AAEL-Practise transfer

Lese­zeit: 48 Minu­ten

AAEL practice transfer for the AAEL journey

Transfer of the AAEL framework to the practice of (higher) education in the post-digital age

In this chap­ter, the focus is on trans­fer, which aims to make the AAEL (Ambi­dex­trous Agi­le Edu­ca­tio­nal Lea­der­ship) frame­work appli­ca­ble to the prac­ti­ce of hig­her edu­ca­ti­on. The shor­ten­ed term “AAEL prac­ti­ce trans­fer” opens up the enti­re field of prac­ti­ce and prac­ti­ces resul­ting from the appli­ca­ti­on and inte­gra­ti­on of this con­cep­tu­al approach into the field of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in the post-digi­tal era.

AAEL Prac­ti­ce Trans­fer – in addi­ti­on to the sepa­ra­te AAEL Play­Book – refers to and is to pre­sent the con­cep­tu­al aspects of the AAEL frame­work usable and mana­geable ele­ments for bet­ter access and grea­ter com­pre­hen­si­bi­li­ty. This includes visua­liza­ti­ons and expl­ana­ti­ons of AAEL values and AAEL prin­ci­ples with prac­ti­cal expl­ana­ti­ons.

The AAEL prac­ti­ce trans­fer chap­ter is divi­ded into three parts:

  1. Part I high­lights the prac­ti­ce of hig­her edu­ca­ti­on and descri­bes the value ori­en­ta­ti­on of AAEL in Doing and Being. All ele­ments of the AAEL frame­work are also named here as cen­tral points of refe­rence and brought tog­e­ther struc­tu­ral­ly and visual­ly in order to make them more tan­gi­ble for the prac­ti­ce of the AAEL journey. 
  2. Part II swit­ches to the pro­cess level, after the struc­tu­red pre­sen­ta­ti­on along pos­si­ble con­tent-rela­ted dis­cus­sions within the frame­work of the visua­li­zed AAEL buil­ding blocks. As a frame­work for an AAEL jour­ney, belon­ging to the AAEL-values the AAEL prin­ci­ples, which are essen­ti­al for AAEL-Being and -Doing in the indi­vi­du­al and joint imple­men­ta­ti­on of AAEL, are intro­du­ced and explai­ned in more detail after the AAEL values. 
  3. Part III descri­bes a fic­ti­tious exam­p­le sce­na­rio, the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty (her­ein­af­ter refer­red to as LU for short). It ser­ves as a sub­se­quent prac­ti­cal illus­tra­ti­on of pos­si­ble acti­vi­ties in the deve­lo­p­ment pro­cess with AAEL — and as a gui­de through the indi­vi­du­al buil­ding blocks of an inde­pen­dent AAEL Play­Book, which takes up and inte­gra­tes the points descri­bed in the transfer. 

PartI
orientation – and also a piece of democracy on a small scale

As cen­tral points of refe­rence, this first part pres­ents, on the one hand, the under­stan­ding of a prac­ti­ce of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on with its estab­lished and new­ly emer­ging prac­ti­ces and, on the other hand, the refe­rence to AAEL-Being and AAEL-Doing. AAEL values and AAEL prin­ci­ples are then descri­bed and cate­go­ri­zed in detail. In addi­ti­on, a gene­ral over­view of the AAEL frame­work is pre­sen­ted in the form of a visua­liza­ti­on. All of this forms the basis for the ide­as pre­sen­ted later on as to how the AAEL frame­work can be trans­la­ted into prac­ti­ce in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on (or other are­as of education). 

1 The practice of (higher) education

In this chap­ter, hig­her edu­ca­ti­on is taken as an exem­pla­ry field in order to illus­tra­te the trans­fer of the AAEL frame­work. In prin­ci­ple, howe­ver, AAEL can just as easi­ly be appli­ed in ear­ly child­hood, school or voca­tio­nal edu­ca­ti­on set­tings as well as in adult and con­ti­nuing edu­ca­ti­on.

The aim of AAEL and the imple­men­ta­ti­on of spe­ci­fic AAEL prac­ti­ces is to take a sys­te­mic view of hig­her edu­ca­ti­on prac­ti­ce – a com­plex struc­tu­re of rou­ti­nes, inter­ac­tions and insti­tu­tio­nal struc­tures – and to con­scious­ly act in this con­text with the who­le in mind. This makes it clear that AAEL is seen as a com­pre­hen­si­ve under­stan­ding of prac­ti­ce, in which the theo­re­ti­cal frame­work with its con­cepts and the modes of action that can be deri­ved from it (AAEL prac­ti­ces) as well as the con­cre­te prac­ti­ce its­elf inter­pe­ne­tra­te and adjust each other.

AAEL can help to estab­lish or streng­then chan­ged and new­ly emer­ging pat­terns, atti­tu­des, pro­ces­ses and struc­tures in the prac­ti­ce of hig­her edu­ca­ti­on and thus have a las­ting impact. It is not about estab­li­shing iso­la­ted methods or tools. Rather, AAEL offers gui­dance on how (excel­lent) tea­ching, rese­arch, trans­fer and social respon­si­bi­li­ty (third mis­si­on) as well as other requi­re­ments for hig­her edu­ca­ti­on in the exis­ting orga­niza­tio­nal struc­tures can be ret­hought tog­e­ther (trans­for­ma­ti­on) and fur­ther deve­lo­ped in incre­men­tal steps (tran­si­ti­on) from the per­spec­ti­ve of lea­der­ship in the post-digi­tal era. The focus the­r­e­fo­re remains on making hig­her edu­ca­ti­on more future-pro­of tog­e­ther – with AAEL and not for its own sake.

Chal­lenges such as the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on can be reflec­ted upon, adapt­ed or rede­si­gned along exis­ting rou­ti­nes and com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on pat­terns with regard to post-digi­ta­li­ty and thus made sus­tainable. Aspects such as trans­pa­ren­cy, acces­si­bi­li­ty, respon­si­bi­li­ty and par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on with a view to future gene­ra­ti­ons can also be used to estab­lish good links to simi­lar­ly ori­en­ted edu­ca­tio­nal prac­ti­ces – such as tho­se for sus­tainable deve­lo­p­ment (SDG) or Open Edu­ca­tio­nal Prac­ti­ces (OEP).

An AAEL prac­ti­ce with its spe­ci­fic prac­ti­ces deve­lo­ps emer­gen­tly in the inter­play bet­ween AAEL Doing and AAEL Being. This inter­play can hard­ly be rigid­ly defi­ned, as Doing is for­med in action through indi­vi­du­al and shared prac­ti­ces and metho­do­lo­gies, while Being (fur­ther) deve­lo­ps in per­so­nal reflec­tion and expe­ri­ence-based growth pro­ces­ses. The­re is no clear ans­wer as to whe­ther AAEL Doing can only suc­ceed if a cer­tain AAEL Being alre­a­dy exists or whe­ther, con­ver­se­ly, Doing pro­mo­tes Being. It is more likely that both deve­lop in par­al­lel and influence each other recipro­cal­ly. In both cases, Doing and Being are based on values and prin­ci­ples that give them direc­tion.

So befo­re we look more clo­se­ly at spe­ci­fic aspects of AAEL prac­ti­ce, the next step is to return to the values of the AAEL frame­work. They ari­se and chan­ge through par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry nego­tia­ti­on within a demo­cra­tic design culture. 

2 Values in the AAEL framework: Strengthening democracy on a small scale

AAEL is to be unders­tood as a pri­ma­ri­ly value- and prin­ci­ple-based frame­work. The basic idea of a frame­work for action that spe­ci­fic values and prin­ci­ples was adapt­ed from the con­text of agi­li­ty1 for the field of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on with the AAEL frame­work. Actors in the field can make inde­pen­dent decis­i­ons and act in a value-ori­en­ted man­ner along this frame­work, both indi­vi­du­al­ly and coll­ec­tively, in order to be able to deal appro­pria­te­ly with com­plex situa­tions such as tho­se that occur every day in (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on.

The AAEL is about taking respon­si­bi­li­ty for bet­ter edu­ca­ti­on as the basis and goal of demo­cra­tic coexis­tence and par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry coope­ra­ti­on. Here, edu­ca­ti­on is shaped step by step by assum­ing lea­der­ship in one’s own area of acti­vi­ty. Struc­tu­ral and per­so­nal aspects are addres­sed in equal mea­su­re and cul­tu­ral deve­lo­p­ments and con­tex­tu­al con­di­ti­ons are included in order to enable and streng­then par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry, resi­li­ent and inno­va­ti­ve (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in a sus­tainable and value-ori­en­ted man­ner for all in the inte­rests of diver­se stake­hol­ders. The AAEL frame­work thus stands for a fun­da­men­tal demo­cra­tic con­vic­tion.

Naming values within the AAEL frame­work is dou­ble-edged. After all, they only make sen­se as a basis for the action pro­cess and streng­then mutu­al trust if they are accept­ed and shared by all stake­hol­ders. At the same time, they can­not sim­ply be impo­sed on ever­yo­ne. The AAEL frame­work is the­r­e­fo­re also about pro­mo­ting the mutu­al faci­li­ta­ti­on of actu­al par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on, wil­ling­ness to self­or­ga­ni­ze and assu­me respon­si­bi­li­ty in a trus­ting frame­work and ques­tio­ning tra­di­tio­nal struc­tures in a power-cri­ti­cal man­ner.

The task the­r­e­fo­re remains to under­stand values from the out­set as the result of under­stan­ding and app­re­cia­ti­ve nego­tia­ti­on. With a view to agi­li­ty, it can be con­cluded that a con­sen­sus as a demo­cra­tic form of co-deter­mi­na­ti­on based on shared values can alre­a­dy enable sus­tainable and meaningful col­la­bo­ra­ti­on. In their respec­ti­ve form, AAEL values are the­r­e­fo­re always the sub­ject of (power-cri­ti­cal) nego­tia­ti­ons in the respec­ti­ve (edu­ca­tio­nal) are­as.

The AAEL values them­sel­ves now fol­low in the next sec­tion: They tie in with this basic under­stan­ding of demo­cra­tic nego­tia­ti­on and are also the anchor on which the AAEL prin­ci­ples are based.

For this reason, trust and respon­si­bi­li­ty are regard­ed and empha­si­zed as cen­tral values in the AAEL framework:

Trust

….becau­se trust is the basis for suc­cessful coope­ra­ti­on and mutu­al sup­port and streng­thens rela­ti­onships and (psy­cho­lo­gi­cal) secu­ri­ty. Trust in each other and in for­mal, struc­tu­ral, legal and social frame­work con­di­ti­ons is a pre­re­qui­si­te and con­se­quence of all other values. After all, trust can­not be impo­sed; it is acqui­red through respon­si­ble coope­ra­ti­on with one ano­ther, streng­the­ned and can also be lost again. 

Responsibility

…becau­se the abili­ty and wil­ling­ness to take on and hand over respon­si­bi­li­ty is fun­da­men­tal for par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry (lear­ning) pro­ces­ses at all levels, col­la­bo­ra­ti­ve working con­texts and for func­tio­ning self-orga­niza­ti­on in groups, teams and orga­niza­ti­ons. Respon­si­bi­li­ty also means a long-term com­mit­ment to sus­tainable edu­ca­tio­nal pro­ces­ses and the wil­ling­ness to cri­ti­cal­ly reflect on the effects of one’s own actions in edu­ca­ti­on in the post-digi­tal age. 

Equal­ly rele­vant values as the basis for an AAEL and its prin­ci­ples as future-ori­en­ted lea­der­ship in the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor within the refe­rence frame­work of agi­li­ty and ambi­dex­teri­ty are the following:

Courage

…becau­se AAEL invi­tes you to be cou­ra­ge­ous and to take risks in your actions with a view to an uncer­tain future and to approach chan­ge proac­tively as a long-term pro­cess despi­te uncer­tain­ties. Cou­ra­ge also includes the wil­ling­ness to see rapid test­ing and mista­kes as lear­ning oppor­tu­ni­ties and to crea­te an envi­ron­ment in which inno­va­ti­ve ide­as can be tes­ted and risks taken. AAEL sup­ports the wil­ling­ness to inno­va­te and to over­co­me uncer­tain­ties in com­plex situations. 

Openess

…becau­se AAEL thri­ves on per­so­nal open­ness and open struc­tures and the wil­ling­ness for trans­pa­ren­cy and a free exch­an­ge of mate­ri­als, infor­ma­ti­on and ide­as in the broa­der sen­se of Open Edu­ca­tio­nal Prac­ti­ce (OEP). Open­ness also means con­ti­nuous­ly inte­gra­ting new fin­dings and tech­no­lo­gi­cal deve­lo­p­ments and con­stant­ly deve­lo­ping per­so­nal­ly well as (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on and thus reac­ting fle­xi­bly to new chal­lenges and opportunities. 

Respect

…becau­se an AAEL is about having respect for peo­p­le and reco­gni­zing and valuing the con­tri­bu­ti­ons and per­spec­ti­ves of ever­yo­ne invol­ved in the col­la­bo­ra­ti­on – and giving feed­back with respect for the per­son. In this respect, respect means inter­ac­ting with all stake­hol­ders and per­spec­ti­ves on an equal foo­ting and ensu­ring that all voices are heard and valued. 

Diversity

…becau­se AAEL con­scious­ly seeks oppor­tu­ni­ties bey­ond dua­li­ties in-bet­ween and out­side, and the frame­work inte­gra­tes diclu­si­ve and inclu­si­ve per­spec­ti­ves and back­grounds with a view to diver­si­ty in edu­ca­ti­on in the post­di­gi­tal age in order to crea­te a sui­ta­ble, sus­tainable edu­ca­ti­on for all. Diver­si­ty is the­r­e­fo­re a con­ti­nuous framing pro­cess that must be actively nur­tu­red and pro­mo­ted in order to crea­te an inclu­si­ve environment. 

Feedback

…becau­se con­s­truc­ti­ve feed­back moti­va­tes rapid lear­ning in terms of out­co­me with a view to achie­ving the goal and pro­mo­tes per­so­nal growth within the orga­niza­ti­on. Feed­back is important in both for­ma­ti­ve and sum­ma­ti­ve sen­se in order to pro­mo­te con­ti­nuous lear­ning and the achie­ve­ment of goals. 

Engagement

…becau­se the AAEL frame­work is pri­ma­ri­ly based on the wil­ling­ness and (self-)commitment to achie­ve com­mon goals in order to con­ti­nuous­ly impro­ve edu­ca­ti­on through rapid feed­back. Enga­ge­ment requi­res a balan­ce bet­ween indi­vi­du­al respon­si­bi­li­ty and coll­ec­ti­ve com­mit­ment to ite­ra­tively achie­ve shared goals. A relia­ble com­mit­ment is nee­ded for goals such as pro­cess design. 

Focus

…becau­se in the com­ple­xi­ty of edu­ca­ti­on, focus and con­cen­tra­ti­on on the next task is important. In this respect, focus means set­ting clear goals and inte­rim goals and pur­suing them con­sis­t­ent­ly, and being able to remain moti­va­ted as well as effi­ci­ent and effec­ti­ve when taking the next steps. 

Communication

…becau­se com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on, espe­ci­al­ly in the post-digi­tal age, in all its forms of ver­bal, non-ver­bal and digi­tal com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on, is essen­ti­al for coor­di­na­ti­on and con­stant exch­an­ge bet­ween peo­p­le, within teams and orga­niza­ti­ons in order con­ti­nuous­ly impro­ve edu­ca­ti­on together.

AAEL values considered in practice

Below are some addi­tio­nal con­side­ra­ti­ons on how the AAEL values men­tio­ned be rea­li­zed in practice:

Together instead of by decree: The basis for constant negotiation

A key point is the insight that values can only be effec­ti­ve if they are sup­port­ed by all stake­hol­ders invol­ved. The­se values form an initi­al coher­ent foun­da­ti­on for an AAEL logic that com­bi­nes agi­li­ty and ambi­dex­teri­ty in such a way that it can be used to con­ti­nuous­ly deve­lop indi­vi­du­al and orga­niza­tio­nal lear­ning pro­ces­ses. They will con­ti­nue to deve­lop or dif­fe­ren­tia­te over time and, rea­li­sti­cal­ly spea­king, can pro­ba­b­ly always be ful­ly recon­ci­led. But for the com­mon start, they form a tar­get space and an anchor for reflec­ting on com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on for shared goals and a mis­si­on. Values also crea­te a direct link to the idea of an agi­le mind­set: “being” in the AAEL con­text means reflec­ting and nego­tia­ting values and prin­ci­ples with each other in such a way that they pro­vi­de a sus­tainable ori­en­ta­ti­on frame­work for action on com­plex problems. 

Interaction of person and organization

Par­ti­cu­lar­ly in are­as of edu­ca­ti­on whe­re tra­di­tio­nal power struc­tures exist (e.g. hier­ar­chi­cal dis­tri­bu­ti­on of decis­i­on-making powers), the “both/and” of sta­bi­li­ty and inno­va­ti­on can only work if actors at all levels are allo­wed to reflect on and help shape their role. Values such as respon­si­bi­li­ty and trust have an impact here at both a per­so­nal and orga­niza­tio­nal level. When peo­p­le with tra­di­tio­nal lea­der­ship roles and func­tions (e.g. lec­tu­r­ers, deans, pre­si­dents) con­scious­ly and trans­par­ent­ly share respon­si­bi­li­ty, trust within the sys­tem grows. 

Courage and openness as drivers for exploration

Ambi­dex­teri­ty as an orga­niza­tio­nal and per­so­nal abili­ty to switch bet­ween impro­ving the exis­ting and explo­ring com­ple­te­ly new approa­ches requi­res a con­ti­nuous wil­ling­ness to inno­va­te. Cou­ra­ge and open­ness are the per­so­nal “atti­tu­des” requi­red for this. Whe­re open­ness is a shared prin­ci­ple, the­re is room to bold­ly explo­re new paths and to see fail­ures as expe­ri­en­ces that pro­mo­te lear­ning and to crea­te a shared lear­ning culture. 

Respect and diversity in self-organized teams

Espe­ci­al­ly when teams of dif­fe­rent forms (core teams to tem­po­ra­ry team con­stel­la­ti­ons or ad-hoc teams) work lar­ge­ly self­or­ga­ni­zed in AAEL con­texts, respect and diver­si­ty are essen­ti­al fac­tors for psy­cho­lo­gi­cal safe­ty. A deve­lo­p­ment space is crea­ted for all per­so­na­li­ties invol­ved with their respec­ti­ve com­pe­ten­ci­es, in which dif­fe­rent per­spec­ti­ves are not only tole­ra­ted, but also spe­ci­fi­cal­ly inte­gra­ted. This pro­mo­tes a spec­trum of ide­as and opti­ons for action and offers oppor­tu­ni­ties for the adop­ti­on and diver­si­ty of per­spec­ti­ves, which is indis­pensable for edu­ca­ti­on in the post-digi­tal age, espe­ci­al­ly in sce­na­ri­os that are still uncertain. 

Feedback and commitment as a driver for continuous learning

What is often fasci­na­ting about agi­le working methods is how dyna­mi­cal­ly and natu­ral­ly feed­back can be incor­po­ra­ted wit­hout tho­se invol­ved having to be afraid of making mista­kes. This only works if ever­yo­ne – from indi­vi­du­als and teams to the enti­re orga­niza­ti­on – pre­pared to see con­s­truc­ti­ve feed­back as an oppor­tu­ni­ty. This lear­ning cul­tu­re requi­res com­mit­ment and a sen­se of respon­si­bi­li­ty in order to be wil­ling and able to give each other feedback. 

Focus and communication in highly complex change processes

Edu­ca­ti­on in the post-digi­tal age is high­ly com­plex: the­re are count­less par­al­lel fac­tors and known and some­ti­mes uncer­tain requi­re­ments to con­sider. This is why focus in the AAEL sen­se not only plays a role at a metho­do­lo­gi­cal level (e.g. on prio­ri­ties in sprints or on the next agreed step), but espe­ci­al­ly at an atti­tu­di­nal and orga­niza­tio­nal level. Clear and open com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on is also essen­ti­al in order to keep goals, roles and inter­me­dia­te sta­tu­s­es transparent. 

Values as a living framework for AAEL

If we under­stand AAEL as a frame­work for action and design for sus­tainable (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on, it also beco­mes clear that the values lis­ted here not only help to struc­tu­re the space for action, but also invi­te us to enable a lively lear­ning and cul­tu­ral prac­ti­ce tog­e­ther. On the one hand, values can ser­ve as a com­pass and also deve­lop fur­ther in inter­ac­tion — or only emer­ge emer­gen­tly in direct, reflec­ti­ve inter­ac­tion.

In the long term, they should help to ensu­re that agi­li­ty and ambi­dex­teri­ty do not remain mere­ly “modern buz­zwords” or “new methods” for the sake of appearan­ces, but ins­tead beco­me a frame­work of values with real depth that fits in with their own prac­ti­ce. In this way, a value-ori­en­ted AAEL prac­ti­ce deve­lo­ps step by step over time and demo­cra­tic prin­ci­ples can be expe­ri­en­ced in ever­y­day inter­ac­tion. Ulti­m­ate­ly, value ori­en­ta­ti­on is always most evi­dent whe­re it is lin­ked to action and can also deve­lop emer­gen­tly — in the spi­rit of a lear­ning and edu­ca­tio­nal cul­tu­re cha­rac­te­ri­zed by ambi­dex­trous and agi­le behaviour. 

3 AAEL elements visualized in interaction

In the fol­lo­wing, the key ele­ments of the AAEL frame­work are explai­ned and illus­tra­ted in a prac­ti­cal way to show how AAEL can func­tion as a sti­mu­la­ting con­cept and help to shape hig­her edu­ca­ti­on prac­ti­ce in a future-ori­en­ted way.

In this vari­ant, a deduc­ti­ve repre­sen­ta­ti­on from the gene­ral to the con­cre­te is fol­lo­wed. That means here: From post-digi­ta­li­ty as a con­text – via the cen­tral epony­mous con­cepts – to an AAEL cul­tu­re deve­lo­ping emer­gen­tly through AAEL-Doing and AAEL-Being at the cen­ter. This view of the model is not fixed and can also be read dif­fer­ent­ly depen­ding on the per­spec­ti­ve.

The fol­lo­wing visua­liza­ti­on bund­les all twel­ve ele­ments of the cur­rent ver­si­on 2.1 of the AAEL frame­work and thus depicts them on the back­ground foil of post-digitality:


Figu­re: Visua­li­sa­ti­on of the AAEL frame­work – Ambi­dex­trous Agi­le Edu­ca­tio­nal Lea­der­ship for the joint design of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in the post-digi­tal era, ver­si­on 2.1.
AAEL elements in the image of a construction kit

The afo­re­men­tio­ned ele­ments can also be seen as such in their inter­play: as ele­ments for playful test­ing, explo­ring and expe­ri­men­ting.

And so the visua­liza­ti­on was deve­lo­ped in the style of a con­s­truc­tion kit with colourful woo­den bricks or buil­ding blocks (per­haps also known as the Tang­ram game2). Strict­ly spea­king, this visua­liza­ti­on deve­lo­ped emer­gen­tly in a lon­ger pro­cess of scribb­ling.

And the­r­e­fo­re the image of buil­ding blocks has also emer­ged here in rela­ti­on to the ele­ments. A ‘buil­ding block’ is unders­tood here as a framing box con­tai­ning colo­red indi­vi­du­al buil­ding blocks that fill the space within this frame. Buil­ding blocks with cor­ners and edges and in dif­fe­rent shapes have been cho­sen, which can be joi­n­ed tog­e­ther to form a who­le and are the­r­e­fo­re com­pa­ti­ble with each other in every case. One can ima­gi­ne three-dimen­sio­nal, mova­ble ele­ments here.

Tog­e­ther, all the buil­ding blocks make up the AAEL frame­work. They exist as indi­vi­du­al ele­ments that only form a who­le tog­e­ther and beco­me effec­ti­ve when they inter­act with each other.

The cho­sen colors and shapes direct con­nec­tions or uni­que posi­ti­ons. They are taken up again for bet­ter ori­en­ta­ti­on, espe­ci­al­ly in the trans­fer for prac­ti­ce in the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor with its methods and prac­ti­ces.

In the visua­liza­ti­on, the respec­ti­ve buil­ding blocks stand for the the­ma­tic ele­ments that tog­e­ther model and fill the AAEL frame­work. View­ed from the out­side in, the­se buil­ding blocks can be cate­go­ri­zed as follows: 

Post-Digitality

In the visua­liza­ti­on, post-digi­ta­li­ty forms the base of the enti­re gra­phic and is con­cei­ved as the pri­ma­ry chall­enge at pre­sent, as well as an essen­ti­al refe­rence field for edu­ca­ti­on. In the colour sche­me, this con­tex­tua­li­zing ele­ment appears in a light sha­de of grey — a deli­be­ra­te choice, as it lies behind the other buil­ding blocks like a foil and can be unders­tood figu­ra­tively as the box of the buil­ding set. The AAEL frame­work is thus sym­bo­li­cal­ly embedded and con­tex­tua­li­zed in digi­ta­li­ty3.

Post-digi­ta­li­ty descri­bes a cur­rent cul­tu­ral sta­te in the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on, which must not only be unders­tood as a tech­no­lo­gi­cal deve­lo­p­ment, but also cri­ti­cal­ly reflec­ted upon. It is not mere­ly an exter­nal con­tex­tu­al con­di­ti­on for (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in the con­text of digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on, but also a pro­found social dyna­mic that per­me­a­tes edu­ca­ti­on and its prac­ti­ce. Sin­ce post-digi­ta­li­ty is repea­ted­ly addres­sed as a cen­tral con­tex­tu­al con­di­ti­on and social chall­enge for (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on, it forms the basis of the AAEL frame­work – a con­di­ti­on that is not only effec­ti­ve as a back­ground, but is alre­a­dy inher­ent in the situa­tions and prac­ti­ces of AAEL

Ambidextrous + Agile + Educational + Leadership

The epony­mous con­cep­tu­al ele­ments of the AAEL frame­work are Ambi­dex­trous, Agi­le, Edu­ca­tio­nal and Lea­der­ship. The Eng­lish terms have been deli­bera­te­ly retai­ned, as they not only enable inter­na­tio­nal con­nec­ti­vi­ty to exis­ting dis­cour­ses, but also open up a broa­der per­spec­ti­ve in terms of con­tent. The­se four cen­tral ele­ments are repre­sen­ted in the visua­liza­ti­on by dif­fer­ent­ly colo­red rec­tan­gles, which also ser­ve as a frame for the inner com­pon­ents of the AAEL buil­ding block.

The Ambi­dex­trous4 buil­ding block stands for the simul­ta­neous opti­miza­ti­on of the tried and tes­ted and the test­ing, deve­lo­p­ment and of the new. It embo­dies an inte­gra­ting and balan­cing per­spec­ti­ve on chan­ge by deli­bera­te­ly adop­ting a both/and atti­tu­de. In com­plex struc­tures, this means navi­ga­ting con­fi­dent­ly bet­ween see­mingly oppo­sing poles such as sta­bi­li­ty and inno­va­ti­on as well as buil­ding bridges – and thus deve­lo­ping the abili­ty to act in the in-bet­ween. The color for this ele­ment in the visua­liza­ti­on is oran­ge.

The next buil­ding block, Agi­le5, empha­si­zes the importance of a gra­du­al, lear­ning wil­ling­ness to adapt to com­plex, dyna­mic con­texts — an essen­ti­al skill, par­ti­cu­lar­ly in (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on. In this logic, agi­li­ty and ambi­dex­teri­ty can be appli­ed to a wide ran­ge of edu­ca­tio­nal and orga­niza­tio­nal are­as. The color for this ele­ment in the visua­liza­ti­on is green.

In this artic­le, the Edu­ca­tio­nal6 buil­ding brick focu­ses on the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor and its spe­ci­fic chal­lenges. It is not just about tea­ching and lear­ning, but about edu­ca­ti­on in a com­pre­hen­si­ve sen­se – with struc­tu­ral, per­so­nal, cul­tu­ral and poli­ti­cal dimen­si­ons that are cru­cial for sus­tainable edu­ca­tio­nal pro­ces­ses. The color for this ele­ment in the visua­liza­ti­on is blue.

The fourth buil­ding block, Lea­der­ship7, refers to the faci­li­ta­ti­on and assump­ti­on of (per­so­nal) respon­si­bi­li­ty within struc­tures and insti­tu­tio­nal con­di­ti­ons in edu­ca­ti­on. Lea­der­ship is con­cei­ved as an over­ar­ching, pro­fes­sio­nal under­stan­ding of action that unfolds across dif­fe­rent roles and levels. The color for this ele­ment in the visua­liza­ti­on is yel­low.

The­se four con­cep­tu­al buil­ding blocks – Ambi­dex­trous, Agi­le, Edu­ca­tio­nal and Lea­der­ship – can be com­bi­ned in a trans­di­sci­pli­na­ry way. They frame the other ele­ments that address the deve­lo­p­ment and action space (doing and being with per­son and orga­niza­ti­on) of the actors, inclu­ding the prin­ci­ples and values as well as the emer­gence of a spe­ci­fic AAEL cul­tu­re.

People + Organization + Being + Doing

The inter­ac­tion of peo­p­le with their per­so­na­li­ties and atti­tu­des as well as orga­niza­ti­ons with their rules, for­mal and infor­mal struc­tures and insti­tu­tio­nal frame­works meets the dyna­mic dimen­si­ons of AAEL Doing and AAEL Being in the AAEL frame­work. The­se four ele­ments – Per­son, Being, Orga­niza­ti­on and Doing – are repre­sen­ted as equal tri­an­gles who­se bases form an inner squa­re and thus enc­lo­se the cen­ter of the buil­ding block within the con­cep­tu­al ele­ments of AAEL.

Doing und Being sowie ihr Zusam­men­spiel mit Per­son und Orga­ni­sa­ti­on sind nicht starr fest­zu­schrei­ben, son­dern ent­ste­hen und ver­än­dern sich im Han­deln – durch Metho­den und Prak­ti­ken, durch Refle­xi­on und Erfah­rung, durch indi­vi­du­el­les und gemein­schaft­li­ches Wachs­tum. In die­sem Rah­men ste­hen sie für eine spe­zi­fi­sche Pra­xis des Han­delns und Seins einer Per­son in und mit der Bil­dungs­or­ga­ni­sa­ti­on – ein­ge­bet­tet in geteil­te Zie­le, getra­gen von einer Visi­on und immer in Wech­sel­wir­kung mit Ver­gan­gen­heit, Gegen­wart und mög­li­chen Zukünften. 

Values + Principles

In the cen­ter of the visua­liza­ti­on are spe­ci­fic AAEL values and prin­ci­ples in the form of two tri­an­gles of the same colour that com­ple­ment each other to form a dia­mond. Values and prin­ci­ples both ari­se from the con­text of post-digi­ta­li­ty and the con­cep­tu­al ele­ments of AAEL. Both are united by the fact that they are deve­lo­ped in the inter­play of person(s) and organization(s), inclu­ding their edu­ca­tio­nal mis­si­on — and, whe­re neces­sa­ry, must be spe­ci­fi­cal­ly nego­tia­ted in order to be shared. Ins­tead of a sta­tic set of rules, in the inter­play bet­ween Being AAEL and Doing AAEL, they form situa­tio­nal and con­text-depen­dent points of ori­en­ta­ti­on for all actors in their ever­y­day actions in the com­ple­xi­ty of edu­ca­ti­on. They are the­r­e­fo­re pla­ced as the core within the rhom­bus, whe­re they in turn form the frame­work for the final, cen­tral buil­ding block. Both ele­ments should actual­ly have the same colors to express their equal value, but again two dif­fe­rent colors are used to bet­ter distin­gu­ish the two elements. 

Culture

In the visua­liza­ti­on, cul­tu­re is a squa­re in the cen­ter of the buil­ding block. In the inter­play of the buil­ding blocks men­tio­ned so far, a new­ly emer­ging under­stan­ding of cul­tu­re can emer­ge, deve­lop and cul­ti­va­te over time within the frame­work of AAEL (AAEL cul­tu­re for short) – fol­lo­wing the exis­ting cul­tu­re as the spe­ci­fic start­ing point of an edu­ca­tio­nal orga­niza­ti­on. Cul­tu­re forms the cen­ter of the AAEL frame­work, but not as a rigid struc­tu­re, but as a dyna­mic space of pos­si­bi­li­ty that is con­stant­ly chan­ging in the inter­ac­tion of values, prin­ci­ples, doing and being. It remains open to new deve­lo­p­ments and per­spec­ti­ves, while at the same time offe­ring ori­en­ta­ti­on as a core ele­ment. As an open, net­work­ed cen­ter, it is in direct exch­an­ge with the sur­roun­ding ele­ments and con­ti­nues to chan­ge through the inter­ac­tion of peo­p­le, orga­niza­ti­ons and their struc­tures. In this way, it remains per­meable to new impul­ses, can absorb new ide­as and pre­ser­ve the tried and tes­ted. An AAEL cul­tu­re can thus be seen as a living, flu­id core in the sen­se of an ambi­dex­trous per­spec­ti­ve – sta­bi­li­zing and at the same time adap­ta­ble, emer­gent and mal­leable, inter­wo­ven with the ele­ments of the frame­work and in con­stant deve­lo­p­ment. The color for this is – also with a con­scious view to Fre­de­ric Lalou­x’s8 ide­as of a teal orga­niza­ti­on – petrol. 

Teil II
AAEL in the process

This part fur­ther pre­pa­res you to enga­ge in AAEL prac­ti­ce and to inte­gra­te and adapt AAEL for hig­her edu­ca­ti­on prac­ti­ce in your own orga­niza­ti­on step by step (see the AAEL Play­Book).

For a good pro­cess, rules for deal­ing with the AAEL frame­work in one’s own edu­ca­tio­nal orga­niza­ti­on are first estab­lished here and then the pro­cess of chan­ge and trans­for­ma­ti­on with AAEL for one’s own goal and one’s own idea and visi­on of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on is descri­bed. Then, dra­wing on the indi­vi­du­al ele­ments of the frame­work, over­ar­ching, action-gui­ding AAEL prin­ci­ples are for­mu­la­ted and explained. 

1 AAEL game rules

The AAEL frame­work is based on the image of a buil­ding block and the fol­lo­wing expl­ana­ti­ons can be read accor­din­gly as a kind of set of rules9for a poten­ti­al­ly suc­cessful inter­ac­tion bet­ween and in deal­ing with the indi­vi­du­al buil­ding blocks and their rela­ti­onship to one another.

Every brick counts!

Despi­te fle­xi­bi­li­ty and adap­ta­bi­li­ty, each buil­ding block ser­ves a spe­ci­fic pur­po­se and has its value in the struc­tu­re of the AAEL con­s­truct so that AAEL can deve­lop coher­ent­ly as a who­le.

The first rule of the game is the­r­e­fo­re not to com­ple­te­ly igno­re any of the buil­ding blocks and to con­scious­ly enga­ge with all per­spec­ti­ves – each with a dif­fe­rent weight­ing – in a sys­te­mic way. In the sen­se of a con­s­truc­tion kit and simi­lar to a tang­ram game10 each “pie­ce” or each new ite­ra­ti­on requi­res all parts to sym­bo­li­cal­ly con­nec­ted and con­side­red tog­e­ther.

Par­ti­al accep­tance of the AAEL core or com­ple­te­ly omit­ting buil­ding blocks (‘cher­ry-picking’) could lead to not addres­sing and deal­ing with all the ques­ti­ons and issues addres­sed in AAEL. In case of doubt, inten­tio­nal omis­si­on is more likely to con­tri­bu­te to the fail­ure of AAEL

Winning together!

This is becau­se the AAEL frame­work is not a reci­pe or a step-by-step gui­de that is ‘the’ one way or ‘the’ one sui­ta­ble solu­ti­on for ever­yo­ne and can be work­ed through accor­ding to a plan. Rather, the AAEL frame­work offers buil­ding blocks that, in a dyna­mic inter­play of actors in the respec­ti­ve edu­ca­tio­nal orga­niza­ti­on, result in a sui­ta­ble, coher­ent who­le with a view to the next, future deve­lo­p­ment steps. The AAEL frame­work always starts with what is alre­a­dy the­re – with the organization(s) and the person(s). What is equal­ly important for AAEL is a per­so­nal and orga­niza­tio­nal wil­ling­ness to embrace chan­ge in the form of an ongo­ing lear­ning pro­cess or a per­ma­nent lear­ning jour­ney. To stay with the image of the buil­ding block, a jour­ney during which ever­yo­ne has and recei­ves the oppor­tu­ni­ty to touch the buil­ding blocks again and again through test­ing and feed­back and to be able to help build and rebuild them. 

What does not fit is not made to fit!

If it is cle­ar­ly not pos­si­ble to reach an agree­ment on the inter­ac­tion of the buil­ding blocks of AAEL, it is bet­ter to choo­se and pur­sue a dif­fe­rent start­ing point for fur­ther deve­lo­p­ment. In this respect, a jus­ti­fied or deli­be­ra­te omis­si­on or avo­id­ance of buil­ding blocks in the AAEL can alre­a­dy be a first deve­lo­p­ment step for an alter­na­ti­ve way of deal­ing with chan­ge and trans­for­ma­ti­on for the respec­ti­ve edu­ca­tio­nal orga­niza­ti­on. In this case, an AAEL is not sui­ta­ble.

The­se AAEL rules, which initi­al­ly accom­pa­ny the AAEL frame­work at the start, will also deve­lop in the cour­se of the respec­ti­ve AAEL journey.

2 Principles in the AAEL framework – integrating guidelines for joint action

Values and prin­ci­ples form the refe­rence for AAEL-Being. The AAEL values shape the basic atti­tu­de and ori­en­ta­ti­on in a post-digi­tal and high­ly com­plex edu­ca­tio­nal world. Accor­din­gly, they also play a role in the AAEL prin­ci­ples, whe­re they are taken up and ela­bo­ra­ted as prin­ci­ples for action. They illus­tra­te how the values can be inte­gra­ted into prac­ti­cal and fle­xi­ble gui­de­lines that can be used by tho­se invol­ved at all levels (micro, meso, macro) and across all levels. Each per­son and each orga­niza­ti­on can adapt them to their own struc­tures and cul­tures – in accordance with their own goals and resour­ces – but wit­hout losing the AAEL core: fle­xi­ble, value-based and future-ori­en­ted design of edu­ca­ti­on.

The AAEL frame­work was deli­bera­te­ly desi­gned as a frame­work and not as a step-by-step or pha­se-by-pha­se gui­de. Rather, the AAEL frame­work sets out cen­tral prin­ci­ples along the con­cep­tu­al ele­ments. Tog­e­ther, the AAEL values and prin­ci­ples are inten­ded to crea­te a basis for the coope­ra­ti­ve, inno­va­ti­ve and sus­tainable design of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on. They are aimed at the fea­si­bi­li­ty of imple­men­ting AAEL in prac­ti­ce and are to be unders­tood as gui­ding and gui­ding com­mon beha­vi­or11. The fol­lo­wing AAEL prin­ci­ples are the­r­e­fo­re essen­ti­al, value-based gui­de­lines that struc­tu­re actions and decis­i­ons, pro­mo­te situa­tio­nal fle­xi­bi­li­ty and adap­ta­bi­li­ty and can be appli­ed inter- and trans­di­sci­pli­na­ri­ly.

In sum­ma­ry, this results in the fol­lo­wing prin­ci­ples of action for ver­si­on 2.1 of the AAEL frame­work, which are explai­ned fur­ther below:

  1. Value-based action for sus­tainable (hig­her) education
  2. Post-digi­ta­li­ty as a mat­ter of course
  3. Bridging the dua­li­ty of explo­ra­ti­on and exploitation
  4. Sove­reign agi­li­ty in the (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on sector
  5. Social respon­si­bi­li­ty and edu­ca­tio­nal mission
  6. Inte­gra­ted lea­der­ship in (hig­her) education
Value-based action for sustainable (higher) education

The first prin­ci­ple of action in the AAEL frame­work draws on the values descri­bed in the pre­vious sec­tions, which is why the descrip­ti­on is kept more con­cise here: The action prin­ci­ple of values-based action in the AAEL frame­work to enable a cul­tu­re in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on that is under­pin­ned by shared values and prin­ci­ples. This crea­tes a trus­ting, respectful and inno­va­ti­ve envi­ron­ment that pro­mo­tes par­ti­ci­pa­to­ry lear­ning and self-orga­niza­ti­on. By empha­si­zing respon­si­bi­li­ty, trust, cou­ra­ge, open­ness, respect, diver­si­ty, feed­back, enga­ge­ment, focus and com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on, sus­tainable and future-pro­of edu­ca­ti­on is made pos­si­ble in a col­la­bo­ra­ti­ve way. 

Post-digitality as a matter of course

AAEL natu­ral­ly takes place in the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on, which is now con­side­red a signi­fi­cant exter­nal dri­ver for the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor along­side other social deve­lo­p­ments and cri­ses. The AAEL frame­work is alre­a­dy ori­en­ted towards a post-digi­tal per­spec­ti­ve on edu­ca­ti­on that goes bey­ond this, in which digi­ta­li­ty is part of ever­y­day life.

The per­spec­ti­ve remains that in this post-digi­ta­li­ty lies a space of pos­si­bi­li­ty that, bey­ond the neces­sa­ry IT infra­struc­tures, also crea­tes a space for inter­ac­tion, for lear­ning, for com­mu­ni­ty and (media) edu­ca­ti­on, which can be fil­led and shaped again.

The prin­ci­ple of self-evi­dent post-digi­ta­li­ty aims to shape hig­her edu­ca­ti­on in such a way that it takes place con­fi­dent­ly in both the ana­log and the digi­tal world. And such an expli­cit dif­fe­ren­tia­ti­on is not neces­sa­ry, as the world of life and ever­y­day life is natu­ral­ly per­me­a­ted by media – and thus also our com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on and inter­ac­tion. The AAEL frame­work the­r­e­fo­re assu­mes an omni­pre­sent media­li­ty and a pro­found­ly media­ti­zed socie­ty. In this, digi­ta­li­ty is natu­ral­ly inte­gra­ted as a cul­tu­ral con­di­ti­on for inter­ac­tion and com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on in the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on. The post-digi­tal per­spec­ti­ve on (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on reco­gni­zes the ever­y­day per­va­si­ve­ness of digi­ta­li­ty and is com­mit­ted to crea­ting a fle­xi­ble, resi­li­ent and sus­tainable but also cri­ti­cal edu­ca­tio­nal land­scape that meets the chal­lenges and needs of a demo­cra­tic society. 

Bridging the duality of exploration and exploitation

This prin­ci­ple is some­what more com­plex, which is why the intro­duc­tion here is more detail­ed:

For AAEL in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on, orga­niza­tio­nal ambi­dex­teri­ty as a con­tex­tu­al vari­ant and per­so­nal or indi­vi­du­al ambi­dex­teri­ty are decisi­ve12, as they can be con­nec­ted to exis­ting prac­ti­ces and pra­xis. They also descri­be the most com­plex vari­ants of ambi­dex­teri­ty. This means that edu­ca­tio­nal orga­niza­ti­ons, such as uni­ver­si­ties, need to crea­te an envi­ron­ment, as well as shape it tog­e­ther with indi­vi­du­als, in which risk-taking and crea­ti­vi­ty (explo­ra­ti­on) and effi­ci­en­cy and opti­miza­ti­on of exis­ting pro­ces­ses (explo­ita­ti­on) are equal­ly valued and pro­mo­ted. Bridging the gap bet­ween the­se dua­li­ties in the sen­se of a “both-and” deter­mi­nes the ever­y­day life of AAEL in order to be able to deci­de and act with con­fi­dence.

The exis­tence and hand­ling of roles and struc­tures are cen­tral ele­ments here. In this way, actors can make clear and trans­pa­rent decis­i­ons in the com­ple­xi­ty of edu­ca­ti­on in some­ti­mes par­al­lel exis­ting con­tra­dic­to­ry orga­niza­tio­nal models and take action and respon­si­bi­li­ty in the form of lea­der­ship for their respec­ti­ve are­as of acti­vi­ty. AAEL requi­res a wil­ling­ness on the part of both the orga­niza­ti­on and the indi­vi­du­al to cul­ti­va­te a con­fi­dent approach to the com­plex simul­tan­ei­ty and equi­va­lence of the new and the exis­ting and the abili­ty to con­stant­ly chan­ge and let go.

In prac­ti­ce, a both/and is also to be unders­tood as fin­ding fur­ther equi­va­lent, inte­gra­ted or balan­ced solu­ti­ons bet­ween the­se dua­li­ties. In a visu­al exam­p­le, this means loo­king for and fin­ding solu­ti­ons bet­ween red and blue as dua­li­ties in the many shades of vio­let. Strict­ly spea­king, the com­plex requi­re­ments of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on with its mul­ti­ple tasks in rese­arch, tea­ching, trans­fer or social respon­si­bi­li­ty remain far more com­plex than tho­se stored in a dua­li­ty, so that we could also speak here of a multi­tu­de of requi­re­ments with a view to the in-bet­ween, for each of which ano­ther hand is nee­ded ins­tead of two or both hands. Howe­ver, on clo­ser inspec­tion, ambi­dex­teri­ty is not pri­ma­ri­ly about a num­ber, but about acting and balan­cing solu­ti­ons with a view to a para­dox, i.e. essen­ti­al­ly con­tra­dic­to­ry and incom­pa­ti­ble things. Ambi­dex­teri­ty the­r­e­fo­re does not stand for a num­ber, but for a fun­da­men­tal approach. This is why the term ambi­dex­teri­ty is retai­ned here when explo­ra­ti­on and explo­ita­ti­on are pla­ced in rela­ti­on to each other, as it is about the prin­ci­ple of bridging.

Enab­ling and pro­mo­ting an appro­pria­te cul­tu­re that sup­ports both explo­ra­ti­on and explo­ita­ti­on in equal mea­su­re and sup­ports the abili­ty to act in the in-bet­ween is fun­da­men­tal in AAEL. Enab­ling con­di­ti­ons to pro­mo­te the emer­gence of an AAEL cul­tu­re is chal­len­ging and com­plex. The AAEL assu­mes that a fle­xi­ble, agi­le orga­niza­tio­nal struc­tu­re that pro­mo­tes open­ness to new ide­as and indi­vi­du­al initia­ti­ves through self-orga­niza­ti­on as well as sys­te­ma­tic effi­ci­en­cy and opti­mi­zed rou­ti­nes pro­vi­des fer­ti­le ground for this. The prin­ci­ple of action of Bridging the dua­li­ty of explo­ra­ti­on and explo­ita­ti­on aims to streng­then a cul­tu­re that values and pro­mo­tes risk-taking and crea­ti­vi­ty as well as effi­ci­en­cy and opti­mi­zed rou­ti­nes. Such a cul­tu­re makes it pos­si­ble to navi­ga­te fle­xi­bly and con­fi­dent­ly bet­ween new approa­ches and exis­ting pro­ces­ses and to adapt to chan­ging con­di­ti­ons. At first glan­ce, this is about balan­cing the respec­ti­ve dua­li­ties, but at second glan­ce, it is pri­ma­ri­ly about fin­ding solu­ti­ons bet­ween the two — in the sen­se of cul­ti­vat­ing a sove­reign abili­ty to act in the in-bet­ween. Or meta­pho­ri­cal­ly: fin­ding and buil­ding bridges. This cul­tu­re sup­ports indi­vi­du­al initia­ti­ves and self-orga­niza­ti­on as well as sys­te­ma­tic effi­ci­en­cy and opti­mi­zed rou­ti­nes in order to sus­tain­ab­ly pro­mo­te both per­so­nal and insti­tu­tio­nal deve­lo­p­ment. By inte­gra­ting orga­niza­tio­nal and indi­vi­du­al ambi­dex­teri­ty, both the proac­ti­ve design of (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on is enab­led and the situa­tio­nal adap­ta­bi­li­ty, deve­lo­p­ment capa­ci­ty and inno­va­ti­ve abili­ty of edu­ca­tio­nal insti­tu­ti­ons and edu­ca­ti­on in a broa­der sen­se are streng­the­ned in a fast-moving, com­plex and uncer­tain world. 

Sovereign agility in the (higher) education sector

Agi­li­ty plays a cen­tral role in modern (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on, as it makes it pos­si­ble to react quick­ly and effec­tively to the dyna­mic and com­plex chal­lenges of today’s edu­ca­tio­nal land­scape and, abo­ve all, to proac­ti­ve, step-by-step action.

By imple­men­ting agi­le prin­ci­ples and prac­ti­ces, uni­ver­si­ties can increase their fle­xi­bi­li­ty and adap­ta­bi­li­ty to meet both short-term requi­re­ments and long-term stra­te­gic goals. Agi­li­ty pro­mo­tes a cul­tu­re of con­ti­nuous lear­ning and impro­ve­ment, which is cru­cial to meet the needs stu­dents, tea­chers and exter­nal demands on hig­her edu­ca­ti­on.

For AAEL in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on, both the actu­al “Doing Agi­le” and “Being Agi­le” are important start­ing points. They pro­vi­de space to deve­lop an inner, agi­le atti­tu­de that con­tri­bu­tes to and deve­lo­ps in the nego­tia­ti­on and inte­gra­ti­on of agi­le values and prin­ci­ples (Being Agi­le) as well as to rea­li­ze agi­li­ty through the con­cre­te appli­ca­ti­on of methods and prac­ti­ces (Doing Agi­le) in ever­y­day edu­ca­ti­on in order to opti­mi­ze pro­ces­ses and react fle­xi­bly to chan­ges in order to ulti­m­ate­ly deli­ver a bet­ter result. In this case, the inten­ded result is to impro­ve hig­her edu­ca­ti­on in an agi­le way.

The inter­play bet­ween “Doing Agi­le” and “Being Agi­le” requi­res a fle­xi­ble, agi­le orga­niza­tio­nal struc­tu­re as well as a cul­tu­re of con­ti­nuous lear­ning and adap­ta­bi­li­ty. By cul­ti­vat­ing agi­le col­la­bo­ra­ti­on, uni­ver­si­ties can mas­ter the com­ple­xi­ty and dyna­mics of the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor with con­fi­dence and crea­te sus­tainable, future-pro­of edu­ca­ti­on.

The prin­ci­ple of sove­reign agi­li­ty aims to design (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in such a way that (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on orga­ni­sa­ti­ons can con­fi­dent­ly meet deve­lo­p­ment requi­re­ments and chan­ges from both insi­de and out­side, thus mana­ging com­ple­xi­ty in an agi­le man­ner and with appro­pria­te qua­li­ty. This appli­es both to the mode of explo­ita­ti­on (opti­mi­sa­ti­on and effi­ci­en­cy of exis­ting pro­ces­ses) and to that of explo­ra­ti­on (new and inno­va­ti­ve). An agi­le edu­ca­tio­nal orga­ni­sa­ti­on is cha­rac­te­ri­sed by fle­xi­bi­li­ty, adap­ta­bi­li­ty and a con­ti­nuous wil­ling­ness to learn and impro­ve. Agi­li­ty makes it pos­si­ble to react quick­ly and effec­tively to new chal­lenges while main­tai­ning sta­ble and effi­ci­ent pro­ces­ses. Agi­le col­la­bo­ra­ti­on in the indi­vi­du­al edu­ca­tio­nal orga­ni­sa­ti­on reli­es on agi­le values, as inte­gra­ted in the AAEL values. 

Social responsibility and educational mission

The AAEL frame­work addres­ses edu­ca­ti­on in a com­pre­hen­si­ve man­ner and hig­her edu­ca­ti­on in par­ti­cu­lar. Social respon­si­bi­li­ty also means a long-term com­mit­ment to sus­tainable edu­ca­tio­nal pro­ces­ses and the wil­ling­ness to cri­ti­cal­ly reflect on the effects of one’s own actions. And this appli­es to all three are­as of hig­her edu­ca­ti­on: per­so­nal deve­lo­p­ment, labour mar­ket ori­en­ta­ti­on and the acqui­si­ti­on of spe­cia­list know­ledge and skills. It is the­r­e­fo­re rele­vant how hig­her edu­ca­ti­on insti­tu­ti­ons can do jus­ti­ce to their social and orga­niza­ti­on-spe­ci­fic edu­ca­tio­nal mis­si­ons by desig­ning framing struc­tu­ral, spa­ti­al, legal, social or com­mu­ni­ca­ti­ve envi­ron­ments that streng­then demo­cra­tic prin­ci­ples in action.

This includes enab­ling diver­se forms of lear­ning, skills acqui­si­ti­on and oppor­tu­ni­ties for edu­ca­ti­on. The­r­e­fo­re, edu­ca­ti­on here addres­ses both the obvious micro level of tea­ching design and deve­lo­p­ment, as well as the design of insti­tu­tio­nal and orga­niza­tio­nal frame­work con­di­ti­ons for various forms of edu­ca­ti­on in the form of cour­ses, pro­gram­mes or degree pro­gram­mes, as well as expe­ri­men­tal spaces at the meso level of the orga­niza­ti­on. The­se are lin­ked to for­mal, struc­tu­ral and own orga­niza­tio­nal chan­ges at the level of the edu­ca­tio­nal orga­niza­ti­on or insti­tu­ti­on its­elf in its social con­text. Par­ti­cu­lar­ly with regard to social chal­lenges and modern deve­lo­p­ments, poli­ti­cal design opti­ons at the macro level and, with a view to open­ness, tech­no­lo­gi­cal deve­lo­p­ment and sus­taina­bi­li­ty, a glo­bal per­spec­ti­ve are also incre­asing­ly rele­vant for AAEL when it comes to social respon­si­bi­li­ty.

The prin­ci­ple of social respon­si­bi­li­ty and the edu­ca­tio­nal mis­si­on aims to shape the frame­work con­di­ti­ons for (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in such a way that they pro­mo­te per­so­nal deve­lo­p­ment and the assump­ti­on of social respon­si­bi­li­ty as well as enab­ling more fun­da­men­tal edu­ca­tio­nal tasks to be ful­fil­led. Edu­ca­ti­on con­tri­bu­tes to the deve­lo­p­ment of a cri­ti­cal, value-based and demo­cra­tic socie­ty. A stra­te­gi­cal­ly meaningful ori­en­ta­ti­on through a shared visi­on for net­work­ed (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on streng­thens the under­stan­ding of an edu­ca­tio­nal mis­si­on that shapes values and prin­ci­ples for action. 

Integrated leadership in (higher) education

Peo­p­le who are wil­ling and able to take on lea­der­ship in the sen­se of the AAEL frame­work act, among other things, with a coa­ching atti­tu­de in order to sup­port and inspi­re indi­vi­du­als, groups or teams and encou­ra­ge them to take on respon­si­bi­li­ty. Such an inte­gra­ti­ve, par­ti­ci­pa­ti­ve lea­der­ship cul­tu­re can con­tri­bu­te to con­ti­nuous deve­lo­p­ment and col­la­bo­ra­ti­ve enga­ge­ment and com­pre­hen­si­ve­ly streng­then hig­her edu­ca­ti­on, both to meet the com­plex and dyna­mic demands of modern socie­ty and to con­ti­nue to deve­lop tog­e­ther in a crea­ti­ve way.

Accor­din­gly, ele­ments of late­ral and ser­vant lea­der­ship as as dis­tri­bu­ted and co-lea­der­ship have their place in this inte­gra­ted per­spec­ti­ve. Lea­der­ship in the AAEL frame­work the­r­e­fo­re means, as inte­gra­ted lea­der­ship, a syn­the­sis of dif­fe­rent trans­for­ma­tio­nal lea­der­ship approa­ches in order to con­scious­ly com­bi­ne ele­ments with one ano­ther and use them to gui­de action within this frame­work.

The prin­ci­ple of inte­gra­ted lea­der­ship in edu­ca­ti­on aims to shape lea­der­ship in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on as a vari­ant of trans­for­ma­tio­nal lea­der­ship. In terms of par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on and self-orga­niza­ti­on, this includes both the fle­xi­bi­li­ty and adap­ta­bi­li­ty of agi­le lea­der­ship as well as the simul­ta­neous opti­miza­ti­on and inno­va­ti­on of ambi­dex­trous lea­der­ship. In order to inte­gra­te the abili­ty to act in the in-bet­ween, an over­ar­ching lea­der­ship cul­tu­re is nee­ded that equal­ly pro­mo­tes the per­so­nal respon­si­bi­li­ty and self-orga­niza­ti­on of all actors and enables a bridge to be built bet­ween lea­der­ship in tra­di­tio­nal and modern orga­niza­tio­nal structures. 

Six principles as guidelines for AAEL practice

Taken tog­e­ther, the AAEL frame­work is (curr­ent­ly) based on six prin­ci­ples for joint­ly sha­ping the prac­ti­ce of future hig­her edu­ca­ti­on. The­se six AAEL prin­ci­ples are direct­ly lin­ked to the AAEL values and help to ensu­re that the value-based atti­tu­de in dyna­mic edu­ca­tio­nal envi­ron­ments can be trans­la­ted into con­cre­te action across all levels. They help to act both sta­b­ly and fle­xi­bly and to remain capa­ble of acting in the in-bet­ween, to dri­ve inno­va­ti­on and at the same time to value pro­ven pro­ces­ses.

Whe­ther at the level of indi­vi­du­al cour­ses, enti­re facul­ties or cross-insti­tu­tio­nal col­la­bo­ra­ti­ons, the prin­ci­ples pro­vi­de gui­dance for pur­suing shared goals in (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on while pre­ser­ving space for expe­ri­men­ta­ti­on and coope­ra­ti­ve and col­la­bo­ra­ti­ve lear­ning. With an inte­gra­ted under­stan­ding of lea­der­ship and a clear set of values, (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in the post-digi­tal age can be shaped in such a way that it not only beco­mes more adap­ta­ble, but also more sus­tainable and more huma­ne.

In order to make the­se con­side­ra­ti­ons easier to under­stand in the fol­lo­wing prac­ti­cal expl­ana­ti­ons, the next sec­tion descri­bes a con­s­truc­ted fic­ti­tious exam­p­le of the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty (LU short) with fic­ti­tious peo­p­le, struc­tures and pos­si­ble prac­ti­ces as anchors. This exam­p­le is later descri­bed in more detail in the AAEL Play­Book along the ele­ments of the AAEL frame­work. The fic­ti­tious and some­ti­mes idea­li­zed exam­p­le is inten­ded to help put one’s own uni­ver­si­ty in rela­ti­on to it and to pro­vi­de food for thought and occa­si­ons for reflec­tion or sug­ges­ti­ons for clas­si­fi­ca­ti­on for one’s own cor­re­spon­ding are­as, pro­ces­ses or topics and roles.

Due to the cur­rent situa­ti­on and in order to enable a clear iden­ti­fi­ca­ti­on with the ques­ti­ons that LU and its stake­hol­ders have to and will have to face in the short and medi­um term, the topic of “AI in edu­ca­ti­on” is woven into the examples.

Part III
Learning University (LU). A fictitious example organization, its actors and its AAEL practice 

In the fol­lo­wing, exem­pla­ry situa­tions are out­lined across the micro, meso and macro levels of hig­her edu­ca­ti­on and the­se lin­ked to AAEL prin­ci­ples as examp­les. All situa­tions are fic­ti­tious occa­si­ons and con­ver­sa­ti­ons inspi­red by obser­va­tions and dis­cus­sions on the topic of AI in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on from the cur­rent public pro­fes­sio­nal deba­te. They were con­tex­tua­li­zed and trans­fer­red to spe­ci­fic loca­ti­ons in a fic­ti­tious uni­ver­si­ty. The LU does not repre­sent an exis­ting uni­ver­si­ty and is a purely fic­ti­tious exam­p­le. 13

  • How are stu­dents, lec­tu­r­ers, admi­nis­tra­ti­ve staff and the uni­ver­si­ty manage­ment deal­ing with the rapid deve­lo­p­ments in the field of AI?
  • What con­tent-rela­ted dis­cus­sion of AI for edu­ca­ti­on is taking place whe­re and with whom?
  • Whe­re are cri­ti­cal doubts important, whe­re is prag­ma­tism appro­pria­te and how do the deve­lo­p­ments fit in with the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty­’s mis­si­on statement?
  • Whe­re are chan­ges neces­sa­ry, whe­re do they make sen­se and whe­re not for the time being?
  • What is the balan­ce bet­ween tra­di­ti­on and innovation?

Ima­gi­ne this (fic­ti­tious) insti­tu­ti­on and get invol­ved with it briefly …

The fictitious learning journey of the Learning University (LU)

The Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty (LU) is a medi­um-sized, rese­arch-ori­en­ted uni­ver­si­ty with around 28,000 stu­dents and a broad port­fo­lio of sub­jects. Values such as open­ness, diver­si­ty and sus­taina­bi­li­ty as well as a com­mit­ment to edu­ca­ti­on in a cul­tu­re of digi­ta­li­ty, which is con­stant­ly evol­ving in the cour­se of the digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on, are alre­a­dy ancho­red in the mis­si­on state­ment. And a living cul­tu­re is deve­lo­ping towards this.

In recent semes­ters, one cen­tral topic has come to the fore: “Arti­fi­ci­al intel­li­gence (AI) in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on”. Bet­ween a spi­rit of opti­mism and skep­ti­cism, tho­se invol­ved are obser­ving, test­ing and dis­cus­sing the new pos­si­bi­li­ties of gene­ra­ti­ve lan­guage models in the con­text of tea­ching, rese­arch as well as admi­nis­tra­ti­on, com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on and manage­ment. Some are imme­dia­te­ly on fire, others are try­ing out the latest tool as usu­al, others are still hesi­tant – some­ti­mes fasci­na­ted, some­ti­mes worried. 

Another month full of excitement and new beginnings

Come with us to the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty cam­pus. As soon as you enter the area with its open-loo­king buil­dings, green spaces and places to lin­ger or stu­dy, you will feel a joyful ener­gy: tea­chers and stu­dents natu­ral­ly explo­ring the latest AI tools, lively dis­cus­sions about new rese­arch results and semi­nars – and infor­ma­ti­on moni­tors dis­play­ing the latest deve­lo­p­ments in the field of AI as well as places for quiet work and undis­tur­bed par­ti­ci­pa­ti­on in online formats. 

In the “Open Space” of the university management (macro level)

In one of the buil­dings, prin­ci­pal Eva Adams looks at parts of the upco­ming month­ly agenda:

  • AI sprints: Short pha­ses in which inter­di­sci­pli­na­ry teams test and cri­ti­cal­ly scru­ti­ni­ze new AI applications.
  • Retro-Lab: An open forum in which deans, stu­dents, tea­ching sup­port staff and pro­fes­sors as well exter­nal part­ners can dis­cuss the use of AI, ethics and orga­niza­tio­nal development.
  • Open Visi­on Forum: A series of events to which exter­nal part­ners are also invi­ted to dis­cuss future-ori­en­ted hig­her education.
  • Ambidextrie4me Cir­cle: A for­mat in which four to five peo­p­le mas­ter their own chal­lenges over twel­ve weeks in a cir­cle through col­le­gi­al peer-to-peer coaching.

She smi­les slight­ly. “We as manage­ment are also lear­ners. The Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty lives up to its name – we have to con­stant­ly reo­ri­ent our­sel­ves and learn with ever­yo­ne – and pay atten­ti­on to what makes us and will make us what we are.” 

AAEL principles of action: Social responsibility and educational mission/values-based action for sustainable higher education 

Rec­tor Adams sees the agen­da not only as an orga­niza­tio­nal plan, but also as an expres­si­on of a set of values: cou­ra­ge, open­ness, reflec­tion, respon­si­bi­li­ty. LU should not only effi­ci­ent­ly inte­gra­te AI into its struc­tures in the sen­se of digi­ta­liza­ti­on, but also do so in a way that is in line with its under­stan­ding of education. 

In the “idea space”: reflection and change of perspective (meso level)

One flo­or below, the Digi­tal Inno­va­ti­on team pushes open the door to the “Ide­as Room”. Tea­chers, stu­dents and admi­nis­tra­ti­ve staff gather here — inclu­ding Dean Prof. Dr. Leo­nie Han­sen from the Facul­ty of Huma­ni­ties and Cul­tu­ral Stu­dies. The focus here is on struc­tu­ral dis­cus­sions about tea­ching and exami­na­ti­on for­mats in facul­ties and admi­nis­tra­ti­on.

Mari­sa from the Uni­ver­si­ty Didac­tics team is mode­ra­ting today and wel­co­mes the group: “Wel­co­me to our first mee­ting this month. We want to inte­gra­te AI respon­si­bly and bold­ly into tea­ching and admi­nis­tra­ti­on – but the tried and tes­ted remains important. Who has ide­as for the first sprint?“

Dean Han­sen inter­jects:
AI is defi­ni­te­ly con­tro­ver­si­al in my facul­ty, but I want to build bridges. We should try out what AI can do for us ins­tead of just jud­ging from afar.“
A stu­dent repre­sen­ta­ti­ve sug­gests allo­wing gene­ra­ti­ve AI in term papers, but with clear labe­l­ing.
Kai Mül­ler, a mem­ber of staff at the exami­na­ti­ons office, rai­ses his head:
“Just a remin­der: the­re are rules. Anyo­ne who wants to chan­ge them is wel­co­me to app­ly. In tri­pli­ca­te.”
Alex Deja­vu, a lec­tu­rer in phi­lo­so­phy, frowns: “But what about the ori­gi­na­li­ty of stu­dent texts? Do we still teach them to think for them­sel­ves? Are we still deve­lo­ping per­so­na­li­ties?”
Noa Bing, engi­neer, opens the tablet:
“Do we real­ly want to dis­cuss text aes­the­tics while the indus­try has long sin­ce been accep­ting AI-gene­ra­ted sys­tem docu­men­ta­ti­on? As long as the elec­tri­ci­ty flows and the facts are cor­rect, I don’t care who wri­tes the text.”
Aylin Brem, busi­ness admi­nis­tra­ti­on pro­fes­sor, smi­les cool­ly in agree­ment:
“Com­pe­ti­ti­ve­ness starts with out­put. And that is hig­her if you can make opti­mum use of all available resour­ces.” And Samir Boum, stu­dent repre­sen­ta­ti­ve, leans back:
AI in term papers? Long sin­ce ever­y­day life. A gene­ral refe­rence to the auto­no­my to wri­te the paper should be enough by now”. “If we no lon­ger have to talk about ana­log or digi­tal, but about edu­ca­ti­on in the post-digi­tal age – what rules do we need?“
asks a pro­fes­sor of lin­gu­i­stics.

Han­sen pau­ses after the mee­ting:
What if we look back in ten years and rea­li­ze that we asked the wrong ques­ti­ons today?

This moment illus­tra­tes the AAEL prin­ci­ple of inte­gra­ted lea­der­ship: chan­ges are joint­ly sup­port­ed by many stake­hol­ders and not dic­ta­ted from abo­ve alo­ne.

This self-doubt is not just a per­so­nal expe­ri­ence — it runs through the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty. Deal­ing with AI not only chan­ges what stu­dents learn, but also how tea­chers under­stand their role. 

In the seminar: Doing and being with AI (micro level)

In the very first week, a young lec­tu­rer, Dr. Ayla Schä­fer, holds a cour­se in edu­ca­tio­nal sci­ence in which she pres­ents a gene­ra­ti­ve AI sys­tem. Essays on edu­ca­tio­nal theo­ries can be crea­ted with just a few key­words — some­ti­mes accu­ra­te­ly, some­ti­mes with errors. 

Expe­ri­ence of the stu­dents:
Some are deligh­ted that they quick­ly recei­ve rough drafts for term papers; others stumb­le over inac­cu­ra­ci­es in the content.

  • Lear­ning pro­cess:
    Ayla has the stu­dents check the essays tog­e­ther for plau­si­bi­li­ty and sources. “We are not lear­ning to blind­ly adopt AI here, but to under­stand it as a tool. You have to ques­ti­on it and be able to deci­de whe­ther and how the results should be enriched.” 
  • Stu­dents’ per­spec­ti­ve:
    AI is seen as a spar­ring part­ner, as a tutor for the many ques­ti­ons that would other­wi­se not be asked – and in one or two group pro­jects as ano­ther mem­ber of the team.

After just a few semi­nar dates, an open and agi­le lear­ning atmo­sphe­re beco­mes appa­rent: fast feed­back loops, the cou­ra­ge to make mista­kes and cri­ti­cal thin­king when using new tech­no­lo­gies and under­stan­ding their scope bey­ond a tool.

AAEL principle of action: Post-digitality as a matter of course 

The dis­cus­sion in the semi­nar room cle­ar­ly shows that digi­ta­li­ty is no lon­ger an addi­tio­nal aspect, but an omni­pre­sent con­di­ti­on. AI is no lon­ger just a new topic – it is part of edu­ca­ti­on in all its breadth. Stu­dents and lec­tu­r­ers are no lon­ger dis­cus­sing whe­ther AI should be inte­gra­ted, but rather how it can be inte­gra­ted in a com­pa­ti­ble way that also takes into account the cri­ti­cal aspects of AI. LU reco­gni­zes that it is not about an arti­fi­ci­al sepa­ra­ti­on bet­ween ana­lo­gue and digi­tal tea­ching – but about enab­ling edu­ca­ti­on in digi­ta­li­ty and, of cour­se, desig­ning envi­ron­ments for lear­ning in a pro­found­ly media­ti­zed world shaped by mediality. 

AAEL principle of action: Value-based action for sustainable higher education 

The dis­cus­sion in the room also shows that value ori­en­ta­ti­on beg­ins direct­ly with coope­ra­ti­on in lear­ning groups or teams. The LU is streng­thening par­ti­ci­pa­ti­ve lear­ning for­mats in order to bring stu­dents into coope­ra­ti­on and col­la­bo­ra­ti­on in a tar­ge­ted man­ner – to learn tog­e­ther soci­al­ly and professionally. 

While lec­tu­r­ers and stu­dents are alre­a­dy inten­si­ve­ly dis­cus­sing new lear­ning for­mats in the Ide­as Room and making AI a topic in semi­nars, it is beco­ming clear at a struc­tu­ral level that for­mal pro­ces­ses are also nee­ded for fun­da­men­tal chan­ges. Here, too, the ques­ti­on of AI and its signi­fi­can­ce for hig­her edu­ca­ti­on ine­vi­ta­b­ly takes cen­ter stage. 

In the Faculty Council: AI as an impetus for structural change (meso level)

In the second week of the semes­ter, the Facul­ty Coun­cil of Eco­no­mics will hold its first mee­ting of the semes­ter. Dean Prof. Dr. Hen­rik Meiss­ner has pre­pared an agen­da that deals with bud­get issues and a new con­cept for attrac­ting (inter­na­tio­nal) stu­dents. But befo­re the mee­ting real­ly beg­ins, a group of stu­dents speaks up.

Stu­dent Jana: “We want our busi­ness and eco­no­mics cour­ses to final­ly spend more time on future skills – data liter­acy, pro­ject manage­ment with AI tools and so on. The lear­ning con­cepts feel out­da­ted!“
Stu­dent Leon adds: “It’s not just about tech­ni­cal aspects. Agi­le working methods, cri­ti­cal reflec­tion on AI and sus­taina­bi­li­ty are also topics that will affect us later in our care­ers. Why does­n’t anyo­ne teach us that?“
Pro­fes­sor Schrei­ber also has her say. “We are dis­cus­sing this here, but the real ques­ti­ons remain: What exami­na­ti­on for­mats do we need in the future? Can we still rely on fixed cur­ri­cu­la at all? Should all facul­ties launch the first pilot pro­jects for new exami­na­ti­on for­mats in the coming semes­ters?“

The dean is visi­bly sur­pri­sed. He looks around at the coun­cil mem­bers, who appear unsett­led: some shrug their should­ers uncer­tain­ly, others hasti­ly take notes. A mix­tu­re of wea­ri­ne­ss, cau­ti­on and a spi­rit of opti­mism spreads through the room. He cle­ars his throat: “Thank you for your open­ness. I can’t pro­mi­se that we’ll chan­ge ever­y­thing straight away, but we’­re taking this real­ly serious­ly.”

And a moment later, he sei­zes the moment and poses the ques­ti­on to the group: “We need to make a decis­i­on – should we, as the Facul­ty of Busi­ness, launch pilot pro­jects for new lear­ning and exami­na­ti­on for­mats in the coming semes­ters?” After an in-depth deba­te, the facul­ty makes a land­mark decis­i­on: from the coming semes­ter, more exami­na­ti­on for­mats in the Bache­lor’s degree cour­ses are to be pilo­ted as open-for­mat exami­na­ti­ons. In addi­ti­on, a cross-facul­ty advi­so­ry com­mit­tee will be set up to deve­lop con­tem­po­ra­ry uni­ver­si­ty-wide exami­na­ti­on for­mats with gui­de­lines for the skills-based use of AI in tea­ching.

After the mee­ting, seve­ral coun­cil mem­bers remain stan­ding. Words such as “pace of chan­ge”, “self-doubt” and “can we mana­ge it all?” can be heard in the cor­ri­dor. They sen­se that a jolt could go through the facul­ty – the only ques­ti­on is whe­ther it will be con­sis­tent enough.

Meiss­ner sums up: “Per­haps the stu­dents are right. Per­haps we need to fun­da­men­tal­ly rethink our way of thin­king. Not just indi­vi­du­al methods, but our enti­re idea of what hig­her edu­ca­ti­on means in the digi­tal age. 

AAEL principle of action: bridging the duality of exploration and exploitation 

Dean Meiss­ner is sur­pri­sed, but he reco­gni­zes the core of the pro­blem: explo­ra­ti­on and explo­ita­ti­on are not in balan­ce. His facul­ty has reli­ed on tried and tes­ted methods – but now it’s time to try new approa­ches. At the LU, decis­i­on-making pro­ces­ses on the design of new cur­ri­cu­la, exami­na­ti­on for­mats and lear­ning for­mats are being actively initia­ted in the faculties. 

In the AI lab: experiments and piloting (micro and meso level)

In the third week, a wide varie­ty of pilot pro­jects will come tog­e­ther in the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty­’s AI Lab. The AI Lab offers agi­le expe­ri­men­tal spaces for new tea­ching and lear­ning con­cepts that could later be imple­men­ted uni­ver­si­ty-wide. Com­pu­ter sci­en­tists are working on an auto­ma­ted feed­back tool, eco­no­mists want to deve­lop an AI-based busi­ness game on the topic of cor­po­ra­te manage­ment, and Dean Han­sen reports on huma­ni­ties semi­nars in which AI initia­tes the ana­ly­sis of lite­ra­ry texts.

Stake­hol­ders: In addi­ti­on to mem­bers of the Digi­tal Inno­va­ti­on team such as Mari­sa and indi­vi­du­al stu­dents, the­re are lec­tu­r­ers with various spe­cia­liza­ti­ons as well as peo­p­le who help shape tea­ching with their exper­ti­se in legal and admi­nis­tra­ti­ve issues. The ques­ti­on of sui­ta­ble forms of assess­ment and lear­ning objec­ti­ves in the age of AI is incre­asing­ly taking cen­ter stage.

The con­se­quen­ces of the pre­vious Facul­ty Coun­cil deba­te are now beco­ming visi­ble: Dean Meiss­ner appears, visi­bly thoughtful: “Our stu­dents have shaken us up in the Facul­ty of Busi­ness. Could we per­haps orga­ni­ze a work­shop in the AI Lab in which we work tog­e­ther to deve­lop sus­tainable lear­ning con­cepts?“

While a lively dis­cus­sion about the oppor­tu­ni­ties of new tech­no­lo­gies emer­ges in one cor­ner, the­re are also cle­ar­ly dif­fe­rent emo­tio­nal reac­tions to the far-rea­ching chan­ges brought about by AI. Some of the par­ti­ci­pan­ts reac­ted spon­ta­neous­ly, others thoughtful­ly – demons­t­ra­ting the full ran­ge of reac­tions that accom­pa­ny major chan­ges at uni­ver­si­ties: Mari­sa from the Digi­tal Inno­va­ti­on team sta­tes, “I did­n’t expect the chan­ges brought about by AI to come so quick­ly and com­pre­hen­si­ve­ly. A lot of things feel like a major uphe­aval. How are we sup­po­sed to keep up with this pace?”
Prof. Dr. Maria Kra­mer, social sci­en­tist, is cri­ti­cal: “I don’t think we should unleash the­se AI tools on our stu­dents unfil­te­red. This dilutes our aca­de­mic stan­dards and des­troys the qua­li­ty of tea­ching in the long term!“
An admi­nis­tra­ti­ve employee adds, visi­bly irri­ta­ted: “I sim­ply don’t under­stand why we should now com­ple­te­ly turn tried and tes­ted pro­ces­ses on their head. That worries me – is all this real­ly neces­sa­ry?“
A young lec­tu­rer from the huma­ni­ties seems inse­cu­re: “I often feel over­whel­med by the rapid chan­ges. How am I sup­po­sed to keep up? On the other hand, I can see how curious and open the stu­dents are – may­be I just have to get invol­ved, but I’m worried about being left behind pro­fes­sio­nal­ly.“
The busi­ness admi­nis­tra­ti­on pro­fes­sor, who was initi­al­ly skep­ti­cal, is incre­asing­ly signal­ing open­ness: “I was afraid of being left behind by AI. But I can now see that we need to deve­lop tog­e­ther. I’m begin­ning to under­stand that the­re are real oppor­tu­ni­ties here.“
The young edu­ca­tio­nal sci­en­tist Dr. Ayla Schä­fer seems enthu­si­a­stic: “I alre­a­dy see AI as an inte­gral part of my tea­ching and lear­ning. The­se tools give me space for deeper didac­tic con­side­ra­ti­ons and allow me to have more per­so­nal cont­act with my stu­dents.“

It is pre­cis­e­ly this diver­si­ty and open­ness of reac­tions that show that LU is on an authen­tic path – chan­ge is not impo­sed, but rather shaped tog­e­ther through emo­tio­nal and social exch­an­ge.

The dif­fe­rent peo­p­le and their per­spec­ti­ves come tog­e­ther here in an open space. It is pre­cis­e­ly in this ten­si­on that it beco­mes clear that chan­ge is not line­ar, but is expe­ri­en­ced at dif­fe­rent speeds and emo­tio­nal inten­si­ties. With a con­s­truc­ti­ve joint reac­tion, mutu­al under­stan­ding grows – and the insight that the way for­ward can only be shaped tog­e­ther.

Agi­le coa­ches spe­ci­fi­cal­ly sup­port the reflec­tion of emo­tio­nal reac­tions and shape the coope­ra­ti­on bet­ween dif­fe­rent posi­ti­ons.

After seve­ral tests and inten­si­ve dis­cus­sions, the par­ti­ci­pan­ts deci­de that agi­le prin­ci­ples should be adopted at the LU not only in the AI Lab, but as a stan­dard for pro­ject deve­lo­p­ment throug­hout the uni­ver­si­ty, becau­se they enable a joint step-by-step lear­ning pro­cess: “We should work tog­e­ther to deve­lop clea­rer ide­as of how agi­le pro­ces­ses can be imple­men­ted not only sel­ec­tively, but also ancho­red in the long term and institutionally.”

AAEL principle of action: Sovereign agility in the education sector 

How can uni­ver­si­ties be orga­ni­zed in such a way that they not only react to chan­ge, but actively shape it? It’s about prac­ti­cing agi­li­ty – with a sta­ble foun­da­ti­on, room for emo­ti­ons and for many cou­ra­ge­ous steps. 

In the retro labs (micro, meso and macro level)

Par­al­lel to this, Retro Labs are run­ning throug­hout the month, in which Rec­tor Dr. Eva Adams and Chan­cell­or Dr. Uwe Hinz regu­lar­ly enga­ge in a joint exch­an­ge with all stake­hol­ders and sui­ta­ble exter­nal part­ners – both stake­hol­ders and Cri­ti­cal Fri­ends – with a view to long-term goals and visi­ons for cur­rent deve­lo­p­ment projects.

Topics: Data pro­tec­tion, pla­gia­rism pro­tec­tion, ethi­cal ques­ti­ons about AI, but also new oppor­tu­ni­ties for inter­na­tio­nal exch­an­ge. And also the dis­cus­sion of acces­si­bi­li­ty for all stu­dents to data pro­tec­tion-com­pli­ant AI offe­rings based on gene­ra­ti­ve lan­guage models and the ques­ti­on of the need for open and free­ly acces­si­ble lan­guage models for edu­ca­ti­on.

For­mat: Short, ite­ra­ti­ve mee­tings in which impres­si­ons from the ongo­ing teams are coll­ec­ted. Indi­vi­du­al working groups – such as the AI Lab – can then con­ti­nue to test spe­ci­fic solu­ti­ons.

Reper­cus­sions: The Facul­ty of Busi­ness and Eco­no­mics in par­ti­cu­lar is now incre­asing­ly con­tri­bu­ting new ide­as to moder­ni­ze tea­ching con­tent. The self-doubt from the Facul­ty Coun­cil mee­ting is giving way to initi­al, prag­ma­tic ide­as for reforming modu­le plans. 

AAEL principle of action: Sovereign agility in the education sector 

The uni­ver­si­ty manage­ment asks: “How can we orga­ni­ze our­sel­ves in such a way that we not only react to chan­ges, but actively shape them?” This will be one of the key ques­ti­ons for the future of LU

In the Open Vision Forum: Reaching the goal together – and yet on a continuous journey (macro level)

Towards the end of this month – our fic­ti­tious obser­va­ti­on peri­od – the first Open Visi­on Forum will take place. This is about the joint stra­te­gic and social posi­tio­ning of the uni­ver­si­ty in deal­ing with AI and post-digi­ta­li­ty. The par­ti­ci­pan­ts will pre­sent their expe­ri­en­ces, fin­dings, results and ideas: 

  • A revi­sed AI gui­de­line was crea­ted thanks to feed­back from semi­nars (micro level), the AI lab (meso level) and the retro labs (macro level).
  • Stu­dents proud­ly point out their con­tri­bu­ti­ons, such as the initia­ti­ve to moder­ni­ze tea­ching in the Facul­ty of Economics.
  • Chan­cell­or Dr. Hinz encou­ra­ges ever­yo­ne to con­ti­nue to get invol­ved in the pro­cess of digi­tal trans­for­ma­ti­on of admi­nis­tra­ti­ve pro­ces­ses, for exam­p­le as a stake­hol­der for the next review mee­ting for legal issues in open book examinations.

The Open Visi­on Forum makes it clear that uni­ver­si­ties around the world are facing the same ques­ti­ons. The inter­na­tio­na­liza­ti­on stra­tegy will be sup­ple­men­ted by a decis­i­on to streng­then part­ner­ships with inter­na­tio­nal uni­ver­si­ties in order to joint­ly deve­lop know­ledge about AI, ethics and edu­ca­ti­on with a glo­bal per­spec­ti­ve and social respon­si­bi­li­ty. In this respect, the Open Visi­on Forum not only leads to inter­nal cla­ri­fi­ca­ti­on of the uni­ver­si­ty stra­tegy, but also pro­vi­des impe­tus for inter­na­tio­nal net­wor­king. In coope­ra­ti­on with part­ner uni­ver­si­ties, the LU is laun­ching a trans­na­tio­nal working group to address ethi­cal stan­dards for the use of open source AI in hig­her edu­ca­ti­on. The aim is to exch­an­ge infor­ma­ti­on on the respec­ti­ve prac­ti­ces and prac­ti­ces and to deve­lop inter­na­tio­nal­ly com­pa­ti­ble stra­te­gies in order to fur­ther deve­lop (hig­her) edu­ca­ti­on in a respon­si­ble and tech­no­lo­gi­cal­ly sove­reign man­ner.

In the con­clu­ding dis­cus­sion, Dean Han­sen once again recal­led her initi­al doubts: “We don’t know whe­ther we are alre­a­dy asking the right ques­ti­ons today. But it is important that we dare to ask new ques­ti­ons at all – we will defi­ni­te­ly have lear­ned from this!”

AAEL principle of action: Social responsibility and educational mission 

LU reco­gni­zes that AI is not just an inter­nal issue – but a ques­ti­on of social responsibility. 

Dean Meiss­ner speaks up again: “In the Facul­ty Coun­cil, we have rea­li­zed that we have to move. Our stu­dents are right – we need to renew our lear­ning con­cepts. Thank you for fin­ding com­mon ground here.“


Rec­tor Evers sums up: “We did­n’t want a clo­sed cata­log of mea­su­res, but to start a pro­cess. AI is just one exam­p­le of how agi­li­ty and ambi­dex­teri­ty chall­enge and inspi­re us. We pro­ve to our­sel­ves every day that this can only work together.”

AAEL principle of action: Integrated leadership in education 

Trans­for­ma­ti­on needs shared lea­der­ship – not just from the top, but from the midd­le of the university. 

Four weeks learning journey: Reflection, emotion and insight

Over the cour­se of the­se four weeks, very dif­fe­rent fee­lings emerge:

Enthusiasm:

Stu­dents and tea­chers ali­ke prai­se the new tools as inspi­ring, as they allow them to con­cen­tra­te more on stra­te­gic and crea­ti­ve aspects.

Concern:

Some tea­chers fear a loss of qua­li­ty or have data pro­tec­tion con­cerns and empha­si­ze the fore­seeable loss of com­pe­tence for them­sel­ves and students.

Self-doubt:

Mem­bers of the Busi­ness Facul­ty Coun­cil reco­gni­ze that old rou­ti­nes are no lon­ger enough.

Confidence:

Dean Han­sen sum­ma­ri­zes after four weeks: “We have tried out a lot and found even more ques­ti­ons. We are on the move – and tha­t’s a good thing!”

Curiosity:

In an edu­ca­tio­nal sci­ence semi­nar, a stu­dent says: “Our gene­ra­ti­on not only wants to use AI tools, but also wants to under­stand what values and skills we need to use them responsibly.” 

The expe­ri­en­ces from the AI Sprints, the AI Lab, the Cir­cle Mee­tings and the Retro Labs have made it clear how important it is to strike a balan­ce bet­ween the tried and tes­ted and the new. And that sus­tainable chan­ge in a sys­tem as tra­di­tio­nal as edu­ca­ti­on and uni­ver­si­ties can come from within. The cri­ti­cal ques­ti­ons sur­roun­ding ethics, qua­li­ty, access and didac­tics are also being rol­led out fur­ther. AI is a cur­rent and important exam­p­le of this becau­se it is so con­tra­dic­to­ry bet­ween enab­ling and con­trol­ling, bet­ween open­ness and com­mer­ce and much more. And so the topic of AI in the broa­der sen­se will fore­see­ab­ly remain an occa­si­on for trans­for­ma­ti­on in order to cri­ti­cal­ly ques­ti­on and posi­ti­on our­sel­ves as a uni­ver­si­ty in the post-digi­tal age. 

Outlook: The fictional learning journey continues

Thus, this first insight into the fic­ti­tious month of an AAEL lear­ning jour­ney ends with the AAEL frame­work in the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty­’s own hig­her edu­ca­ti­on prac­ti­ce using the exam­p­le of the AI topic.

What alre­a­dy beco­mes clear in this framing sto­ry: With ambi­dex­teri­ty, agi­li­ty and a post-digi­tal per­spec­ti­ve, the fic­ti­tious Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty beg­ins its jour­ney into the future here – and actively helps to shape it. Becau­se sus­tainable chan­ge in uni­ver­si­ties can only come from within. Ever­yo­ne is cal­led upon to play their part in con­ti­nuous deve­lo­p­ment – a real lear­ning jour­ney.

For the Lear­ning Uni­ver­si­ty, the lear­ning jour­ney now con­ti­nues in the AAEL Play­Book. This means that the LU sel­ects indi­vi­du­al ele­ments of the AAEL frame­work, explo­res them in grea­ter depth with its stake­hol­ders using spe­ci­fic methods and tests them in prac­ti­ce. The AAEL Play­Book fol­lows the basic idea of chan­ge in loop mode14 and refers to the sto­ry of the fic­ti­tious exam­p­le of the Lear­ning University. 

Last update on 04/04/2025 (Chan­ge­log)

  1. see in more detail in the in-depth chap­ter under: https://agile-educational-leadership.de/v1/agilitaet‑1 – 0/ ↩︎
  2. Tang­ram game: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tangram ↩︎
  3. For more details on agi­li­ty and agi­li­ty in the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, see the cor­re­spon­ding in-depth chap­ter here in the AAEL Book 1.0 athttps://agile-educational-leadership.de/v1/agilitaet‑1 – 0/ ↩︎
  4. For more detail­ed infor­ma­ti­on on forms of per­so­nal and orga­niza­tio­nal ambi­dex­teri­ty, see the cor­re­spon­ding in-depth chap­ter here in the AAEL Book 1.0 at https://agile-educational-leadership.de/v1/ambidextrie‑1/ ↩︎
  5. For more details on agi­li­ty and agi­li­ty in the edu­ca­ti­on sec­tor, see the cor­re­spon­ding in-depth chap­ter here in the AAEL Book 1.0 athttps://agile-educational-leadership.de/v1/agilitaet‑1 – 0/ ↩︎
  6. For more details on the focus on edu­ca­ti­on and its rele­van­ce to future-ori­en­ted capa­ci­ty to act in times of chan­ge, see the cor­re­spon­ding in-depth chap­ter here in the AAEL Book 1.0 at https://agile-educational-leadership.de/v1/wieso-educational-oder-bildung-matters‑1/ ↩︎
  7. For more details on the rela­ti­onship bet­ween manage­ment and lea­der­ship as well as forms of lea­der­ship, see the cor­re­spon­ding in-depth chap­ter here in AAEL Book 1.0 at https://agile-educational-leadership.de/v1/leadership‑1/ ↩︎
  8. See: Laloux, F. (2015). Reinven­ting Orga­niza­ti­ons: Ein Leit­fa­den zur Gestal­tung sinn­stif­ten­der For­men der Zusam­men­ar­beit. Mün­chen: Vah­len. DOI: 10.15358/9783800649143 ↩︎
  9. In line with the form in which the Scrum Gui­de (https://scrumguides.org/index.html) is crea­ted, the AAEL frame­work, in addi­ti­on to its ver­si­on-based fur­ther deve­lo­p­ment, is based on the con­cept of a kind of ‘rules of the game’ in order to set limits to any adjus­t­ments. ↩︎
  10. Tang­ram game: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tangram ↩︎
  11. Cen­tral prin­ci­ples for the AAEL frame­work are descri­bed based on the Agi­le Mani­festo (https://agilemanifesto.org/iso/de/principles.html). ↩︎
  12. For more infor­ma­ti­on on forms of ambi­dex­teri­ty, see the chap­ter https://agile-educational-leadership.de/v1/ambidextrie‑1/#ambidextrie ↩︎
  13. I would like to take this oppor­tu­ni­ty to thank team mem­ber KItty (aka GPT 4.5), who pro­vi­ded me with valuable and effi­ci­ent spa­ring moments when I was working on the examp­les — and who did­n’t get impa­ti­ent when I was repea­ted­ly che­cking the con­sis­ten­cy of the many indi­vi­du­al ele­ments and sup­port­ed me wit­hout fati­gue during the final text cor­rec­tions 😉 ↩︎
  14. Cf. among others the Ber­ka­na Two Loop Model by Mar­ga­ret Wheat­ley and Debo­rah Frie­ze for the emer­gence of chan­ge in living social sys­tems: https://berkana.org/resources/pioneering-a-new-paradigm/ and see in more detail in the in-depth chap­ter on chan­ge and orga­niza­ti­ons (coming soon). ↩︎
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