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Autor/inMeyer, Katrina A.
TitelIs Online Learning a Disruptive Innovation?
QuelleIn: Planning for Higher Education, 39 (2011) 4, S.44-53 (10 Seiten)
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Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Zeitschriftenaufsatz
ISSN0736-0983
SchlagwörterElectronic Learning; Higher Education; Online Courses; Change Agents; Educational Technology; Educational Planning; Technology Integration; Language Usage; Curriculum Design; Misconceptions; Management Systems
AbstractIn their desire to plan for the future, planners must assess the role of both internal and external influences on the institution. What then should people make of the idea that technology is disruptive? This perception fuels the views of Barone and Hagner (2001), who claimed that technology would "transform" higher education; Duderstadt (2000), who stressed that technologies would drive changes in higher education; and Gonick, who saw in the Internet a "new kind of force" and "a change agent" that would produce a "very different kind of university" (Gonick 2009). This language is consistent and powerful, but the question remains: Should planners plan for the disruption of higher education? Have the promoters of the "technology as disruptor" idea overplayed their hands or is transformation around the corner? Three problems plague language equating technology with transformation. First, such language is oversimplified and ignores other forces at work such as the human element. Second, it lacks precision. Third, it lacks a theory that can help explain disruption and evaluate whether it has occurred. To address the first problem, this analysis incorporates alternative forces that contribute to or modify the influence of change agents. To address the second problem, this article focuses on online learning. To address the third problem, this analysis draws heavily on the work of Christensen (1997, 2000), whose concept of "disruptive technology" was first applied to technologies in business. So the charge for this effort is to evaluate whether online learning is a disruptive technology in higher education, as defined by Christensen (1997). (ERIC).
AnmerkungenSociety for College and University Planning. 339 East Liberty Street Suite 300, Ann Arbor, MI 48104. Tel: 734-998-7832; Fax: 734-998-6532; e-mail: info@scup.org; Web site: http://www.scup.org/PHE
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2017/4/10
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