B Business Information Systems, M Business Research, PhD
Lecturer, Griffith Business School
First Year Advisor, Griffith Business School
Contact details for Dr Luke Houghton
Research expertise
- How cognitive framing impacts complex problem solving and decision making in organisations
- Management issues such as training and feral systems in Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems
- Higher education blended learning strategies
Current teaching areas
- Business Informatics
- Information Policy and Governance
- Mobile Workforce Technologies
Publications
Refereed journal articles
- Houghton, L and Ruth A 2010, 'Making Information Systems Less Scrugged: Reflecting on the processes of change in teaching and learning', Journal of Information Technology and Education, vol. 9, pp IIP-91-IIP-102.
- Ruth, A and Houghton, L 2009, 'The wiki way of learning', Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 138-152.
- Houghton, L and Metcalfe, M 2010, 'Synthesis as conception shifting', Journal of the Operational Research Society, vol. 61, no. 6, pp. 953-963.
- Houghton, L 2009, 'Generalization and systemic epistemology: Why should it make sense?', Systems Research and Behavioural Science, vol. 25, no. 10, pp. 1-10.
- Kerr, DV, Houghton, L and Burgess K 2007, 'Power Relationships That Lead To The Development Of Feral Systems', Australasian Journal of Information Systems, vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 141-152.
Refereed conference papers
- Ruth, A and Houghton, L 2010, 'Developing critical thinking with new and old technologies', ED-MEDIA 2010 World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia & Telecommunications, Canada.
- Burgess, K, Kerr, D and Houghton L 2009, 'Communities of practice: the missing link in Enterprise Resource Planning Implementation', 21st Annual Nordic Logistics Research Network (NOFOMA) Conference Proceedings, Sweden.
- Kerr, D and Houghton, L 2008, 'Feral systems: the likely effects on business analytics functions in an enterprise resource planning system environment', 19th Annual Australian Conference on Information Systems, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.