Keeping track of memory, forgetting and learning in communities of practice
Context: In June 2002, twenty-five people who at some stage had met online in the Foundations of Communities of Practice Workshop gathered at a beautiful location in Portugal with a loose agenda to share their work, ideas and practices about communities of practice. Many of the conversations that took place led to some long-term relationships, collective learning agendas and new practices. One of the practices that developed out of this Setúbal Dialogue was immediate reporting on some of the results of the dialogue to a wider audience of people (although we did not formally publish anything) at a local conference. Two other practices following this one have been: first, to organize small, informal meetings of CPsquare members and friends adjoining large conferences and, second, to explore and extend the idea of a face-to-face workshop with an online set-up and follow-on open both to members who could attend the conference workshop and some who could not. These events include a workshop on “Phase change” at the Communities and Technologies (C&T) conference in Amsterdam in 2003 and a workshop on “Context and the role of narrative” at the C&T conference in Milan in 2005.
In October 2006 with an agenda that we will negotiate online and a culture of sharing ideas, work practices and living arrangements we are holding a Dialogue at a beautiful location in Florence. “The Prato[1] Dialog” will take place a few days before the “Prato Conference” that is organised by the Community Informatics Research Network (http://www.ccnr.net/?q=taxonomy/term/50). “Communities, Memories and Technologies” is the theme of the Prato Conference and our Dialogue will harness this theme and develop some of the threads of our inquiry to participants in a workshop during the Prato Conference. All those who participate in the Prato Dialogue are invited to help present the workshop at the Prato Conference.
For many of us, where a social perspective on learning is the subject and the means of inquiry and the rallying point that brings us together these events are works of love. They are produced in moments stolen from our jobs, families and friends. We often find ourselves swimming between disciplinary and professional boundaries trying to articulate more clearly what we do, and looking for ways to justify, legitimize and finance our way to learning and improving our practice. At this Dialogue we want to make these stolen moments an open and discussable subject of inquiry – part of our community memory as we join ideas and forces for making such events a sustainable part of our repertoire of practice, and our gift to the world.
When: late afternoon of Thursday October 5th through lunch on Sunday October 8th, 2006
Where: in or near Florence, Italy. Although we have reserved accommodation similar to those that will be used for the CIRN Conference, we’re considering alternatives along the lines of http://www.casanuova.info/ or http://www.fattoriadimigliarino.it/ . We are still looking for a venue and need your help.
Why: meeting with peers is part of practicing our craft. We want to create an opportunity to reflect on our own work and on the work of others. We want to pursue specific lines of questions, enjoy the community & face-to-face meeting as a source of inspiration for our work.
Who: we are inviting people who are interested in reflecting on theory and on practice. Initially it will be launched by Beverly Trayner, Patricia Arnold and John D. Smith. We are explicitly working on involving others in shaping the event and leading it. In fact, each participant is expected to play a role in producing the dialog.
Cost: we are aiming for a self-organizing event where costs are covered but none of the organizers make money from the event. We anticipate that the cost of infrastructure, organization, possible guest speakers, and outings will be covered by registration fees.
The big question:
We will choose one ‘reference case’ that we will attend to as our thinking progresses during the Dialog.
Initial questions about domain:
Initial questions about practice:
Initial questions about community:
· Who is here? Who is not here? Why?
· What does that say about how we’ve spoken about our learning in previous interactions? What relationships have we sustained and what relationships have fallen away? Is there tolerance of the ambiguity of being a peripheral participant?
Included in the event:
Leads to:
What we still need:
Discussion: In our study and leadership of communities of practice, we naturally focus on what is memorable: the beautiful, the good, and the positive. But our critics score the word “community” as too romantic and inherently carrying an overoptimistic view. The power of communities of practice also includes a rather darker side that supports forgetting, unlearning, denial and not-knowing. Even at their most positive, communities of practice play a critical role in UN-learning old practices and views of the world; mal-practitioners are taught or shunned.
Communities of practice include a whole range of subtle social and intellectual manoeuvres, including:
We look forward to hearing from you by March 1, 2006…
and wish you inspiring days over the holidays and a good start in 2006!
Beverly, John and Patricia
[1] Prato is a small town near Florence.
"Weaving Together Online and Face-To-Face Learning: A Design From A Communities Of Practice Perspective" by John D. Smith and Beverly Trayner come out of our collaboration in and around CPsquare and was presented at the AACE E-Learn 2005 Conference in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Abstract: Weaving together online and face-to-face learning improves the quality of working in both media. Based on the observations of nine different experiments that went through a similar process of weaving together these two media we share our observations of outcomes and an evolving design framework from a community of practice perspective. Arguing that weaving participation using different media in succession is different from blended or hybrid learning, we suggest that careful design of an online ramp-up can make a face-to-face event more potent, and the subsequent online collaboration more productive. Key elements of this design process are inclusion, interaction, and social structure designed for the negotiation of meaning. We offer heuristics that help trace the threads from first online contact to the development of productive relationships at later phases in an emerging community of practice.
Download the paper