Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education: the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education : the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development. / Pischetola, Magda; Møller, Jeppe Kilberg; Malmborg, Lone.

In: Education and Information Technologies, Vol. 28, 2022, p. 7571–7600.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pischetola, M, Møller, JK & Malmborg, L 2022, 'Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education: the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development', Education and Information Technologies, vol. 28, pp. 7571–7600. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10639-022-11490-x

APA

Pischetola, M., Møller, J. K., & Malmborg, L. (2022). Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education: the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development. Education and Information Technologies, 28, 7571–7600. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10639-022-11490-x

Vancouver

Pischetola M, Møller JK, Malmborg L. Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education: the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development. Education and Information Technologies. 2022;28:7571–7600. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10639-022-11490-x

Author

Pischetola, Magda ; Møller, Jeppe Kilberg ; Malmborg, Lone. / Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education : the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development. In: Education and Information Technologies. 2022 ; Vol. 28. pp. 7571–7600.

Bibtex

@article{a6e8f53d87824f06ae64c2ccd1de9cc8,
title = "Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education: the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development",
abstract = "Professional development programs for teachers in higher education are often characterized by top-down approaches, which fail to make appreciable differences in teaching practices. This study uses a qualitative approach to explore activity-oriented design (AOD) as an instrument for collaborative learning in higher education teacher professional development. We examine Teknosofikum, an ongoing project developed in Denmark along three iterations, involving a total of 64 course participants (42 in the hybrid format; 22 online). The study applies the methodology of design-based research: data was collected via 15 semi-structured group interviews, online forums, and field notes/recordings from online meetings and onsite workshops. Data analysis follows the methodology of grounded theory and evidence is given significance inductively, based on contextual data. Four activities were selected to assess the potential of AOD methods in enhancing teacher collaboration, with different aims: reflection, discussion, theory-practice alignment, and participation. Our analysis revolved around three main categories: trust, deep interaction, and shared beliefs/values. The results show how collaborative group work activities have improved trust and knowledge-sharing among participants and have contributed to creating a safe learning environment. The paper concludes that AOD methods could better assist educational designers in promoting professional development courses that aim at enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education.",
author = "Magda Pischetola and M{\o}ller, {Jeppe Kilberg} and Lone Malmborg",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1007/s10639-022-11490-x",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "7571–7600",
journal = "Education and Information Technologies",
issn = "1360-2357",
publisher = "Kluwer Academic Publishers",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education

T2 - the potential of activity-oriented design for professional development

AU - Pischetola, Magda

AU - Møller, Jeppe Kilberg

AU - Malmborg, Lone

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Professional development programs for teachers in higher education are often characterized by top-down approaches, which fail to make appreciable differences in teaching practices. This study uses a qualitative approach to explore activity-oriented design (AOD) as an instrument for collaborative learning in higher education teacher professional development. We examine Teknosofikum, an ongoing project developed in Denmark along three iterations, involving a total of 64 course participants (42 in the hybrid format; 22 online). The study applies the methodology of design-based research: data was collected via 15 semi-structured group interviews, online forums, and field notes/recordings from online meetings and onsite workshops. Data analysis follows the methodology of grounded theory and evidence is given significance inductively, based on contextual data. Four activities were selected to assess the potential of AOD methods in enhancing teacher collaboration, with different aims: reflection, discussion, theory-practice alignment, and participation. Our analysis revolved around three main categories: trust, deep interaction, and shared beliefs/values. The results show how collaborative group work activities have improved trust and knowledge-sharing among participants and have contributed to creating a safe learning environment. The paper concludes that AOD methods could better assist educational designers in promoting professional development courses that aim at enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education.

AB - Professional development programs for teachers in higher education are often characterized by top-down approaches, which fail to make appreciable differences in teaching practices. This study uses a qualitative approach to explore activity-oriented design (AOD) as an instrument for collaborative learning in higher education teacher professional development. We examine Teknosofikum, an ongoing project developed in Denmark along three iterations, involving a total of 64 course participants (42 in the hybrid format; 22 online). The study applies the methodology of design-based research: data was collected via 15 semi-structured group interviews, online forums, and field notes/recordings from online meetings and onsite workshops. Data analysis follows the methodology of grounded theory and evidence is given significance inductively, based on contextual data. Four activities were selected to assess the potential of AOD methods in enhancing teacher collaboration, with different aims: reflection, discussion, theory-practice alignment, and participation. Our analysis revolved around three main categories: trust, deep interaction, and shared beliefs/values. The results show how collaborative group work activities have improved trust and knowledge-sharing among participants and have contributed to creating a safe learning environment. The paper concludes that AOD methods could better assist educational designers in promoting professional development courses that aim at enhancing teacher collaboration in higher education.

U2 - 10.1007/s10639-022-11490-x

DO - 10.1007/s10639-022-11490-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36532797

VL - 28

SP - 7571

EP - 7600

JO - Education and Information Technologies

JF - Education and Information Technologies

SN - 1360-2357

ER -

ID: 327772229