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	<title>New England Board of Higher Education &#187; MITx</title>
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		<title>Pardon the Disruption &#8230; Innovation Changes How We Think About Higher Education</title>
		<link>http://www.nebhe.org/thejournal/disruptive-innovation-changing-how-we-think-about-higher-education/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=disruptive-innovation-changing-how-we-think-about-higher-education</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2012 11:57:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John O. Harney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Admissions]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Anant Agarwal]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Philip DiSalvio]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nebhe.org/?post_type=thejournal&#038;p=14499</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>The first online course from MITx titled 6.002x: Circuits and Electronics, offered earlier this year, had more students than the entire number of living students who have graduated from the university. Indeed, that number is not far from the total of all the students enrolled there since the 19th century.</p>
<p>MIT reports that 155,000 people registered ...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The first online course from MITx titled 6.002x: Circuits and Electronics, offered earlier this year, had more students than the entire number of living students who have graduated from the university. Indeed, that number is not far from the total of all the students enrolled there since the 19th century.</p>
<p>MIT reports that 155,000 people registered for MITx 6.002x and of those, approximately 23,000 tried the first problem set, 9,000 passed the midterm, and 7,157 passed the course as a whole. According to MITx: "… if the number is looked at in absolute terms, it had as many students as might take the course in 40 years at MIT.”</p>
<p>These statistics illustrate the landscape-changing potential of this "disruptive innovation" taking place on the shores of the Charles River. Learning technologies now being used in the massive open online course (MOOC) movement, some suggest, will change the way we think about higher education. MOOCs are based on an open-networked learning pedagogy where participants are typically distributed and course materials are dispersed across the web.</p>
<p>The new generation of MOOCs offered by MIT and Harvard (edX), are free to anyone with Internet access, feature interactive technology, open admissions, and provide the ability to teach tens of thousands of students at once. MIT/Harvard edX contends that these courses are as rigorous as their campus counterparts and offer exceptional instruction with the best of technology–including online interactive learning, automated assessment, and a credential of mastery for individuals successfully completing the courses.</p>
<p>"We've crossed the tipping point," says Anant Agarwal, president of edX, the worldwide online learning initiative of MIT and Harvard University. Agarwal anticipates that the courses being launched in the autumn of 2012 will have at least a half-million students—and probably many more.</p>
<p>Ultimately, students from more than 160 countries registered for 6.002x. The majority of the traffic on the MITx site came from the U.S., India and the United Kingdom. The countries that followed these top three were Colombia, Spain, Pakistan, Canada, Brazil, Greece and Mexico.</p>
<p>Truly worldwide in scope, MITx reported that a 15-year-old from Mongolia received a perfect score on the final exam - an achievement that should not be diminished. According to Agarwal "... the Mongolian teen shared that distinction with only 300 students enrolled in the 6002x course."</p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Embracing the fast-moving changes</strong></p>
<p>Popularized by Clayton Christensen of the Harvard Business School, "disruptive innovation” is described as change, usually technological, that causes upheaval of an entire industry sector.</p>
<p>Indeed, some observe that what we are seeing at edX and other similar ventures (e.g., Coursera, Udacity, etc.) may be the catalyst that will displace established ways of thinking about the role of higher education institutions—and as some observers posit—move us from an instruction paradigm to a learning paradigm where instead of colleges existing to provide instruction, colleges will have to exist as institutions that produce learning.</p>
<p>By leveraging the vast resources available via the Internet and by using the technology available today through the use of multimedia, instructional design, automated assessment and web-based faculty-student interactive strategies, the classroom experience is being re-created and high-quality learning is now available to those individuals who might not otherwise have access or the financial wherewithal – here and around the world.</p>
<p><strong>An unsustainable business model?</strong></p>
<p>Those who say that MOOCs have the potential to undermine the finances of colleges and universities refer to the destabilization of the newspaper business brought about by the Internet and disruption of the fixed-line telephony business brought about by cellular phone technology.</p>
<p>Questions arise that challenge the <em>status quo</em>. If students can access high-quality academic material for little or no cost, will higher education institutions be obliged to prove the value of their institutions’ educational experience? If the content of university courses are freely available and a click-away, especially from institutions such as MIT or Harvard where individuals can learn from world-renowned scholars and scientists, what exactly are students paying for?</p>
<p>Some make cogent arguments about the value of the traditional college experience, but at a time when many higher education institutions are dealing with protests over soaring tuition and student debt, rising costs and shrinking budgets, questions about value are becoming increasingly relevant.</p>
<p>Industry upheaval as seen through the lens of financial viability is becoming more apparent. In the <em>U.S. News &amp; World Report's</em> 2010 college rankings edition, the authors write that the existing structure invites aggressive new forms of competition. "If colleges were businesses, they would be ripe for hostile takeovers, complete with serious cost-cutting and painful reorganizations." They further observe that questions such as “Is the consumer getting the product we promised? What do you actually learn here?” will be increasingly asked.</p>
<p>Foreshadowing change are questions about the unsustainable business model of the university. A recent Bain study of more than 1,700 colleges and universities shows that one-third of all colleges are on an “unsustainable path.” This study also shows that an additional 28% are” … at risk of slipping into <em>an unsustainable condition</em>.” Similarly, debt taken on by colleges has risen 88% since 2001.</p>
<p>As higher education institutions move toward opening up their digital campuses worldwide, other converging forces are accelerating the transformation of the American higher education landscape—and it’s happening at light speed.</p>
<p><em>Next: The Value Gap in Higher Education</em></p>
<p><a href="mailto:%3CPhilip.DiSalvio@umb.edu"><strong><em>Philip DiSalvio</em></strong></a><em> is dean of University College at University of Massachusetts Boston.</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Shifting Landscapes, Changing Assumptions Reshape Higher Ed</title>
		<link>http://www.nebhe.org/thejournal/shifting-landscapes-and-changing-assumptions-reshape-higher-ed/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=shifting-landscapes-and-changing-assumptions-reshape-higher-ed</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jun 2012 11:00:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John O. Harney</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nebhe.org/?post_type=thejournal&#038;p=13558</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>In 1852, Massachusetts became the first state to provide all its citizens access to a free public education. Over the next 66 years, every other state made the same guarantee. Based on a factory-model classroom and inspired in part by the approach Horace Mann saw in Prussia in 1843, it seemed to adequately prepare American ...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 1852, Massachusetts became the first state to provide all its citizens access to a free public education. Over the next 66 years, every other state made the same guarantee. Based on a factory-model classroom and inspired in part by the approach Horace Mann saw in Prussia in 1843, it seemed to adequately prepare American youth for the 20th century industrialized economy.</p>
<p>Massachusetts may again be a geographic hotspot that signals the displacement from the old to the new.</p>
<p>Just as key sectors of the American economy have experienced huge and disruptive transformations—shifts that have resulted in radical change from one way of thinking or organizing to another—higher education is transforming.</p>
<p>Case in point is the recent announcement by MIT and Harvard of their collaboration and creation of online courses through EdX. Courses are offered free of charge, and students will be able to earn certificates in mastery.</p>
<p>Other Ivy League colleges are competing to create online classes without the Ivy League price tag and without the Ivy League admission hurdles. In a recent article in <em>The New Yorker</em> magazine, Stanford University President John Hennessy said, "There's a tsunami coming."</p>
<p>This MIT-Harvard initiative points to something much deeper within the higher education fabric. A paradigm shift is occurring in American higher education, and many of the traditional forms of higher education may be headed for oblivion.</p>
<p>A convergence of forces driving change in higher education is forcing us to ponder such fundamental questions as what a university is, what a course is, what a student is and what is the meaning of a college credential. These drivers of change may be re-creating our views on these essential questions.</p>
<p>Disruptive technologies, the eroding sustainability of the higher education business model, tuition tipping points and onerous student debt burdens are increasingly forcing people to question of the value of a college degree. Approximately half of Americans think the higher education system is doing a poor or fair job in providing value for the money spent, according to a <a href="http://pewresearch.org/pubs/2261/college-university-education-costs-student-debt" target="_blank">recent survey </a>by the Pew Research Center.</p>
<p><strong>Parallels to health care</strong></p>
<p>Similarities are clear in the evolutionary shifts that hospitals experienced in the 1980s as the central structure in the U.S. health care system and that colleges are experiencing now as the central structure in higher education.</p>
<p>In the '80s, changes in funding formulas created seismic shifts in the hospital industry. Hospitals strategically transformed their organizational structures as a result of changes in funding. Many hospitals closed, consolidations and mergers became commonplace, large systems formed, new health organizational models arose and patient care was turned upside down. A similar shifting landscape is occurring in higher education.</p>
<p>On state university campuses across the nation, the concept of consolidating campuses and academic assets has gained traction as state support for higher education declines.</p>
<p>We're now beginning to see a wave of college closings and merger discussions. Forces of change could accelerate the pace. The higher education system is arguably different from the hospital industry. Many institutions have endowments, and students pay upfront with large government subsidies. But for some institutions, endowments are being tapped and the sense of a higher education bubble about to burst is taking hold.</p>
<p>Even elite institutions such as Harvard, Yale and the University of Michigan are feeling the pinch. Harvard's endowment supports operations that are critical to Harvard's educational and research objectives. In FY2011, distributions from the endowment contributed almost a third of the university's operating budget, supporting Harvard's academic programs, science and medical research, and student financial aid programs.</p>
<p>"With severe economic downturns fundamentally changing how we must approach our current activities as well as plan for our future,” Harvard Management Company’s leadership asserted in November 2008, "It is reasonable to estimate that reliance on endowment to fund operations has increased.”</p>
<p>According to the Yale Endowment Report 2010, there is a “Recognition of increased budgetary dependence on endowment income."</p>
<p>And according to the University of Michigan Office of the Vice President for Communications, "The actual dollars dispersed for operations increased in FY2011, as they have every year since 2006."</p>
<p>Concurrently, external support for research from governments, corporations and foundations is becoming increasingly difficult to come by, and academic institutions are bearing a greater share of the ever-increasing costs of research. Accompanying all this is a growing sense that tuition increases are becoming politically untenable.</p>
<p><strong>Higher education structural shifts</strong></p>
<p>Structural shifts are happening around the country. In Georgia, officials are preparing to consolidate eight of the state's 35 public universities and colleges.</p>
<p>In Colorado, the state medical school—a coveted asset for research universities—was recently merged into the University of Colorado-Denver.</p>
<p>For six months, the University of Maryland's governing board of regents examined merging its Baltimore school into its campus at College Park.</p>
<p>New Jersey is among a number of states to consider mergers and consolidations. A plan is underway to overhaul New Jersey's public university system—including a merger of Rutgers-Camden and Rowan University.</p>
<p>The higher education industry is on the verge of a transformative realignment, as today's economic realities force higher education to rethink its fundamental business model.</p>
<p>Just as national reform helped change the U.S. health care industry and just as deep-seated reforms and changes in European higher education have taken place over the past 25 years, we may see national reform initiatives occur in such areas as state-university relationships, educational outcomes, quality assurance and funding.</p>
<p>It is predicted that the American higher education landscape in another generation will look significantly different from how it does today.</p>
<p>What are those convergent forces driving this metamorphosis and how are they coming together to change the American higher education landscape forever?</p>
<p>We plan to work with <em>NEJHE</em> on a series of pieces exploring the interrelated drivers of change enveloping higher education today.</p>
<p>Next: "Disruptive Innovation: Rethinking Assumptions About Higher Education" ... Observers of higher education will note the increasing prominence of disruptive innovation as a driver of change. Consider that by 2015, 25 million postsecondary students in the U.S. will be taking at least some of their classes online. If the trend continues, by 2018, there will be more full time online students than students that take all their classes in a physical classroom, according to “The US Market for Self-paced eLearning Products and Services: 2010-2015 Forecast and Analysis" published in the <a href="http://www.ambientinsight.com/Default.aspx">Ambient Insight</a> Comprehensive Report in January 2011.</p>
<p>How does this disruptive innovation change our thinking about higher education?</p>
<p><em><strong><a href="mailto:%3CPhilip.DiSalvio@umb.edu">Philip DiSalvio</a></strong> is dean of University College at University of Massachusetts Boston.</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Will MITx Change How We Think About Higher Education?</title>
		<link>http://www.nebhe.org/thejournal/will-mitx-change-how-we-think-about-higher-education/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=will-mitx-change-how-we-think-about-higher-education</link>
		<comments>http://www.nebhe.org/thejournal/will-mitx-change-how-we-think-about-higher-education/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Feb 2012 11:44:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John O. Harney</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nebhe.org/?post_type=thejournal&#038;p=12119</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>While many colleges and universities are trying to adapt to the forces affecting higher education today, a recent move by the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology is about to cause a seismic shift.</p>
<p>The prototype version of MITx is scheduled for launch in spring 2012. MITx is an outgrowth of MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW), which began in ...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>While many colleges and universities are trying to adapt to the forces affecting higher education today, a recent move by the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology is about to cause a seismic shift.</p>
<p>The prototype version of <a href="http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2011/mitx-faq-1219.html">MITx</a> is scheduled for launch in spring 2012. MITx is an outgrowth of <a href="http://ocw.mit.edu/index.htm">MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW)</a>, which began in 2002. Building upon the inventory of nearly 2,100 MIT courses, MITx will offer the online teaching of MIT courses worldwide and the opportunity for able learners to gain certification of mastery of MIT material.</p>
<p>The launch of MITx represents a milestone both in terms of access to higher education and higher education credentialing. The significance of this event is that this shift is coming from MIT, more often thought of as a premier global university than a radical institution.</p>
<p>Beginning with a portfolio of selected courses, MITx is expected to grow over time. It will offer a compendium of courses needed for demonstrated competence in a given subject, including lectures, syllabi, online tests, feedback, group discussions, labs and interaction with MIT faculty.</p>
<p>Online learners who demonstrate mastery of subjects will earn a certificate of completion of MIT coursework. As with MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW), the teaching materials on MITx will be available for free, as will be the teaching on the platform. Those who have the ability and motivation to demonstrate mastery of content can receive a credential for a modest fee. MIT is in the process of determining a fee structure for both individual and groups of courses.</p>
<p>The credential would not be issued under the name MIT, but rather a body within the institute. MIT plans to create a not-for-profit body that will offer certification for online learners of MIT coursework. That body will carry a distinct name to avoid confusion.</p>
<p>MIT will also make the open-source software infrastructure on which MITx is based freely available to educational institutions. Through an online interactive learning platform, this infrastructure will establish ways for other universities, as well as interested individuals, to join MIT in improving and adding features to the technology.</p>
<p><strong>Disruptive or creative destruction</strong></p>
<p>The open-educational-resources movement began around a decade ago. A term applied to free and open digital publication of educational resources—such as course materials created by universities—these resources are accessible to anyone, anytime via the Internet. Open-source offerings do not carry college credits per se nor can they be used toward earning a degree.</p>
<p>Now in its 10th year, MIT’s OCW includes nearly 2,100 MIT courses and has been used by more than 100 million people.</p>
<p>MIT is not the only university to understand the value of OCW. Stanford, Yale, Johns Hopkins, Notre Dame, the University of Michigan, the University of California Berkeley and numerous other distinguished higher education institutions have joined in the movement.</p>
<p>Hundreds of English-speaking open courseware initiatives now exist across the U.S. as well as in England, Canada and Australia. A big boost for the idea of "open access" to the world's knowledge is a recent announcement to let the public view, for free, some of the trove of information available through JSTOR, a service that helps scholars, researchers and students discover, use and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive of more than 1,000 academic journals and other scholarly content.</p>
<p>But this new iteration, MITx, represents a wider disruption—and perhaps even a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_destruction" target="_blank">creative destruction</a>. It begs the question: Is this the catalyst that will change how we think about traditional higher education?</p>
<p><strong>Reading the signs</strong></p>
<p>At a time when higher education is essential for succeeding in a global economy, we have reached a crossroads with a vast university system that has difficulty accommodating demand because the cost is prohibitive. Access is becoming increasingly out of reach.</p>
<p>Consider the confluence of forces driving us to reconsider how we look at traditional higher education. Those forces include disruptive technologies (Internet, open courseware movement, etc.), but also tuition tipping points, the changing labor market, the economy and changing demographics.</p>
<p>The annual price tag for a college credential has risen about three times as fast as inflation, and there is no sign that it’s slowing down. Debt burdens—$110-billion in student loans borrowed this last year—point to questions about the value of a degree and the nature of credentials.</p>
<p>This suggests to some that going to college at any price may no longer be worth it. Indeed, approximately half of Americans think the higher education system is doing a poor or fair job in providing value for the money spent, according to a survey last spring by the Pew Research Center.</p>
<p><strong>Higher education game-changer?</strong></p>
<p>Revolutions come as a result of a response to dominant power. Self-directed learning (SDL) may be that tool for some who lack access because of time, place or circumstances. Different from traditional higher education, it can be a viable means of access to knowledge acquisition with a value-added element. Learners avail themselves of the relevant knowledge when and where they wish.</p>
<p>While a similar argument was made about the “distance learning” revolution 20 years ago, it’s different this time with MIT (through MITx) offering not only free content and sophisticated online pedagogy, but most significantly, a credential from a world-renowned university for a very modest fee.</p>
<p>Are we about to see the kind of paradigm shift in higher education that was seen in the health care industry when funding formulas changed dramatically? It could be an earthquake for the majority of colleges, which depend on tuition income rather than big endowments and research grants.</p>
<p>The era of high-level SDL promises free access, rapidly increasing quality and advanced educational content. With access to relevant knowledge to their career and a credential of mastery from an MIT or for that matter Stanford (which is embarking on a similar endeavor to that of MITx), what would stop individuals from making an informed choice? Credentialing from world-class institutions, at anytime and anyplace, and at a highly affordable price could be a very attractive option.</p>
<p>When combined with the free online textbooks at sites like Textbook Revolution and TextBooksFree, plus other course books from Google Books, World Public Library and Project Guttenberg, MITx will provide students wtih access to a high-level collegiate learning experience totally online for a nominal fee. It's easy to imagine that these students will form their own virtual study groups, affiliations and various other aspects of traditional student life. The only thing missing from a face-to-face MIT or Stanford education may, in fact, be the “live” campus experience.</p>
<p>What remains to be seen is whether employers desperate for high-level talent will start to bring the drawbridge down and relax their education screens to include nontraditional “self learners," especially if these learners have received certificates of completion or mastery from distinguished world-class institutions such as MIT or Stanford. As these "graduates" demonstrate value to their employers, it might open the door to many more nontraditional self-learners.</p>
<p><strong>A threat to higher education or a wake-up call?</strong></p>
<p>The wider significance of MITx to higher education may not be so much the strategic tension between tyranny of the degree versus the transformation of learning into a simple commodity that cheapens the challenge of mastering subject matter. Rather, it may be that MITx threatens traditional higher education in general. For some who see universities as credit-producing machines—students as input and revenue dollars as output—it may seem so. Private higher institutions are already tuition-driven entities and public higher institutions are becoming increasingly so.</p>
<p>This shift advances a question many have asked before and one that is particularly relevant today. What commitment does higher education have in creating learning opportunities that break barriers to education?</p>
<p>Is higher learning more than taking a class? Is it more than subject content and testing for knowledge acquisition? Is it membership within a community of learners?</p>
<p>If the latter is the case, then access to higher learning—lifelong learning—must be seen as higher education's primary role and as an asset for all members of the community.</p>
<p>MITx and other similar programs coming out of “high-end” universities are realizing that public higher education has had it right all along. It's a question of access—precisely what public higher education has embraced since its inception as the core of its mission. Aligned with this core mission of access comes both affordability and student <em>success</em> in the forms of retention, persistence, graduation and preparation for the job market.</p>
<p>With funding support of <em>public</em> higher education dwindling, providing access becomes even more challenging. The rise of new forms of self-directed learning and nontraditional credentialing will increasingly be a part of our higher education fabric and fill gaps by recognizing learning areas that employers may value but traditional grades and diplomas often miss, such as certain computer technology skills, critical thinking know-how and interpersonal proficiencies.</p>
<p>Consider the fact that the marketplace has overtaken the government as the dominant force shaping and reshaping American higher education. MITx is addressing the market by lowering the existing barriers between residential campuses and the millions of learners around the world by making MIT educational content accessible and providing those learners with an opportunity to earn an MIT-related credential.</p>
<p>Whether MITx will directly threaten the operating margins of universities (especially for-profit universities) remains to be seen, but higher education continues to be disrupted.</p>
<p>In a global economy, the real question for traditional higher education now becomes whether we continue to offer higher learning to those who can afford the high prices and let the market address the issue of access.</p>
<p><a href="mailto:%3CPhilip.DiSalvio@umb.edu">Philip DiSalvio</a> is dean of University College at University of Massachusetts Boston.</p>
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