Title: Prsentation PowerPoint
1Communities of Practice Social Structures for
the Development of Knowledge France Henri, Ph.
D. LICEF Research Center Télé-université
Université du Québec à Montréal
PALETTES Kick off Meeting Lausanne, March 13-15
2006
2Presentation Outline
- Concept of Virtual Community
- 4 Types of Communities
- Importance of CoPs within Organizations
- CoP Model (Wenger, Mc Dermott Snyder, 2002)
- Design and Life Cycle of a CoP
3Virtual Community
- An Emerging Concept
- a virtual group that communicates via Internet
- a structured social network driven by common
goals that shares a cyberspace - a cyberspace with common areas where community
life and interactions occur - a cyberspace settlement involving community
activities, artefacts, individual creations,
common realizations, etc.
4Virtual Community
- Grasping its Activity
- Three Basic Proposals from Wengers Social
Learning Theory (1998) - Community activities are described in terms of
participation, socialisation and development of
identity - Learning and Doing form a unique concept
members participation triggers learning and
understanding - Learning is the process of participating,
negotiating meaning and constructing ones
identity
5Types of Virtual Communities
- Communities carry out distinct activities and
select various modes of participation which
result in different types of learning - Virtual communities are defined according to
- their goal (initial intention)
- their level of unity (strength of the social
link) - the evolution of goals and modes of association
over time
6Types of Virtual Communities
Group
Community of Practice
Community of Learners
Strenght of the Social Link
Intelligent Community of Interest
Community of Interest
Gathering
Intentionality and Goal
Various Types of Virtual Communities According to
their Emerging Context
7Types of Virtual Communities
- Although all virtual communities target a certain
type of learning, they cannot be amalgamated - The activities, the modes of participation, the
types of production and consequently, the
learning itself, differ from one virtual
communities to another
8Importance of CoPs within Organizations
- CoPs are an essential ingredient for success in
the knowledge economy - They can help deal with rapid changes
- They can be responsible for knowledge development
and sharing and managing the knowledge produced
by workers - Known to produce knowledge, they are part of the
strategy to gain productivity - They are a source of motivation for the workforce
by making them responsible for developing
practical and instantly applicable knowledge
9Importance of CoPs within Organizations
- CoPs are an essential ingredient for success in
the knowledge economy - They could be considered as an economical
solution that banks on cooperation and
collaboration - costs reduction for support and immersion of new
employees - promote self-learning through participation
- Traditional training seems obsolete it is no
longer considered a means to produce context
adapted knowledge
10CoP Model a Social Structure for Knowledge
- Three basic components
- a domain
- a community
- a shared practice
11CoP Model a Social Structure for Knowledge
- The Domain of Knowledge
- The CoP domain differs from the field/profession
- It addresses a series of issues, challenges and
problems encountered in the field by a community
who decides to tackle such elements - It is the focus and raison dêtre of the
community it defines its identity - The domain evolves over the life span of the
community in response to new, emerging challenges
and issues
12CoP Model a Social Structure for Knowledge
- The Community
- Group of people who care about their domain and
fell concerned by issues they face - Participation is voluntary and takes various
forms depending on members level of interest a
desire... - for the domain to develop and to contribute
- to interact with peers to share what they feel is
important about it - to make a significant contribution knowing that
it will be appreciated - to simply expand their knowledge by learning
about the practice
13CoP Model a Social Structure for Knowledge
- The Community
- Is bounded by relationships based on reciprocity,
confidence and flexibility - Its members can manage conflicts and turn them
into productive events - It could be of various size
14CoP Model a Social Structure for Knowledge
15CoP Model a Social Structure for Knowledge
- A Shared Practice
- is developed by the members of the community in
order to increase day-to-day efficiency - includes
- the history of the community the knowledge it
has developed - a set of socially selected methods and common
approaches to carry out the activities of a
specific domain - common standards to direct actions,
communication, problem-solving, performance and
responsibilities
16CoP Model a Social Structure for Knowledge
- A shared practice includes
- a corpus of various types of empirical,
theoretical and procedural knowledge, both
explicit and tacit - a framework of references, models, principles
- acquired knowledge, best practices, heuristics
- Tools, documents and other artefacts that reflect
knowledge - Not all practices are shared and produce a CoP
- Communities and practice are linked to a specific
type of social structure which is driven by
specific goals and purposes
17Types of CoPs
- Strategic vs Spontaneous Communities
- Strategic types according to purposes
- help and assistance communities
- communities of best practices
- communities dedicated to knowledge management and
knowledge-stewarding - communities of innovation
18CoP Design
- Design
- to spark interest not to create a rigid
structure - to allow the community to express its
personality, energy and main purpose - The Community Design Paradox
- design is used to anticipate, plan and organize
- design fails to anticipate and plan natural,
spontaneous or self-directed components - Rather than focus on planning every single
detail, design must strive to stimulate active
participation
19Life Cycle of a CoP
- Life Cycle of a CoP a Five-Step Process
- Potential
- Coalescing
- Collective maturing
- Stewardship
- Transformation or death
20Life Cycle of a CoP
- Step 1 Community Potential
- Initial design align important issues in terms
of who? what? value? roles? output? - Determine the scope of the domain
- Identify common needs of knowledge
- Determine the purpose of the CoP help, exemplary
practices, intendancy, knowledge management,
innovation - Select coordinator and leaders
- Interview potential members
21Life Cycle of a CoP
- Step 2 Coalescing
- Establish the value of sharing knowledge about
the domain - Identify practice knowledge to be shared and how
it will be done - Develop confidence and strengthen relationships
between members - Create links among core members at this point,
this is more important than developing peripheral
participation
22Life Cycle of a CoP
- Step 3 Collective Maturing
- The community defines its role in the
organization and its relationships with other
domains - It is no longer simply a network of professional
friends - It must manage its growth and ensure that it is
not distracted from its purpose - Must remain up-to-date and address real issues
(bureaucratization hazard)
23Life Cycle of a CoP
- Step 3 Collective Maturing
- Measure and manage creation of value
- Manage the knowledge system
- collect anecdotes document, share and broadcast
knowledge - Develop and provide community support
- allocate time to participate actively, ex. trips
to meet members and attend events - develop financial model funding for projects and
infrastructure
24Life Cycle of a CoP
- Step 4 Stewardship
- Respond to the challenge of survival
- Overcome a lack of energy
- Avoid closing and stagnation in a well
established field - Monitor resourcing
- Recruit new members, a new core
- Develop new leadership
25Life Cycle of a CoP
- Step 5 Transformation or Death
- Risks
- loss of energy
- community becomes a social club
- members migrate to other communities
- institutionalization of the community
- Redefine, update, transform, keep up
- or die!
26Summary
- Emerging Conditions
- A core
- Leading, coordinating
- Consult members to determine CoP purpose
- Legitimate, relevant, creation of value
- awareness of CoP input and output
- A community design that fits its size
- Programmed activities and events
- Provide support time and means