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woke up full of insights

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Woke up early this morning full of ideas.I need to add a section on Discussion. The TMA went Findings -> Conclusions, bypassing Reflecting and Discussing. I am not happy at all with the conclusions I wrote. They were to "flow logically" from the findings, but how is that possible without contextualising the findings?

1 I have read a paper which inter alia discusses the overlap between the use of the terms 'practice' and 'participation' in CoP theory. (Handle et al. 2006). Sometimes it is practice as in the sense of 'practitioner' as in the Situated Learning cases of apprenticeship. Sometimes it is equate to any verb. In my TMA, i have used the first sense for my introduction and the second sense for my research. So in the introduction i talk about 'evaluators' as an example of practice. Whereas in the rest of the paper i see that as part of a 'domain of knowledge' and the practice as what people actually do. This is possibly because the 'practice' in the sense of being a "practitioner of jointly developing myself and other AWARD Alumni" is weird.

2. AWARD has a well articulated Theory of Change which attempts to identify critical change factors which are preconditions for a certain future

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One precondition is that "a critical mass of women starts to self-organize, influence and lead". An alumni group can be seen as a sub-system supporting this. this precondition has been unpacked by AWARD as having preconditions of its own, which are a commitment to social change, advancement in studies and career, and taking up leadership positions. Each fellow has a road map which can be conceptualized as her own purposeful system aligned with the general movement. The strength of the model is its complexity and holistic nature and nested purposes. So each woman is on a dynamic trajectory comprising her purposeful activity within this framework AND in a relational dynamic with her community of academic practitioners AND a relational dynamic with her institute AND a relational dynamic with the structures of her country.

I am surprised I was surprised at the breadth of nested purposes expressed.

So, now what? Well, the paper Helen shared with me on seeing organizations as a dynamic and tangled web of nested goals (Vangen and Huxham 2011) is helpful for unpacking this some. it suggests that goals are multiple and can be characterised as being on dimensions of: level (network/individual), origin (internal/external), authenticity (genuine or pseudo), relevance (network-dependent or not), content (substantive or process), overtness (explicit or tacit or partially shared).

In terms of my research methodology, it means that the heuristic i chose to use is woefully simple as it implies 'One shared domain', one shared practice and one shared community - yes in a complex landscape of other interacting CoP but nonetheless as quite a simple system. It needs to be expanded to incorporate the fact that a CoP can include many concurrent complementary purposes at once.

Maybe a CoP heuristic is not helpful, not because of any failing of CoP theory, but because it is not helpful to think of this constellation as a CoP. it is a wicked constellation, a dynamic tangled web of nested goals, maybe seeing it as a CoP prematurely tames it (particularly given the wealth of literature that considers a CoP as a 'thing' to create, steward or nurture). Note here also the other paper Helen shared, which is by Robert Chia and distinguishes between a 'becoming' and a 'being' ontology. The latter sees things, structures, processes which can be managed, the former recognises that things are recognised as such in one photographic moment in a world of flux. So we may do well to consider our 'CoP' as a becoming towards the critical mass noted before.

Which brings me back to the name. Calling it a CoP reveals and conceals. One thing it conceals is the forward-looking, action-oriented, becomingness. This is accentuated by the word 'alumni'. Alumni implies backward looking, community has no sense of movement. However, 'alumni' is important for identity, meaning and social capital, so i suggest we leave that in for the time being. For the community part, how about we call it an "action network" (a la Steve Waddell) whose network theory will be discussed too? Vicki was concerned that the alumni might fix so much on the low level goals that the Dream level, WHY level goals get neglected. Maybe in the name we need to have a reminder of that too? Or will the name start to get silly then? How about...

AWARD alumni action network for rural women?

 

Permalink 3 comments (latest comment by Arwen Bailey, Saturday, 24 Mar 2012, 17:43)
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emerging themes

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going through the interviews i can see different needs and readinesses of the fellows. Reasons for wanting an alumni scheme seem to depend on the fellows' progress on their personal trajectory:

  • skills acquisition, motivation, access to expertise
  • desire to share forward, multiply what they have experienced, sharing forward leadership training, writing training and mentoring younger fellows in instituttions , sensitiszing men, reaching out to girls in schools
  • desire to engage with external environment, set agendas, influence policy, lead relevant research

Frameworks to help understand this or locate individuals are:

Mayoux four powers framework that we use in AWARD

  • power from within (confidence, motivation, networking for inspiration)
  • power to do (skills acquistion, networking for personal career development)
  • power over (resource generation, networking for visibility)
  • power with (setting agendas, influencing policy, networking for concerted action)

What i feel doesn't fit exactly and maybe this extends that framework a bit, is the desire many of them have to act as a multiplier of the AWARD effect. Maybe the empowerment framework is seen principally as a personal thing and doesn't cater for this kind of altruistic power to in the sense of giving it to... What other preposition could we use to render this idea?

Power from? Power through? Power beyond? Power across?

Waddell typology of networks

societal learning. Networks can be seen as a typology of increasing societal impact where the last is generative network in which the network is outward looking and aims to create societal change.

Appreciative systems

Using the term 'readinesses' made me think of Vicker's appreciative systems.  I wonder if there is anything there which could be helpful in this analysis. TIme to go back and reread.

Kitchener's three levels of cognition

AWARD helps the fellows solve problems better, then they get meta prepared, reflexive, self aware to step out of their scientific cloud and see the bigger purpose (as Sheila Ommeh said). A third level can be seen as trying rather than being good at adapting to the envrionment, as trying to shape the environment.

Of course the framework i haven't mentioned is the actual CoP framework that guided my research. I hope that is not going to matter....

Permalink 1 comment (latest comment by Arwen Bailey, Sunday, 26 Feb 2012, 05:42)
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Schon chapter - Government as learning system

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Edited by Arwen Bailey, Sunday, 6 Feb 2011, 06:33

How i enjoyed this chapter. It resonates deeply with what i have experienced and gave food for thought for work, where mainstreaming is what we aim to achieve. In current post - we want women and minorities to be mainstreamed into the scientific community. In possible future post - we want agricultural biodiversity to be mainstreamed into policies for sustainable food systems.

I wish there were another chapter on HOW to get the idea into good currency. The vanguard roles (artist, prophet, muckraker, utopian) give a hint of potential ways forward. Biodiversity benefits from a critical mass of science in support of it. Gender maybe benefits more from the utopian role. Both can benefit from the artist role - suggesting new discourses.

I love the idea of the intermediate theory: "theory that serves as a bridge connecting views of particular situations to what we will later call paradigm of change". This links in to a post below on Hofstadter's theory of understanding - with a seething mass of possible connections, the strongest connections are with those close to what we already understand (and for understand i think we have to add 'believe').

I find Schon optimistic. it pushes the envelope and the idea of policy as process means that there are opportunities out there to influence policy even if formal policy structures are not favourable. Local, social discovery is where it is at.

Funny this chapter is called Government as a learning system - that is the last of the messages I am getting from it. I am getting rather a message about how to achieve change through learning despite lagging government policies.

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