Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and IdentityCambridge University Press, 28.09.1999 - 318 Seiten Presents a broad conceptual framework for thinking about learning as a process of social participation. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 58
Seite 4
... ability to experience the world and our engage- ment with it as meaningful – is ultimately what learning is to produce . As a reflection of these assumptions , the primary focus of this theory is on learning as social participation ...
... ability to experience the world and our engage- ment with it as meaningful – is ultimately what learning is to produce . As a reflection of these assumptions , the primary focus of this theory is on learning as social participation ...
Seite 5
... ability - indi- vidually and collectively to experience our life and the world as meaningful . 2 ) Practice : a way of talking about the shared historical and social resources , frameworks , and perspectives that can sustain mu- tual ...
... ability - indi- vidually and collectively to experience our life and the world as meaningful . 2 ) Practice : a way of talking about the shared historical and social resources , frameworks , and perspectives that can sustain mu- tual ...
Seite 8
... ability to respond , when we wish to engage in new practices and seek to join new communities . There are also times when society explicitly places us in situations where the issue of learning becomes problematic and requires our focus ...
... ability to respond , when we wish to engage in new practices and seek to join new communities . There are also times when society explicitly places us in situations where the issue of learning becomes problematic and requires our focus ...
Seite 11
... ability to follow my argument . In an earlier book , anthropologist Jean Lave and I tried to distill - from a number of ethnographic studies of apprenticeship - what such studies might contribute to a general theory of learning . Our ...
... ability to follow my argument . In an earlier book , anthropologist Jean Lave and I tried to distill - from a number of ethnographic studies of apprenticeship - what such studies might contribute to a general theory of learning . Our ...
Seite 15
... ability to " own " meanings , it involves issues of social participation and rela- tions of power in fundamental ways . Indeed , many theories in this category have been concerned with issues of resistance to institu- tional or colonial ...
... ability to " own " meanings , it involves issues of social participation and rela- tions of power in fundamental ways . Indeed , many theories in this category have been concerned with issues of resistance to institu- tional or colonial ...
Inhalt
Meaning | 51 |
Negotiation of meaning | 52 |
Participation | 55 |
Reification | 57 |
The duality of meaning | 62 |
Community | 72 |
Mutual engagement | 73 |
Joint enterprise | 77 |
Engagement | 174 |
Imagination | 175 |
Alignment | 178 |
Belonging and communities | 181 |
The work of belonging | 183 |
Identification and negotiability | 188 |
Identification | 191 |
Negotiability | 197 |
Shared repertoire | 82 |
Negotiating meaning in practice | 84 |
Learning | 86 |
The dual constitution of histories | 87 |
Histories of learning | 93 |
Generational discontinuities | 99 |
Boundary | 103 |
The duality of boundary relations | 104 |
Practice as connection | 113 |
The landscape of practice | 118 |
Locality | 122 |
Constellations of practices | 126 |
The local and the global | 131 |
Knowing in practice | 134 |
Identity | 143 |
A focus on identity | 145 |
Some assumptions to avoid | 146 |
Structure of Part II | 147 |
Identity in practice | 149 |
participation and reification | 150 |
Community membership | 152 |
Trajectories | 153 |
Nexus of multimembership | 158 |
Localglobal interplay | 161 |
Participation and nonparticipation | 164 |
Identities of nonparticipation | 165 |
Sources of participation and nonparticipation | 167 |
Institutional nonparticipation | 169 |
Modes of belonging | 173 |
The dual nature of identity | 207 |
Social ecologies of identity | 211 |
Learning communities | 214 |
Epilogue Design | 223 |
Design for learning | 225 |
Design and practice | 228 |
Structure of the Epilogue | 229 |
Learning architectures | 230 |
Dimensions | 231 |
Components | 236 |
A design framework | 239 |
Organizations | 241 |
Dimensions of organizational design | 242 |
Organization learning and practice | 249 |
Organizational engagement | 250 |
Organizational imagination | 257 |
Organizational alignment | 260 |
Education | 263 |
Dimensions of educational design | 264 |
a learning architecture | 270 |
Educational engagement | 271 |
Educational imagination | 272 |
Educational alignment | 273 |
Educational resources | 275 |
Notes | 279 |
Bibliography | 301 |
309 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity Etienne Wenger Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1999 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ability actions activities alignment Alinsu argued Ariel artifacts aspects become boundary objects broader Chapter claims processors Coda communities of prac communities of practice complex connections constitute context coordination create defined develop dimensions discontinuities discourses discuss Donald Schön duality economy of meaning educational design engagement in practice enterprise experience of meaning focus forms of participation global iden identification and negotiability identity of participation imagination individual inherent instance institutional institutionalized interaction interpretation involved issues Jean Lave John Seely Brown kind knowledge learning community lives membership ment modes of belonging multimembership munities of practice mutual engagement negotiating meaning negotiation of meaning newcomers organization organizational organizational learning ownership of meaning participation and non-participation participation and reification peripheral person perspective production reflect regime of competence relations repertoire requires sense shared practice social theory specific structure talk tice tion trajectories understand worksheet
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 47 - It is in this sense that they constitute a community of practice. The concept of practice connotes doing, but not just doing in and of itself. It is doing in a historical and social context that gives structure and meaning to what we do.
Seite 4 - Such participation shapes not only what we do, but also who we are and how we interpret what we do.
Seite 3 - ... and inevitable, and that - given a chance - we are quite good at it? And what if, in addition, we assumed that learning is, in its essence, a fundamentally social phenomenon, reflecting our own deeply social nature as human beings capable of knowing?
Seite 4 - Participation here refers not just to local events of engagement in certain activities with certain people, but to a more encompassing process of being active participants in the practices of social communities and constructing identities in relation to these communities.
Verweise auf dieses Buch
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