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Faculty Development & Academic Affairs

Teaching and Student Assessment: Tools to Advance Curriculum Change Adoption
Presented by: Valerie N. Williams, MPA
Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs
College of Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Goals: The goals of this seminar were to be able to document teaching innovations and evaluate the success of specific innovations.

The steps toward implementing successful innovation:

  1. The innovation diffusion curve - A framework for adoption of innovation includes a communication strategy. Recognize that the dissemination of innovation is a process over time. E.M. Rogers (1995) identified strata of people within an organization. "True innovators" make up about 2.5%, "early adopters" of innovation comprise 13.5%. These people are opinion leaders and have high credibility. The early majority makes up about 34% and are conservative deliberate followers. It is only after the first 50% of the organization adopts the innovation that it can be self sustained. An additional 34% make up the "late majority." These faculty are skeptical but can give important critique. The so-called "laggards," who essentially never adopt the innovation, make up about 16%.

  2. Guide the Innovation Adoption
    • Plan a communication strategy
    • Promote how the innovation will make the faculty/school/organization more successful
    • Be clear what the innovation will make better
    • Be mindful of the innovation diffusion curve

  3. Shifting Paradigms
    Current trend to shift from teacher-centered to learner-centered paradigm
    • Learners construct knowledge through info gathering/synthesis
    • Learners develop ability to integrate info with skills of inquiry, communication, critical thinking, problem solving, etc.
    • Emphasis is on use and communication of knowledge with emphasis on generating better questions and learning from errors
    • Promotes collaboration

  4. Communicating the Innovation
    • Successful innovation will require clear communication from the innovators to the early adopters
    • The benefits of the innovation should be apparent. These need to be clear for the faculty, the organization and the learners
    • A reliable network of communication needs to be established and the "early adopters" involved in the process as opinion leaders
    • Use team learning techniques

  5. Identify and refine assessment criteria to promote the dissemination of innovation
    • What standards of excellence are best suited to the innovation?
    • Do these standards compare favorably to accepted standards?
    • Can the standards compare favorably to accepted standards?
    • Can the standards be quantified and used for improvement of the innovation?

Summarized by F. DiMario
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