A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context

There are hopes that new learning technologies will help to transform university learning and teaching into a more engaging experience for twenty-first-century students. But since 2000 the changes in campus university teaching have been more limited than expected. I have drawn on ideas from organisa...

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Main Author: Carol Russell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Learning Technology 2009-12-01
Series:Research in Learning Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/10771
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spelling doaj-28fad901e17a42a98acc45d6ee29c8102020-11-25T00:22:44ZengAssociation for Learning Technology Research in Learning Technology2156-70692156-70772009-12-0117110.3402/rlt.v17i1.10771A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in contextCarol RussellThere are hopes that new learning technologies will help to transform university learning and teaching into a more engaging experience for twenty-first-century students. But since 2000 the changes in campus university teaching have been more limited than expected. I have drawn on ideas from organisational change management research to investigate why this is happening in one particular campus university context. My study examines the strategies of individual lecturers for adopting e-learning within their disciplinary, departmental and university work environments to develop a conceptual framework for analysing university learning and teaching as a complex adaptive system. This conceptual framework links the processes through which university teaching changes, the resulting forms of learning activity and the learning technologies used – all within the organisational context of the university. The framework suggests that systemic transformation of a university's learning and teaching requires coordinated change across activities that have traditionally been managed separately in campus universities. Without such coordination, established ways of organising learning and teaching will reassert themselves, as support staff and lecturers seek to optimise their own work locally. The conceptual framework could inform strategies for realising the full benefits of new learning technologies in other campus universities.http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/10771e-learning adoptioncomplex adaptive systemscampus universities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carol Russell
spellingShingle Carol Russell
A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context
Research in Learning Technology
e-learning adoption
complex adaptive systems
campus universities
author_facet Carol Russell
author_sort Carol Russell
title A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context
title_short A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context
title_full A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context
title_fullStr A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context
title_full_unstemmed A systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context
title_sort systemic framework for managing e-learning adoption in campus universities: individual strategies in context
publisher Association for Learning Technology
series Research in Learning Technology
issn 2156-7069
2156-7077
publishDate 2009-12-01
description There are hopes that new learning technologies will help to transform university learning and teaching into a more engaging experience for twenty-first-century students. But since 2000 the changes in campus university teaching have been more limited than expected. I have drawn on ideas from organisational change management research to investigate why this is happening in one particular campus university context. My study examines the strategies of individual lecturers for adopting e-learning within their disciplinary, departmental and university work environments to develop a conceptual framework for analysing university learning and teaching as a complex adaptive system. This conceptual framework links the processes through which university teaching changes, the resulting forms of learning activity and the learning technologies used – all within the organisational context of the university. The framework suggests that systemic transformation of a university's learning and teaching requires coordinated change across activities that have traditionally been managed separately in campus universities. Without such coordination, established ways of organising learning and teaching will reassert themselves, as support staff and lecturers seek to optimise their own work locally. The conceptual framework could inform strategies for realising the full benefits of new learning technologies in other campus universities.
topic e-learning adoption
complex adaptive systems
campus universities
url http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/10771
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