Kaleidoscope : shaping a better future through a stakeholder approach to widespread organisational change
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Kaleidoscope : shaping a better future through a stakeholder approach to widespread organisational change |
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Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | Alderman, Lyn (Author) and Melanie, Larissa (Author) |
Journal or Proceedings Title | 2013 AES International Conference: Evaluation Shaping a Better Future: Priorities, Pragmatics, Promise and Power |
Number of Pages | 11 |
Year | 2013 |
Place of Publication | Brisbane, Australia |
Conference/Event | 2013 AES International Conference: Evaluation Shaping a Better Future: Priorities, Pragmatics, Promise and Power |
Event Details | 2013 AES International Conference: Evaluation Shaping a Better Future: Priorities, Pragmatics, Promise and Power Parent AES International Conference |
Abstract | The main focus of ‘Kaleidoscope: Reframing evaluation through a stakeholder approach to sustainable, cultural change in Higher Education’ is to develop a set of principles to guide user-led engagement in widespread organisational change and maximise its impact. The word kaleidoscope represents the unique lens through which each institution will need to view their cultural specificity and local context through an extensive process of collaboration and engagement, followed by communication and dissemination. Kaleidoscope has particular relevance when new approaches to learning and teaching evaluation are introduced by tertiary institutions. Building on the Reframe Project, which involved three years of user-led consultation and was designed to meet stakeholders’ needs, QUT successfully introduced a new evaluation framework in 2013 across the university. Reframe was evidence based, involved scholarly reflection and was founded on a strong theoretical framework. The evolution of the evaluation framework included analysis of scholarly literature and environmental scans across the higher education sector (Alderman, et al., 2012), researched development of conceptual theory (Alderman, et al., in press 2013), incorporated the stakeholder voice and framed within project management principles (Alderman & Melanie, 2012). Kaleidoscope’s objectives are for QUT to develop its research-based stakeholder approach to distil the successful experience exhibited in the Reframe Project into a transferable set of guidelines for use by other tertiary institutions across the sectors. These guidelines will assist others to design, develop, and deploy, their own culturally specific widespread organisational change informed by stakeholder engagement and organisational buy-in. It is intended that these guidelines will promote, support and enable other tertiary institutions to embark on their own projects and maximise the impact. In correlation with a our conference paper, this round table presents the Draft Guidelines and Framework ready for external peer review by evaluation practitioners, as part of Kaleidoscope’s dissemination (Hinton & Gannaway, 2011) applying illuminative evaluation theory (Parlett & Hamilton, 1976), through conference workshops and linked round table discussions (Shapiro, et al., 1983; Jacobs, 2000). |
Keywords | evaluation; higher education; pedagogy; student feedback; surveys; teaching |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 390303. Higher education |
Public Notes | Files associated with this item cannot be displayed due to copyright restrictions. |
Byline Affiliations | Queensland University of Technology |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q69vw/kaleidoscope-shaping-a-better-future-through-a-stakeholder-approach-to-widespread-organisational-change
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