An Organizational Perspective on Experiential Education in Ontario Higher Education

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Date

2024-06-14

Authors

LaCroix, Emerson

Advisor

Aurini, Janice

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Publisher

University of Waterloo

Abstract

Experiential education has long been appreciated for its pedagogical value. There is a considerable body of evidence suggesting that students reap particular benefits when ‘learning by doing’ and engaging in practical learning experiences. Though, change is underway. In Ontario, experiential education has been incorporated into strategic funding metrics by the Ministry of Colleges and Universities, and thus subsumed in the neoliberal tradition of quantification and measurement. Universities are now required to ensure all students have at least one experiential learning opportunity before graduation and are required to measure and report where these opportunities are in their programs. This transformation prompts many questions about how organizational change takes place, and how different constituencies within and across Ontario universities are reacting to these changes. Rather than taking a conventional pedagogical view, in this dissertation I analyze experiential education through an organizational lens. I ask questions about the ongoing organizational change, drawing on a variety of organizational theories to capture institutional, organizational, and actor-level perspectives. The first research chapter (Chapter 3) focuses on the field-level dynamics of experiential education in Ontario via the Strategic Mandate process. Using three cohorts of Strategic Mandate Agreements between 2014 and 2025, I uncover how experiential education has evolved over time at the discursive and policy level. The second and third research chapters draw on 132 survey responses from faculty across the province, and 47 interviews from faculty at six Ontario universities. In the second research chapter (Chapter 4), I examine how faculty have experienced the changes to experiential education. This chapter captures recoupling in action and considers how faculty have experienced a changing organizational conception of experiential education. The final research chapter (Chapter 5) draws on the same qualitative sample but takes a more micro-level view of faculty sensemaking, delineating the various lenses through which faculty have made — and continue to make — sense of experiential education. Together, these chapters contribute a gradual narrowing from meso-level dynamics down to micro-level sensemaking to understand how a particular organizational change occurs, instigates responses, and spurs actor-level sensemaking. By taking an organizational approach, I uncover a much more nuanced understanding of experiential education and its relative complexities. My thesis concludes with policy recommendations, and implications for future research.

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Keywords

experiential learning, higher education, faculty, organizational theory

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