Informal distributed leadership in technology adoption
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Date
Authors
Rambe, Patient
Dzansi, Dennis Yao
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Journal of Science, Technology, Innovation and Development
Abstract
This study investigated the role of informal distributed leadership in dealing with the complexities of adopting technology
innovation in Higher Education contexts. In the study, in-depth semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions
were held with a group of informal leaders in a South African university. The findings suggest that informal distributed
leadership works best in promoting technology adoption when there is a clear understanding of: (1) the locus of control
of technology adopters; (2) power contestations between academics and students; (3) alignment of technology with
pedagogical goals; and (4) shared intentionality between the core group of informal leaders. In practical terms, the study
offers a middle-of-the-road approach to diffusion of technology innovation as an alternative to the ineffective top-down and
individual innovative leader (bottom-up) approaches. For originality/novelty, the study introduces the distributed leadership
theory into the technology adoption discourse.
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Published Article
