转型空间:教育工作者讨论地图系统和支持加拿大的新一代系统思想家

IF 2.8 Q2 BUSINESS
Katharine McGowan, Latasha Calf Robe, L. Allan, E. Bray-Collins, Mathieu Couture, Sarah D Croft, A. Daling, A. Farahbakhsh, Susan Grossman, Sarayloo Hassan, Paul C. Heidebrecht, Nicole M. Helwig, Michelle Jackett, Jessica Machado
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文的目的是探讨多名加拿大教育工作者在系统地图(MTS)竞赛中的经验,该竞赛旨在培养和发展学生探索复杂问题的系统思维能力。这一挑战为加拿大大专院校的社会创新项目(从新生到成熟)提供了一个机会,既可以与自己的社区合作,也可以与国际上的社会创新者合作,将社会创新空间联系起来,作为他们第三个使命的一部分。在整个组织中,学生们重视跨学科和系统思维的品质,组织受益于外部竞争,但组织参与社会创新作为内部深刻变革过程的问题仍然存在。设计/方法/方法所有参加2020年MTS竞赛的加拿大大专院校(17)被邀请参加数字圆桌会议,讨论他们的经验。10所大学能够参加,代表了一系列高等院校(包括大型研究机构、仅限本科的大学和学院)。为了促进讨论,与会者开会讨论形式和主题;对于圆桌会议本身,参与的教育工作者使用谷歌表格来记录他们的经历。这些被总结,匿名和重新分发验证和澄清。为了反映这种合作方式,所有参与的教育工作者都被列为本文的作者,按组织作者的字母顺序排列。对于参与MTS的学生来说,他们已经建立了跨学科和系统思维技能,以及他们对社区实现有意义变革的承诺。但MTS进入了肥沃的环境,并起到了催化剂的作用,吸引了人们的注意力、认可和联系。然而,尽管这可能与高等教育的第三个使命相一致,但教育工作者表达了对可持续性的担忧,对内部变革的承诺,以及应对挑战方法和协作工作之间的紧张关系,以及内部工作和国家竞争限制。这使得将MTS简单地插入高等教育与社会创新相关的第三个使命变得复杂。研究局限性/意义本研究仅限于参与MTS的加拿大大专院校,因此不能代表加拿大的大专院校或所有MTS参与者,尽管加拿大在挑战本身中有很好的代表性。此外,虽然作者相信他们的方法将所有参与者视为作者,并确保了私下和集体的多重反馈机会,但这是一个有意的、可能引起争议的传统研究的举动。社会影响超过一半的加拿大大学(高等教育的一个分支)至少有一项社会创新计划,但问题是这些计划是否正在内部进行评估,或者是否正在引发可能产生的变革性内部工作。了解MTS的影响,这是一个与社会创新相关的倡议的例子,可以帮助推动关于高等教育领域社会创新的更广泛的讨论,以及还有很多工作要做。由于加拿大参与MTS仅四年,这是第一次跨机构考虑其作为转型社会创新工具的相关机会和障碍。此外,教育工作者开诚布公地与教育工作者交谈,加强了整个高等教育领域社会创新的协作质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transformational spaces: educators discuss map the system and supporting Canada’s emerging generation of systems thinkers
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore multiple Canadian educators' experiences with the Map the System (MTS) competition, designed to foster and grow systems thinking capacity among students exploring complex questions. The challenge has been an opportunity for social innovation programs (from the nascent to the established) across Canadian post-secondaries to engage both with their own communities and with social innovators internationally, connecting social innovation spaces as part of their third mission. Across the organizations, students valued the interdisciplinary and systems thinking qualities, and organizations benefited from the external competition, there remain questions about organizational engagement in social innovation as a deeply transformative process internally. Design/methodology/approach All Canadian post-secondary institutions who participated in the 2020 MTS competition (17) were invited to a digital roundtable to discuss their experiences. Ten were able to participate, representing a range of post-secondaries (including large research institutions, undergraduate-only universities and colleges). To facilitate discussion, participants met to discuss format and topics; for the roundtable itself, participant educators used a google form to capture their experiences. These were summarized, anonymized and redistributed for validation and clarification. To reflect this collaborative approach, all participant educators are listed as authors on this paper, alphabetically after the organizing authors. Findings For students participating in MTS, they have built both their interdisciplinary and systems thinking skills, as well as their commitment to achieving meaningful change in their community. But MTS arrived in fertile environments and acted as an accelerant, driving attention, validation and connection. Yet while this might align with post-secondary education’s third mission, educators expressed concerns about sustainability, internal commitment to change and navigating tensions between a challenge approach and collaborative work, and internal work and national competition limitations. This complicates the simple insertion of MTS in a post-secondary’s social innovation-related third mission. Research limitations/implications This study was limited to Canadian post-secondaries participating in MTS, and therefore are not representative of either post-secondaries in Canada, or all the MTS participants although Canada is well represented in the challenge itself. Additionally, while the authors believe their approach to treat all participants as authors, and ensured multiple feedback opportunities in private and collectively, this is a deliberate and potentially controversial move away from a traditional study. Social implications More than half of Canadian universities (a subgroup of post-secondaries) had at least one social innovation initiative, but questions have been raised about whether these initiatives are being evaluated internally, or are triggering the kinds of transformative internal work that might be an outcome. Understanding the impact of MTS one example of a social innovation-related initiative can help advance the broader conversation about the place (s) for social innovation in the post-secondary landscape – and where there is still significant work to be done. Originality/value As Canada has only participated in MTS for four years, this is the first inter-institution consideration of its related opportunities and obstacles as a vehicle for transformational social innovation. As well, educators talking openly and frankly to educators reinforces the collaborative quality of social innovation across the post-secondary landscape.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
14
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