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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The contribution of knowledge management to learning an exploration of its practice and potential in Australian and New Zealand schools /

Reynolds, Mary E. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.(Computer Integrated Education))-University of Pretoria, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references. Available on the Internet via the World Wide Web.
2

Knowledge management in Malaysian secondary schools : implications of the "Smart School" initiative

Awang, Marinah January 2009 (has links)
Knowledge management is a response to the growing realization of knowledge as the deliverer of organizational success. Because much attention has been given to the private sector, knowledge management initiatives in educational settings seem to be lacking. Considering that knowledge activities – capturing, creating, sharing, applying and storing – are important activities in education, particularly schools, the failure to fully appreciate the potential of managing knowledge within education is surprising. A review of the literature suggests that factors such as management, technology and culture contribute differently to managing knowledge in many organizations. The management factor, for example, was a catalyst in providing a conducive work environment, whereas technology provides the mechanism as an enabler for knowledge management initiatives. Culture was important for the knowledge context and could play a significant role in the uptake of managing knowledge. The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between these contextual factors – management, technology and culture – and the knowledge activities. The study took place in Malaysian secondary schools and highlighted the Smart School Project as one of the seven flagships of Malaysia Multimedia Super Corridor. A mixed method approach was used as a strategy of inquiry in order to explore the knowledge management contextual factors in relation to knowledge activities. The quantitative method focused on collecting data based on a survey instrument. There were 1313 respondents and Smart Schools and non Smart Schools participated in responding to the questionnaire. As for the interview method, the study focused on 21 individuals who were purposely selected based on their special implementation roles in the schools – school principals, information technology coordinators and teachers. The survey data were analysed by using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) software. There were three types of statistical application used, namely the descriptive statistics, the t-test and regression, whereas the interview data were analysed manually by looking and searching for noticeable patterns to be connected to the research framework. The findings suggest that although there is no explicit knowledge management system used in managing knowledge in the educational sector, there are a lot of elements and positive practices of knowledge management already in place that could help schools to develop and encourage activities such as knowledge sharing. As far as the contribution of the contextual factors to knowledge activities, technology was an important instrument in all of the knowledge activities, but it was certainly not the only or the most prominent one. The culture factor played a more significant role in all knowledge activities particularly when knowledge sharing was considered as a social and spiritual obligation in the communities of practice. Despite this, there were also barriers in the uptake of knowledge management initiatives in schools which seemed to limit knowledge activities due to time constraints and teacher workload.
3

Modelling the current state and potential use of knowledge management in higher education institutions

Jack, Gillian January 2004 (has links)
This research explores the development of a framework appropriate to evaluate the readiness of a university to engage with knowledge management. Many universities are evolving from traditional bureaucratic, hierarchical structures to become more flexible, adaptable, commercially viable and competitive and knowledge management is becoming increasingly important in this respect. An over view of knowledge management clarifies what the concept is, and a critical review of current frameworks and models identifies gaps and weaknesses specifically in relation to empirical testing, theoretical underpinning and a holistic approach. This framework addresses those gaps and weaknesses and draws on organisational management, strategy, structure and culture, and systems thinking to ensure a holistic approach. These key elements provide the basis upon which a knowledge management framework is developed. A Soft Systems Methodological approach with a critical dimension is used to underpin this research because enquiry into organisational problem situations is complex and unstructured, based on human activity and social systems. The framework is innovative and offers contributions to knowledge because it: - is a new development within the domain of knowledge management. (it is intended to help evaluate the readiness of universities to engage in knowledge management); - provides a new application of critical systems thinking (critical systems thinking is applied to knowledge management); - uses a new synthesis (it was developed using a synthesis of soft systems principles, knowledge management concepts, and organisational theory); - enables organisations to consider their situations in new ways (by enabling self-critique of KM readiness); - offers new insights into the domain of knowledge management by means of the comprehensive and substantial literature review that helped its development.
4

Existieren Wissensmanagement-Schulen? Eine Clusteranalyse von Wissensmanagement-Beiträgen aus den letzten 10 Jahren

Kruse, Paul, Kummer, Christian, Zschech, Patrick January 2014 (has links)
Die Kommunikation in Forschungsgemeinschaften ist seit jeher ein vielschichtiger und komplexer Prozess. In den meisten Communities kommt es daher häufig zu Missverständnissen oder widersprüchlichen Auffassungen. Trotz seiner über 20-jährigen Historie ist besonders das Forschungsfeld Wissensmanagement mit einer Reihe von Schwierigkeiten und tiefgehenden Missverständnissen konfrontiert. Allem voran fällt die mangelnde Kumulativität der Debatte auf. Statt von einer interdisziplinär-synergetischen Betrachtung zu profitieren, liegt eine heterogene Landschaft an Grundbegriffen, Modellen, Theorien und Instrumenten vor, welche in ihren Aussagen teilweise unvereinbar und konkurrierend zueinander stehen – ein Hinweis auf die noch geringe wissenschaftliche Reife des Forschungsfeldes Wissensmanagement.

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