Internal Conflict within Communities of Practice
We belong to various communities of practice throughout our
lives. Many of these diverse communities of practice are in conflict with one
another and create internal debate and practical implications within our lives.
Everyone must address this conflict, however visible minorities, or more
specifically, Afrikans throughout the Diaspora are constantly negotiating these
divergent communities because of oppression and our marginalized position in
society.
I am an assistant coach of a high school basketball team.
Last weekend my wife and I had dinner with the head coach, a white man, and his
partner at our residence. After a great meal and several cocktails our
discussion turned to an incident last year when a young African Nova Scotian
player from an opposing team posted some disparaging remarks about some of our
players (the team is all white except my daughter) on-line prior to a
tournament. This ultimately resulted in involvement by both school
administrations and the NSSAF, the provincial governing sports body and it
created hard feelings between the teams, coaches and parents. I knew this young
player and her parents from my daughter’s previous involvement at the Community
YMCA and other provincial basketball programs. She is a wonderful young woman
and gifted athlete – a direct result of her parenting. In my mind, she simply
demonstrated poor decision-making as all young people do in their maturation
process. Throughout the incident last year and every time I have see her or her
parents moving forward, I gave them daps, talked to her about her future and
supported her play on the court. The coach took issue with my actions and
asserted that I was being hypocritical as a coach of our basketball program. I,
in turn became defensive, and indicated that although I disagreed with her
actions, she was a young African Nova Scotian and that I believed it was my
responsibility as one of the few African Nova Scotian coaches in the province
and a positive male figure, to make contact with all African Nova Scotian players
and to verbalize my ongoing support. Additionally, I stated that because of who
I was and what I believed in, my commitment to the African Nova Scotian
community easily superceded my involvement with the basketball program. I genuinely
care about my players and was upset about the incident but believe I have an
obligation to the Afrikan community that trumps all other responsibilities
outside of my family.
This conversation generated a lot of internal debate about
conflicting communities of practice and identity. It demonstrated that although
we all belong to various communities there is overlap, tension and disparities
that create demarcations and choices which reflect what believe we in. Wenger
discusses the concept of diversity within communities of practice and asserts” that
mutual engagement is a kind of community that does not entail homogeneity. He
also posits that a community of practice is neither a haven for togetherness
nor an island of intimacy insulated from political and social relations.” (Wenger,
75) The head coach and I have very different belief systems and
perspectives about race that color our view of the team and any obligations to
team members vs members of the African Nova Scotian community. We consider
ourselves a coaching unit and the players, coaches, parents, administration,
opponents create a community of practice and not only are there disparities
about basketball related issues but we enter this community with differing
experiences and histories. I believe that everyone present during the
conversation benefited from the spirited dispute and that these types of
interactions contribute to the history and future of the community of practice.
This is nothing new to African Nova Scotians because we have
been required to function in both our cultural communities and broader societal
contexts. All people must negotiate this conflict but visible minorities within
Canadian society are enculturated to manage this as a function of integration.
I am only beginning to understand Wenger’s theory of learning and I anxiously await
further classroom debate about this issue during our next scheduled lectures but
the readings present some interesting ideas about how we learn and our
interactions with others and it seems to have parallels with Afrocentrism and
Nguzo Saba such as community, collective responsibility and participation and
shared history.
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ReplyDeleteI very much liked you blog. You addressed how complicated it is (especially for people African Descent) to navigate their way through Eurocentric communities of practice while trying to be Afrocentric.
ReplyDeleteThe discussion you had with the white coach shows how our realities are very different from one another. I understand completely why while you didn't condone what they bball player had done, you still supposed them. On the other hand I also see how the other coach did not understand how you could still support them. This shows how Wenger's idea about many constellations(Communities of Practice) "crash" together. It also shows reification of ideas within a new community of practice as each of you had a different belief as to why you supported or didn't support the basketball player.
I think that as African Nova Scotians while different, we all have some similar experiences and understandings of our world. We also understand that if don't support each through the good and the bad, the ups and the downs that no one else will. It is this that helps to keep us afrocentric in this Eurocentric world. Great work!!!