Understanding Distinctions of Worth in the Practices of Instructional Design Teams

被引:0
|
作者
Jason K. McDonald
Brenton D. Jackson
McKayla B. Hunter
机构
[1] Brigham Young University,
[2] Brigham Young University,undefined
关键词
Instructional design; Design practice; Distinctions of worth; Instructional design teams; Case study;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In this article we report our research into the concerns and other matters of significance for members of instructional design teams. Specifically we studied how members of a design team depicted the quality of their own motives while participating in team pursuits. This is a type of self-evaluation known as drawing distinctions of worth. Our research took the form of a case study, focusing on an instructional design team at a university in the United States. Based on interviews with team members and observations of their work, we developed an account of our research participant’s distinctions of worth organized around three themes: (a) distinctions of worth could guide their decision-making more than did the goals of the project; (b) competing distinctions of worth could be difficult for them to reconcile; and (c) their distinctions of worth could be accompanied by unanticipated costs. Overall, these themes reflect that distinctions of worth were a real aspect of our participants’ team involvement, and not merely their subjective responses to situational factors. This has implications for those managing teams or otherwise helping teams improve, which we discuss. We also discuss how research into instructional design teams that only focuses on external dynamics team members experience, and not on factors such as their distinctions of worth, cannot fully account for what it means for people to contribute towards team outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:1641 / 1663
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Instructional Design and Professional Informal Learning: Practices, Tensions, and Ironies
    Yanchar, Stephen C.
    Hawkley, Melissa N.
    [J]. EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY & SOCIETY, 2015, 18 (04): : 424 - 434
  • [32] Studying language teacher cognition: Understanding and enacting theoretically consistent instructional practices
    Johnson, Karen E.
    [J]. LANGUAGE TEACHING RESEARCH, 2018, 22 (03) : 259 - 263
  • [33] Structured Literacy and Typical Literacy Practices: Understanding Differences to Create Instructional Opportunities
    Spear-Swerling, Louise
    [J]. TEACHING EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN, 2019, 51 (03) : 201 - 211
  • [34] Understanding understanding as an instructional matter
    Macbeth, Douglas
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PRAGMATICS, 2011, 43 (02) : 438 - 451
  • [35] Towards an understanding of instructional design heuristics: an exploratory Delphi study
    Cindy S. York
    Peggy A. Ertmer
    [J]. Educational Technology Research and Development, 2011, 59 : 841 - 863
  • [36] Towards an understanding of instructional design heuristics: an exploratory Delphi study
    York, Cindy S.
    Ertmer, Peggy A.
    [J]. ETR&D-EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, 2011, 59 (06): : 841 - 863
  • [37] Teacher Utilization of Instructional Consultation Teams
    Berger, Jill
    Yiu, Ho Lam
    Nelson, Deborah
    Vaganek, Megan
    Rosenfield, Sylvia
    Gravois, Todd
    Gottfredson, Gary
    Phuong Vu
    Shanahan, Kate
    Hong, Vanessa
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSULTATION, 2014, 24 (03) : 211 - 238
  • [38] Managing and Mentoring Capstone Design Teams: Considerations and Practices for Faculty
    Paretti, Marie
    Layton, Richard
    Laguette, Stephen
    Speegle, Greg
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING EDUCATION, 2011, 27 (06) : 1192 - 1205
  • [39] Understanding Work Practices of Autonomous Agile Teams: A Social-psychological Review
    Gren, Lucas
    [J]. AGILE PROCESSES IN SOFTWARE ENGINEERING AND EXTREME PROGRAMMING - WORKSHOPS (XP 2020), 2020, 396 : 227 - 235
  • [40] The instructional design portfolioInstructional Systems Technology (IST) core working in teams: A wisdomtools scenario
    Trena M. Paulus
    Brian Horvitz
    Min Shi
    Senem Yildiz
    Marty Siegel
    [J]. TechTrends, 2004, 48 (4) : 60 - 61