1 / 11

Palette Summer school: on the idea of communities of practice

Explore the concept of communities of practice and the role of practice in learning. Understand the different types of knowledge resources produced through practice and the informal nature of learning. Discover alternative perspectives from scholars like Wenger and Giddens. Delve into the concept of reification and the different forms of knowledge described by Blackler. Learn about different learning contexts and the distinction between informal and formal learning in the workplace.

ccasandra
Download Presentation

Palette Summer school: on the idea of communities of practice

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Palette Summer school: on the idea of communities of practice Murray Saunders

  2. Theoretical overview: communities of practice • Learning in work is produced through practices • A workplace can be understood as an activity system or a community of practice • Practice produces different types of knowledge resource • Learning processes are often ‘informal’ Learning takes place in different contexts

  3. Alternative perspectives 2: Wenger “A concept of practice includes both the explicit and the tacit. It includes what is said and what is left unsaid; what is represented and what is assumed. It includes the language, tools, documents, images, symbols, well defined roles, specified criteria, codified procedures, regulations, and contracts that various practices make explicit for a variety of purposes. But it also includes all the implicit relations, tacit conventions, subtle cues, untold rules of thumb, recognizable intuitions, specific perceptions, well tuned sensitivities, embodied understandings, underlying assumptions and shared world views.” [p47Wenger 1999]

  4. Wenger on ‘practice’ • “ The concept of practice connotes doing, but not just doing in and of itself. It is doing in a historical and social context that gives structure and meaning to what we do. In this sense, practice is always social practice” [Wenger 99, p 47]

  5. Alternative perspectives 1: Giddens on ‘practice’ • Informal learning often occurs through practice or learning about a practice. Practice is at the heart of informal learning • Giddens’ notion of the practical refers to behaviour which is recurrent or routine i.e. happens on a day to day basis and is rooted in the normal routine of daily life. Therefore a ‘practice’ is a way of doing something, the pattern of which is reproduced in a social context [i.e. work] according to certain rules. • A practice is recurrent or routine, rule governed behaviour • Can we say that the ‘rules’ constitute the knowledge base of informal learning in communities of practice?

  6. Reification!!! Important concept because it refers to when a practice becomes a system, a procedure or even a standard: “the process of giving form to our experience by producing objects that congeal this experience into ‘thingness’” [Wenger p58].

  7. Blackler’s images of work-based knowledge • Embrained knowledge [dependent on conceptual skills and cognitive abilities] • Embodied knowledge [action oriented likely to be only partly explicit, mostly tacit, ‘the way we do things here’] • Encultured knowledge [refers to the process of achieving shared understandings through language, socialisation acculturation, socially constructed and negotiable] • Embedded knowledge [resides in systemic routines {reification of practice} relationships between technologies, roles, formal procedures and emergent routines] • Encoded knowledge [information conveyed by signs and symbols, traditional forms {hard copy} and emergent forms {electronic}

  8. Knowledge descriptors [Blackler] • Mediated [activity systems] • Situated [Wenger] • Provisional • Pragmatic • Contested

  9. Learning contexts • Immediate Informal learning needs requiring short term solutions mainly embedded in day to day practices [what kinds of knowledge resources required?] • Project Learning needs medium term, structured, requiring formal procedural knowledge based resources, outcomes represented in written form [what kind of knowledge resources required?] • Validated Learning is formal, structured, validated by external authority and qualified [what kinds of knowledge resources?] • Organic Learning needs are diffused, changing, defined by a community of practice, loosely organised groups, organised at a distance

  10. Learning in the workplace as informal or non formal learning? • Happens everywhere • Happens any time • Outside a prescribed framework • Rarely an organised event or package • Can use all kinds of different people as a learning resource • Is undertaken ‘socially naturally’ and is not usually accredited • Usually is open ended without the specification of learning outcomes apart from learning intentions • Can be quite close to the idea of ‘socialisation’ [see Eraut in Coffield [2000]

  11. Learning through work in a community of practice Practice clusters as routine recurrent, rule governed behaviours New members access practices through informal learning processes Evolving practice creates new rules as knowledge resources Accessing and producing knowledge resources through practice

More Related