Investing
in technology
Is
investment in educational technology justified? Yes, providing it
supports the improvement of learning outcomes and is not just for its
own sake. Technology should enable scale and eventually lower the
per-unit cost of education. It also can improve access, help students
learn better, and help faculty and institutions assess their
effectiveness.
"Technology
is only helpful if we know what we want to do," says Lombardi. "The
role of technology is to help people figure out better ways of doing
what it is they want to do. But if they don't know what they want to
do, or if the technology just adds cost and no efficiencies or
improvements, it will be gee-whiz value, but not real or lasting
value."
"The
appropriate use of technology can increase revenue by accessing new
markets, improving efficiency and effectiveness of educational
resources, and gather and analyze data," adds Kelsall. "This data can
be used to reduce the cost of regulatory compliance. Increased revenue
while improving operating efficiency results in improved education
economics. Further, data gathered through technology can be analyzed to
determine behaviors that improve learning outcomes."
Investment
in technology can come from a variety of sources; government funding;
endowments; higher tuition and fees based on the belief that the
technology produces higher utility or quality; and new savings from the
technology itself, which is rare. Some institutions have succeeded in
reallocating savings from back-end technology services realized through
efficiency. As the cost of hardware, software and some administrative
services comes down, those savings can be re-invested in learning
technology.
"Educational
institutions have to do a better job of carving out and protecting
funding in their annual budgets that will be used solely for strategic
investments in learning," adds Allen. "Private industry does this, of
course, and it's usually called R&D. Whether the college or
university is public or private, strategic investment money needs to be
taken off the top of the institution's budget at the beginning and
before budgets are given to schools and departments to develop.
Institutions have the ability, if they have the will, to do some
investment of their own. That's a function of leadership.
An
additional source of revenue for investing in technology is the
development of partnering relationships between academic institutions
and private industry. Care must be taken, however, in selecting
strategic partners; the cultures of industry and academia are so
different that "pooling" efforts, says Lendo, can become
counter-productive.
"Vendors
sell generic applications while universities and colleges want specific
applications that help them differentiate their products," adds
Lombardi. "Vendors often sell products that require high costs to
implement, and institutions, while buying these products, do not
believe the vendors care about the users. Vendors are interested in
extracting high margins from very low-margin university and college
businesses. This lack of convergence in business models makes for poor
relationships."
"There
has to be a willingness for both to work together on projects that will
facilitate the provision of educational services, the delivery of
curriculum and student learning," says Allen. "I think more attention
needs to be given to the student life cycle and the particular needs of
the student in each phase of that cycle that could be facilitated
through the use of new technology. The technology industry can't do
this in isolation from educational institutions. It has to be a true
partnership."