Az egyetemek megújításának egy lehetősége: a Tudásháromszög-modell

Authors

  • Kálmán Anikó

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3311/ope.523

Abstract

The global network economy requires numerous activities also from universities. These activities center on processes and structures of the network operations, as well as on developing competencies needed in creating and maintaining them. When the transformation measures are planned and implemented systematically through Knowledge Triangle implementation to benefit the entire university, all this becomes easier and the profitability and impact of the operations increases significantly. However, there is a lack of good examples of what KT means in university practice and how the principles of KT are applied in real-life exercises. Moreover, universities have not defined the priorities of the key success factors, such as the need for new research-based knowledge, necessary new concepts for better use of existing and new knowledge, and the new entrepreneurial mindset for knowledge co-creation and innovation. This article discusses potential answers for these problems by introducing the opportunities that KT conceptualizing and implementations offer for universities as they develop their operations in order to play their important role in answering the acute challenges of society and in influencing proactively their changing operational environment.

Author Biography

Kálmán Anikó

She is recognized as one of the few experts in Hungary in the field of Lifelong Learning and Andragogy. She got her PhD degree in 1999 in Educational Science and the Habilitated Doctor (Dr. habil.) qualification in 2007 in management and organizational sciences.

Among others she is currently: associate professor at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics (BME), Hungary, academic staff member at the Doctoral School of the Faculty of Education and Psychology at the Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest and also in Szeged University Educational Doctoral School. She was the executive president of the MELLearN Hungarian National University Lifelong Learning Network between 2002-2015 and was elected to the SEFI Boards of Directors in 2014. She was  a visiting lecturer in 2015 in  Tampere University of Applied Sciences.

Her research fields are: lifelong learning, staff development, adult education, methodology, knowledge triangle and the new ecosystem.

Published

2022-11-14 — Updated on 2023-01-03

Issue

Section

Tanulmányok