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9 juin 2013

University Affairs takes gold, silver

http://www.universityaffairs.ca/uploadedImages/ua_junejuly2013_KRW_Gold_Seal_100x100.jpgBy Léo Charbonneau. Magazine honoured for design and news coverage at publishing awards event. University Affairs won a gold and a silver at the Kenneth R. Wilson Awards for excellence in business publishing on June 4 in Toronto. The magazine won the gold medal in the category of best design of a feature, for the article, "In praise of literature", in the December 2012 issue. The award was presented to the magazine's design firm, Toronto-based Underline Studio? Read more...
9 juin 2013

Universities bolster learning on Web

http://webmedia.newseum.org/newseum-multimedia/dfp/jpg9/med/LA_TTT.jpgBy Mary Beth Marklein. Public universities and systems in nine states say they’ll join a push to greatly expand and improve online learning. Coursera, a Silicon Valley-based company, announced recently that it will partner with university systems in Colorado, Georgia, New York, Tennessee and Texas to develop and evaluate the potential of technology that is fueling dramatic changes in how higher education is designed and delivered. Partnerships with several state flagship universities also are being announced, bringing to more than 70 the number of schools or systems working with the company. Coursera is one of a handful of young companies or non-profit groups that offer an array of free, non-credit, college-level courses to anyone who has an Internet connection and a desire to learn. Millions of people worldwide have signed up for these massive, open online courses — known as MOOCs. Read more...
9 juin 2013

Are MOOCs making education a monoculture?

http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/xnvxnxrSXjZn9NBmI_lSNg--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7aD0yNTtxPTg1O3c9MTA2/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/logo/csmonitor/csm_logo_115.jpgBy John Yemma. The rise of Massive Open Online Courses is presenting higher education with a powerful challenge. Access to great teachers will help millions. But will MOOCs cause a massive college shakeout as well? A tree farm produces a monoculture you can count on. Its timber efficiently becomes the lumber that makes houses and furniture. A woodlot is a little more sketchy. It might begin as a forgotten weed patch, grow into a scrubby forest, and eventually host a mini-United Nations of species. Left alone, a woodlot can become an interestingly varied patch of earth, maybe even a natural treasure. Read more...
9 juin 2013

Keep college affordable

http://media.miamiherald.com/static/images/redesign/mhlogo-channel.gifOUR OPINION: Student loan costs should not shut the door to higher education. Congress and the president are jousting once again over the cost of college loans, a perennial dilemma that faces a July 1 deadline to avoid a doubling of federally subsidized interest rates that would discourage thousands of potential students from seeking a college diploma. Everyone seems to be in agreement that something has to be done to keep college loans low and affordable. Given that student debt amounts to more than $1 trillion, which some fear could trigger an eventual economic crisis, the focus should be on keeping costs down and making them predictable. But that will require the sort of political compromise that is increasingly rare in Washington these days. Read more...
9 juin 2013

For-profit colleges wrong solution to higher education problem

http://media.kansascity.com/static/v4/img/base/kcstar_banner.pngBy Rodolfo F. Acuna. For-profit colleges are not the answer to the rising cost of higher education. This increase is having a disastrous impact on many poor and middle income Americans, and it's disastrous for Mexican-American and other Latino communities. Over time, this trend will destroy all hope for millions of young people. Low-income students made up half of all the students in for-profit colleges, with minorities making up 37 percent of that population. Read more...
9 juin 2013

Online Curriculum Development: Not a Turnkey Solution

http://www.universitybusiness.com/sites/default/files/UBTech_leadership.jpgBy Ed Finkel. Pearson Education President Dave Daniels bristles when he hears the word “outsourcing” used to describe contracts colleges and universities sign with outside vendors to develop online curriculum.
“The word ‘outsource’ to me is real pejorative,” Daniels says. “It sounds like the school is saying, ‘Here, take it and bring it back to us.’ When it really is a collaboration. People think there’s this big, bad for-profit giant coming and taking over.”
Pearson has helped to develop everything from a single professor’s course to entire online programs at 60 or 70 universities, Daniels says. Read more...
9 juin 2013

Is academic nepotism a good thing?

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/large/public/IHE_Sept2012_SoundingBoardLogoV3%20copy-1_0.pngBy Jane Robbins. The retirement of Gordon Gee from Ohio State, and its inevitable connection to his other presidencies, including at my former place of work, Vanderbilt, provides an opportunity to talk about an important ethics subject: academic nepotism. Gee’s wife, Constance, was in my department when I was at Vanderbilt. She had come in with tenure, and when Gee left, she stayed (she has since retired). Constance Gee was not the only one in the department known to have come in as a trailing spouse, or to otherwise have come into a position through what is sometimes called the back door. Read more...
9 juin 2013

Kairos: Open Since 1996

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/large/public/library_babel_fish_blog_header.jpgBy Barbara Fister. Open access publishing has been gaining ground recently. I thought it would be instructive to talk to Doug Eyman, editor of Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, & Pedagogy - which has been exploring the potential of open access web-based publishing since 1996. Read more...
9 juin 2013

Strategy Session in a Box

By Margaret Andrews. There was a great article, “We’re All To Blame For MOOCs,” in the Chronicle Review yesterday – pointing out how so many institutions of higher education are susceptible to becoming obsolete as MOOCs take hold. Read more...
9 juin 2013

3 Reasons to Decree Mobile Learning by 2015

By Joshua Kim. 1.  Mobile Education Is Coming: Spend some time with Mary Meeker's 2013 Internet Trends Report and one trend that jumps out is the rapid accession of the mobile web. Meeker describes the trends in mobile as "aggressive momentum". Everything from search to shopping to music to games to news is moving quickly from the computer and browser to the smart phone and tablet. Education services through the laptop and browser may not disappear, but they will certainly be complemented by mobile.  
2.  The Need to Prepare Today for Tomorrow:  Ben Franklin once said that “By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail.” If we wait to prepare for a future where our students expect the same mobile access for their education materials and platforms as they get for their banking, news, gaming, and entertainment platforms then we will not be ready when that future arrives.
3.  A BHAG (Big Hairy Audacious Goal) Motivates Teams: We need goals that take us out of our day-to-day work of spending all of our energy making our existing services work. Yes, we need to keep our high service levels - but we also need to find the cycles to prepare for what's next. A decree about mobile learning from leadership gives us permission to look beyond the problems that are directly in front of our face. We can feel empowered to experiment, try new things, and learn by failing. Read more...
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