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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup)
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Education 2030 - Framework for Action

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Via Ana Cristina Pratas, Miloš Bajčetić, juandoming
Rescooped by michel verstrepen from HigherEd: Disrupted or Disruptor? Your Choice.
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Which universities will be thriving in 20 years time?

Which universities will be thriving in 20 years time? | gpmt | Scoop.it

Which universities will emerge as the winners and the losers from all the turmoil in higher education policy and funding? How many institutions will disappear, and what will happen to those in the "squeezed middle"?

 

There is a polarisation of views on these questions. On the one side are the "learning 2.0 tendency", who hold that the traditional campus-based model of HE provision is obsolete and doomed in the new world of open educational resources and borderless learning services.

Ranked against them are the "defenders of the faith", who point out that demand for "traditional" university study continues to grow strongly around the world, and that new campus universities are opening daily in China, India and many other emerging economies.

A fresh perspective on this producer-centred impasse can be found by considering the kinds of customer-driven disruptive innovations that have overturned the established structures of almost every other major world industry, from IT to airlines to entertainment. In all of these industries, the power to control the market has moved from the traditional producers to their customer groups, causing the old guard to confront the existential question: what business are you in?

 

Four forces lending to answers are:

1. Diverging domains of learning

2. Next wave globalisation

3. Explosion of the learning value chain

4. Public-private mash-ups


Via susangautsch
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Eclectic Technology
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Digital Aristotle: Thoughts on the Future of Education

"Some thoughts on teachers, students and the Future of Education."


Via Beth Dichter
Beth Dichter's curator insight, January 11, 2014 7:08 PM

One point of view of how schools may change as we move from schools based on moving people from farms to factories and what may happen as digital technology continues to expand and the possibility of online learning where the computer would be the "personal tutor". The video is just under 6 minutes and will raise some questions. You might consider sharing it in faculty meeting (and if you do the discussion may be somewhat heated).

HUBMODE's curator insight, August 11, 2014 2:43 AM

Digital will disrupt Education as well.Let us build it with a huge human touch#HUBMODE