Title: Student Community engagement, communities of practice and Community Psychology
1Student -Community engagement, communities of
practice and Community Psychology
- Rebecca Lawthom and Michael Richards,
- Social Change and Well Being Centre, Research
Institute for Health and Social Change - Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester UK
2Communities of practice means
- Knowing becomes situated in social resources
- Learning is situated in forms of social
co-participation - A different concept of identity or learning
around activity and participation - Engaging with asymmetric forms of
co-participation (as in CP)
3COPS are social relations
- Eckert and McConnell-Ginet (1999) define a COP as
an aggregated of people, who united by a common
enterprise, develop and share ways of doing
things, ways of talking, beliefs and values in
short, practices (p.186) - COPS are essentially about language,
communication and learning. - Participants make meaning of this joint
enterprise and of themselves in relation to this
enterprise.
4COP gives a perspective on how learning happens
- Individuals engage in multiple communities of
practice, as core members, peripheral or
apprentices. - Engagements in social groupings result in the
acquisition of cultural knowledge i.e. the
practices (behaviours and actions of local
communities of practice) - How ? through legitimate peripheral
participation
5Legitimate peripheral participation
- Learning is embedded in the social (material and
social relations) the practices - Legitimate participation indicates that the
learner is entitled and contributes to respective
COP - Peripheral suggests participation is a collective
effort more engagement is more than mastery, it
is about belonging. - COP refers to human and non-human features thus
settings, buildings and locations are socially
meaningful aspects of practice.
6Learning becoming and belonging
- Lee and Roth (2003,p.2)
- it is a constant process of becoming and
belonging to a community that is itself becoming
and belonging to practitioners - And
- This way of articulating learning seeks to
decenter mastery and domination of others in
favour of a description that focuses on an
increasing entanglement in the relations that
constitute a community of practice (p.4)
7Knowledge acquisition and community psychology
- Community Psychology is concerned with
- Values which underpin marginalisation and
oppression - Social justice access to knowledge
- Power who has access to rights
- Working with in a community not ON
- Valuing others respecting knowledge
- Action and change and learning sustainability
and long term development
8COP with Community Psychology students and
partners
- Much synergy between these two
- Communities of practice very interested in
learning in practice not didactic structuring in
assymetric learning settings. - Learning is therefore about access to settings
(practice settings) where the curriculum may be
the social setting. - Students learning to do community psychology as
part of a CP course (a counter-hegemonic bloc
within psychology curriculum) - Psychology students here encouraged not to do
research on people but research with community
members. - Tutors, community members and students are all
part of a community of practice
9Using a case study to understand partnership
- Case study here of a Community project undertaken
last year - This successful student liaised with a community
group - Michael Richards and the Wiseguys project
10Community Psychology Student to Community
Psychologist.
- Undergraduate Community Psychology.
- Young Peoples Support Foundation (YPSF).
- Volunteer completion of report.
- Sex and Relationship Advice Worker with boys and
young men aged 13 to 25 years. - Deliver sessions on sexual health and related
issues. Also take part in events, forums and
training sessions. - Advice work which involves work on homelessness,
benefit advice, mental health and drugs/alcohol.
11Wyseguys (Wy Wythenshawe)
- Tackles problems associated with masculinity
including poor health (mental and physical),
unemployment, crime, sexuality and education. - Safe space for young men.
- Health calendar for young men.
- Alcohol play and workshops.
12Session Development.
- 4 main areas
- Women similarities and differences.
- Fatherhood good and bad, ideal dad.
- Relationships different sexualities.
- Contraception and Sexually transmitted diseases.
- Also cover mental health, alcohol and drugs and
present issues in their lives.
13Action Research and my work.
- Empower young men have a voice.
- Collaborate in making decisions on content of
sessions. - Inclusion at all levels of ability through
relationship building. - Respecting and promoting diversity.
- - Working with young men and not on them.
- Through evaluation tools e.g. quizzes, they have
demonstrated learning from session. - Sustainability more funds and time needed to
take to next level.
14Apprentices (i.e. the students) and the learning
curriculum
- Teaching curriculum ostensibly structured by
tutors learning outcomes etc - Learning curriculum structured by members
simply participation in an activity system - Students as apprentices and legitimate peripheral
participants - Community members core participators
- Learning and identity are entwined.
15Tutors and community members reflections
- Tutors need to manage twin curricular demands in
a dynamic environment - Members of community attended presentations
ensuring clarity of voice and responsibility
around marginalisation - Community members steered process (as core
members) and sometimes transformed university
COP.
16What does this example give us ?
- Community engagement managed and credited.
Academic boundaries extended beyond the campus - Community Psychology- based on action research
principles- different ways of learning and
teaching (pedagogy) - Communities of practice as a useful framework to
understand community and university partnerships