Reflections from Building Communities of Practice
The role of the Secretariat of Communities of Practice evolves rapidly based on the changing needs of the community.
Over two years, the CORE Net Secretariat adapted to the emergent needs of the community within the broader ambit of network facilitation. This included framing conversations, collating and presenting information, organising and moderating sessions and managing participation. A defining value of design-led facilitation is constantly adapting to best serve the needs of the network members.
Our primary role was to hold space for evolving conversations that reflected the temporal needs of researchers and research audiences.
The role of different members is likely to evolve over time within Communities of Practice, based on their interest, incentives, and bandwidth.
With the CORE Net Collaboration Norms workshops, we were able to establish how the level of involvement among different members is likely to vary based on their scale and availability. Through the journey of the two years, we discovered that participation was often higher when the network activities aligned with what partners members already wanted to focus and collaborate on and amplify.
The role of different members is likely to evolve over time within Communities of Practice, based on their interest, incentives, and bandwidth.
With the CORE Net Collaboration Norms workshops, we were able to establish how the level of involvement among different members is likely to vary based on their scale and availability. Through the journey of the two years, we discovered that participation was often higher when the network activities aligned with what partners members already wanted to focus and collaborate on and amplify.
Members within Communities of Practice appreciate clear expectations on time and effort for their engagement.
Many members were most engaged when they could clearly understand their input and if the output was tangible (a paper presentation, panel discussion, etc). However, cross-disciplinary collaborative work can often be emergent and responsive and would need more patient engagement from members.