Addressing Complex Social Problems Using the Lens of Family Violence: Valuable Learning from the First Year of an Interdisciplinary Community of Practice
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Communities of Practice
1.2. Complex Social Issues and Family and Domestic Violence FDV
1.3. University Teaching and Learning about FDV
2. Methods
3. Results
3.1. Participants, Process Measures of the CoP, and Its Development over Time
- Collect information to broaden understanding of the issues and current responses,
- Create teaching and learning resources,
- Aim for policy impact: from primary prevention through to tertiary services,
- Raise awareness of and improve services on campus and links to possibilities outside of campus,
- Engage in collaborative research on FDV.
3.2. Findings from the Qualitative Analysis
3.2.1. Motivation for Participation in the CoP
3.2.2. Achievements
- Cross-disciplinary collaboration
- Increased knowledge and awareness of the university
- Development of connections outside of the university
3.2.3. Challenges
- Managing time
…sat as something they could only give time to once they had done all the other things they needed to do. There wasn’t a sense of university roles and expectations, it wasn’t an outcome you could say ‘I’m putting in time into this and I’m going to get a paper out or I’m going to publish it so I can put it down for my teaching’.
- Short timeframes and limits on the use of the funding
There’s a lot of developmental work happening in the first year or 6 months and relationship building …So as it matured there would be more opportunity for more tasks and formal outcomes.
- Balancing openness to new members with achieving outcomes
...last time we met we had new people come and we covered the same ground that we covered in previous meetings-because every time there’s a new person, we talk about what we might do.
- Balancing exploration and creative input with structure and project development
Do you immediately try to do something about the problem that you see now, or do you look underneath it and see what are the things that are causing the problem?
- Creating and sustaining new ways of working
The biggest challenge was trying to think creatively about the problem of the CoP, how do we really work together? How do we really break down the discipline silos and how do we really create ways of crossing them? How do we change the Law [Units] and how do we change the way we work together, it’s very hard…
Technology is often quite limited, particularly in the earlier meetings - it was often quite difficult to hear what other people were saying in the room. And it was difficult to see who was in the room, so it wasn’t as strong a connection because of technological challenges.
3.2.4. Assessment against Community of Practice Value Creation Criteria
Maybe keep it smaller than what it currently is, so it would only be those people who are really passionate and who want to be actively involved. That might be that initially there are the two or three topics we need to address which are, curriculum, being closely connected to the sector and working with the PPI [Public Policy Institute]. So, we have a smaller number of people in designated tasks and activities to keep the momentum going and make sure the action happens rather than talking.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cycle | Indicators of Value | |
---|---|---|
Cycle 1. Immediate value: indicators of activity/interactions. | This cycle considers networking/community activities and interactions as having value in and of themselves. | “Seeing the will to address this issue, given its complexity.” “Commitment to change the outcome.” |
Cycle 2. Potential value: knowledge capital | Human capital. New skills, information, perspectives, ideas, as well as confidence, and inspiration Social capital-potential opportunities for collaboration and the ability to promote a cause Resources (tangible capital). Specific pieces of information, documents, tools and procedures, links and references, search capabilities, visualization tools, and other socio-informational structures that facilitate access to information. Collective intangible assets (reputational capital). Reputation of the community or network, the status of a profession, or the recognition of the strategic relevance of the domain. Many people value their community of practice, for instance, for the collective voice or recognition that it provides them in their organization. All these assets increase the potential for collective action. Transformed ability to learn (learning capital). The act of participating in a facilitated network or a community as a valuable way of learning can be enlightening for people for whom formal teaching or training methods have always been seen as the only way to learn. When members have experienced significant learning in networks or communities they can transfer this experience to other contexts. | “It’s exposed to me to the operations of the university, it’s been good to understand how the different areas of the university work.” “…it was simply the inspiration in seeing so many different people doing so much different work” “I’ve never been in a room with family law people talking about family law in relation to domestic violence, I’ve always been on the service delivery end, with clients going to family law court. It was interesting to see how the family law bit works.” “I’ve also learnt more personally about how to collaborate with the non-University sector …. when they brought in different organisations …that was that was something I learnt from.” “...a couple of key contacts I made that I feel confident that we will continue work together.” “Sharing resources and ideas, particularly about transformative learning.” “The symposium was a great achievement to show the breadth of work.” “The symposium encouraged everyone to look outwardly from the university to focus their research and work.” “For me, some of the Perth campus-based staff are much more aware of WACRH [in Geraldton], which was definitely one of my aims.” “Symposium was a great event to show what’s happening in the area from different disciplines and external organisations and create connections with them and learn from them.” |
Cycle 3. Applied value: Changes in practice | Indicators of changes in practice. Knowledge capital is a potential value, which may or may not be put into use. Leveraging capital requires adapting and applying it to a specific situation. e.g. reusing a lesson plan or changing a procedure, implementing an idea, trying a suggestion, enlisting members of one’s network for a cause, or leveraging a collective voice to make a case for an organizational decision. | “UWA pulled together an application to [national organisation] to pilot university-based prevention of FDV – even though it wasn’t successful, it wouldn’t have happened without the CoP.” |
Cycle 4. Realized value | Indicators of performance improvement. Changes in practice or the use of resources from the community/network that results in improvements in performance of what matters to stakeholders, including members who apply a new practice. | “Projects involving students [Media, WACRH and McCusker] was a good achievement. They were innovations.” “Some of us got involved in a World Universities Network project on FDV to do collaborative international research.” |
Cycle 5. Reframing value: | Indicators for assessing the redefinition of success. Social learning causes a reconsideration of the learning imperatives and the criteria by which success is defined. This includes reframing strategies, goals, as well as values. | (no example) |
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Greville, H.; House, W.; Tarrant, S.; Thompson, S.C. Addressing Complex Social Problems Using the Lens of Family Violence: Valuable Learning from the First Year of an Interdisciplinary Community of Practice. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043501
Greville H, House W, Tarrant S, Thompson SC. Addressing Complex Social Problems Using the Lens of Family Violence: Valuable Learning from the First Year of an Interdisciplinary Community of Practice. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(4):3501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043501
Chicago/Turabian StyleGreville, Heath, William House, Stella Tarrant, and Sandra C. Thompson. 2023. "Addressing Complex Social Problems Using the Lens of Family Violence: Valuable Learning from the First Year of an Interdisciplinary Community of Practice" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 4: 3501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043501
APA StyleGreville, H., House, W., Tarrant, S., & Thompson, S. C. (2023). Addressing Complex Social Problems Using the Lens of Family Violence: Valuable Learning from the First Year of an Interdisciplinary Community of Practice. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043501