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Turning universities into data-driven organisations: seven dimensions of change

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Turning universities into data-driven organisations: seven dimensions of change. / Komljenovic, Janja; Sellar, Sam; Birch, Kean.
In: Higher Education, 01.08.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Komljenovic J, Sellar S, Birch K. Turning universities into data-driven organisations: seven dimensions of change. Higher Education. 2024 Aug 1. Epub 2024 Aug 1. doi: 10.1007/s10734-024-01277-z

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@article{7bf83949025c4d6ca7374c4d829ca551,
title = "Turning universities into data-driven organisations: seven dimensions of change",
abstract = "AbstractUniversities are striving to become data-driven organisations, benefitting from data collection, analysis, and various data products, such as business intelligence, learning analytics, personalised recommendations, behavioural nudging, and automation. However, datafication of universities is not an easy process. We empirically explore the struggles and challenges of UK universities in making digital and personal data useful and valuable. We structure our analysis along seven dimensions: the aspirational dimension explores university datafication aims and the challenges of achieving them; the technological dimension explores struggles with digital infrastructure supporting datafication and data quality; the legal dimension includes data privacy, security, vendor management, and new legal complexities that datafication brings; the commercial dimension tackles proprietary data products developed using university data and relations between universities and EdTech companies; the organisational dimension discusses data governance and institutional management relevant to datafication; the ideological dimension explores ideas about data value and the paradoxes that emerge between these ideas and university practices; and the existential dimension considers how datafication changes the core functioning of universities as social institutions.",
author = "Janja Komljenovic and Sam Sellar and Kean Birch",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s10734-024-01277-z",
language = "English",
journal = "Higher Education",
issn = "0018-1560",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Turning universities into data-driven organisations

T2 - seven dimensions of change

AU - Komljenovic, Janja

AU - Sellar, Sam

AU - Birch, Kean

PY - 2024/8/1

Y1 - 2024/8/1

N2 - AbstractUniversities are striving to become data-driven organisations, benefitting from data collection, analysis, and various data products, such as business intelligence, learning analytics, personalised recommendations, behavioural nudging, and automation. However, datafication of universities is not an easy process. We empirically explore the struggles and challenges of UK universities in making digital and personal data useful and valuable. We structure our analysis along seven dimensions: the aspirational dimension explores university datafication aims and the challenges of achieving them; the technological dimension explores struggles with digital infrastructure supporting datafication and data quality; the legal dimension includes data privacy, security, vendor management, and new legal complexities that datafication brings; the commercial dimension tackles proprietary data products developed using university data and relations between universities and EdTech companies; the organisational dimension discusses data governance and institutional management relevant to datafication; the ideological dimension explores ideas about data value and the paradoxes that emerge between these ideas and university practices; and the existential dimension considers how datafication changes the core functioning of universities as social institutions.

AB - AbstractUniversities are striving to become data-driven organisations, benefitting from data collection, analysis, and various data products, such as business intelligence, learning analytics, personalised recommendations, behavioural nudging, and automation. However, datafication of universities is not an easy process. We empirically explore the struggles and challenges of UK universities in making digital and personal data useful and valuable. We structure our analysis along seven dimensions: the aspirational dimension explores university datafication aims and the challenges of achieving them; the technological dimension explores struggles with digital infrastructure supporting datafication and data quality; the legal dimension includes data privacy, security, vendor management, and new legal complexities that datafication brings; the commercial dimension tackles proprietary data products developed using university data and relations between universities and EdTech companies; the organisational dimension discusses data governance and institutional management relevant to datafication; the ideological dimension explores ideas about data value and the paradoxes that emerge between these ideas and university practices; and the existential dimension considers how datafication changes the core functioning of universities as social institutions.

U2 - 10.1007/s10734-024-01277-z

DO - 10.1007/s10734-024-01277-z

M3 - Journal article

JO - Higher Education

JF - Higher Education

SN - 0018-1560

ER -