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Saskia de Wit

SLS chapter 11 CoP as social learning system

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It is a perspective that locates learning, not in the head or outside it, but in the relationship between the person and the world, which for human beings is a social person in a social world.

Learning as the production of social structure

Meaningful engagement in social contexts  requires participation (discussion, reflection,..) and reification (making into an object, papers, tools , words). Artefacts without participation do not carry their own meaning; and participation without artefacts is fleeting, unanchored. Should be an interplay.

Their interplay creates a social history of learning, which combines individual and collective aspects. Together they form a ‘regime of competence,’ a set of criteria and expectations by which they recognise membership.

· Understanding of matters

· Engaging productively with others in the community

· Using the repertoire of resources that the Community has accumulated through its history of learning.

Over time, a history of learning becomes an informal and dynamic social structure among the participants, and this is what a community of practice is.

practice is something that is produced over time by those who engage in it.
All sorts of constraints, yes of course. A community of practice can be dysfunctional

No matter how much external effort is made to shape, dictate, or mandate practice, in the end it reflects the meanings arrived at by those engaged in it. Even when they comply with external mandates, they produce a practice that reflects their own engagement with their situation

Practice cannot be subsumed by a design. Practice is a response to a design, an institution, and management practice ---based on active negation of meaning.

Learning produces a social system and that a practice can be said to be the property of a community.

Learning as the production of identity

Learning is not just acquiring skills and information; it is becoming a certain person – a knower in a context where what it means to know is negotiated with respect to the regime of competence of a community.

When a newcomer is entering a community, it is mostly the competence that is pulling the experience along, until the learner’s experience reflects the competence of the community

A community’s competence along as when a member brings in some new element into the practice and has to negotiate whether the community will embrace this contribution as a new element of competence – or reject it

identification involves modulation: one can identify more or less with a community, the need to belong to it, and therefore the need to be accountable to its regime of competence

Thus identity reflects a complex relationship between the social and the personal. The focus on identity creates a tension between competence and experience. The focus on identity also adds a human dimension to the notion of practice. It is not just about techniques

Gaining a competence entails becoming someone for whom the competence is a meaningful way of living in the world.

… When learning is becoming,
….when knowledge and knower are not separated,
….then the practice is also about enabling such becoming

Remaining on a learning edge takes a delicate balancing act between honoring the history of the practice and shaking free from it.

possible when communities interact with and explore other perspectives beyond their boundaries

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Saskia de Wit

SLS chapter 8 Extract 4-5

Visible to anyone in the world

Extract 4 Participation and Non-participation

we know who we are by what is familiar and by what we can negotiate and make use of, and that we know who we are not by what is unfamiliar, unwieldy, and out of our purview.

Our relations to communities of practice thus involve both participation and nonparticipation, and our identities are shaped by combinations of the two.

Identities of Non-participation

Experiences of non-participation do not necessarily build up to an identity of nonparticipation. We inevitably come in contact with communities of practice to which we do not belong, non-participation is an inevitable part of living. Not all that we encounter becomes significant and not all that we meet carries our touch; yet these events can all contribute in their own ways to our experience of identity.

In a landscape defined by boundaries and peripheries, a coherent identity is of necessity a mixture of being in and being out.

· In the case of peripherality, some degree of non-participation is necessary to enable a kind of participation that is less than full. Here, it is the participation aspect that dominates and defines non-participation as an enabling factor of participation.

· In the case of marginality, a form of non-participation prevents full participation. Here, it is the non-participation aspect that dominates and comes to define a restricted form of participation.

Peripherality and marginality both involve a mix of participation and nonparticipation. The difference between peripherality and marginality must be understood in the context of trajectories that determine the significance of forms of participation.

· Newcomers, on an inbound trajectory that is construed by everyone to include full participation in its future. Non-participation is then an opportunity for learning.

· people whose trajectory remains peripheral, non-participation is an enabling aspect of their participation because full participation is not a goal to start with.

· long-standing members can be kept in a marginal position, so integrated in the practice that it closes the future. Forms of non-participation may be so ingrained in the practice that it may seem impossible to conceive of a different trajectory within the same community.

full participation (insider); full non-participation (outsider); peripherality (participation enabled by non-participation, whether it leads to full participation or remains on a peripheral trajectory); and marginality (participation restricted by non-participation, whether it leads to non-membership or to a marginal position).

Extract 5 Participation in Social Learning Systems

The perspective of a social learning system applies to many of our social institutions with implications at multiple levels.

· Individuals : importance of finding the dynamic set of communities they should belong to and a meaningful trajectory through these communities over time.

· Communities of Practice : balance between core and boundary processes, so that the practice is both a strong node in the web of interconnections – an enabler of deep learning in a specific area balance between core and boundary processes, so that the practice is both a strong node in the web of interconnections – an enabler of deep learning in a specific area

· Organizations: a need to learn to foster and participate in social learning systems, both inside and outside organizational boundaries. Organizations can take part in them; they can foster them; they can leverage them; but they cannot fully own or control them

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