- Oct 2016
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www.businessinsider.com www.businessinsider.com
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Outside of the classroom, universities can use connected devices to monitor their students, staff, and resources and equipment at a reduced operating cost, which saves everyone money.
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- Sep 2016
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hybridpedagogy.org hybridpedagogy.org
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it’s productive to not only think of schools and colleges as sites of learning, but also as marketplaces where goods, knowledge, and services are consumed and produced
Agreed that it’s productive. But isn’t it also about framing (formal/institutional) education in purely economic terms? Useful to think about goods and services which have exchange value. May be a bit too easy to slip into the implicit idea that a learner is among the system’s key products.
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frame the purposes and value of education in purely economic terms
Sign of the times? One part is about economics as the discipline of decision-making. Economists often claim that their work is about any risk/benefit analysis and isn’t purely about money. But the whole thing is still about “resources” or “exchange value”, in one way or another. So, it could be undue influence from this way of thinking. A second part is that, as this piece made clear at the onset, “education is big business”. In some ways, “education” is mostly a term for a sector or market. Schooling, Higher Education, Teaching, and Learning are all related. Corporate training may not belong to the same sector even though many of the aforementioned EdTech players bet big on this. So there’s a logic to focus on the money involved in “education”. Has little to do with learning experiences, but it’s an entrenched system.
Finally, there’s something about efficiency, regardless of effectiveness. It’s somewhat related to economics, but it’s often at a much shallower level. The kind of “your tax dollars at work” thinking which is so common in the United States. “It’s the economy, silly!”
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www.chronicle.com www.chronicle.com
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often private companies whose technologies power the systems universities use for predictive analytics and adaptive courseware
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the use of data in scholarly research about student learning; the use of data in systems like the admissions process or predictive-analytics programs that colleges use to spot students who should be referred to an academic counselor; and the ways colleges should treat nontraditional transcript data, alternative credentials, and other forms of documentation about students’ activities, such as badges, that recognize them for nonacademic skills.
Useful breakdown. Research, predictive models, and recognition are quite distinct from one another and the approaches to data that they imply are quite different. In a way, the “personalized learning” model at the core of the second topic is close to the Big Data attitude (collect all the things and sense will come through eventually) with corresponding ethical problems. Through projects vary greatly, research has a much more solid base in both ethics and epistemology than the kind of Big Data approach used by technocentric outlets. The part about recognition, though, opens the most interesting door. Microcredentials and badges are a part of a broader picture. The data shared in those cases need not be so comprehensive and learners have a lot of agency in the matter. In fact, when then-Ashoka Charles Tsai interviewed Mozilla executive director Mark Surman about badges, the message was quite clear: badges are a way to rethink education as a learner-driven “create your own path” adventure. The contrast between the three models reveals a lot. From the abstract world of research, to the top-down models of Minority Report-style predictive educating, all the way to a form of heutagogy. Lots to chew on.
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- Jul 2016
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hybridpedagogy.org hybridpedagogy.org
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reduce students, to mere algorithms
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www.theguardian.com www.theguardian.com
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It starts by rejecting the canard that a university education is just another commodity.
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There are outputs, such as graduates, increased social mobility and higher standards of living.
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Don't turn students into consumers – the US proves it's a recipe for disaster
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www.seattletimes.com www.seattletimes.com
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“In five to 10 years, most students will buy their postsecondary education differently from the way they buy it now,”
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www.centerdigitaled.com www.centerdigitaled.com
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Improve Admissions ROI
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www.businessinsider.com www.businessinsider.com
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which applicants are most likely to matriculate
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medium.com medium.com
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those who are learners will have more opportunities for growth and success than those who are learned.
Nice pun, giving another connotation to the term “learner”.
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www.washingtonpost.com www.washingtonpost.com
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the largest consumer of college graduates
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- Apr 2016
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techcrunch.com techcrunch.com
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Researchers have tracked student emotions while using Crystal Island–a game-based learning environment– and used that research to predict how students will react in other learning situations
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- Dec 2015
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www.forbes.com www.forbes.com
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wring out every ounce of performance
Now think of it with a learner in mind.
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