Beyond bricks and mortar: a qualitative examination of factors influencing diffusion of an innovative PETE graduate program
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Jones, Emily (Author)
- Eberline, Andrew (Author)
- Knipe, Robert (Author)
Title
Beyond bricks and mortar: a qualitative examination of factors influencing diffusion of an innovative PETE graduate program
Abstract
As novel approaches to post-graduate education emerge and professional learning concepts evolve, there is a need for additional research investigating the processes by which physical education teacher education (PETE) faculty and administrators conceptualise and launch non-traditional graduate programming. The purpose of this study was to investigate stakeholders’ perceptions of the factors influencing the diffusion of a one-year, contextually based, full-immersion master’s degree in PE. Six stakeholders, including individuals from a mid-sized university, a global fitness corporation, and a rural K-12 school district all located within the United States, participated in semi-structured interviews. Deductive content analysis methods were used to analyse the data. Utilising Roger’s Attributes of Innovation, eleven sub-themes emerged. Findings represent stakeholders’ perceptions of facilitators and barriers to the implementation and diffusion of an innovative effort to deliver graduate education. Challenges and lessons learned provide insight for PETE faculty and administrators seeking to expand graduate education beyond bricks and mortar.
Publication
Curriculum Studies in Health and Physical Education
Publisher
Routledge
Date
2020-05-03
Volume
11
Issue
2
Pages
163-179
Citation Key
jonesBricksMortarQualitative2020
Accessed
1/10/24, 6:51 PM
ISSN
2574-2981
Short Title
Beyond bricks and mortar
Library Catalog
Taylor and Francis+NEJM
Extra
Citation
Jones, E., Eberline, A., & Knipe, R. (2020). Beyond bricks and mortar: a qualitative examination of factors influencing diffusion of an innovative PETE graduate program. Curriculum Studies in Health and Physical Education, 11(2), 163–179. https://doi.org/10.1080/25742981.2020.1719853
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