592 Articles match "Communities of Practice","Community"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Friday, February 26, 2010
Personally, I’m of the school of thought that lurking is a form of legitimate peripheral participation , that in most cases, if everyone actively participated we’d be overwhelmed, that we often and appropriately lurk offline and that lurking is not always “take and no give,” that people do in fact take what they learn one place and often use it and contribute elsewhere. Second is another distillation of conversation, this time from CPSquare . I was asked about some useful references on lurking and lurkers this week, so I thought I’d refresh  myself with a few that I like. (I’ve
 
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
The memorandum instructed the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to provide guidance to executive departments and agencies on implementing open government. The memorandum outlined the three pillars of open government thereby narrowing the discussion to transparency, participation, and collaboration. One of the requirements set forth in the OGD was for executive departments and agencies to create a public feedback On January 21, 2009, the White House issued the Transparency and Open Government Memorandum. On December 8, 2009, OMB released the Open Government Directive (OGD),
 
Thursday, February 18, 2010
little bit about our respective practices A definition of technology stewardship The 2001 “Tech Report” for the Federal Council of CIOs was getting out of date.  proposed to write an update of it.  February 16, 2010 Theme: Rethinking Ourselves (KM People)  as Technology Stewards
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

In the latter half of 2008, we worked with a number of companies to establish communities of practice. In training the people with key roles in the communities (such as the coordinator, core team members and those with support roles outside the communities) a common question arose..."what Of what do we do first?" Of course the answer to this depends on the specific context.
This is the young swan swimming in the waters near our house (there is a lot of water in our area, something which made a Malian friend exclaim that this is a very dangerous place!). The swan is slowly transforming from a grey into a white swan. I'm interested in the transformation phase in communities of practice. Most materials deal with the start-up phase of communities of practice. The first reason is that I looked around for materials about transformation/transition for a Dutch course, and couldn't find any good materials. A
That made me think that I could blog some of the questions I get (+ the answers). One of them was: how can blogs support communities of practice? community of practice can have a public teamblog. An example of a teamblog is the ecollaboration weblog . (Cartoon via tangwailing blog ) I observed that Stan Garfield blogs about questions he receives or overhears about knowledge management. 1.
This is the fifth in a series of blog posts I wrote for  Darren Sidnick . am finally getting the rest of the series up. In our first post on Communities of Practice (CoPs) we disabused ourselves of the confusion between a community and the platform that allows a community to interact together online. Is a “class” I You can find part1   here,  p art 2   here,    part 3 here  and part 4 here . 
Tags: KS-Workshop communities_of_practic CDC's CoP home page with resources on CoPs ...Tags:
We went to the studio of 'Tussen de Oren' ('Between the Ears') a television program that does all kind of psychological experiments to share scientific research about communication and psychology in a humoristic manner. One of the questions to the panel was to find out what was true of some widely known anecdotes or 'broodjes aap' in Dutch. This was hard to guess! Some of the anecdotes that were not true were: eskimos have 100-s of words for snow cat survives ride in washing-machine you can breed 'bonsai' kittens by breeding them in a pot While working with
On the learning conversations blog I found a video interview with Etienne Wenger in which he answers quite some basic questions about communities of practices in organisation. What they are, when not to foster them (they are not a panacee), how sponsorship of communities in an organisation differs from managing communities. Highlights: think about communities when Practitioners need to be in the lead. When there is a clear knowledge gap, just produce a manual.
It is the story of a community of birdwatchers in Central Park in New York City and how they observed, loved and obsessed over a family of Red-Tailed Hawks that raised a family on an apartment ledge just of Central Park.   If you have ever hankered to read a “real life” story about an organic community of practice, one free from the business pressures of CoPs manufactured inside of corporations, read this book. My friend Sue Wolff generously lent me two books recently. The first, Marie Winn’s “
Tomorrow I'm going to present the difference between the theories of communities of practice and action learning (and between the communities themselves and action-reflection groups). CoP = community of practice, AL = Action Learning). Any input welcome! Characteristic CoP AL Is A theory, little information on methods I haven't found any materials comparing the two, so I had to do some brainwork for myself.
This is a really interesting wiki which tries to identify networks and communities of interest who are showing up on twitter. ...Tags: Tags: howto community community_indicators communities_of_practice twitte