TY - JOUR
T1 - Is transferring an educational innovation actually a process of transformation?
AU - Varpio, Lara
AU - Bell, Robert
AU - Hollingworth, Gary
AU - Jalali, Alireza
AU - Haidet, Paul
AU - Levine, Ruth
AU - Regehr, Glenn
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments The authors would like to acknowledge the generous support received from the University of Ottawa’s a) Teaching and Learning Grant, b) Office of Faculty Development, c) Undergraduate Medical Education Office, and d) Academy for Innovation in Medical Education (AIME).
PY - 2012/8
Y1 - 2012/8
N2 - Recent debates question the extent to which adopting an educational innovation requires compromise between the innovation's original design and the adoption site's context. Through compromises, the innovation's fundamental principles may be transferred, transformed, or abandoned. This paper analyzes such compromises during the piloting of Team-Based Learning (TBL). We ask: When is the process of transferring an innovation actually a process of transformation? This study is an autoethnography of our research team's implementation process. Autoethnographies are personalized accounts where authors draw on their own experiences to extend understanding of a particular topic. To conduct this autoethnography, we used an in-depth, interactive interview with the piloting clinician educator. In the analysis of TBL's fundamental principles, some aspects of the principles transferred easily, while others were transformed. Analysis raised concerns that the transformations threatened the foundational principles of TBL. While an educational innovation's techniques may seem to be surface structures, they are realizations of deeper fundamental principles. The fundamental principles are themselves realizations of the innovation's foundational philosophy. When techniques and/or principles are modified to a context, it is important to analyze if the modifications continue to uphold the innovation's philosophy.
AB - Recent debates question the extent to which adopting an educational innovation requires compromise between the innovation's original design and the adoption site's context. Through compromises, the innovation's fundamental principles may be transferred, transformed, or abandoned. This paper analyzes such compromises during the piloting of Team-Based Learning (TBL). We ask: When is the process of transferring an innovation actually a process of transformation? This study is an autoethnography of our research team's implementation process. Autoethnographies are personalized accounts where authors draw on their own experiences to extend understanding of a particular topic. To conduct this autoethnography, we used an in-depth, interactive interview with the piloting clinician educator. In the analysis of TBL's fundamental principles, some aspects of the principles transferred easily, while others were transformed. Analysis raised concerns that the transformations threatened the foundational principles of TBL. While an educational innovation's techniques may seem to be surface structures, they are realizations of deeper fundamental principles. The fundamental principles are themselves realizations of the innovation's foundational philosophy. When techniques and/or principles are modified to a context, it is important to analyze if the modifications continue to uphold the innovation's philosophy.
KW - Educational innovation
KW - Qualitative research
KW - Team-based learning (TBL)
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U2 - 10.1007/s10459-011-9313-4
DO - 10.1007/s10459-011-9313-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 21725841
AN - SCOPUS:84862684941
SN - 1382-4996
VL - 17
SP - 357
EP - 367
JO - Advances in Health Sciences Education
JF - Advances in Health Sciences Education
IS - 3
ER -