CoP's and Bloggers: Bloghui 2006

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My obligatory presentation on blogs and CoPs. Old now. From BlogHui, the wonderful meetup in Downtown Wellington, scuppered (or nearly) by local bloggers who just didn't know how to use the phone book and landline. Sad.

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CoP’s and BloggersBlogHui March 2006Derek Chirnside

A vision for Community

First, some background

Community . . .

Identity . . . Belonging . . .

Destiny . . .

Comrades – networks – buddies

Learning . . . .

Community . . .

CommunityShi-moon-nity

Reflection

!@#$%^&* !!

Identity

Who am I?

What is my destiny??

Destiny.Where do I want to go??

Who do I want to go with?

Context.

knowledge

Learning . . .

Knowledge

skills

nous

Pause: what resonated for you?Pause: what resonated for you?

Can you identify a time you have Can you identify a time you have been part of or are part of a been part of or are part of a community?community?

What’s it like?What’s it like?

Blogs RSS feeds, aggregators, – implications for communities.

CoPs and Bloggers

Not too worried about what type of community: Inquiry, practice, learning . . .

People getting together in some way with a common purpose or cause,with some level of mutual commitment,providing mutual support and help, working on projects, or just ‘chewing the fat’.

Usually Distributed: distance, flexible, multimodal, blended

A few random perspectives (CoP + Blog)A few random perspectives (CoP + Blog)Blogs: “Containers for conversations” (Nancy White)Blogs: “Containers for conversations” (Nancy White)A “hindrance for knowledge management” (a manager)A “hindrance for knowledge management” (a manager)Blogs: provide a voice, a platform an identityBlogs: provide a voice, a platform an identityHelp attenuate inputs - people build reputationsHelp attenuate inputs - people build reputationsCommunity: “Constellations of blogs” (quote from??)Community: “Constellations of blogs” (quote from??)

Members/BelongingInitiation; Identity – voice . . . Value . . . Destiny . . . (purpose)Comrades – networks – buddiesLearning/knowledge . . . . (boundaries)Leadership . . .

The community questionsThere are some things we have to take care of . . .

Wenger, Lave, Snyder, Figallio, Stuckey, McDermott (etc)

Some of these are blogosphere questions. Some are not.

Infantisation!!

What can web 2.0 offer???

From web 2.0: Let’s just choose blogs, aggregators and RSS . .

Preliminary Finding:Blogs are NOT the same as a threaded discussion forum-in that their psychic effect is different-and seems different for different people.

Sample: four classes, all formal taught courses and a few community like entities in teacher professional development

Forums vs (classic) Blogs

Weblogs Threaded forumsIndividual locus of controlPersonal ownership

Centralised/group

Personal reflection is paramount Reflection: has a corporate element (can be broader)

Comments: may be switched on – not central

Email notifications on replies/dialogue

Tools: RSS, categories

[permalinks, trackbacks etc]

Subjects, post classification

Containers: posts – grouped in categories, reverse chronological

Grouped into threads, usually reverse chronological

Del.icio.us - tagging ?? - evolution is occurring

Ideas classified into categories - but can be lost, fragmented . .

Ideas can be scattered over multiple forums . . .

adapted from Common Craft

“I never felt comfortable posting in the blog” (Compared to forum) –

taught course member

Surmise:There is a perception of it being too public in a blog.The Poster is the focus in a blog.Liked the relative anonymity of the forum. Ownership is there, but LESS than on a blog.Group is more the focus in a blog

Myth:Blogging is easy

“I just find it so hard to blog”(Insert any of a range of responses . .)

community member (opt in)

Technology is a barrier. Still.“It’s still to tough getting started out of the box” *

* Mark Bernstein talk* Mark Bernstein talk

“I just don’t like the way the blog is always there – like it’s whispering to me come and do something”

IT course member 2004 where blogging was a part of the course

Someone else from the same course: “That’s what I like about it”

Surmise: personality is a factor - maybe along with other factors such as confidence, motivation

Example: Macromedia community described by Kai Koening

Communities based around blogs

“Membership”Managing problems

Knowledge management

Knowledge creation

Stewardship of the practice

“It’s all about the tools”Purpose, people & processes 2nd

Perception/realityLocus of controlIdentityVoiceTags/categoriesOwnership

Community software: design issues . . .

metaphors

scaleable: catering for growth

welcoming newcomers

identity/belonging - finding other

managing the practice - boundaries

Blogs tend NOT to worry about KM or community

So: Blogs and CoPs

*Individual*Individualistic?*Personal*Owned*Locus of responsibility is where?*”Disinterested passion” (from ?)*

What in blogging DIS-enhances community? - list in process

Bloggers can help keep a community on it’s toes, outward looking

So: Blogs and CoPs

*creation of an individual voice*identity enhanced (reputation)*boundaries pushed*new ideas*depth of engagement with ideas*challenging of boundaries**

What in blogging ENhances community? - a list in process

Where to now??

???

?

Derek Chirnside

Comments?