An exploration of the behavior of higher education institutions in
adopting innovative information technology solutions before they have
proven utility. Six constructs were used to explore patterns of
adoption. A unique quantitative instrument examined 20 IT innovations
through six constructs (diffusion, infusion, alignment, recruitment,
advocacy, and differentiation quadrants). Key findings indicate that (a)
institutions are diffusing more technology than can be infused, (b)
technologies are not all well aligned with the goal of providing
students with a clear (learning) advantage, (c) greater alignment is
achieved with lower levels of innovation adoption, (d) technologies are
used for recruiting purposes, (e) the assertion that students are
pushing for ever increasing amounts of technologiecal innovaiton is an
overstatement and fluctuates according to institution type, and (f)
CIO's perceive the use of technology as a differentiator of their
institutions within the higher education industry.