IMS Global: Online
enrollment is increasing at a rapid pace as residential enrollment on
today's campuses has largely plateaued. How do you think these changes
will impact our society? And what form will future learning take?
JVL: While the
higher education marketplace continues to diversify in terms of
institutional and delivery structures, this development simply expands
the populations that have access to much of the content of higher
education. These changes make content more easily and readily available
to many people, especially those who work in careers or who do not have
the financial or other opportunities to participate in traditional
higher education. One of the consequences of this is that many
traditional institutions will become more complex, offering not only
traditional residential programs but also extensive online programs to
expand their scale beyond what's possible on a physical campus.
As online
delivery continues to expand, it's likely that we will see an
increasing specialization in the educational content available to
consumers. The generic liberal arts education or the ordinary business
or engineering degree, built on the assumption of full-time residential
attendance at institutions where content is only one part of the
service provided, will not necessarily serve many new consumers of
higher education content. These newer consumers will want specific
content, for specific purposes, and will seek out programs that deliver
content with minimal extraneous enhancement.
One
impact of the separation of content from the context of delivery is
that the continuing fragmentation of the higher education marketplace
will accelerate. The prestige institutions will maintain and probably
increase their exclusivity, the alternative delivery mechanisms will
gain market share, and the less prestigious traditional institutions
will struggle to maintain a place in this highly differentiated market.
The
separation of content from context will also change our understanding
of the result of post secondary education. The simple notion of a
baccalaureate degree being the token of having done something
significant (college) will probably give way to a wide variety of
outcome degrees or certificates of competency or other tokens of
achievement that for many will be more than sufficient, or may be the
additional value added onto a traditional degree to give an edge in the
employment market. How that works out is not easy to predict. We could
see a retail marketplace for higher education with elite stores that
charge high prices for high touch services and the presumption of high
quality, generic stores, or supermarkets of higher education that
provide content of high quality at low prices with low touch and little
attention to prestige, and similar manifestations of highly
differentiated consumer product or consumer service marketplaces.
The
challenges to regulators will be significant, and we'll see lots of
specific outcome testing to ensure that the business graduates who
profess a certain level of accounting knowledge actually have it. The
current exams for nurses and other professionals, CPA's for example,
are models for this, and as society seeks specific competence for
specific purposes, colleges will find themselves more and more focused
on producing people who can pass those competence, content-based exams.
While we'll pass through a critical thinking kind of testing phase,
this will likely give way to much more specific knowledge-based testing
that will give employers guidance on the skill sets of the people who
they want to hire, and as those skill sets change, the tests will
change, forcing people to return to the educational services sector to
acquire the content to pass the next round of competency test.
Equally
significant will be what we do with the production of knowledge, the
research engine that has been the primary force for American global
success for many generations. This research engine, constructed
primarily on the base of the traditional college/university model, may
become much less integrated into the educational process and migrate
into more focused, research intensive enterprises affiliated with or
part of universities, but not necessarily part of the educational
enterprise. This will respond to the tremendous cost of supporting
research and the inability of institutions to offer lifetime tenure to
researchers whose output is unpredictable over long periods. Instead,
we'll see research organizations with faculty who have 5-year rolling
tenure, based on their performance in the competitive world of
research. If they continue to succeed, they will continue to be
supported, but if they fall out of the competition, they will be asked
to find alternative employment. This is also a reflection of the
specialization that is characteristic of highly diversified and highly
competitive industries.
Similarly,
the role of faculty will continue to change, with the proportion of
fully tenured full-time faculty, outside of elite institutions,
continuing to decline in favor of contract or contingent faculty who
teach and have the skills to teach within the multiple delivery
mechanisms and institutions that have appeared and will continue to
proliferate. These faculty will find ways to enhance their value by
focusing on high productivity in content delivery, on the maintenance
of expertise, and on skills related to the creation of content for the
various delivery institutions. These individuals may well end up well
paid, although at present, they have not found a way to translate the
high lifetime value of the traditional tenured faculty career into an
equally high value proposition for a contingent faculty career. The
competitive context for faculty, in any case, will clearly become more
intense as it has for employees of other high value consumer service
industries.