Design of an Iraqi University’s Institutional Effectiveness Model and Participant Experiences with Team Coaching

Main Article Content

Scott Joseph Warren
Rachel Gresk
Nancy Shankle
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1216-7599
Heather Farmakis
Krishna Gathwal

Abstract

As global university budgets fall due to inflationary and political pressures and international competition for students becomes increasingly fierce, it is increasingly important that these institutions are financially efficient and academically effective. While accrediting agencies guide the requirements of higher education structures necessary to achieve institutional effectiveness, the internal processes for evaluating and improving internal programs and courses are often less well described in the literature. This situation faced a relatively new university in Iraq that sought to develop its institutional improvement processes. Goals for the grant-funded project included designing a whole system educational program to improve institutional effectiveness in both academic and administrative aspects. In part, the university needed to redesign its educational processes and teach its faculty and administrators how to reduce the number of courses and curricular programs with low demand, decrease the number of credit hours to match international expectations better, and improve the quality of remaining courses with a goal of continuous improvement. Engaging in such a process requires local faculty training, engagement with such work, and expertise from faculty and administrators with experience engaging in such activities. This article presents both an overview of the design case and training methodology developed in collaboration with a U.S. non-profit and faculty from member institutions. Further, the piece provides findings from surveys with participants regarding the redesign as they took part in the work of systemic learning enhancements completed through a learning process meant to make the university more efficient and effective at achieving its educational mission.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

How to Cite
Warren, S. J., Gresk, R., Shankle, N., Farmakis, H. ., & Gathwal, K. (2024). Design of an Iraqi University’s Institutional Effectiveness Model and Participant Experiences with Team Coaching . International Journal of Designs for Learning, 15(3), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.14434/ijdl.v15i3.36302
Section
Traditional Design Cases
Author Biographies

Scott Joseph Warren, University of North Texas

Scott J. Warren is a Professor of Learning Technologies and Director of the Learning Technologies Doctoral program at the University of North Texas. His interests include operations management and organizational learning in the context of change management, digital transformation strategy, and implementation research.

Rachel Gresk, American University of Iraq, Sulaimani

Rachel Gresk is the Associate Vice President of Advancement at the American University of Iraq, Sulaimani. Areas of expertise are student satisfaction, strategic planning, student persistence, international higher education, and international development.

Nancy Shankle, Texas A&M University System

Nancy Hinkle is Provost of the RELLIS Academic Alliance in the Texas A&M University System. Her expertise includes assessment, program review, accreditation, student success, and the transfer student experience.

Heather Farmakis, Texas International Education Consortium

Heather Farmakis is the former Chief Operations Officer at the Texas International Education Consortium (TIEC) and current Chief Strategy Officer at Excel Education Systems. She is an expert in online learning, leadership, executive education programs, educational product development, accreditation, business development, and program evaluation. Before joining TIEC, Dr. Farmakis offered professional development and consulting services for association executives, school leadership, and business owners.

Krishna Gathwal, University of North Texas

Krishna Gathwal is a transformative learning strategist with over 18 years of experience designing impactful learning solutions that bridge skill gaps and drive measurable business results. As a Learning Product Manager, she leads innovative programs and technologies to engage learners and boost capabilities. A strategic learning architect and instructional design expert, she crafts future-proof strategies aligned with business goals and leverages cutting-edge methodologies.