Author/Authors :
John Cook، نويسنده , , Debbie Holley and David Andrew، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
This paper describes the most recent phase in a mature e-learning project, in
the area of reusable learning objects, that has attempted to bring about technological
and cultural change. Following an overview of the project and
organisational context, an institutional change model is described that helps
managers and stakeholders to identify critical interactions among processes
and that emphasises the need to recognise interdependencies among technology,
practice and strategy. Our model places a premium on informal change,
feasibility and sequence. The rest of the paper is organised around three key
themes that emerged from practitioner accounts of a recent phase of the
project; these are institutional change and resistance, a model for good practice
and working with students to change their experience. The research method
for the work described in this paper was interpretive, and involved the first
author’s attempts to understand members of the project team’s definitions and
accounts of the situation. Thus the rich accounts were further augmented by
an interpretive phase that drew on the explanatory power of our change
model.We conclude by (1) proposing that the inclusion of different stakeholders,
and particularly the student voice, has provided the catalyst for change
within the three partners of the CETL, and (2) suggesting that the crucial
factors in change implementation are the coordination and dynamic extension
of informal change processes which already exist