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[ProfessionalDevelopment] Online Communities of Practice

David Rosen

djrosen at comcast.net
Sun Dec 4 11:09:21 EST 2005


Colleagues,

Robert Kelley, a member of the Massachusetts Adult Basic Education
Distance Learning Advisory Board, posted the message below about
online communities of practice to the Advisory Board's Moodle. With
his permission, I am re-posting it here. Do you participate in an
online CoP? If so, tell us about it. Who organized it? For what
purpose(s)? How does it work? What do you see as its benefits for you
and others? Is this discussion forum a CoP for you? If so, tell us why.

David J. Rosen
djrosen at comcast.net
-----

I have been interested in and am currently working on developing
online communities of practice (CoP's) for teachers and administrators.

CoP's can be defined as small groups of people held together by “a
common sense of purpose and a real need to know what each other
knows... an effective hothouse in which new ideas germinate, new
methods and tools are developed, and new communities are rooted. The
CoP can help professionals gain access to, and facility with, ideas,
methods, content, and colleagues; help novices learn about the
profession through apprenticeship and peripheral participation; and
enable journeymen to become valued resources and community leaders
through informal mentoring and participation in multiple work groups."
[ http://tappedin.org/tappedin/web/papers/2002/TIEvolution.pdf ]

A community of practice is also a ‘community that learns.’ Not merely
peers exchanging ideas around the water cooler, sharing and
benefiting from each other’s expertise, but colleagues committed to
jointly develop better practices.” In the CoP literature, learning is
viewed as a social activity that occurs as newcomers and journeymen
move through an established community’s professional hierarchy toward
expertise.

Learning opportunities occur primarily through informal interaction
among colleagues in the context of work. Newcomers gain access to the
community’s professional knowledge in authentic contexts through
encounters with people, tools, tasks, and social norms. New practices
and technologies are adopted by the CoP through the evolution of
practice over time. Thus, a CoP can be an effective hothouse in which
new ideas germinate, new methods and tools are developed, and new
communities are rooted.

I've listed some papers that explore the theory and practical sides
of CoP's. The first link has research from one of the longest running
projects, called Tapped_In. It's pretty technical but deep into the
paper it discusses the common issues: http://tappedin.org/tappedin/
web/papers/2002/TIEvolution.pdf

Some easier reading includes: http://www.fullcirc.com/community/
communitywhatwhy.htm
http://www.fullcirc.com/community/networkscatalystscommunity.htm

Bob Kelley
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