EJEL Volume 6 Issue 3
October 2008
The eLIDA CAMEL Nomadic Model of Collaborative Partnership for a Community of Practice in Design for Learning
Jill Jameson
School of Education and Training, University of Greenwich, London, UK
A nomadic collaborative partnership model for a community of practice (CoP) in Design for Learning (D4L)
can facilitate successful innovation and continuing appraisals of effective professional practice,
stimulated by a 'critical friend' assigned to the project. This paper reports on e-learning case studies
collected by the JISC-funded UK eLIDA CAMEL Design for Learning Project. The project implemented and
evaluated learning design (LD) tools in higher and further education within the JISC Design for Learning
pedagogic programme (2006-07). Project partners trialled professional user evaluations of innovative
e-learning tools with learning design function, collecting D4L case studies and LD sequences in post-16/HE
contexts using LAMS and Moodle. The project brought together learning activity sequences within a collaborative
e-learning community of practice based on the CAMEL (Collaborative Approaches to the Management of e-Learning)
model, contributing to international D4L developments. This paper provides an overview of project outputs in
e-learning innovations, including evaluations from teachers and students. The paper explores intentionality
in the development of a CoP in design for learning, reporting on trials of LD and social software that bridged
tensions between formalised intra-institutional e-learning relationships and inter-institutional professional
project team dynamic D4L practitioner interactions. Following a brief report of D4L case studies and feedback,
the catalytic role of the 'critical friend' is highlighted and recommended as a key ingredient in the
successful development of a nomadic model of communities of practice for managing professional e-learning
projects. eLIDA CAMEL Partners included the Association of Learning Technology (ALT), JISC infoNet, three
universities and five FE/Sixth Form Colleges. Results reported to JISC demonstrated D4L e-learning
innovations by practitioners, illuminated by the role of the 'critical friend'. The project also
benefited from formal case study evaluations and the leading work of ALT and JISC infoNet in the
development of the CAMEL model.
Keywords:
e-Learning, communities of practice, collaboration, design for learning, JISC, case study, professional practice.
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