Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives?
Thesis advisor: Vincent Cho === Thesis advisor: Diana C. Pullin === This study explored the role of professional learning communities for district leadership implementing large-scale technology initiatives such as 1:1 implementations (one computing device for every student). The existing literature...
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ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1016502019-05-10T07:38:00Z Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives? Nolin, Anna Patricia Arnold, Erik Paul Cohen, Peter D. Flanagan, Gina Eva Turner, Henry J. Thesis advisor: Vincent Cho Thesis advisor: Diana C. Pullin Text thesis 2014 Boston College English electronic application/pdf This study explored the role of professional learning communities for district leadership implementing large-scale technology initiatives such as 1:1 implementations (one computing device for every student). The existing literature regarding technology leadership is limited, as is literature on how districts use existing collaborative structures such as professional learning communities (PLCs) to implement technology initiatives. This study examined how superintendents and their leadership teams expect educator collaboration and whether and how they connect these expectations to large-scale technology implementation. Specifically, the concept of professional learning communities (PLCs) and their constructs were studied as collaborative mechanisms designed to support educators implementing large-scale technology initiatives. This qualitative study employs a multiple case study method to explore how the use of collaborative structures supported large-scale technology implementation in five school districts. These respondents and their stories detail a unique moment in educational leadership as increasing numbers of districts seek to implement such large-scale initiatives in school systems. Study results highlight how superintendents use leadership planning and implementation teams to serve as PLCs at the district level. This study confirms that the collaborative constructs of the PLC do serve to assist in the implementation of large-scale technology implementations in school systems, but largely at the central office strategic planning level. Superintendents utilize these collaborative structures for personal learning as they design implementation but do not scale up such structures for use by all educators across the implementation or system. Recommendations are made for use of collaborative structures to create technology educator learning ecologies across school systems. Collaboration Innovation Learning Organization Professional Learning Community Technology Technology Professional Development Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2014. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education. 415699 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3832 |
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Collaboration Innovation Learning Organization Professional Learning Community Technology Technology Professional Development Nolin, Anna Patricia Arnold, Erik Paul Cohen, Peter D. Flanagan, Gina Eva Turner, Henry J. Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives? |
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Thesis advisor: Vincent Cho === Thesis advisor: Diana C. Pullin === This study explored the role of professional learning communities for district leadership implementing large-scale technology initiatives such as 1:1 implementations (one computing device for every student). The existing literature regarding technology leadership is limited, as is literature on how districts use existing collaborative structures such as professional learning communities (PLCs) to implement technology initiatives. This study examined how superintendents and their leadership teams expect educator collaboration and whether and how they connect these expectations to large-scale technology implementation. Specifically, the concept of professional learning communities (PLCs) and their constructs were studied as collaborative mechanisms designed to support educators implementing large-scale technology initiatives. This qualitative study employs a multiple case study method to explore how the use of collaborative structures supported large-scale technology implementation in five school districts. These respondents and their stories detail a unique moment in educational leadership as increasing numbers of districts seek to implement such large-scale initiatives in school systems. Study results highlight how superintendents use leadership planning and implementation teams to serve as PLCs at the district level. This study confirms that the collaborative constructs of the PLC do serve to assist in the implementation of large-scale technology implementations in school systems, but largely at the central office strategic planning level. Superintendents utilize these collaborative structures for personal learning as they design implementation but do not scale up such structures for use by all educators across the implementation or system. Recommendations are made for use of collaborative structures to create technology educator learning ecologies across school systems. === Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2014. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education. |
author |
Nolin, Anna Patricia Arnold, Erik Paul Cohen, Peter D. Flanagan, Gina Eva Turner, Henry J. |
author_facet |
Nolin, Anna Patricia Arnold, Erik Paul Cohen, Peter D. Flanagan, Gina Eva Turner, Henry J. |
author_sort |
Nolin, Anna Patricia |
title |
Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives? |
title_short |
Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives? |
title_full |
Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives? |
title_fullStr |
Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Framing Innovation: Do Professional Learning Communities Influence Acceptance of Large-Scale Technology Initiatives? |
title_sort |
framing innovation: do professional learning communities influence acceptance of large-scale technology initiatives? |
publisher |
Boston College |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3832 |
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