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gsiemens

Times Higher Education - Inside Higher Ed: Disappearing Liberal Arts Colleges - 4 views

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    The _Liberal Education_ article is fascinating. Note that the baseline is somewhat contested. Vocational/professional learning is the big driver.
gsiemens

Enrollments fall for first time in 15 years | Inside Higher Ed - 4 views

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    Blip or trend?
Marc Lentini

MOOCs - BlackBerry's lesson for higher education - University World News - 5 views

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    Another international take on MOOCs. Do MOOCs pose more of a threat to international branch campuses, since they focus on career-oriented training?
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    A provocative comparison. Perhaps what will push MOOCs over the top will be employers accepting them.
gsiemens

MOOCs - YouTube - 2 views

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    MOOC conversation with Dave Cormier, George Siemens, Martin Weller
Jackie Werner

An Old-School Notion: Writing Required - College, Reinvented - The Chronicle of Higher ... - 1 views

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    Chronicle article (paywalled) on how more writing will help students learn more--an interesting problem when combined with the prevalence of MOOCS, where writing assignments are only looked over by peers.
gsiemens

CIHE | The Boston College Center for International Higher Education - 0 views

shared by gsiemens on 14 Oct 12 - Cached
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    Good resource - Prof Altbach has been in the HE discussion game for a long time (week 1 readings included a paper he did for a UNESCO conf)
Avron Barr

Thrun - Democratizing Higher Education - 2 views

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    Video recording of Sebastian Thrun's (Google, Udacity) keynote at this week's 18th Annual Sloan Consortium Conference on Online Learning
Florian Meyer

Daniel's comprehensive review of MOOC developments - 8 views

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    Thanks for this resource, i now have a much better idea of the difference between cMOOC and xMOOC's. It is also so up-to-date and gives me the opportunity to learn from others when thinking about my own development of a MOOC Loads of ideas !!
Ken Graetz

Meet the High Priest of Runaway College Inflation (He Regrets Nothing) - 2 views

  • The way Trachtenberg saw it, selling George Washington over the other schools was like selling one brand of vodka over another. Vodka, he points out, is a colorless, odorless liquid that varies little by maker. He realized the same was true among national private universities: It was as simple as raising the price and upgrading the packaging to create the illusion of quality. Trachtenberg gambled that prospective students would see costly tuition as a sign of quality, and he was right. "People equate price with the value of their education," he says.
  • He didn't spend the tuition windfall to shift the professor-to-student ratio or overhaul the curriculum. Instead, he covered the campus in cafĂ©s, beautiful study spaces, and nicer dorms. Trachtenberg thought that construction on campus gave the appearance that the school was financially sound and was progressing toward a goal, so his policy was, "Never stop building." If he wanted to erect or renovate two buildings, he would stagger the projects so that jackhammers could be heard constantly around campus. He also introduced a three-day orientation, known as Colonial Inauguration, that featured ice-cream socials, casino nights, and a laser show that cost $2,500 per minute.
  • While critics accused Trachtenberg of "educational socialism" for squeezing money out of top-earners, he called it "buying talent" and said that students were more interested in attending a $40,000 school with a $20,000 discount than they were in attending a $20,000 school.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Cornell, which costs $57,000, is a good case study. Students from families that make less than $120,000 are eligible for unlimited financial aid. But the university recently capped aid at $7,500 for students from families making more than $120,000. Wealthy applicants can pay the difference, but middle-class ones have to take out loans.
  • Although Trachtenberg hasn't rethought his approach, he now recommends another course for other schools: specialization. That is, schools on the brink of catastrophe--those where endowments and enrollment numbers augur bankruptcy--can be brought back by offering something that can't be found elsewhere.
  • Even taking into consideration student debt, unemployment, and the financial strain on institutions, Trachtenberg is still reluctant to say that students could be attracted to a school simply because of the academics it offers. "Not many students would have the vision to see that," he says;
Randolph Hollingsworth

Sir John Daniel - The Technology Revolution: Coming Soon to Postsecondary Education (15... - 5 views

    • Randolph Hollingsworth
       
      recommended by Stella "scsporto scsporto" in CFHE12 discussion thread Week 1 under the topic "change drivers"
  • We want to stretch the triangle like this: more access, more quality, less cost. But with traditional teaching methods we can’t. It is an iron triangle.
  • unhealthy link between quality and exclusivity
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  • that link is unnecessary and technology can break it
  • the revolution that breaks the iron triangle works with all technologies because it is rooted in the basic principles of technology
  • division of labour, specialisation, economies of scale, and the use of machines and communications media
  • the basis of the industrial revolution
  • the new technologies that let us share, study and socialise simultaneously
  • Our only requirement is to think of postsecondary education as a system and apply to it the principles of division of labour and specialisation in the service of the learner
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    3 vectors of Access, Quality and Cost - and we want to stretch the triangle to have more access, more quality and less cost = "iron triangle" if using traditional teaching methods => unhealthy link between quality and exclusivity in the popular mindset about higher ed; iron triangle can be stretched if we think of higher ed as a system and apply principles of division of labor and specialization (i.e., "unbundle" the professor)
Randolph Hollingsworth

EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research - Undergraduate Students and IT, 2012 - 4 views

anonymous

Why the Internet Isn't Going to End College As We Know It - Jordan Weissmann - The Atla... - 1 views

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    "It's a long process of aculturation that transitions students into the adult world." I agree with this 100% and was glad to read it. While I support online learning, this reason alone makes me believe that if the college campus was taken away, we would be doing those young students a disservice.
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