خلاصه
1. معرفی
2. بررسی ادبیات
3. روش شناسی
4. نتیجه
5. بحث
6. نتیجه گیری
منابع مالی
بیانیه هیئت بررسی سازمانی
بیانیه رضایت آگاهانه
بیانیه در دسترس بودن داده ها
بیانیه مشارکت نویسنده CRediT
اعلامیه منافع رقابتی
پیوست A. داده های تکمیلی
منابع
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Literature review
3. Methodology
4. Result
5. Discussion
6. Conclusion
Funding
Institutional review board statement
Informed consent statement
Data availability statement
CRediT authorship contribution statement
Declaration of competing interest
Appendix A. Supplementary data
References
چکیده
اگرچه دانش باعث رشد سازمانی می شود، مهارت های کار گروهی محدود مانع به اشتراک گذاری و استفاده موثر دانش در میان بخش ها و افراد در مؤسسات آموزش عالی (HEI) شده است. بنابراین، این مقاله یک مدل کار گروهی مرتبط با دانش را برای HEI توسعه میدهد. پیشینه تحصیلی، رهبری و پذیرش رسانه های اجتماعی متغیرهای مستقل بودند، در حالی که اکتساب دانش، توسعه، کاربرد، تجدید نظر و کار گروهی دانش فشرده متغیرهای وابسته بودند. با استفاده از یک پرسشنامه آنلاین، یک تحقیق کمی از 918 نفر در سراسر HEI های مختلف، فرضیه ها را بر اساس یافته های PLSSEM آزمایش کرد. نتایج نشان داد که پیشینه آموزشی، رهبری و پذیرش رسانههای اجتماعی توانمندسازهای جداییناپذیر در هموارسازی عملیات مدیریت دانش هستند، در حالی که ترکیب هم افزایی مراحل فرآیند، کار گروهی را هدایت میکند. در نتیجه، نتایج پایههایی را برای پرورش فرهنگ یادگیری مستمر، مسئولیتپذیری و همکاری در HEI ایجاد میکند.
Abstract
Although knowledge drives organizational growth, limited teamwork skills have hindered effective knowledge sharing and utilization across departments and individuals in higher education institutions (HEIs). Thus, this paper develops a pertinent knowledge-intensive teamworking model for HEIs. Educational background, leadership, and social media adoption were independent variables, while knowledge acquisition, development, application, revision, and knowledge-intensive teamwork were dependent variables. Using an online questionnaire, a quantitative investigation of 918 people across different HEIs tested hypotheses based on PLS-SEM findings. Results showed that educational background, leadership, and social media adoption are integral enablers in smoothing knowledge management operations, while the synergistic combination of process phases drives teamwork. Consequently, outcomes establish foundations for fostering a continuous learning culture, accountability, and cooperation in HEIs.
Introduction
Most management and technology research has focused on the technical efficiency of social media [1]. Information technology revolutionized education over three decades ago, and more recent research has examined various impacts on the workplace, such as training and communication [2,3]. Social media adoption in higher education institutions (HEIs) depends on strategic aims, resources, and cultural factors [4]. Furthermore, the adoption of technology by HEIs is contingent on organizational strategy and differs among HEIs in the same education system [5]. The use of social media in education has drawn interdisciplinary interest [6,7] as HEIs shift communication from one-way to interactive to regularly engage stakeholders [8]. Continual society-wide communication needs frequent updates across media, especially social platforms. Different methods can shape how HEIs utilize social media as key channels, enabling stakeholder conversations. Communication frequently starts on blogging platforms and spreads across media as users access multiple integrated channels, facilitating tailored, multi-way exchanges without time barriers.
The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated remote work and learning, disrupting traditional HEI teamwork models and requiring new virtual collaboration approaches [9]. This research extends knowledge management theory by examining how social media enables leadership, knowledge sharing, and co-development in virtual teams. Specifically, it provides empirical support for the knowledge management cycle model of Kang and Hau [10] by demonstrating how social media can facilitate key stages of knowledge acquisition, sharing, and revision in virtual settings. The findings reveal how social media-enabled leadership, through modeling knowledge-sharing practices and incentivizing participation, is critical for overcoming motivational barriers to collaborative knowledge activities online [11]. This paper advances the theoretical understanding of the interconnected relationships between social media adoption, leadership influence, and iterative knowledge improvement critical for virtual team effectiveness in higher education institutions. Moreover, a key contribution is providing empirical evidence on the affordances of different social media platforms for enabling specific collaborative activities in virtual HEI teams. The findings provide actionable guidance to HEI leaders on effective social media policies and professional development to optimize virtual teamwork. This research also contributes a new conceptual model of social media-enabled knowledge-intensive teamwork tailored to the HEI context.
Conclusion
The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted higher education institutions, catalyzing a shift towards remote and online learning. In this context, social media has become an integral platform enabling knowledge-intensive teamwork, allowing seamless communication and collaboration regardless of location. Specifically, social media can promote the development of such teams in several key ways. Online discussions and forums can be leveraged to share information and resources, discuss ideas, brainstorm solutions, and provide feedback among team members. Video conferencing tools facilitate virtual meetings and presentations, helping members stay connected and engaged. Additionally, knowledge management systems allow the centralized sharing and accessing of documents while tracking progress - optimizing coordination. Consequently, social media facilitates effective knowledge-intensive teamwork in higher education after COVID-19 by providing ubiquitous channels for cooperation.
In conclusion, high-performing knowledge-based teams in higher education are predicated on an innovation-centric framework requiring integrated organizational and procedural alignment. Positive relationships among knowledge skill-building, leadership support, and cultural enablement underscore the need to embed holistically developmental, technological, and structural conditions that foster learning and innovative capacity at individual and team levels. Internally, sustained idea flows via cooperation enable continuous adaptation and improvement as contexts shift.