for leadership: why-how-what. In this reading seminar, we’ll explore Sinek’s framework and how his influential ideas about leadership might be taken up and used. You may or may not find them influential - in either case you develop your own position and your own insights. |
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Summer 2024 (A Term) Tuesday 4:00 – 5:20 PM Pacific Pinker, Steven. Enlightenment now: The case for reason, science, humanism, and progress. New York, NY: Penguin Books, 2018. [ISBN 978-0143111382] [About $15.00 at the usual places | UW Library] Links to an external site. Steven Pinker gives an optimistic view of the future. He does so by following the data and making commitments to rationality, to human flourishing, and to progress. He asks us to dare to understand. In this reading seminar, we’ll explore the ideals of the Enlightenment for our age and how they relate to “data-driven, socially conscious information leaders.” |
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Spring 2024 Tuesday 4:00 – 5:20 PM Pacific - OR - Thursday 4:00 – 5:20 PM Pacific David Hendry (dhendry@uw.edu) Graeber, D. (2018). Bullshit Jobs: A Theory. New York: Simon & Schuster. [ISBN: 978-1-5011-4331-1] [About $15.00 at the usual places | UW Library Links to an external site.] While the book title is annoying, the topic is serious, and of huge importance to organizations and society at large. Simply put, organizations and bureaucracies frequently create jobs that are a waste of time; jobs that are not socially valuable; jobs that undermine our human capacities to be creative, to be in meaningful connection with each other, and to learn and grow. Perhaps not all organizations create BS jobs, but according to Graeber, many do. What are pointless jobs? Why do they exist? What harms do they cause? What can we do about organizational BS? David Graeber – known as a provocative, original, and influential thinker – was an anthropologist who asked these questions and more. The resulting book, an international best seller, will have insights into how we can be socially conscious leaders as we strive to develop our capacities to design good organizations, good strategy, and good information tools. We are likely to find important implications for our use of Artificial Intelligence and for designing businesses processes that automate human decision-making. Most of all, we will explore the idea of meaningful work and how we value our work and the work of others.
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Winter 2024 Thursday 4:00 – 5:20 PM Pacific Brown, B. (2018). Dare to Lead: Brave Work. Tough Conversations. Whole Hearts. New York: Random House. [ISBN-13: 978-0399592522] [About $15.00 at the usual places] "A leader is anyone who takes responsibility for finding the potential in people and processes and has the courage to develop that potential." In this reading seminar, we will examine this influential view of leadership, and explore how we can develop our leadership skills each and every day. For an introduction to the author, Brené Brown, see Dare to Lead Hub Links to an external site..
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Notes:
- "... the gift that is not used will be lost, while the one that is passed along remains abundant...." Quotation is from The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World, by Lewis Hyde, 1983, p. 26.
- “He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that." Quotation from John Stuart Mill (1806–73), quoted in Steven Pinker, Enlightenment Now. New York: Basic Books, 2018, 373; see also John Stuart Mill Links to an external site., Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Image credit, showing a reading group, in Nature: Washington Post Links to an external site.