January 25th, 2012
I have read three articles in the last three days about alternatives to earning a college degree, primarily through certification of one kind or another.
The first article, from The Chronicle of Higher Education, discusses the concept of “badges” that are awarded by various websites, training companies, individuals, etc. The concept is that the badge is relatively easy to earn (to keep the learner motivated and engaged) and indicates that they have achieved a certain skill level or learning competency. At the Khan Academy, students receive a “Great Listener” badge for sitting through 30 minutes of video lectures and can earn an “Awesome Listener” badge after completing a full hour of video lectures. In addition, visitors and users of that site can earn badges indicating “Master of Algebra” or “Challenge Patches.” Similarly, MITx is a newly announced venture by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), slotted to be released in an experimental prototype version in the spring of 2012 and designed to recognize people who complete MIT’s online courses and successfully pass the tests and quizzes. MIT has an arrangement with OpenStudy to offer badges to students who are helpful in course discussions. The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation has a $2 million grant to test the badge platform in education. With the Foundation’s support, The Mozilla Foundation (best known for the Firefox browser) is “building an Open Badge Infrastructure to enable the interoperability and collection of badges” which will “support badges from any issuer across the Internet.”
Both The Chronicle of Higher Education and Inside Higher Education wrote about the tenured Stanford professor who has left to form a startup, Know Labs. Sebastian Thrun and a colleague taught an artificial intelligence MOOC (Massively Open Online Course) this summer to more than 160,000 students and he plans to commercialize that type of course through the Udacity portal owned by his startup, Know Labs. Thrun’s venture will not only offer courses developed and taught by him but also by others. One of the first courses that Udacity will offer is “Building a Search Engine” which will be seven weeks in length and which will be taught by David Evans, Associate Professor of Computer Science at the University of Virginia. Thrun is betting that the word (grades/recommendation) of a highly regarded professor will win over prospective employers or current employers of students taking courses.
Richard Vedder, an economist at Ohio University, wrote an article for the Chronicle’s Innovations blog entitled “Beware: Alternative Certification is Coming.” Most of the article talks about Straighterline’s lower priced college course offerings and the announcement last week that Straighterline is offering students the opportunity to take the Educational Testing Service (ETS) iSkills test and the Council on Aid to Education’s (CAE) Collegiate Learning Assessment (CLA) test (the one made famous by New York University Professor of Sociology and Education, Richard Arum and University of Virginia Assistant Professor of Sociology, Josipa Roksa in their book, Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses). Vedder also discusses the Khan Academy and MIT certification offerings. My favorite paragraph from his article relates to his discussion of the first week of beginning economics courses when professors explain the point that: “If the price of something rises a lot, people look for substitutes. Resources are scarce and they [people] maximize their utility by shifting away from high priced goods or services to the lower priced good or service.”
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Tags: Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses, alternative credentialing, badges, Clayton Christensen, Collegiate Learning Assessment, cost of a degree, cost of college, Council on Aid to Education, David Evans, Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns, Education Testing Service, financing college, Inside Higher Education, iSkills test, John D and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation, Josipa Roksa, Khan Academy, Know Labs, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MITx, MOOC, New York University, Nicholas Carr, Ohio University, OpenStudy, Pew Research Center, Richard Arum, Richard Vedder, SAT test taking scandal, Sebastian Thrun, Stanford, Straighterline, the big switch, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Innovative University: Changing the DNA of Higher Education from the Inside Out, The Mozilla Foundation, Udacity, University of Virginia
Posted in Access and Affordability, Business of Education, Cost of a Degree, Economy, Online Education, Trends in Higher Education | No Comments »
January 23rd, 2012
Rich DeMillo has a lengthy background in academia serving as a professor at four different universities, Dean of Computing at Georgia Tech College of Computing, Director of the Computer and Computation Research Division of the National Science Foundation, and was Hewlett Packard’s first Chief Technology Officer. His latest book, Abelard to Apple: The Fate of American Colleges and Universities, developed from a five page memo that he planned to send to his colleagues about what was wrong at his university then evolved to a whitepaper in which he solicited the advice of friends and colleagues, and eventually to a book.
Unlike Clayton Christensen who writes about innovative companies as a Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School (thus making his transition to writing about innovative universities less surprising), DeMillo’s background is in engineering and computer science. His observations, however, stem from his background as a professor at a traditional “brick and mortar” school. From his position inside the hallowed halls of academia, he notes that the institutions in the middle, those between the elite institutions (top 75) and institutions that admit everyone, are the ones that are in trouble with a value proposition squeeze coming from above (elite) as well as below (business model to serve anyone or everyone at a lower price point). DeMillo stresses that modern universities are businesses (contrary to some of the myopic ideologues who insist that non-profit institutions don’t have a business model) and are competitive organizations run by smart people. Similar to Christensen, DeMillo argues that the class-oriented society and culture of higher education creates a faculty-centered model that is difficult to break out of for institutions undergoing competition for enrolled students. (For a review of Christensen’s book, Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way to World Learns, see my August 2008 blog article. To see my review of Christensen’s book, The Innovative University: Changing the DNA of Higher Education from the Inside Out, see my August 2011 blog article.)
DeMillo states that in any market, the winners are those with competitive brands, price, or value. Brand is difficult to build for all but the elite colleges and universities, price continues to increase for almost all institutions and in most cases is becoming uncompetitive, and value is a concept seldom understood by the faculty at most institutions. Because most college presidents are promoted from the ranks of academics, they are ill-equipped to understand the importance of strategic planning and understanding competitive threats from business disruptors like creative proprietary institutions.
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Tags: Abelard to Apple: The Fate of American Colleges and Universities, affordability, Anya Kamenentz, Clayton Christensen, Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns, DIY U: Edupunks Edupreneurs and the Coming Transformation of Higher Education, education business models, Georgia Tech, Georgia Tech College of Computing, Harvard Business School, Hewlett Packard, higher education access, National Science Foundation, Rich DeMillo, The Innovative University: Changing the DNA of Higher Education from the Inside Out
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