Shared Repertoire
Shared routines, language, stories, tools, and resources through which a practice is recognised and negotiated.
Overview
Shared routines, language, stories, tools, and resources through which a practice is recognised and negotiated.
Meanings Across Theories
Observable Research Manifestations
- Recurring terms, artefacts, routines, and contested meanings may be examined.
Common Misuse
- Treating a written handbook as evidence that participants share a repertoire.
Related scholars
- Etienne Wenger — Source author; no scholar profile is claimed in this phase.
Sources & verification
- VerifiedThe linked record provides the source-specific vocabulary and bibliographic anchor for this concept page. — Wenger, E. (1998). Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity. Cambridge University Press.
- Editorially ReviewedThe definition, cross-theory distinction, related-entity explanation, and misuse warning are Syntag editorial synthesis, not a quotation or universal consensus.
- Research GuidanceObservable research manifestations are study-dependent options, not a measurement recipe or automatic inference.
Content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional academic advice.