Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Painting the Picture of Higher Education's Future

Taken together the two article below paint one possible picture of the future for higher education. Jeffery Simpson's Tough times for public institutions provides a clear outline for one of the core challenges that colleges and universities in Canada, among other public institutions, must face in order to solidify their financial foundation. My Provost has made the same point on more than one occasion.

In Reigning in College Costs, Micheal Bassis describes a new model that he suggests will improve quality while cutting costs by leveraging new technology that is now available. Michael Bassis is the president of Westminster College in Salt Lake City.

To me it certainly seems like higher education is at the beginning or in the midst of some significant change if you consider the funding shortfalls and new technology available today that can (& will) enhance learning. One of my blog posts from this past February, called Student Affairs Needs Fundraising Staff, showed that funding for higher education in Canada has been falling for four decades and the recent recession would seem to indicate that it will not be reversed anytime soon.

The following quote from Bassis' article suggests that Student Affairs could have a place in his model because of our expertise in high touch interactions, "instruction combining online and face-to-face elements (called hybrid or blended learning) was more effective than either purely face-to-face instruction or purely online instruction. In short, the report documented that high tech plus high touch works best. " Student Affairs must make strategic choices to take advantage of this opportunity because, as Bassis points out "Ultimately, it is not the technology but the new practices that the technology enables which will revolutionize learning."

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