By Michael Feldstein. Paul Fain has written a really good, nuanced article at IHE covering the update that Essex County College gave of their developmental math adaptive learning pilot at a recent conference in Washington, DC. We did a two–part case study on ECC in our e-Literate TV series). More...
The Fraught Interaction Design of Personalized Learning Products
By Michael Feldstein. David Wiley has a really interesting post up about Lumen Learning’s new personalized learning platform. More...
Inside View Of Blackboard’s Moodle Strategy In Latin America
By Phil Hill. One year ago Blackboard’s strategy for Moodle was floundering. After the 2012 acquisition of Moodlerooms and Netspot, Blackboard had kept its promises of supporting the open source community – and in fact, Blackboard pays much more than 50% of the total revenue going to Moodle HQ[1] – but that does not mean they had a strategy. More...
Ed Tech Evaluation Plan: More problems than I initially thought
By Phil Hill. Late last week I described the new plan from the US Department of Education (ED) and their Office of Educational Technology (OET) to “call for better methods for evaluating educational apps”. Essentially the ED is seeking proposals for new ed tech evaluation methods so that they can share the results with schools – helping them evaluate specific applications. More...
What’s the gestation period of a TEF?
The Government is, rightly in my view, committed to raising the salience of good teaching in higher education.
Its preferred means for doing so is a new Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF). No one yet knows exactly what that will look like.
Only two things are certain: one, that the TEF will be hard to get right; and two, that the Government’s stated timetable is optimistic – arguably to the point of impossibility. More...
Analysis of new peers by their higher education
On this morning’s BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Lord Norton of Louth, a Conservative member of the House of Lords, noted that one of his former students, Kevin Shinkwin, had been included in the 2015 Dissolution Peerages list published yesterday.
It triggered HEPI to undertake a quick analysis of the higher education of all 45 new peers. More...
Boards, Senates, and Myths of University Exceptionalism
By . If there is one thing that the departure of Arvind Gupta has demonstrated, it’s that there are a large number of faculty (and others) who either misunderstand or dispute the role of Boards of Governors at universities.
Here’s the deal. Regardless of whether an organization is for-profit or not-for-profit, there is some kind of committee at the top, which usually has the word “Board” in its title – Board of Trustees, Board of Governors, whatever. More...
Theories of Change
By . One of the easiest things to do in policy is to advocate for policy X, so as to change effect Y. One of the hardest things to do is to get people to explain clearly their theory of change. That is, what are the steps by which changing X actually affects Y. More...
October 20th
By . Policy-making in Ottawa is like a huge river, moving in a slow stately procession, and only occasionally providing excitement if you hit some rapids. It’s not like Washington, which – for all its vaunted “gridlock” – is actually more like an ice jam: there is a lot of pressure in the system, and things can move pretty quickly if the jam breaks somewhere. Partly it’s because of our Westminster system, and our tradition of party discipline: there are not many independent policy actors on the hill, and hence, not many points where interest groups can exert leverage. Add to that a relative lack of genuinely independent intellectual life in Ottawa (government and interest groups are dominated by policy analysts – Canada has no real equivalent to the Brookings Institute, or even the New America Foundation), and what you’ve got is a shop that doesn’t absorb new ideas easily. More...
Oil and Universities
By . As the price of oil continues to plummet, just a few thoughts on the financial implications for universities.
In provinces that are oil importers, the effect is likely net positive, slightly. Economic growth should be a little bit above trend, inflation will fall a bit, and those factors will make it easier for provincial governments to balance budgets this year, without turning to cuts. More...