"This publication, Scaling Solutions to Higher Education's Biggest Challenges, aims to identify the challenges obstructing student success and provide exemplars that, if adequately cultivated, can support the widespread adoption of real solutions."
"Millions of Americans who went to college seeking a better future now face crushing debt from student loans-while the industry makes a handsome profit. How a broken system landed so many in this mess."
"There's a lot at stake and that means plenty of outlets resort to illicit practices (read: faux users and spambots) to improve their reputation. In a Gartner study, analysts found that by 2014, between 10 and 15 percent of social media reviews will be faked."
"Where's Sakai headed? Toward interoperability without sacrificing customizations, flexibility, diverse feature set, peer-based innovation and lower costs.
Sakai 10 is about to be released. This release celebrates ten years of Sakai providing flexibility, control and cost savings. Sakai 10 is the first of a series of releases that will respond to the needs of higher ed stakeholders everywhere."
"As to the future of digital learning, Bailey predicts increasing opportunities for students to take course online or in blended learning environment, more options for state-approved online classes, and a focus on competency-based learning. "State policy can remove roadblocks to students' digital learning opportunities, Bailey said"
"leaders from Delaware's education, nonprofit and business communities released a new statewide plan for its public school system. The blueprint, called Student Success 2025, included personalized learning as one of the key strategies."
Every institution should develop and
implement a strategy for the support
and on-going improvement of
the quality of teaching and learning,
devoting the necessary level of human
and financial resources to the task, and
integrating this priority in its overall
mission, giving teaching due parity
with research.
The working group has heard and received suggestions across a broad range of topics. Here are a few examples:
Make an institutional commitment to fostering high-quality hybrid instruction (online and face-to-face) and provide the IT infrastructure to support course development and redevelopment along those lines.
Establish an experimental college with the freedom to innovate in different course formats and individualized interdisciplinary majors.
Require an e-portfolio of all undergraduate students, connecting the first-year experience and co-curricular activities to their major field of study and career preparation.
""Students are going to be a hot commodity, a scarce resource," said Grawe. "It's going to be harder during this period for institutions to aggressively increase tuition. It may be a time period when it's a little easier on parents and students who are negotiating over the financial aid package.""
This is a deep and complex question, one not susceptible to single answers or easy slogans. Fortunately, two William and Mary economists have published one of the best and most accessible explanations I've ever seen."
"To better understand how states are using OER to meet curriculum and instructional materials needs, the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) and New America analyzed thousands of pages of state policies, legislation, and curriculum documents from all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Based upon this nationwide scan, we homed in on 14 states undertaking innovative work leveraging OER and conducted in-depth interviews with education leaders from those states. "