Double Agents: Visible and Invisible Work in an Online Community of Practice
D. Davenport. Knowledge Networks: Innovation through Communities of Practice, chapter 21, IGI Global, Hershey, PA, (2004)
Abstract
This chapter reflects on work to create computer-supported Communities of Practice among small enterprises in the tourism sector and to establish a knowledge network for destination management. The work was undertaken as part of a project funded by the European Community. The author draws on recent work by Dourish in which he makes a case for an approach to design that takes account of both 'embodiment' and 'embeddedness'. An online knowledge network is embedded in a given domain, but it is also embodied in physical interactors working with machines. Novices who interact in this environment by means of ICTs are thus double agents, working in a domain but also working with artefacts. Where the 'workings' of a device are not fully understood, expectations of what may be achieved in an interaction are likely to be unrealistic; this may affect the reach and richness of a knowledge network.
%0 Book Section
%1 KNICOP_21
%A Davenport, Dr Elisabeth
%B Knowledge Networks: Innovation through Communities of Practice
%C Hershey, PA
%D 2004
%E Hildreth, Paul
%E Kimble, Chris
%I IGI Global
%K CoP Community_of_Practice Ethnographic_Study Face-to-Face IS_Design_Issues IT_Platform Interaction Interface_Design Internet-Based_Technologies Invisible_Work Knowledge_Network Literacy Meetings Online_Community Situated_Learning Technology_and_Social_Issues Trust User-Centered_Design
%P 256--266
%T Double Agents: Visible and Invisible Work in an Online Community of Practice
%U http://www.chris-kimble.com/KNICOP/Chapters/Chapter_21.html
%X This chapter reflects on work to create computer-supported Communities of Practice among small enterprises in the tourism sector and to establish a knowledge network for destination management. The work was undertaken as part of a project funded by the European Community. The author draws on recent work by Dourish in which he makes a case for an approach to design that takes account of both 'embodiment' and 'embeddedness'. An online knowledge network is embedded in a given domain, but it is also embodied in physical interactors working with machines. Novices who interact in this environment by means of ICTs are thus double agents, working in a domain but also working with artefacts. Where the 'workings' of a device are not fully understood, expectations of what may be achieved in an interaction are likely to be unrealistic; this may affect the reach and richness of a knowledge network.
%& 21
@incollection{KNICOP_21,
abstract = {This chapter reflects on work to create computer-supported Communities of Practice among small enterprises in the tourism sector and to establish a knowledge network for destination management. The work was undertaken as part of a project funded by the European Community. The author draws on recent work by Dourish in which he makes a case for an approach to design that takes account of both 'embodiment' and 'embeddedness'. An online knowledge network is embedded in a given domain, but it is also embodied in physical interactors working with machines. Novices who interact in this environment by means of ICTs are thus double agents, working in a domain but also working with artefacts. Where the 'workings' of a device are not fully understood, expectations of what may be achieved in an interaction are likely to be unrealistic; this may affect the reach and richness of a knowledge network.},
added-at = {2008-04-13T15:33:20.000+0200},
address = {Hershey, PA},
author = {Davenport, Dr Elisabeth},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2fc2b2df9d69f4aa75091fdaabc8072fe/xckuk},
booktitle = {Knowledge Networks: Innovation through Communities of Practice},
chapter = 21,
description = {KNICOP},
editor = {Hildreth, Paul and Kimble, Chris},
interhash = {3e6a98b87b0f3e3e69555d9d8629f225},
intrahash = {fc2b2df9d69f4aa75091fdaabc8072fe},
keywords = {CoP Community_of_Practice Ethnographic_Study Face-to-Face IS_Design_Issues IT_Platform Interaction Interface_Design Internet-Based_Technologies Invisible_Work Knowledge_Network Literacy Meetings Online_Community Situated_Learning Technology_and_Social_Issues Trust User-Centered_Design},
pages = {256--266},
publisher = {IGI Global},
timestamp = {2008-04-13T15:33:26.000+0200},
title = {Double Agents: Visible and Invisible Work in an Online Community of Practice},
url = {http://www.chris-kimble.com/KNICOP/Chapters/Chapter_21.html},
year = 2004
}