International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education | |
Barriers and beliefs: a comparative case study of how university educators understand the datafication of higher education systems | |
Research Article | |
Erica Miklas1  Bonnie Stewart1  Samantha Szcyrek1  Thu Le1  | |
[1] Faculty of Education, University of Windsor, 401 Sunset Ave, Windsor, ON, Canada; | |
关键词: Datafication; Higher education; Data; Digital education; Data ethics; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s41239-023-00402-9 | |
received in 2023-01-17, accepted in 2023-05-02, 发布年份 2023 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
In recent decades, higher education institutions around the world have come to depend on complex digital infrastructures. In addition to registration, financial, and other operations platforms, digital classroom tools with built-in learning analytics capacities underpin many course delivery options. Taken together, these intersecting digital systems collect vast amounts of data from students, staff, and faculty. Educators’ work environments—and knowledge about their work environments—have been shifted by this rise in pervasive datafication. In this paper, we overview the ways faculty in a variety of institutional status positions and geographic locales understand this shift and make sense of the datafied infrastructures of their institutions. We present findings from a comparative case study (CCS) of university educators in six countries, examining participants’ knowledge, practices, experiences, and perspectives in relation to datafication, while tracing patterns across contexts. We draw on individual, systemic, and historical axes of comparison to demonstrate that in spite of structural barriers to educator data literacy, professionals teaching in higher education do have strong and informed ethical and pedagogical perspectives on datafication that warrant greater attention. Our study suggests a distinction between the understandings educators have of data processes, or technical specifics of datafication on campuses, and their understanding of big picture data paradigms and ethical implications. Educators were found to be far more knowledgeable and comfortable in paradigm discussions than they were in process ones, partly due to structural barriers that limit their involvement at the process level.Graphical Abstract
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© The Author(s) 2023
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202309072088241ZK.pdf | 1311KB | download | |
MediaObjects/13690_2023_1116_MOESM2_ESM.docx | 50KB | Other | download |
40517_2023_259_Article_IEq85.gif | 1KB | Image | download |
【 图 表 】
40517_2023_259_Article_IEq85.gif
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