adoption of technology enhanced learning in higher education: influences of institutional policies...
TRANSCRIPT
Adoption of Technology Enhanced Learning in Higher Education: Influences of Institutional Policies and Practices
Dr. Gale Parchoma
Organization of this presentation
• Questions are definitely welcome at any point, I struggle to keep up with answering both verbal questions and chat questions.
• So I have inserted Questions and Comments (Q&C) slides between sections of this presentation.
• When we reach a Q&C slide, please remind me if I have missed questions, especially ones posted in the Chat.
Quick Note: I want to work through the first section on the study, questions, and literature review quite quickly because I think the more interesting stuff is in the findings.
The Context & Purpose of the Study
• One research-oriented western Canadian university– Involved in a 5-year Provincially funded program (2000-
2005) to increase the use of technology enhanced learning (TEL).
• Comparison of macro (provincial), mezzo (university), and micro (individual faculty members’) goals and measures of TEL success.
• In-depth look at driving and restraining forces that influenced the success of individual projects.
The Questions
1. What are the motivations for faculty members to adopt technology enhanced learning (TEL) into teaching praxis?
2. Does the adoption of TEL influence faculty members’ scholarship of teaching? If so, how?
3. What are the ‘returns on investment’ for faculty members’ time devoted to TEL?
4. To what extent do institutional structures, cultures, and policies support or impede success?
Literature Review 1
Organizational Structure
Pre-TEL Post-TEL
Literature Review 2
Cultures
Pre-TEL Post-TEL
Literature Review 3
Pedagogies
Pre-TEL Post-TEL
Literature Review 4
Economies (Reward Systems)
Pre-TEL Post-TEL
Questions & Comments ?
Participants & Research Design
All study participants were members of TEL development teams
Stage 1: 8 instructional designers from three organizational units Focus groups Selection of information-rich cases
Stage 2: Piloting the faculty interview protocol One faculty member revisions to the protocol
Stage 3: 8 Faculty Interviews 8 Narratives Common themes
Stage 4: Environmental scan of documentation corroboration with interview data
Research Design: Purposeful Sampling
Stage 1
Identify “critical,” “typical,” and“politically sensitive” cases
1. Faculty-ID dissonance2. ID-Media/IT dissonance3. Faculty-Media/IT
dissonance4. Confounding factors
(outside the control of TEL team members’ ability to resolve
Stage 2
Pilot of the faculty interview protocol
1
23
4
Stage 3: Faculty Interviews8 Cases – Diverse disciplines, Diverse Projects
Researcher as a “complete- member” researcher
1. Dental education (undergraduate, CE, and intra-disciplinary programs)
2. 3rd Year Veterinary medical education3. Teacher education (graduate & undergraduate) Researcher as an “aware observer”
4. Nursing education (undergraduate) 5. Native Studies (undergraduate)6. Multi-disciplinary professional graduate degree in
International Trade7. Psychology (undergraduate super-class) 8. Computer science (graduate and undergraduate)
Questions & Comments ?
Stage 3: Data AnalysisIdentifying themes (1)
– Departmental initiatives for curricular development, standardization, renewal, and refinement
– Pedagogical innovation – “keeping the fire (of student engagement in learning) alive”
– Providing students with more flexible access to learning opportunities
– Integrating research into teaching
Question 1: Faculty members’ motivations for involvement in TEL projects?
Stage 3: Data AnalysisIdentifying themes (2)
Question 2: Changes to the scholarship of teaching influenced by TEL?
– Increased use of tutorials in TEL projects also influenced change in classroom-based instruction
– Online discussion as an avenue to engage learners
– Encourage independent learning through the use of TEL self-study modules for knowledge acquisition + free up classroom time for in-depth discussions
– Move away from traditional, lecture-based instructional approaches and toward more flexible access to student-centered, independent, collaborative, and small-group mentorship
– New or heightened interest in learning theory and researching “educational effectiveness”
Stage 3: Data AnalysisIdentifying themes (3)
Question 3: “Academic returns on investment” for faculty time committed to TEL innovations?
– Inadequate time, compensation, & recognition for time commitments
– TEL projects may have compromised the ability to earn tenure and/or achieve promotion
• “The pay off for doing this is intellectual and intellectual alone. There is really no pay off. You do your regular job and then add this on.”
– Existing intellectual property policies are tailored to support and recognize print-based publications, but do not address faculty concerns about fair returns on investment for time spent developing and/or publishing TEL artifacts
Stage 3: Data Analysis - Identifying themes (4)Question 4: The extent to which institutional structures, cultures, and
policies supported or impeded successful design, development, and delivery of TEL projects?
Supportive + TEL funding and Provincial professional support+ Additional financial resources and support staff provided by colleges or
departments
Mixed Feelings About… ± Instructional design & media production support± Support from university administration ± Collegial skepticism, fear, or misunderstanding of TEL as a cultural
barrierImpeding
– Lack of ongoing technical, administrative, and maintenance support– Dealing with third-party copyright and local intellectual property policies– Lengthy approval processes for new programs– Coping large development teams & shifting team memberships
… The need to plan cost-recovery approaches and marketing strategies
Environmental scan of TEL documentation
Corroboration with a province-wide study of multiple higher education institutions
Faculty Motivations
(1) Responding to institutional and/or departmental initiative
(2) Course content development or renewal(3) Enhancing and expanding opportunities for
student learning experiences.
TEL influences on changes to teaching
(1) Increasing independent learning skills(2) Providing scheduling flexibilities (3) Providing a better/enriched learning
experience(4) Identified need for research into quality and
effectiveness of new approaches
Return on Investment(1) Lack of faculty time as a “large” institutional barrier (2) “Lack of institutional incentives or recognition for faculty efforts
Institutional structures, cultures, and policies
(2) Concerns that TEL undermines quality of teaching and learning (2) Lack of ongoing technical and administrative support (3) Concerns about intellectual property and copyright
Questions & Comments ?
Discussion: (1) OrganizationalStructures & Functions
• Divergent Macro-Micro-Mezzo-level measures of success: – Macro – Quantity (Target = 2000 TEL projects in 5 years) – Mezzo – Accountability (Each project on time and within budget) – Micro – Quality (Educational effectiveness)
• Divergent Mezzo-Micro goals– Mezzo – Valuing research, publication, clinical duties, advising grad
students, classroom teaching over TEL activities– Micro – Focus on TEL development and innovation in teaching
• Tensions between bureaucratic and autonomous organizational functions as barriers– Mezzo-Micro tensions - the one-size-fits-all approach to TEL project
development– Mezzo-Micro tensions - curricular standardization led to disputes
about relative levels of academic freedom based on employment status
Discussion: (2)Organizational Cultures
• Poly-cultural nature of the academy
– Variant levels of skepticism, fear, and a misunderstanding of technology enhanced learning across college settings
• Provision of resources for research / evaluation activities as core components of TEL development projects could mediate these concerns
• Dissemination of information from early adopters’ experiences
– Recognize and respect differences in collegial settings and pedagogical cultures across the institution
• Implication– A “high level” institutional e-learning strategy, combined with a
customized set of e-learning sub-strategies, which respond effectively to variant College cultures and their specific needs
Discussion: (3)Organizational Economies (Institutional Reward Systems)
Lack of institutional recognition and rewards
The relatively “public” and pervasive nature of TEL:
A sense of vulnerability / quest for perfection
A significant time investment in content literature reviews &
consultation with peers
Time commitments to innovation: design and development process
Expanded time commitment competes with existing scholarly
duties
Problematic intellectual property policies
Implications
– Revised tenure and promotion criteria & intellectual property policy
Discussion: (4) Pedagogical Praxis
• Information-sharing across disciplines and colleges, for example:
• Blended learning approaches to small-group tutorials• Use of peer-to-peer discussions and collaborative
activities to support deep learning• Criteria for selecting appropriate curricular content for
independent study
• Implications– Interdisciplinary discourse on TEL experiences may be
able to advance the quality of teaching & learning in higher education (TEL & classroom-based)
– Interdisciplinary & intra-cultural programs may be the next big pedagogical challenges in TEL
Feedback from students in the LUe-Research and TEL Doctoral Summer 2008 Programme
Critiques• Universities do not take even small problems lightly. It is
difficult to make room for experimentation and prototyping, thus allow for even small ‘failures’ in TEL programs.
• Wide adoption of TEL may change the image of the Academy. Is this a good thing? Or could it cause an erosion of loyalty to home institutions?
Comments• E-learning has followed a similar developmental path in the
UK & EU. It is now mainstream across institutions. • The focus has moved from technological concerns to
pedagogy, content, quality assurance and standards, teacher/trainer training and continuous development, organisational change and the transformation of education and training to align with TEL processes.
Questions & Comments ?
Parchoma, G. (2008). Adoption of technology enhanced learning in higher education: Influences of institutional policies and practices. Saarbrücken, Germany: VDM Verlag
Dr Gale ParchomaLecturer: Educational Research, CSALT Research Group RM C59 County SouthLancaster UniversityTelephone: +44 (0) 1524 (5)94695Tel. from Canada: 001-44-1524-594695Email: [email protected]
Thanks for your time!