National Institute for Literacy
 

[Workplace 1577] Re: Communities of Practice?

Gary Bartolina BartolinaG at NYSCSEAPARTNERSHIP.ORG
Tue Aug 26 15:06:08 EDT 2008


Donna,



Community of Practice sounds much better than a Listserv....I like it...



I use it for all the terms you listed, plus in addition I use it as an
assignment for my Masters Degree program at Buffalo State on Adult
Education.





Ms. Gary Bartolina, Program Manager
Adult Education Basics
NYS & CSEA Partnership for Education & Training
Corporate Plaza East - Suite 502
240 Washington Avenue Extension
Albany, NY 12203
Phone: 518-473-4990
Fax: 518-473-9457
bartolinag at nyscseapartnership.org
<mailto:bartolinag at nyscseapartnership.org>
www.nyscseapartnership.org <http://www.nyscseapartnership.org/>
"A love affair with knowledge will never end in heartbreak."
(Michael Garrett Marino)
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-----Original Message-----
From: workplace-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:workplace-bounces at nifl.gov] On
Behalf Of Brian, Dr Donna J G
Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 2:54 PM
To: The Workplace Literacy Discussion List
Subject: [Workplace 1576] Communities of Practice?





Dear Colleagues,

I'd like your feedback on how to more clearly describe how you (and
other subscribers) use the Workplace Literacy Discussion List (and
possibly other NIFL lists). For example, the Institute's lists
(http://www.nifl.gov/lincs/discussions/discussions.html) historically
have been used to



* Problem solve

* Request or receive information

* Seek others' teaching or learning experiences

* Introduce, discuss, and develop projects and resources

* Introduce field experts and dialogue with them about their
work

* Raise awareness of and debate key issues important to the
field

* Plan, preview, and report on sessions held at national
conferences

* Identify who has knowledge and learn about our field's
knowledge gaps



Some would call groups engaged in this kind of activity "communities of
practice" (CoPs) http://www.ewenger.com/theory/index.htm .



Communities of practice are:



Groups of people who share a concern or a passion for something they do
and they learn how to do it better as they interact regularly.



CoPs share a common interest and commitment to that interest that
distinguishes them from others, they engage in joint learning activities
(whether intentional or not), build relationships that enable them to
learn from one another, and they strive to improve what they do.



1. So do you consider the Workplace Literacy Discussion List to be
a "community of practice?"



2. Does this describe who we are and what we do on the list? Or,
could you see yourself becoming more involved in this way?



3. What comments or concerns, if any, do you have about the concept
and the term "communities of practice" as it might be used to describe
our online interactions?



For a quick overview on CoPs: http://www.ewenger.com/theory/index.htm



I look forward to hearing from you! Please post your reply to the list
no later than this Friday, August 29th.



Thanks so much!



Donna



Donna Brian

Moderator, LINCS Workplace Literacy Discussion List

Off-list contact djgbrian at utk.edu



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