Teachers as CoP Advocates
How can we take teachers into using a Community of Practice?
“The
term ‘community of practice’ is of relatively recent coinage, even though the
phenomenon it refers to is age-old”
The first step towards taking teachers into becoming CoP
advocates has to do with choosing the right channel. Before a CoP campaign
begins, a CoP platform is selected, and as York (2018) advises, the CoP
administrators need to “focus on the actual benefits that come with shared
content.” For teachers working together in an institution or in a school
district (or even beyond these boundaries), a CoP can be the way to share
useful content grounded in their immediate teaching needs. Once a CoP platform
is chosen, instructors need to be motivated to share their user-generated
content (directly coming from them) in the community. This sharing can make
teachers feel excited to see how their ideas are used by collegues or peers.
And how they can interact with colleagues can also be another benefit. But this
is futile if we do not learn what shared content is looked for by educators and
what content works well for a CoP of language teachers.
“A community of practice is a group of people who share a
concern or a passion for something they do, and learn how to do it better as
they interact regularly”
A
single idea shared by a teacher can have a great and lasting effect, so telling
teachers what content you want for the institution’s CoP is critical. “Make it
clear and specific what types of content you’re looking for”
In
CoP’s lore, administrators have to focus on the community aspect of it to take
teachers into being CoP advocates. If “the best thing about user-generated
content is it typically sparks engagement”
The
health of the community of practice depends a lot on how teacher-generated
content efforts is analyzed and measured. Administrators want all teachers to
be active participants and generators of content to spark their peers’ interest
and motivate their community engagement. For these reasons it is indispensable
to measure the TGC strategy if the school wants it to work. Benchmarking is compulsory
here; not understanding the impact of what admins want teachers to do can have
dire repercussions in CoP activity and teacher presence. Admins also have to
generate engagement reports to track teachers’ involvement within this social
teaching network. Not knowing what is going on can prevent the organization
from helping their educators get to the pinnacle of their teaching. The absence
of analysis and measurement will prevent the birth of a new generation
of CoP advocates who can sustain engagement through time.
To
sum up. the CoP (Community of Practice) is a site that must turn into an
organic being that can grow and become fruitful for its users. Not only do
users become consumers of CoP content but producers of new content for the
community. Engaged teachers in a CoP will use its content, modify it for
his/her teaching purposes, add to it, add value to it, and put those ideas into
a different teaching context that can be shared in the CoP. In terms of a
social media platform for teachers, instructors become produsers, and
who can develop a shared set of teaching knowledge.
References
Team BE. (2011, December 28). What is a community of
practice? Retrieved August 15, 2020, from Wenger-Trayner.Com:
https://wenger-trayner.com/resources/what-is-a-community-of-practice/
Wenger-Trayner, E., & Wenger-Trayner, B. (2015, April
15). A community of practice story. Retrieved August 15, 2020, from
Wenger-Trayner.Com:
https://wenger-trayner.com/introduction-to-communities-of-practice/
York, A. (2018, May 23). User Generated Content: 5 Steps
to Turn Customers Into Advocates. Retrieved August 14, 2020, from
SproutSocial.Com/: https://sproutsocial.com/insights/user-generated-content-guide/
[7] Teachers as CoP Advocates by Jonathan Acuña on Scribd
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