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| advancing learning through IT innovation | |
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2004 Spring Focus Session
Empowering Institutional Communities of Practice to Transform Teaching and Learning Intended ParticipantsWhile open to individuals, this online focus session is designed to help higher education institutional teams in particular that have been tasked to plan, implement and deliver projects, programs or services to transform teaching and learning with technology and who wish to use communities of practice - both virtual and face-to-face - as a strategy to accomplish this transformation. Institutional roles that team members might represent include (a mixture of roles is encouraged for effective teams):
ProgramCommunities of practice are "groups of people who share a concern, a set of problems, or a passion about a topic, and who deepen their knowledge and expertise in this area by interacting on an ongoing basis" (Wenger/McDermott/Snyder, 2002). NLII sponsors virtual communities of practice ("VCOPs") in defined domains so that members can communicate, collaborate and carry out their professional development activities online within their community between face-to-face events. This online focus session/workshop is the first of a series of activities organized around designing, developing, and supporting the Bridging Community, a community for faculty, staff and others closely associated with faculty development centers, teaching excellence and resource centers and educational/instructional/learning technology departments. The domain of the VCOP encompasses the transformation of instructional design and pedagogical practice through enhanced engagement with learning science research. The Bridging VCOP will focus on the use of institutional communities of practice as agents of change to transform this practice in order to promote the most appropriate and effective use of technology to promote learning. This community will offer a choice of multiple venues, including this focus session. The online focus session/workshop will provide help to institutional teams as they begin to develop one or more on-going institutional communities of practice. These communities will be organized around helping support faculty and educational/learning technology staff as they tackle significant institutional improvement of teaching and learning with technology. Topics will include how to do an environmental scan/needs analysis of their institution to determine what the opportunities are, review past efforts and shared key learnings on the campus of what works well, and identify the enabling structures for their efforts. The Appreciative Inquiry process will be introduced, and participants will be assisted in scripting the process they will use at their institution, and how to take the information they gather to decide next steps. The online focus session/workshop will be organized around activity/problem-based learning, and will include follow-up at the end of the workshop with feedback to each institutional team. After the workshop, optional ongoing structured community/synchronous activities to help members of institutional team continue with the next steps in creating their institutional communities of practice. Work Products & OutcomesFor the individual institutional team participant, the outcomes we would expect to result from the online focus session/workshop are that participants would:
For the institutional team, the work products and outcomes we would expect to result from the online focus session/workshop are that teams would:
For the Bridging Community, the work products and outcomes we would expect to result from the online focus session/workshop are:
For the NLII as a sponsor, the Bridging Community is a design experiment in the full utilization of virtual environments to support face-to-face and online collaboration and communication in a professional development context, to advance our knowledge about the use of technology to transform teaching and learning. Desired outcomes would include the development of virtual communities of practice on participants’ campuses, in addition to a good set of data about how to effectively use these online tools, and the corresponding facilitation techniques and community support infrastructure. Questions We Will TackleThe following questions are representative of the issues and topics for the online focus session/workshop:
Page Last Updated: Monday, September 13, 2004
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