The Open University Naughton joined the
Open University as a lecturer in systems in 1972. He has made contributions (see e.g.) to the understanding and application of
soft systems analysis developed by
Peter Checkland at Lancaster University. In addition to his work in systems analysis, Naughton also made significant contributions to the public understanding of technology, initially as co-designer (with Professor
Nigel Cross) of two incarnations of the university's Technology Foundation Course (T101 & T102) which, over its lifetime, introduced over 50,000 students to technological ideas. In the 1980s he was a key member of the team that introduced the use of personal computers into the university's teaching and learning system. In the 1990s, with colleagues Martin Weller and Garry Alexander, Naughton created the university's first major online course (
You, your computer and the Net) which attracted 12,000 students per presentation in its early days and marked the beginning of the university's rise as a major provider of online education. (It now has approximately 250,000 online students.) In 2001 he set up the university's
Relevant Knowledge programme—a suite of short online courses on topical technological issues and was director of the programme until 2009. Naughton was promoted to senior lecturer in 1980 and became professor of the public understanding of technology in July 2002. In 2008, he was appointed academic adviser to the Arcadia Project at Cambridge University Library. This was a project, sponsored by the Arcadia Fund, to explore the role of the academic library in a digital age. The project ran from 2008 to 2012 and supported 19 Arcadia Fellows and their associated projects. He was vice-president of Wolfson College, Cambridge, from 2011 to 2015.
Current research In collaboration with
Professor Sir Richard Evans and
Dr David Runciman, Naughton is a principal investigator on a five-year research project on 'Conspiracy and Democracy' funded by the
Leverhulme Trust. He is also co-director (with Professor David Runciman) of the 'Technology and Democracy' project in the Cambridge Centre for Digital Knowledge. Both projects are based in [http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk CRASSH (the
Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities) at
Cambridge University. Naughton is chair of the advisory board of Cambridge's
Minderoo Centre for Technology and Democracy Naughton is also a member of the steering group of the university's Strategic Research Initiative on Big Data. ==Journalistic career==