TY - JOUR
T1 - ThinkLets
T2 - A collaboration engineering pattern language
AU - De Vreede, Gert Jan
AU - Kolfschoten, Gwendolyn L.
AU - Briggs, Robert O.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Under the right circumstances, teams that use professional facilitators and Group Support Systems (GSS) experience significant gains in productivity and quality of work life. However, because of the expense, facilitators are not available to many teams that could benefit from their interventions. The emerging field of Collaboration Engineering aims to formulate an approach for designing high-value recurring collaboration processes that capture the best practices of master facilitators and packaging the processes in a fashion that can be transferred to practitioners to execute for themselves without the ongoing intervention of professional facilitators. Towards that end, Collaboration Engineering researchers have developed thinkLets, an Alexandrian design pattern language. A thinkLet is a named, packaged facilitation technique, captured as a pattern that collaboration engineers can incorporate into process designs. These patterns can be instantiated at design time in such a way that a practitioner can use them to recreate a predictable pattern of collaboration. This paper articulates the details of thinkLet design patterns and explains the utility that facilitators, collaboration engineers, researchers and practitioners are deriving from thinkLets in the field. It examines the parallels and differences among the goals and structures of the thinkLets pattern language, Alexander's architectural patterns and software design patterns.
AB - Under the right circumstances, teams that use professional facilitators and Group Support Systems (GSS) experience significant gains in productivity and quality of work life. However, because of the expense, facilitators are not available to many teams that could benefit from their interventions. The emerging field of Collaboration Engineering aims to formulate an approach for designing high-value recurring collaboration processes that capture the best practices of master facilitators and packaging the processes in a fashion that can be transferred to practitioners to execute for themselves without the ongoing intervention of professional facilitators. Towards that end, Collaboration Engineering researchers have developed thinkLets, an Alexandrian design pattern language. A thinkLet is a named, packaged facilitation technique, captured as a pattern that collaboration engineers can incorporate into process designs. These patterns can be instantiated at design time in such a way that a practitioner can use them to recreate a predictable pattern of collaboration. This paper articulates the details of thinkLet design patterns and explains the utility that facilitators, collaboration engineers, researchers and practitioners are deriving from thinkLets in the field. It examines the parallels and differences among the goals and structures of the thinkLets pattern language, Alexander's architectural patterns and software design patterns.
KW - Collaboration engineering
KW - Design pattern
KW - Facilitation
KW - Group support systems (GSS)
KW - Pattern language
KW - ThinkLet
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33645317111&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=33645317111&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1504/IJCAT.2006.009064
DO - 10.1504/IJCAT.2006.009064
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33645317111
SN - 0952-8091
VL - 25
SP - 140
EP - 154
JO - International Journal of Computer Applications in Technology
JF - International Journal of Computer Applications in Technology
IS - 2-3
ER -