Diffusion of Innovation Elements that Influence the Adoption and Diffusion of Distance Education in Health

Authors

  • James Ball
  • Roberta Ogletree
  • Paul Asunda
  • Kim Miller
  • Elaine Jurkowski

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47779/ajhs.2014.221

Keywords:

Diffusion of innovation theory, Health education, Distance education

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to identify which elements in Rogers’ (2003) diffusion of innovation theory are more likely to influence the adoption and diffusion of distance education in health education. Researchers used Survey Monkey to disseminate an instrument to health education faculty and instructors currently employed by the health education and promotion departments listed in the AAHE directory (2011). Based on the results, it can be concluded that the likelihood of distance education adoption by health education faculty is dependent on the communication channels and characteristics of the innovation (distance education) elements of the diffusion of innovation theory.

Author Biographies

James Ball

James Ball, PhD 2200 Bonforte Blvd. Pueblo, CO 81001-4901 Phone: 608-385-
3011 Fax: 719-549-2549 Colorado State University-Pueblo 

Roberta Ogletree

Roberta Ogletree, HSD. Southern Illinois University-Carbondale

Paul Asunda

Paul Asunda, PhD Purdue University 

Kim Miller

Kim Miller, PhD Southern Illinois University-Carbondale 

Elaine Jurkowski

Elaine Jurkowski, PhD Southern Illinois University-Carbondale 

Published

2020-11-15

How to Cite

Ball, J., Ogletree, R., Asunda, P., Miller, K., & Jurkowski, E. (2020). Diffusion of Innovation Elements that Influence the Adoption and Diffusion of Distance Education in Health. American Journal of Health Studies, 29(3). https://doi.org/10.47779/ajhs.2014.221