IMPLEMENTATION OF EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE IN HUMAN SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS: IMPLICATIONS FROM AGENT-BASED MODELS
Authored by Kenneth A Frank, Ran Xu, William R Penuel
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1002/pam.22081
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://msu.edu/~kenfrank/create%20events%20with%20example.nlogo
Abstract
Much of the impact of a policy depends on how it is implemented,
especially as mediated by organizations such as schools or hospitals.
Here, we focus on how implementation of evidence-based practices in
human service organizations (e.g., schools, hospitals) is affected by
intraorganizational network dynamics. In particular, we hypothesize
intraorganizational behavioral divergence and network polarization are
likely to occur when actors strongly identify with their organizations.
Using agent-based models, we find that when organizational
identification is high, external change agents who attempt to direct
organizations by introducing policy aligned messages (e.g., professional
development emphasizing specific teaching practices) may unintentionally
contribute to divergence in practice and polarization in networks,
inhibiting full implementation of the desired practices as well as
reducing organizational capacity to absorb new practices. Thus, the
external change agent should consider the interaction between the type
of message and the intraorganizational network dynamics driven by
organizational identification.
Tags
Social networks
behavior
Dynamics
weak ties
Health-care
Evidence-based medicine
Professional-development
Network
interventions
Economic-action
Teachers