TY - JOUR
T1 - Faculty members’ responses to implementing re-envisioned EdD programs
AU - Buss, Ray
AU - Zambo, Ron
AU - Zambo, Debby
AU - Perry, Jill A.
AU - Williams, Tiffany R.
PY - 2015/12/12
Y1 - 2015/12/12
N2 - Limitations of the education doctorate (EdD) and the emergence of professional practice doctorates have influenced those offering the EdD to re-envision, re-define, and reclaim the EdD as the degree of choice for the next generation of educational leaders. Colleges of education faculty members have used the Carnegie Project on the Education Doctorate's (CPED) working principles to redesign EdD programs to make them more relevant to educational leaders. Faculty members’ perceptions of program revisions, participation in CPED, implementation of redesign efforts, factors influencing revision, and so on were assessed using closed- and open-ended items in an online survey. Results indicated variables from Rogers’ theory of diffusion and adoption of an innovation and CPED working principles were useful in understanding program redesign efforts, changes, implementation efforts, and outcomes. Moreover, quantitative and qualitative data were complementary. This work has implications for EdD program design, program leaders, faculty members, and students participating in such programs.
AB - Limitations of the education doctorate (EdD) and the emergence of professional practice doctorates have influenced those offering the EdD to re-envision, re-define, and reclaim the EdD as the degree of choice for the next generation of educational leaders. Colleges of education faculty members have used the Carnegie Project on the Education Doctorate's (CPED) working principles to redesign EdD programs to make them more relevant to educational leaders. Faculty members’ perceptions of program revisions, participation in CPED, implementation of redesign efforts, factors influencing revision, and so on were assessed using closed- and open-ended items in an online survey. Results indicated variables from Rogers’ theory of diffusion and adoption of an innovation and CPED working principles were useful in understanding program redesign efforts, changes, implementation efforts, and outcomes. Moreover, quantitative and qualitative data were complementary. This work has implications for EdD program design, program leaders, faculty members, and students participating in such programs.
KW - CPED
KW - Doctoral education
KW - EdD
KW - EdD programs
KW - change
KW - doctoral practices
KW - educational innovation
KW - faculty
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U2 - 10.1080/03075079.2015.1113951
DO - 10.1080/03075079.2015.1113951
M3 - Article
SN - 0307-5079
SP - 1
EP - 17
JO - Studies in Higher Education
JF - Studies in Higher Education
ER -