Open innovation in schools: a new imperative for organising innovation in education?
Open innovation in schools: a new imperative for organising innovation in education?
Schools are considered knowledge-creating organisations that find it difficult to develop and implement innovations on their own. Knowledge mobilisation is seen as the key to overcoming this problem. In particular, the use of external sources of knowledge is regarded as an important lever for change. However, there is a lack of concepts and empirical studies in educational research on the extent to which external knowledge is used for innovation in schools. Based on a sample of N = 411 schools, this article explores whether the concept of open innovation can be used in the context of education. Originating from the field of innovation research, open innovation regimes are seen as imperative if organisations are to create and benefit from technology. Multinomial logistic regression analyses show that mobilising external knowledge significantly increases the likelihood of implementing innovations in schools. A machine-learning approach reveals that it is necessary to tailor open innovation regimes to the specific conditions of any given school. In particular, with regard to the use of new technologies and innovations in the field of digitalisation, open innovation can be a lever for change.
Closed innovation, Innovation performance, Knowledge creation, Knowledge mobilisation, Open innovation, Schools
1051-1077
Pietsch, Marcus
b019e70b-d112-48b9-b48b-cba4725ee097
Cramer, Colin
951166b2-c87e-4914-86cf-19ff3e47ae45
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
Aydin, Burak
e6033274-e8d9-4ff3-a284-bcee3b922c0c
Witthöft, Jasmin
85e2907d-e373-4035-973a-dd41a5dfed90
27 November 2023
Pietsch, Marcus
b019e70b-d112-48b9-b48b-cba4725ee097
Cramer, Colin
951166b2-c87e-4914-86cf-19ff3e47ae45
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
Aydin, Burak
e6033274-e8d9-4ff3-a284-bcee3b922c0c
Witthöft, Jasmin
85e2907d-e373-4035-973a-dd41a5dfed90
Pietsch, Marcus, Cramer, Colin, Brown, Chris, Aydin, Burak and Witthöft, Jasmin
(2023)
Open innovation in schools: a new imperative for organising innovation in education?
Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 29 (2), .
(doi:10.1007/s10758-023-09705-2).
Abstract
Schools are considered knowledge-creating organisations that find it difficult to develop and implement innovations on their own. Knowledge mobilisation is seen as the key to overcoming this problem. In particular, the use of external sources of knowledge is regarded as an important lever for change. However, there is a lack of concepts and empirical studies in educational research on the extent to which external knowledge is used for innovation in schools. Based on a sample of N = 411 schools, this article explores whether the concept of open innovation can be used in the context of education. Originating from the field of innovation research, open innovation regimes are seen as imperative if organisations are to create and benefit from technology. Multinomial logistic regression analyses show that mobilising external knowledge significantly increases the likelihood of implementing innovations in schools. A machine-learning approach reveals that it is necessary to tailor open innovation regimes to the specific conditions of any given school. In particular, with regard to the use of new technologies and innovations in the field of digitalisation, open innovation can be a lever for change.
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TKL_Manuscript_OI_Schools_R2_20231022_CC
- Author's Original
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s10758-023-09705-2
- Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 27 November 2023
Published date: 27 November 2023
Keywords:
Closed innovation, Innovation performance, Knowledge creation, Knowledge mobilisation, Open innovation, Schools
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494426
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494426
ISSN: 2211-1662
PURE UUID: 8b9b12e0-8441-47fb-a2af-1595760eb6a3
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Date deposited: 08 Oct 2024 16:38
Last modified: 09 Oct 2024 02:15
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Contributors
Author:
Marcus Pietsch
Author:
Colin Cramer
Author:
Chris Brown
Author:
Burak Aydin
Author:
Jasmin Witthöft
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