“…Over this time, he has moved from focusing on the dissemination of information and facilitation of the development of critical, analytical, and strategic thinking, to developing students' ability to engage in self-reflection, practical reflexivity, and self-observation to learn from, and through, their lived experience (Eriksen, 2012) in an attempt to strengthen their capacity to be effective relational leaders (Cunliffe & Eriksen, 2011). Consistent with management educators such as Borredon, Deffayet, Baker, and Kolb (2011) in their employment of learning teams to facilitate deep learning, and Innes' (2006) conceptualization of problem-based learning groups, he grew to understand learning and personal development to be a social, as well as a psychological, process and, thus, began to imagine his courses as communities of mutual learning and development. The social aspect of learning emphasizes that each student has a responsibility not only for his or her learning and growth but also a responsibility for-and ability to influence-fellow students' learning and growth (Mesle, 2008).…”