| Literature DB >> 19250556 |
Linda C Li1, Jeremy M Grimshaw, Camilla Nielsen, Maria Judd, Peter C Coyte, Ian D Graham.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the experience of health professionals, it appears that interacting with peers in the workplace fosters learning and information sharing. Informal groups and networks present good opportunities for information exchange. Communities of practice (CoPs), which have been described by Wenger and others as a type of informal learning organization, have received increasing attention in the health care sector; however, the lack of uniform operating definitions of CoPs has resulted in considerable variation in the structure and function of these groups, making it difficult to evaluate their effectiveness.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19250556 PMCID: PMC2654669 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-4-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Description of communities of practice research synthesis project
| Objectives: | • To examine how CoPs were defined and used in the business and health sectors. |
| • To evaluate the evidence of CoPs in the health sector. | |
| Search strategy: | • We searched the literature published between 1991 and 2005. |
| • Database search: Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, HealthSTAR, ERIC, ECONLIT, AMED, and ProQuest. | |
| • Hand-searched | |
| Eligibility criteria | • Primary studies that involved groups, teams, or learning environments that were either labelled as CoPs or were developed using CoP and/or other related concepts (e.g., situated learning, legitimate peripheral learning) as the guiding framework. |
| Synthesis approach: | • Meta-narrative approach |
| ○ The research synthesis focused on: | |
| ▪ The authors' interpretations of the CoP concept. | |
| ▪ The key characteristics of CoP groups. | |
| ▪ The common elements of CoP groups. | |
| • Meta-analysis to assess the effectiveness of CoPs in the health sector. | |
| Search results: | • 1421 articles were obtained; of those, we found 13 primary studies from the health sector and 18 from the business sector. |
| Key findings: | • The structure of CoP groups varied greatly, ranging from voluntary informal networks to work-supported formal education sessions, and from apprentice training to multidisciplinary, multi-site project teams. |
| • Four characteristics were identified from CoP groups: | |
| ○ CoP members interact with each other in formal and informal settings. | |
| ○ CoP members share knowledge with each other. | |
| ○ CoP members collaborate with each other to create new knowledge. | |
| ○ CoP groups foster the development of a shared-identity among members. | |
| • These characteristics, however, were not consistently present in all CoPs. | |
| • There was a lack of clarity in the responsibilities of CoP facilitators and how power dynamics should be handled within a CoP group. | |
| • We were unable to identify any studies that used experimental, quasi-experimental, or observational designs, |
*CoPs = Communities of practice
Wenger's indicators for the presence of community of practice and the proposed domains
| 1. Sustained mutual relationships – harmonious or conflictual | Mutual engagement |
| 2. Shared ways of engaging in doing things together | Mutual engagement |
| 3. The rapid flow of information and propagation of innovation | Mutual engagement |
| 4. Absence of introductory preambles, as if conversations and interactions were merely the continuation of an ongoing process | Mutual engagement |
| 5. Very quick setup of a problem to be discussed | Mutual engagement |
| 6. Substantial overlap in participants' descriptions of who belongs | Mutual engagement |
| 7. Knowing what others know, what they can do, and how they can contribute to an enterprise | Mutual engagement |
| 8. Mutually defining identities | Mutual engagement |
| 9. The ability to assess the appropriateness of actions and products | Shared repertoire |
| 10. Specific tools, representations, and other artefacts | Shared repertoire |
| 11. Local lore, shared stories, inside jokes, knowing laughter | Shared repertoire |
| 12. Jargon and shortcuts to communication as well as the ease of producing new ones | Shared repertoire |
| 13. Certain styles recognized as displaying membership | Mutual engagement |
| 14. A shared discourse reflecting a certain perspective on the world | Mutual engagement |
* From: Wenger E. Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity. New York: Cambridge University Press; 1998, pg. 125.