Affiliation:
1. The University of Georgia
2. Virginia Tech University
Abstract
This case study demonstrates how change agents can utilize networked learning communities (NLCs) with shared leadership to provide the structural supports for learning and influence the implementation of innovations within a social system. Our focus is the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA), a large school system operating 164 accredited schools domestically and internationally. As part of their systemic priority of implementing innovations for educational improvement, DoDEA worked with extension specialists to create NLCs for instructional leaders using the Engelbart’s Organizational Learning and Improvement Schema. The schema is a three-tiered approach to non-formal learning that facilitates leader capacity building at the individual, team, and systemwide levels. To support these learning communities, DoDEA also created regional support teams or opinion leaders to assist with the implementation of systemwide educational technologies through non-formal professional learning. Focus group discussions provided insights on the impact of this model as a mechanism for diffusing educational innovations throughout the system. Findings suggest that implementation of this approach in other international training and development settings can yield positive impacts on the innovation-decision process.
Keywords: Shared leadership; international training & development; social learning; systemic change; Diffusion of Innovations
Funder
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Publisher
Journal of International Agricultural and Extension Education
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science,Education
Reference20 articles.
1. Anderson II, J. C. (2013). An exploration of the motivational profile of secondary urban agriculture students. Journal of Agricultural Education, 54(2), 205-216. doi: 10.5032/jae.2013.02205
2. Anderson II, J. C., Alegbeleye, I., Gichane, W., & Abaye, A. O. (2019). Senegalese professors’ intention in engaging in learner-centered instructional strategies in higher education pedagogy. Journal of International Agricultural Extension Education, 26(1), 85-99. doi: 10.5191/jiaee.2019.26108
3. Bergman, J. Z., Rentsch, J. R., Small, E. E., Davenport, S. W., & Bergman, S. M. (2012). The shared leadership process in decision-making teams. The Journal of Social Psychology, 152(1), 17-42.
4. Bryk, A. S., Gomez, L. M., Grunow, A., & LeMahieu, P. G. (2015). Learning to improve: How American schools can get better at getting better. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Education Press.
5. Currie, G. & Spuridonidis, D. (2019). Sharing leadership for Diffusion of Innovation in professionalized settings. Human Relations, 72(7), 1209-1233. doi: 10.117/0018726718796175