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Using Theory to Inform Capacity‐Building: Bootstrapping Communities of Practice in Computer Science Education Research
Author(s) -
Fincher Sally,
Tenenberg Josh
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of engineering education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.896
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 2168-9830
pISSN - 1069-4730
DOI - 10.1002/j.2168-9830.2006.tb00902.x
Subject(s) - bootstrapping (finance) , community of practice , metaphor , discipline , computer science , capacity building , field (mathematics) , repertoire , knowledge management , engineering ethics , sociology , pedagogy , political science , engineering , social science , linguistics , philosophy , physics , mathematics , acoustics , financial economics , law , economics , pure mathematics
Abstract In this paper, we describe our efforts in the deliberate creation of a community of practice of researchers in computer science education (CSEd). We understand community of practice in the sense in which Wenger describes it, whereby the community is characterized by mutual engagement in a joint enterprise that gives rise to a shared repertoire of knowledge, artefacts, and practices. We first identify CSEd as a research field in which no shared paradigm exists, and then we describe the Bootstrapping project, its metaphor, structure, rationale, and delivery, as designed to create a community of practice of CSEd researchers. Features of other projects are also outlined that have similar aims of capacity building in disciplinary‐specific pedagogic enquiry. A theoretically derived framework for evaluating the success of endeavours of this type is then presented, and we report the results from an empirical study. We conclude with four open questions for our project and others like it: Where is the locus of a community of practice? Who are the core members? Do capacity‐building models transfer to other disciplines? Can our theoretically motivated measures of success apply to other projects of the same nature?