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Communities of Practice: Going One Step Too Far

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Title: Communities of Practice: Going One Step Too Far


1
Communities of Practice Going One Step Too Far?
  • Chris KIMBLE
  • Department of Computer Science, University of
    York ltchris.kimble_at_cs.york.ac.ukgt
  • Paul HILDRETH
  • K-Now International Ltd, York
  • ltpmh_at_k-now-int.comgt

2
Overview
  • Introduction and context
  • The key questions
  • CoPs The First Step
  • CoPs and Situated Learning
  • CoPs The Next Step
  • Linking CoPs and Work
  • Linking CoPs and KM
  • CoPs One Step Too Far?
  • CoPs in the Business Environment
  • CoPs in the Virtual Environment
  • Conclusions

3
Context
  • In 1980s KM was seen as the solution to problems
    of managing knowledge in business environment
  • Hard Knowledge could be "captured" from an
    expert, codified in a series of rules and stored
    in a computer
  • In 1990s the importance of softer types of
    knowledge, and how this was created, shared and
    sustained, was beginning to be recognised
  • Soft Knowledge Is implicit and unstructured and
    can not be easily articulated

4
The Key Questions
  • Communities of Practice (CoPs) were seen as a new
    approach to KM that could deal with the softer
    types of knowledge
  • However the concept of KM grew in a formal,
    commercial organisational setting, CoPs did not
  • The key questions
  • Do CoPs really offer a way to manage the softer
    aspects of knowledge? Can they be initiated and
    directed by an organisation?
  • Are CoPs applicable to todays high tech and
    increasingly internationalised "virtual" world?

5
CoPs The First Step
  • Lave and Wenger (1991) first introduced the term
    Community of Practice in 1991 in relation to
    informal situated learning
  • " a set of relations among persons, activity and
    world, over time and in relation with other
    tangential and overlapping CoPs" (Lave and
    Wenger, 1991, p98)
  • This was an apprenticeship model based on the
    notion of Legitimate Peripheral Participation
    where learning was seen as an integral part of a
    practice that gives meaning to the world
  • " generative social practice in the lived in
    world" (Lave and Wenger, 1991, p35).

6
CoPs The First Step
  • From Lave and Wenger (1991)
  • CoPs are concerned with Situated Learning
  • Learning is an informal process based on LPP
  • Learning is a social process and people will
    participate at different levels
  • The community, and participation in it, are
    inseparable from the practice.
  • But during the 1990s a theory of learning
    developed from studies of non-drinking
    alcoholics, tailors in Goa and midwives in the
    Yucatan, began to be applied to the world of work
    and the problems of Knowledge Management and the
    world of commerce and work

7
CoPs and Work The Next Step
  • In 1998 Wenger studied a CoP in a large
    insurance company and identified two key
    processes in CoPs participation and reification.
  • Participation
  • ... the social experience of living in the world
    in terms of membership in social communities and
    active involvement in social enterprises
    (Wenger, 1998, p55 )
  • Reification
  • ... the process of giving form to our experience
    by producing objects that congeal this experience
    into thingness (Wenger, 1998, p58)

8
CoPs and Work The Next Step
  • From now on, a CoP was defined in terms of
  • What it is about
  • The activity/body of knowledge that the community
    has organized itself around - a joint enterprise.
  • How it functions
  • How people are linked through their involvement
    in common activities - mutual engagement
  • What it produces
  • The set of resources the members of a CoP build
    up over time - their shared repertoire

9
CoPs and KM The Next Step
  • Early (circa 1985) KM systems focussed on Hard
    Knowledge (e.g. Expert systems)
  • Knowledge has an independent existence and can be
    captured and stored in a computer
  • Later (circa 1995) approaches to KM recognised
    the value of softer forms of knowledge
  • Knowledge is a property of people, relationships
    and situations and only has meaning in a
    particular context
  • Now (circa 2000) the view of knowledge as a
    duality is gaining acceptance
  • Knowledge is a duality that consists
    simultaneously of both Hard and Soft Knowledge

10
CoPs and KM The Next Step
  • From a KM perspective Hildreth and Kimble (2002)
    argue
  • if we view knowledge as a duality, then all KM
    problems become problems of managing both hard
    and soft knowledge all KM projects must
    address both the hard and soft aspects of
    knowledge
  • From a CoP perspective Wenger (1998) argues the
    two key processes, participation and reification,
    also form a duality.
  • CoPs have moved from being a forum for informal
    situated learning to a means of managing knowledge

11
CoPs One Step Too Far?
  • The key questions
  • Do CoPs really offer a way to manage the softer
    aspects of knowledge?
  • In CoPs knowledge is not possessed by an
    individual but is an emergent property of the
    group. Legitimacy is not a function of hierarchy
    but of status Can CoPs ever be initiated and
    directed by an organisation?
  • Are CoPs applicable to a high tech and
    internationalised "virtual" world?
  • The learning that takes place in a CoP is
    situated learning. Is this the same as being
    co-located? Can technology replace face-to-face
    interaction?

12
CoPs in the Business Environment
  • Creating a CoP
  • Most business organisations consist of project
    teams or task groups that can be brought together
    to meet the needs of the wider organisation.
  • CoPs are self-directed, self-motivated and driven
    by the interests of their members. Status and
    legitimacy are internal to the CoP and may not
    reflect the organisational hierarchy
  • Gongla and Rizzuto (2004) found examples of CoPs
    that disappeared in order to remove themselves
    from the organisational radar.

13
CoPs in the Business Environment
  • Knowledge Sharing
  • Lave and Wenger's (1991) saw CoPs as
  • a set of relations among persons, activity and
    world, over time and in relation with other
    tangential and overlapping CoPs
  • Wenger (1998) saw an organization
  • not as one CoP, but as a constellation of
    interrelated CoPs that overlapped and exchanged
    knowledge via social links.
  • Hislop (2004) found that
  • In three case studies of CoPs in large European
    organisations only one was successful in sharing
    knowledge between communities

14
CoPs in the Virtual Environment
  • CoPs
  • "At the simplest level, they are a small group of
    people whove worked together over a period of
    time. Not a team not a task force not
    necessarily an authorised or identified group
    they are peers in the execution of "real work".
    What holds them together is a common sense of
    purpose and a real need to know what each other
    knows." (Brown and Gray, 1995)
  • Knowledge Networks
  • Electronic networking, means that it is possible
    for members of a CoP to link to others who do
    similar work. These might also be members of CoP
    one CoP might link with a CoP until everybody who
    had an interest in the area is a member.

15
CoPs in the Virtual Environment
  • How might LPP translate to a virtual environment?
    (Lueg, 2000)
  • In CoPs, there is a social periphery in a
    virtual group there is also a physical periphery.
    What effect might this have?
  • The learning that takes place in a CoP is
    situated learning. Is this necessarily the same
    as being co-located?
  • Electronic Networks of Practice (Brown and
    Duguid, 2000)
  • NoPs share some features with CoPs but social
    ties are weaker and there is less common ground
    between the members.
  • NoPs allow the diffusion of knowledge across a
    (virtual) network while CoPs are the (co-located)
    hub.

16
Conclusions
  • CoPs do appear to offer a means of managing the
    softer aspects of knowledge in a work related
    context, but there are problems with
  • Managerial control
  • Cross boundary knowledge sharing
  • As human relationships are central to a CoP,
    technology does not really seem to have much to
    offer to the creation of virtual CoPs
  • However, looser networks such as ENoPs do seem to
    come closer to the ideal of work based virtual
    CoPs

17
Questions / Comments?
  • Chris Kimble - Department of Computer Science,
    University of York
  • chris.kimble_at_cs.york.ac.uk
  • Paul Hildreth - K-Now International Ltd, York
  • pmh_at_k-now-int.com
  • Knowledge Networks Innovation through
    Communities of Practice, Paul Hildreth and Chris
    Kimble (eds), Idea Group Publishing, Feb 2004
  • ISBN 159140200X (Hardcover)
  • ISBN 1591402700 (Paperback)
  • Copies of the paper and presentation are
    available at
  • http//www.cs.york.ac.uk/mis/news.htm
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