INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY

Current research findings indicate (1) that the impact of innovations on educational settings is minimal, if any, and (2) that few innovations are being institutionalized. This study examined issues surrounding the institutionalization of innovations, particularly within teacher education programs i...

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Main Author: MAXWELL, MARGARET LYNN
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI8401027
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-62782020-12-02T14:37:51Z INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY MAXWELL, MARGARET LYNN Current research findings indicate (1) that the impact of innovations on educational settings is minimal, if any, and (2) that few innovations are being institutionalized. This study examined issues surrounding the institutionalization of innovations, particularly within teacher education programs in developing countries. The study first examined literature on the types of innovations within teacher training institutions in developing countries and on representative innovation research models and theories. Subsequently, based on this literature, a Wholistic Innovation Model was proposed in which four aspects of innovation were identified as "sensitizing concepts." These aspects were (1) innovation characteristics, (2) adopter characteristics, (3) innovation process strategies, and (4) social system constraints and resources. As sensitizing concepts, these four aspects guided the researcher in developing a case-study research design which both quantitatively and qualitatively evaluated the innovation of self-instructional materials (SIMs) at the National Teacher Training College (N.T.T.C.) of Lesotho. Personnel involved currently and historically with SIMs as well as documents were used as sources in evaluating (1) the institutionalization level of the innovation, and (2) the factors influencing that level. The data analysis revealed that SIMs were not institutionalized at N.T.T.C. Factors influencing this status were categorized according to the four sensitizing concepts or innovation aspects in which the most frequently cited factors inhibiting institutionalization were found included (1) the innovation process strategies, and (2) the social system constraints and resources. The aspect that contained factors most frequently cited as supporting SIMs was the innovation characteristic. The aspect of adopter characteristics included an equal number of factors inhibiting and supporting the innovation. A summary of findings and implications from the case-study analysis suggest that participatory decision-making, collaborative control and continuous sensitivity to the needs and perceptions of adopters are important for innovation survival. Evaluating innovations from a systemic or wholistic approach appears to be a powerful and particularly appropriate method for analysis in the area of education. 1983-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI8401027 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Teacher education
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Teacher education
spellingShingle Teacher education
MAXWELL, MARGARET LYNN
INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY
description Current research findings indicate (1) that the impact of innovations on educational settings is minimal, if any, and (2) that few innovations are being institutionalized. This study examined issues surrounding the institutionalization of innovations, particularly within teacher education programs in developing countries. The study first examined literature on the types of innovations within teacher training institutions in developing countries and on representative innovation research models and theories. Subsequently, based on this literature, a Wholistic Innovation Model was proposed in which four aspects of innovation were identified as "sensitizing concepts." These aspects were (1) innovation characteristics, (2) adopter characteristics, (3) innovation process strategies, and (4) social system constraints and resources. As sensitizing concepts, these four aspects guided the researcher in developing a case-study research design which both quantitatively and qualitatively evaluated the innovation of self-instructional materials (SIMs) at the National Teacher Training College (N.T.T.C.) of Lesotho. Personnel involved currently and historically with SIMs as well as documents were used as sources in evaluating (1) the institutionalization level of the innovation, and (2) the factors influencing that level. The data analysis revealed that SIMs were not institutionalized at N.T.T.C. Factors influencing this status were categorized according to the four sensitizing concepts or innovation aspects in which the most frequently cited factors inhibiting institutionalization were found included (1) the innovation process strategies, and (2) the social system constraints and resources. The aspect that contained factors most frequently cited as supporting SIMs was the innovation characteristic. The aspect of adopter characteristics included an equal number of factors inhibiting and supporting the innovation. A summary of findings and implications from the case-study analysis suggest that participatory decision-making, collaborative control and continuous sensitivity to the needs and perceptions of adopters are important for innovation survival. Evaluating innovations from a systemic or wholistic approach appears to be a powerful and particularly appropriate method for analysis in the area of education.
author MAXWELL, MARGARET LYNN
author_facet MAXWELL, MARGARET LYNN
author_sort MAXWELL, MARGARET LYNN
title INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY
title_short INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY
title_full INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY
title_fullStr INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY
title_full_unstemmed INNOVATIONS IN TEACHER EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A CASE STUDY
title_sort innovations in teacher education in developing countries: a case study
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 1983
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI8401027
work_keys_str_mv AT maxwellmargaretlynn innovationsinteachereducationindevelopingcountriesacasestudy
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