Nada Dabbagh, PhD., is Professor and Inaugural Founding Director of the Division of Learning Technologies in the College of Education and Human Development (CEHD) at George Mason University, USA. Dr. Dabbagh teaches courses in instructional design and digital pedagogy in CEHD’s Learning Design and Technology (LDT) Master’s program and the Learning Technologies Design Research (LTDR) Doctoral program. She also teaches in the Chief Learning Officer (CLO) C-Suite Executive Development program. Dr. Dabbagh’s research is steeped in the learning sciences and focuses on the pedagogical ecology of technology mediated learning environments with the goal of understanding the cognitive, social, and techno-social consequences of learning systems design. Specific research interests include online learning, lifelong learning, interaction design, and personal learning environments (PLEs).
Dr. Dabbagh’s L&D projects/products have been funded by the National Science Foundation, U.S. Department of Labor (Mine Safety and Health Administration), U.S. Army Simulation and Training Technology Center (Defense Acquisition University), U.S. Department of Education, and the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) among other national organizations. Her research is published in top tier journals such as Educational Technology Research & Development, Performance Improvement Quarterly, The Internet & Higher Education, The Iberoamerican Review of Digital Education, Quarterly Review of Distance Education, Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education, Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-Based Learning, Instructional Science, and the British Journal of Educational Technology. She has co-authored five books and co-edited The Wiley handbook of Problem-Based Learning. Her research is also published as chapters in numerous edited books and handbooks.
Dr. Dabbagh consults nationally and internationally as an expert in LDT serving on R&D and L&D advisory boards of high-profile educational technology organizations and institutions such as International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE), EDUCAUSE, Stanford Research Institute (SRI), Association for Educational Communications & Technology (AECT), Arab Academy of Sciences (AAS), Hamdan Bin Muhammad Smart University (HBMSU), Booz Allen Hamilton, and ABT Associates. She also serves on editorial boards and as consulting editor of prominent research journals in the LDT field and engages as keynote speaker, panelist, proposal reviewer, session chair, and planner/organizer of some of the most innovative and contemporary conference events of our time such as the Innovations in E-Learning Symposium and the Immersive Technologies in Training and Education.
Candidate Statement
AECT is my forever home, academically, professionally, and personally. I have been a member of AECT since 1994 when I was a doctoral student at Penn State. I recall learning how to do my first scholarly presentation back then; becoming an AECT intern in 1995 and receiving The ECT Foundation Cochran Internship Award; presenting my dissertation at the Pennsylvania Chapter of AECT (PAECT) in 1996; receiving The Louise Benton Wagner Award and the ECT Foundation Mentor Endowment Professional Development Grant in 2000, the Crystal Award in 2015 with my Mason colleagues and students, the Outstanding Research Reviewer Award in 2017,and the Research and Theory Division’s Featured Research Award in 2022 with my doctoral student. I also served as AECT board member (2002-2004); President of the Division of Training and Performance (2000-2001); and Conference Planner (2000).
More recently, I served on AECT’s Nominating Committee (2021); as proposal reviewer for the D&D Division (2023); and on the editorial board of TechTrends (2013-2023) and ETR&D (2017-present). In fact, I served as proposal reviewer and conference session chair throughout my 30+ year tenure at AECT.
All to say that I have a long-standing legacy at AECT that has shaped me as a scholar, researcher, and leader, and now that I am Professor Emerita of Education, I would like to give back to the AECT community. I am forever grateful for the learning experiences and service opportunities that AECT provided me as these were instrumental in shaping my growth and success as a scholar, researcher, and Professor of Learning Design and Technology (LDT). I feel a huge sense of belonging to the AECT community and I would like to be able to provide a similar experience to young budding scholars and researchers and enable them to make their own strides in the field of Educational Technology (EdTech) and carve their own professional pathways (as I successfully did). I have mentored and coached many graduate students throughout my career and helped them make their debut as scholars at AECT.
By becoming a board member at large, I hope to provide new opportunities for students from across the globe, to explore, invent, and innovate in the LDT space which is now hugely impacted by AI. I would like to provide opportunities for budding researchers to collaborate with the EdTech industry to ensure that educators and instructional designers are developing and using educational technologies wisely, ethically, efficiently, and effectively. The field of Instructional Technology (Instructional Design & Technology, or LDT) is a niche field that is always evolving and we need new researchers, educators, and learning technology entrepreneurs who are willing to use evidence-based strategies and pedagogical knowledge (learning sciences) to redefine the future of this field in the age of AI. My vision as AECT board member at-large and as a leader in the LDT field is to be able to engage the AECT community in pursuing this goal so as to remain an exemplary association and leading organization. Thank you