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EPSO Building and Developing a Community of Practice Build Knowledge Develop Expertise Solve Problems Dr David Stewart 24 May 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "EPSO Building and Developing a Community of Practice Build Knowledge Develop Expertise Solve Problems Dr David Stewart 24 May 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 EPSO Building and Developing a Community of Practice Build Knowledge Develop Expertise Solve Problems Dr David Stewart 24 May 2011

2 What is a Community of Practice?  Communities of Practice 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 Wenger

3 The 3 Fundamental Elements of a Community of Practice  Domain – a shared competence that distinguishes members from other people  Community – they build relationships that enable them to learn from each other  Practice – they develop a shared repertoire of resources including experiences, stories, tools, ways of addressing recurring problems

4 Building more effective Communities of Practice

5 Communities of Practice: Orientation

6  Meetings – in person or online gatherings with an agenda (i.e. monthly topic calls)  Projects – interrelated tasks with specific outcomes or products (i.e. identifying a new practice and refining it.)  Access to expertise – learning from experienced practitioners (i.e. access to subject matter experts)  Relationship – getting to know each other (i.e. the bi-annual conference)  Context – private, internally- focused or serving an organisation, or the wider world (i.e. what is kept within the community, what is shared with the wider world)  Community cultivation – Recruiting, orienting and supporting members, growing the community (i.e. who makes sure the new person is invited in and met others?)  Individual participation – enabling members to craft their own experience of the community (i.e. access material when and how you want it.)  Content – a focus on capturing and publishing what the community learns and knows (i.e. a newsletter, publishing an article, etc.)  Open ended conversation – conversations that continue to rise and fall over time without a specific goal (i.e. Web forum, Twitter, etc.) Base material from: Digital Habitats: Stewarding technology for communities © 2009 Wenger, White, and Smith Community Orientations What do they mean?

7  Identify where our community is now to assess how we can facilitate our efforts to  Generate ideas and focus on activities to increase engagement  Identify tools and processes which will help us increase our shared learning  Identify how the members of the EPSO community would like to build our community to help forward planning How can EPSO use Communities of Practice concepts and ideas?

8 Creating an orientation profile Using CoP theory to understand your community by creating an orientation profile  Perception of the current state of the community  Perception of the desired state of the community 0 = not important 5 = very important

9 Proposed next steps Identify a project team to agree a COP questionnaire to build an EPSO profile RQIA will issue to all members for completion by end of August ? on-line. Draft report to be developed and agreed with project team in September/October Results presented in Belfast in November at a workshop session to agree next steps

10 Belfast välkomnar de EPSO Samfunnet av Praksis i November 2011 !


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