Building the Learning Community

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Building the Learning Community

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Experience in Domain. Shared Knowledge. Shared Knowing. Time. Critical Mass. Emerging User-need ... Knowledge Networks and Communities of Practice. Learning as ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building the Learning Community


1
Building the Learning Community
  • The Power of Online Learning
  • November 17, 2005

Lawrence C. Ragan Steven Tello
2
Program Agenda
  • Introductions
  • Key Concepts
  • Balancing Expectations
  • Learning Communities
  • Community of Practice
  • Community Context
  • Community Building Strategies

3
Introductions
  • Session presenters and participants
  • Who, where
  • Show of hands--experience levels??

4
Program Description
  • Provide participants with the opportunity to
    share ideas and experiences on how to build
    learning communities within the teaching and
    learning process. Discussion will focus on how
    individual experiences can contribute to
    development of principles and standards of
    practice

5
Formal
Informal
Degree of Structure
6
Learning Communities What are they?
  • Groups of people engaged in intellectual
    interaction for the purpose of learning Cross,
    1998
  • A relatively small group that may include
    students, teachers, administrators and others who
    have a clear sense of membership, common goals
    and opportunity for extensive face-to-face
    interaction. Baker, 1999
  • a kind of co-registration or block scheduling
    that enables students to take courses together.
    Tinto, 1998
  • A group of people organized around common goals
    and purpose and committed to learning with and
    from each other.
  • Shared Knowledge Shared Knowing

7
Student Learning Communities
  • SLC examined in depth on FTF Campus environment
  • Formed primarily around course sequences or
    programs of study
  • Benefits include
  • Increased depth of learning
  • Improved persistence/retention
  • Promote collaborative learning techniques
  • Extend learning beyond classroom
  • Expand student support circle

8
Student Learning Communities
  • Paired/Clustered Courses
  • 2 - 4 individual courses, clustered around a
    theme
  • Typically includes writing course and seminar
  • Often oriented toward freshman
  • Large Course Cohorts (Freshman Interest Groups)
  • Large lecture paired with smaller
    recitation/discussion
  • Often include writing course FIG seminar
  • Team-Taught Programs
  • Interdisciplinary teams with curricular focus
  • Semester to Year duration
  • Residence-Based Program
  • Organize student cohorts, grouped around
    curriculum purpose
  • Activities sometimes courses within residence
    halls.

9
SLC Examples - Syracuse U.
http//lc.syr.edu
10
Syracuse U. - Management Learning Community
  • Freshman program for Management majors
  • Three courses
  • Intro. to Management
  • Intro. to Writing
  • Learning Community Seminar
  • Common floor in residence hall
  • Team projects activities
  • Academic
  • Team building

11
UMA-Commonwealth College
http//www.comcol.umass.edu/
12
UMA-Commonwealth College
  • UMass Amherst Honors College
  • Focus on
  • Academic Achievement
  • Service Learning
  • Freshman Social Network
  • Honors floor in several residence halls, grouped
    by major interests
  • Open to range of majors

13
Learning Community Pedagogy
  • Laufgraben Tompkins, 2004 Finkel,2000

14
Impact for Non-student Groups
  • while we are willing to recognize the importance
    of shared learning among our students, we
    sometimes fail to recognize the need to become
    shared learners as well. Tinto
  • Learning communities can serve as a Change Force
    on campuses, challenging established academic and
    administrative policies and procedures.
  • Is this beginning to sound familiar?

15
Faculty Learning Communities
  • A faculty learning community (FLC) is a
    cross-disciplinary faculty and staff group of
    size 6-15 (8 to 12 is the recommended size)
    engaging in an active, collaborative, yearlong
    program with a curriculum about enhancing
    teaching and learning and with frequent seminars
    and activities that provide learning,
    development, interdisciplinarity, the scholarship
    of teaching and learning, and community building.
    Milton D. Cox

http//www.units.muohio.edu/flc/
16
Types of FLC (Cox)
  • Context or topic-based
  • Address a special campus teaching and learning
    need, issue, or opportunity
  • Designed to address special academic interests or
    common interests.
  • Teaching Portfolio Development, Integrating
    Technology into the Case Method, Integrating Arts
    the Curriculum
  • Cohort-based
  • Address the teaching, learning, and developmental
    needs of an important cohort of faculty or staff
    .
  • Designed to address a broad range of issues
    affecting their situation.
  • Graduate Faculty Circle or Senior Faculty Fellows

17
Miami University of Ohio
http//www.units.muohio.edu/celt/flcs/index.php
18
Miami University of Ohio
  • 96 Faculty Learning Communities since 1979
  • Hesburgh Award for faculty development
  • Competitive participation process, often includes
    stipend
  • Guides policy and practice

19
Western Carolina University
http//www.wcu.edu/sotl/faclearncom.html
20
Characteristics of Learning Communities (Cox)
  • Safety and Trust
  • Openness
  • Respect members feel valued respected
  • Responsiveness engendered/moderated by
    facilitator
  • Collaboration- in both creation consultation
  • Relevance relationship to participants academic
    life
  • Challenge high expectations for quality of
    outcomes
  • Enjoyment - activities must include social
    opportunities
  • Esprit de Corps - Sharing individual and
    community outcomes with colleagues
  • Empowerment - A sense that activity is focused
    around a crucial element and a desired outcome

21
Activity Learning Community Contexts
  • In groups, please identify a learning community
    familiar to you and your collaborators. Select
    one among the group and then identify
  • Type of Learning Community
  • Context (institution, program, purpose)
  • Characteristics
  • Can you identify other types of LCs?

22
Table Discussion
  • Examples of Learning Communities
  • Table 1--faculty LCs--discussion of challenges
    (time, motivation, accessibility, ease of use,
    priority management, recognition, credit)
  • Table 2--Virtual Faculty LC--
  • Table 3--concerned about the assessment of the
    process rather than the outcomes

23
Community of Practice (CoP)
  • Communities of practice develop around things
    that matter to people.
  • E. Wenger

24
Background
  • CoPs have been around as a field of study for a
    long time
  • Corporate/business has recognized and valued CoPS
    as a nature of managing within an increasingly
    complex and information driven environment
  • IBM Global Services experience
  • Knowledge Networks and Communities of Practice
  • Learning as a Social System
  • Collective learning and collective memory
  • Communispace.com, Participate.com, Tomoyne.com,
    SharePoint
  • Overlap with field of education (Passmore
    example self-organizing groups)

25
Community of Practice
  • Communities of practice (CoP) are groups of
    people who share a concern or a passion for
    something they do and learn how to do it better
    as they interact regularly.
  • Etienne (ATN) Wenger and others

26
Three Essential Elements
  • The domain
  • (A CoP) has an identity defined by a shared
    domain of interest. Membership therefore implies
    a commitment to the domain, and therefore a
    shared competence that distinguishes members from
    other people.

27
Three Essential Elements
  • The practice
  • Members of a CoP develop a shared repertoire of
    resources experiences, stories, tools, ways of
    addressing recurring problemsin short a shared
    practice. This takes time and sustained
    interaction.

28
Three Essential Elements
  • The community (purposeful relationships)
  • Members engage in joint activities and
    discussions, help each other, and share
    information. They build relationships that enable
    them to learn from each other.

29
Types of CoP Activities
  • Problem solving
  • "Can we work on this design and brainstorm some
    ideas Im stuck."
  • Requests for information
  • "Where can I find the code to connect to the
    server?"
  • Seeking experience
  • "Has anyone dealt with a customer in this
    situation?"
  • Reusing assets
  • "I have a proposal for a local area network I
    wrote for a client last year. I can send it to
    you and you can easily tweak it for this new
    client."

30
Types of CoP Activities
  • Coordination and synergy
  • "Can we combine our purchases of solvent to
    achieve bulk discounts?"
  • Discussing developments
  • "What do you think of the new CAD system? Does it
    really help?"
  • Documentation projects
  • "We have faced this problem five times now. Let
    us write it down once and for all."
  • Visits
  • "Can we come and see your after-school program?
    We need to establish one in our city."
  • Mapping knowledge and identifying gaps
  • "Who knows what, and what are we missing? What
    other groups should we connect with?"

31
Activity CoP Contexts
  • Group Think Identify examples of community of
    practice.
  • Type of Community of Practice
  • Digital Artists - Forum driven, learning tools,
    experienceUser groups, SIGs
  • Professional Associations
  • http//www.Learningtimes.org
  • OpenSource Community
  • Study Group - dynamic, user-driven
  • Context (institution, program, purpose)
  • Blogs used as technology tool to facilitate CoP
  • Characteristics

32
EVOLUTION OF ONLINE COMMUNITIES
Users groups
Self-help Teams
SIGs
Program Office
Experience in Domain Shared Knowledge Shared
Knowing Time Critical Mass Emerging User-need
Freshman Club
Department Discussion group
Virtual Study Groups
College Talk Space
Systems-generated
User-generated
DEGREE OF STRUCTURE
33
Forces along the Continuum
  • Experience in Domain
  • Response to change
  • Shared Knowledge
  • Shared Knowing
  • Time
  • Critical Mass
  • Emerging User-needs

34
Community Building Strategies
  • Within groups identify either activity sheet for
    Learning Community or Community of Practice or
    both
  • EXAMPLES ANGEL groups, CyberCelebrities
  • 30 Minutes group discussion
  • Report out--
  • (send via email group work)

35
Strategies Feedback
  • Lcr1_at_psu.edu

36
  • Learning Community faculty that teach online
  • Focus on learning and to improve teaching and
    learning online.
  • Distributive model for sharing BExperiences
  • Give a month for the outcome
  • Training
  • Defining the outcomes and
  • LCR1_at_PSU.EDU

37
Summary Future Directions
38
EVOLUTION OF ONLINE COMMUNITIES
Learning Community
Community of Practice
DEGREE OF STRUCTURE
39
Early vs. Late Adopters
  • Study of Online vs. non-online teachers
  • Michele Jacobson and Alanna Edwards University of
    Calgary
  • Orientation toward technology adoption and change
    may also impact generation of and participation
    in CoPs.
  • In comparisons of early adaptors and late
    adaptors to online teaching
  • Early adaptors may be more prone to developing
    CoPs where late adaptors may respond more to
    established
  • Question Does this phenomenon exist with online
    learners as well?

40
LC/CoP Institutional Context
  • Impact of size of audience (number of members
    within programs vs. institutions)
  • Degree of member coherence (cohort vs.
    independent)
  • Member proximity (local vs. distributed)
  • Institutional investment (support/value)
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