Enabling educational innovation through complexity leadership? Perspectives from four Dutch universities

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Martine Schophuizen (The Netherlands Initiative for Education Research (NRO), The Hague, Open University of the Netherlands)

Aodhán Kelly (Maastricht University)

Caitlin Utama (Universiteit Leiden)

Marcus Specht (TU Delft - Web Information Systems)

Marco Kalz (Open University of the Netherlands, Heidelberg University of Education)

Research Group
Web Information Systems
Copyright
© 2022 Martine Schophuizen, Aodhán Kelly, Caitlin Utama, M.M. Specht, Marco Kalz
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11233-022-09105-8
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Martine Schophuizen, Aodhán Kelly, Caitlin Utama, M.M. Specht, Marco Kalz
Research Group
Web Information Systems
Issue number
4
Volume number
29 (2023)
Pages (from-to)
471-490
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Leadership in higher can influence the structurally embedding of educational technologies in higher education institutions. However, HEIs are complex pluralistic organizational environments with loosely coupled systems, diffused power and goal ambiguity which makes governance of educational innovations a wicked problem in which they have to balance dynamic complex interactions while also setting out a clear vision and enacting this vision towards organizational goals. This paper analyses four qualitative case studies with a focus on the choices made by leaders in four Dutch universities that aim to contribute to organisational educational innovation. We investigated the data through the lens of complexity leadership theory in which three types of leadership play an important role: administrative leadership (i.e. top-down oriented), adaptive leadership (i.e. bottom-up oriented) and enabling leadership that emerges as a leadership type between administrative and adaptive leadership and contributes to governing innovation in complex environments. This study sheds light on how, in the case of HEIs as complex environments, leaders made strategic choices and followed up on them to enable the innovative potential of the organisation.