From DSC:
“The Walmart of Education [Christian, 2008]” appears to be materializing in front of our eyes.
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Rethink college: 3 takeaways from the TIME Summit on Higher Education — from nation.time.com by Kayla Webley
Excerpt:
For a room full of academics talking about the future of higher education, the conversation was surprisingly blunt. Yesterday TIME gathered more than 100 college presidents and other experts from across the U.S. to talk about the biggest problems facing higher education, which U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan summed up for the room as “high prices, low completion rates, and too little accountability.”
Also see:
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From DSC:
Whether one agrees or not with the scenarios…what’s important here is to promote discussions of the future of higher education across the world. Developing scenarios is an excellent way to jump start such conversations, contribute to strategic plans/visions, and develop responses to the changing higher education landscape.
Three trends in higher education that defy the status quo — from onlinelearninginsights.wordpress.com by Debbie Morrison
Excerpt:
Leading educators shared their insights and innovative programs – three dominant themes emerged, 1) competency based learning, 2) personalized student learning and 3) the changing role of the instructor. Each presenter shared extensive research in an area of his or her expertise and details of an innovative educational program; programs that provide a non-traditional education that defy the status quo. The summary of the trends follow, with a ‘takeaway’ for each designed to provide readers with practical ideas for application to their own area of study or work.
Classroom of 2020: The future is very different than you think — from theglobeandmail.com by Erin Millar
Excerpt:
This is the brave new world of higher education, where students teach professors, technology enables digital note-passing and online courses enroll thousands of students. The pupil-tutor relationship has been turned on its head. A perfect storm — extreme financial constraints, a technological revolution, groundbreaking pedagogical research, and increased expectations from students facing weak job prospects — is forcing universities to reimagine their purpose. And all the while, a university education has never been more in demand from so many parts of the world.
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The future of higher education: White paper — from IBM and the American Council on Education (ACE; specifically, the ACE Fellows Program)
Excerpts (emphasis DSC):
The role of higher education is to give students the skills and knowledge they need to succeed in a globally competitive world. Education isn’t just about teaching students to take tests well, but rather to create lifelong learners who can contribute to a thriving society and competitive economy.
From DSC:
We will have a very hard time creating lifelong learners if a large swath of people dislike learning in the first place. When 20-30%+ of our youth are not even graduating from high school, I can’t help but recall a saying from one of my first coaches:
Always change a losing game. Never change a winning game.
I think that our biggest gift to students is not what they were able to get on an ACT or SAT test — though I realize how important that can be in getting into College ABC or University of XYZ (and thus hopefully helping them get started on a solid footing/career). Rather, on a grander scale, our biggest gift to our students is that they would enjoy learning; that we could help students identify their God-given passion(s), talents, gifts, abilities — and then go develop them and use them to serve others. Everyone will benefit if they do so; and the students will know joy and purpose in their lives. These are the types of WIN-WIN situations that square up with the thinking of many economists — “Do what you do best and everyone benefits.”
College is dead. Long live college! — from nation.time.com by Amanda Ripley
Excerpt:
Exemplary week paves the way for higher education online — from edcetera.rafter.com by Kirsten Winkler
Excerpt:
This week was quite telling for the changes the higher education sector is currently going through. And the direction the industry is heading towards seems obvious: online. This week, up-and-coming education startups raised money and introduced new products whereas leaders in the space had to announce cuts.
From DSC:
This reminds me of how University of Massachusetts President Emeritus Jack Wilson described online learning at last week’s Sloan-C Conference:
“Online learning is a relentless force that will not be denied. The trends are so relentless in fact, that they take students, faculty, and administrations along with them.”