Cultivating a Data Culture in Higher Education 2018
DOI: 10.4324/9781315171326-1
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Developing a Data Culture

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In the recent past, data from standardised testing 3 on a global scale have been used to measure the success of students, teachers, and schools—and even to mark global competitiveness (or lack thereof) at a country level. According to Henderson and Powers [131] , data in schools can improve the return on investment (ROI) especially on learning resources, technology investments, and the development of best practices.…”
Section: The Intersection Of People Technology and Data To Improve Ed...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the recent past, data from standardised testing 3 on a global scale have been used to measure the success of students, teachers, and schools—and even to mark global competitiveness (or lack thereof) at a country level. According to Henderson and Powers [131] , data in schools can improve the return on investment (ROI) especially on learning resources, technology investments, and the development of best practices.…”
Section: The Intersection Of People Technology and Data To Improve Ed...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Henderson and Powers (2018) note,At the core level, a data culture focuses on the use of information to make sound decisions that help an institution attain a competitive gain. It is not a focus on numbers, but rather on effective use of resources to make advantageous decisions.…”
Section: Theoretical Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Related to silos, campus culture and data climate can have a considerable impact. Henderson and Powers (2018) found that HEIs are very susceptible to adverse challenges when a negative data culture exists. Culture can inhibit the ability to link data to outcomes, breed issues of distrust, or make decisions in a vacuum with limited visibility into the totality of data around a given topic.…”
Section: Collaboration Is No Longer An Optionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Culture can inhibit the ability to link data to outcomes, breed issues of distrust, or make decisions in a vacuum with limited visibility into the totality of data around a given topic. Likewise, Henderson and Powers (2018) noted HEIs could determine if they had successful data cultures when the community openly and freely shared data, understood the intrinsic value of data resources and structures, worked with data that are trusted, and ultimately made strategic decisions by clearly leveraging data. Simon, Chen, and Cho (2018) also recognize that campus culture and climate around data can be instrumental to successful analytic deployment and recommend institutions conduct maturity assessments and stakeholder interviews to highlight challenges (Zeid, 2014).…”
Section: Collaboration Is No Longer An Optionmentioning
confidence: 99%