Thursday, 22 November 2012

Infrequently Asked Questions: An interdisciplinary dialogue


                                                                                               17 Nov 2011

(In)frequently asked questions -(I)FAQ.....
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1. What is this (I)FAQ about?

   This (I)FAQ deals with the role of NCSI in promoting interdisciplinary
   research in IISc.

2. But are there not initiatives already in place to meet this objective?
   Interdisciplinary centres have been set up, there are occasional
   lectures by faculty of other departments and, in the case of
   interdisciplinary research teams, movement of students from one
   department to another?

   Simply establishing interdisciplinary teams and centres is not
   enough: they must also function effectively.They need coaching
   and methodological support to reach their full potential. There
   is an urgent need for the Institute to have an internal capability
   to build and sustain interdisciplinary communities. This becomes
   important considering that IISc is plagued by many institutional
   problems that act as barriers to knowledge integration.

3. What are those institutional problems? Can you elaborate?

   I did explain this in my earlier FAQ. The undue focus on
   publications, individualism and secrecy may have served knowledge
   fragmentation but they cannot meet our objective of knowledge
   integration. That said, even if rules and incentives are modified
   to suit interdisciplinary communities, they would still need dedicated
   support to function well.

4. Are you implying that interdisciplinary teams and centres have their
   downside as well?

   Yes, like any other human institution, they have their disorders.
   They may simply not be functioning well or they can even become
   an obstacle to learning. This may happen when the qualities one seeks
   in a successful interdisciplinary community are pushed out of balance.

5. Can you give an example of such an imbalance?

   Most certainly. Successful communities capture and document insights,
   ideas and procedures. They organize that information into a
   repository so it is easily accessible to members. But carried to the
   extreme, this turns into a single-minded focus on documentation. The
   result of documentism is typically an information junkyard. It is a
   consequence of thinking that the documents are the main source of value
   to the community. To remedy it, communities need to think through
   their purpose, identify the documents that would genuinely be useful,
   and develop clear roles for managing them. Even though documentation
   is important for a community, most find that they need to integrate
   documentation with knowledge sharing and problem solving activities.
   There is need for support teams that help accelerate the natural
   learning and evolution processes of interdisciplinary communities.

6. What other ways can support teams help?

   The teams can operate on both the strategic and tactical levels.
   This may include assessing the current condition, identifying strategic
   capability gaps and areas where learning activities are uncoordinated
   as also educating, raising awareness and convincing stakeholders.
   On another level, there will be need to build a repository for
   community documents including best practices and standards, a directory
   of members' areas of expertise and a shared workspace for synchronous
   electronic collaboration.

   Let me add that this is only an illustrative list. There are many
   more issues involved in developing interdisciplinary communities.

7. I notice you talk of interdisciplinary 'communities': has this
   got any special connotation than, say, interdisciplinary teams
   or centers?

   The essence of a 'team' is a set of interdependent tasks that
   contribute to a predefined, shared objective. The team makes a
   commitment to this goal and ensures that individual commitments
   are kept. The essence of a 'community' is the members' personal
   investment in its domain. It is not so much a specific achievement
   as a territory, an area of shared interest that the community
   explores. A community is not defined by any set of 'tasks': it
   is defined by its fundamental commitment to exploring its domain
   and to developing and sharing the relevant knowledge.

8. But does not a 'department' also reflect 'an area of
   shared interest'?

   It is true that universities in general have organized themselves
   around the scientific specialties, the 'disciplines', but this was
   spurred not so much for the purpose of stewarding knowledge and
   fostering learning as by the need to meet the increased competition for
   university resources. Look around and see how much communication
   takes place between the different specialty groups even within the same
   department: I guess it might be very minimal. So yes, the
   conventional university structure does not address present day
   knowledge related problems: there is need for more informal,
   voluntary structures organized around knowledge.

9. And interdisciplinary communities can provide this structure, right?

   At this point, let me add a qualifier and rephrase interdisciplinary
   communities as interdisciplinary 'communities of practice' to make
   it more broad-based. Whereas a 'domain' denotes the topic the community
   focuses on, the 'practice' is the specific knowledge the
   community develops, shares and maintains. A community of practice
   generally consists of a domain, the community and the practice. But
   members of a community may also face similar problems that are not
   officially recognized as domains such as aggressive clients or a low
   status job.(You may, however, continue to refer to interdisciplinary
   communities of practice as interdisciplinary communities for the
   purpose of this I-FAQ).

   The answer to your question is yes: interdisciplinary communities of
   practice can even become the foundational structures on which to
   build the twenty-first century research university.

10.But have not communities of practice always been functioning in
   research universities? Have not communities been always organized
   around the disciplines-physics, chemistry, biology..for the practices
   of research and teaching?

   Not quite. Remember that the 'practices' that you mentioned were
   taken for granted; what gained more prominence were the disciplines
   and the organization of knowledge around them. Moreover, there have
   never been true 'communities' in operation. As I have said earlier,
   universities have been organized around the 'disciplines' not so
   much for the purpose of fostering learning and knowledge as much as
   for meeting the increased competition for resources. The 'disciplinary'
   approach to knowledge production is in fact self-constraining.
   'Learning' has to encompass much more than classroom teaching and the
   kind of apprenticeship that research students go through. The new
   scheme will put 'practice' before 'knowledge': seeing the research
   university not through the lens of knowledge, but through the lens of
   practice.



11.So you are making a distinction between knowledge and practice?

   Yes. Let me clarify. The 'practice' of managing a cricket team
   is not the same as the 'practice' of playing on a team. A researcher
   may think he has invented a brilliant new technology: a manufacturing
   professional may simply dismiss it. That's because both belong to
   different communities of practice. If people are engaged in different
   practices, if they are learning to be different kinds of people, they
   will respond to the same information in different ways: the same
   'knowledge' doesn't get produced. Practice shapes assimilation.

12. How do you say that?

    When you share a practice, or when you have evolved a practice
    together and have learned to read each other and know what
    everyone else is really good at, there is a kind of trust and common
    ground that is built up which enables smooth flow of knowledge
    (within a community of practice). Practice provides the rails on which
    knowledge flows. As I have already indicated, it is the different
    attitudes and dispositions shaped by practice and identity
    that divide different communities of practice.

    Take the case of NCSI. We belong to a community of practice that is
    very different from other units in IISc. We provide services: others
    are basically into research and teaching. We have our own style, our
    own sense of taste, judgment and appropriateness.I feel that might be
    one of the primary reasons why members of the teaching and research
    community (even from the same domain, leave alone different domains)
    are not always able to judge, in a fair manner, the degree of effort
    and quality of work put in by the service community.

13.But why do you suggest such an explicit focus on 'practice' now?

   As I have stated in an earlier FAQ, there are several unhealthy
   trends afflicting research universities. There is a need to bring
   in elements that counterbalance the unavoidable and that negate
   the negative traits. And one way of doing this is to focus on
   converting research universities into 'learning organizations'.
   Researchers are becoming more directly sensitive to market pressures.
   Certain lines of inquiry that are unlikely to be rewarded by large
   grants are not likely to be pursued. Most innovations have always come
   from outside the research university. But the university was needed
   to ensure that the innovations were converted into public goods
   rather than intellectual property. As universities themselves are
   now encouraged to become intellectual property holders, their
   distinctiveness as producers of knowledge as a public good is itself
   under threat. There is need for measures to counterbalance the negative
   effects to bring the spotlight back to knowledge as a public good free
   from extraneous considerations. Seeing the research university through
   the lens of 'practice' can be a useful tool in facilitating their
   development as learning organizations.

14.OK.. but what's the connection between 'practice' and a 'learning
   organization'?

   Communities of practice help in knowledge flow. Exchange of knowledge
   across community boundaries will help integrate the knowledge system.
   The organization then becomes a learning organization. A learning
   organization is able to cope with change in a much better manner. There
   will be all-round improvement in quality.

   Let me again come back to your earlier query on why the explicit focus
   on 'practice' now. As I have indicated, a series of events in the
   external environment is forcing centres of higher education to adapt
   through new initiatives. New initiatives such as industry-academia
   interaction also lead to unhealthy trends such as dependence on big
   industrial money and the patenting culture. A series of countermeasures
   (such as identifying with the general public by rendering esoteric
   knowledge publicly available) are needed to offset the negative
   effects. A two-way learning with external stakeholders such as research
   users and citizen scientists has now become feasible. With new
   technologies and systems in place, administrators will be able to rely
   on quality information and knowledge for decision making. New
   'practices' such as the practice of interacting with research users or
   the practice of converting information to knowledge or the practice of
   disseminating scientific knowledge to the lay public have gained
   importance. Interdisciplinarity has resulted in multiple
   stakeholders: this has resulted in the 'practice' of negotiating with
   them to reach common ground. The success of a research university is no
   longer dependent on just the 'practices' of research and teaching:
   there are multiple interlinked practices. Communities can be formed
   around each of these practices.

15.In an earlier (I)FAQ you had stated that interdisciplinary
   centres cannot be run like other departments. Can you elaborate?

   Sure. I agree that lean 'centres' were conceived of as a way to
   stimulate networks of innovators in units attached to diverse
   institutions and firms in the context of the new socially distributed
   knowledge production. But if these units are to be simply disbanded
   when their jobs are completed or when decreasing returns become
   evident, sustainable long-term benefits would not accrue. Without
   adequate process management, they run the risk of functioning as
   another department. A 'department' implies specifying a structure and
   systems and roles that achieve relatively fixed goals and fit well with
  other structural elements. This may have worked for fragmentary not
   integrative research, since interdisciplinary research mostly implies
   integrative research.

16.But how else can specific interdisciplinary projects be managed?

   If you are talking of managing specific interdisciplinary
   projects, of interdisciplinary teams focused on specific tasks- yes,
   the 'centres' may well be suitable. But what I am concerned more with
   is promoting learning and knowledge and I don't think interdisciplinary
   centres are the best structures to achieve this objective.

   But let me also put a counter-question: How many interdisciplinary
   'centres' will you keep creating? A 'centre' once again implies a
   boundary; true interdisciplinarity transcends boundaries. Let's say we
   have 2 interdisciplinary centres- ID1 and ID2. Who will manage a
   project involving both ID1 and ID2? Do you create a third
   interdisciplinary centre? Sure, there may be many external stakeholders
   in these centres and are probably not as institutionalized as a
  department is but I guess the difference ends there. A 'centre' apes a
   'department' in all other ways: it facilitates resource utilization,
   has boundaries, has to have a budget and administrators.

   In the absence of structures that promote learning and knowledge,
   interdisciplinary centres may very well fade away. No problem with
   that- they are temporary structures designed to fade away. Centres
   are constantly being reorganized. Projects come and go. Teams are
   assembled and dispersed.But along with them the knowledge accumulated
   also gets lost. I am referring here primarily to the kinds of knowledge
   that get created in the course of carrying out the projects but never
   get formally published. Given this flux, the moot question is whether
   the temporary structures can be reinforced by ones that are more stable
   and long-term albeit informal and voluntary. Interdisciplinary
   communities that facilitate promoting learning and knowledge provide
   that stability. And that's why, as I have said earlier, communities
   of practice can become the foundational structures on which to build
   the twenty-first century research university.

17.And that would provide new degrees of freedom for redesigning the
   research university?

   Precisely. We may then even be able to re-examine the whole concept
   of initiating several interdisciplinary centres and instead
   have just a single unit that would take on the responsibility of
   managing nay administering the different interdisciplinary projects.
   This can co-exist along with the several interdisciplinary
   communities.

18.So setting up interdisciplinary communities is also needed for
   integrative research, right?

   Well..'setting' up may not be the right word. We should realize
   that communities should be natural, spontaneous and self-directed.
   You cannot contrive or dictate it. Communities evolve toward their
   potential rather than define them upfront and developing them
   involves imagining possibilities their members have not yet
   considered. And yet, as I have already indicated, if these
   communities are to survive on a sustained basis and reach their full
   potential they need support. The support services may include
   'designing' them, but with characteristics very different from the
   'design' as we have traditionally understood.

19.How is it different from the traditional design?

   The goal of interdisciplinary community design is to bring out the
   community's own internal direction, character and energy. Designing
   them is more a matter of shepherding their evolution than creating
   them from scratch. Communities usually build on pre-existing networks.
   The key is to combine design elements in a way that catalyzes
   interdisciplinary community development.

20.Won't all the interdisciplinary communities need separate dedicated
   support teams?

   Ideally yes. All interdisciplinary communities should not be handled
   the same way. They may be 'distributed' in varying degrees:
   geographically and in other ways with respect to size, organizational
   affiliation, cultural and other differences. They may even have
   different strategic intents.

21.Can you elaborate?

   Strategic intents for forming communities may differ. One may be
   to help each other solve everyday work problems, another may be
   to develop and disseminate a set of best practices or to steward
   the tools, insights and approaches needed by members and yet another
   to develop highly innovative solutions and ideas. Different intents
   require different community structures and activities. But this
   does not necessarily imply that the support teams have to function in a
   disjointed manner.

22.What is the alternative then?

   The support teams can function from and be part of a central
   Interdisciplinary Research Facilitation Unit (IRFU) that can also
   oversee the coordinated working of all these communities.
   It can facilitate exchanges across community boundaries and help
   integrate the knowledge system. The central unit can take care of
   the support needs of individual communities as well.

   [The IRFU itself can be part of a larger 'Institute Knowledge
   Initiative' similar to the Institute Nanoscience Initiative
   (INI) or the Institute Mathematics Initiative(IMI) and housed at
   NCSI. A dedicated dashboard can be set up in the monitoring room
   of the IRFU at NCSI for facilitating boundary exchange].

23.You talked about facilitating exchanges across community boundaries.
   Can you throw more light on this?

   Earlier I touched upon the disorders faced by individual communities.
   But communities do not exist in isolation. Their effectiveness is
   not a matter of their internal development alone but how well they
   connect with other communities as well. Problems also afflict
   constellations of communities: by constellation I mean a set of
   multiple communities related by organization affiliation, subject
   matter or application. As communities focus on their domains and
   deepen their expertise, they inevitably create boundaries. Different
   domains entail different interests, perspectives and perceptions of
   value. Membership in different communities makes trust more difficult.
   Different practices entail different vocabularies, styles and sets of
   experiences.It is important to pay as much attention to
   the boundaries of communities as to their core, and to make sure
   that there is enough activity at these boundaries to prevent
   fragmentation and renew learning.

24.Can interdisciplinary communities of practice meet the challenge of
   different interests, perspectives, perceptions of value, vocabularies,
   styles and sets of experiences?

   What makes managing knowledge a challenge is that it is not an object
   that can be stored, owned and moved around like a piece of equipment
   or document. It resides in the skills, understanding and relationships
   of its members as well as in the tools,documents and processes that
   embody aspects of this knowledge. Communities of practice do not reduce
   knowledge to an object. They are the ideal social structures for
   stewarding knowledge. By assigning responsibility to the practitioners
   themselves to generate and share the knowledge they need, these
   communities provide a social forum that supports the living nature of
   knowledge. So yes, one way of reconciling different interests,
   perspectives, perceptions of value, vocabularies, styles and sets of
   experiences is through interaction and informal learning processes such
   as storytelling, conversation, coaching and apprenticeship of the kind
   that communities of practice provide. But I repeat: management
   and support services for such communities are crucial. It is not just a
  question of grouping people together: there are complex issues involved
   and the nuances and subtleties need to be addressed for their
   successful operation.

25.Oh well..I see the point. You need to nurture interdisciplinary
   communities (and by implication interdisciplinary research) if they
   are to sustain and thrive and that requires dedicated professional
   care without which they are likely to fizzle out. Am I right?

   Fizzling out may be a strong word but it is a possibility. What is
   certain is interdisciplinary communities will fail to achieve
   their full potential without dedicated care. It is not
   enough to have shared projects that are at the intersections of
   multiple domains or people with membership in multiple
   communities. Learning to see interdisciplinary community disorders
   is a useful lens for developing them and helping to ensure their
   continuing value. To allow communities to flourish, it is very
   important to pay constant attention and fine tune the process as it
   evolves. Interdisciplinary communities truly become knowledge
  assets when their core and boundaries evolve in complementary ways-
   creating deep expertise inside and constant renewal at the boundary. The
   learning potential of the institute lies in the balancing act between
   well-developed communities and active boundary management.

26.And NCSI can take on that balancing role?

   Any unit in IISc can take on that role. But since NCSI has
   been most closely involved with scientific information and
   knowledge management in the Institute for sometime now and
   has trained professionals in these areas, I would pitch for it.
   After all, the domain of information science and by
   extension knowledge management evolved with the need to view knowledge
   in its entirety. The issue is not just one of reconciling different
   perspectives, interests or perceptions of value. While the Institute
   (and universities in general) is faced with a gamut of organizational
   problems, the basic structures and systems remain the same. Quick-fixing
   solutions will only have limited impact. A more holistic approach
   to change will cause many of the problems to just disappear: we
  may not even have to address them individually. The domain of
   information and knowledge management has much to offer towards this
   end. Relationship and knowledge brokering will gain added
   significance. A centre like NCSI will then play a centrestage
   role, much beyond being facilitators of not much consequence.

27. Thank you!
                               -x-


Reference:

Wenger, E., McDermott, R. and Snyder, W.M. 2002. Cultivating Communities of Practice.
Boston: Harvard Business School Press.
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Manu Rajan
National Centre for Science Information (NCSI)
Indian Institute of Science (IISc)
Bangalore 560 012

email: manu.rajan134@gmail.com
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