200 likes | 335 Views
Citizens League Higher Education Phase I Steering Committee Meeting #3: July 12. Today’s objectives. To consider whether the economy and employments are facing a “breakpoint” of discontinuous change that requires transformational change in higher education
E N D
Citizens League Higher Education Phase I Steering Committee Meeting #3: July 12
Today’s objectives • To consider whether the economy and employments are facing a “breakpoint” of discontinuous change that requires transformational change in higher education • To imagine and design what higher education might look like in this new economic world
Today’s agenda • Introductions • Breakpoint Change discussion • Small group design • Evaluation
Change Itself Has Changed! • Change actually follows patterns of momentous, seemingly unpredictable and abrupt shift • At breakpoint, the rule change is so sharp that use of old rules not only doesn’t work, it acts as a barrier to success • Nature parts with the past
Breakpoint: The Cycle of Growth and Change Breakpoints Phase 1: Exploring and Inventing the Pattern Phase 3: Integrating the New and Different Phase 2: Extending and Improving
Change Itself Has Changed! DateInventionYrs to Mass Use 1873 Electricity 46 1876 Telephone 35 1886 Gas Automobile 55 1906 Radio 22 1926 Television 26 1975 PC 16 1983 Mobile Phone 13 1994 The Web 4
“Modifications of our thinking patterns will not work. This new era requires a radical rethinking of the most basic and foundational ways we view the world.” --Breakpoint and Beyond, Mastering the Future Today, 1992
Breakpoint Principles • Create what has never existed before • Make deep and powerful interdependent connections with one another • Be pulled into a new kind of future, not pushed by the past
Are We at a Breakpoint? From Saturday (July 9) NYT: • The unemployment rate rise to 9.2%. “Economists were stunned.” • “This fall, for the first time, the University of California will take in more from student tuition than state finances.” • Regarding the last shuttle flight: “These days, my pet fantasy for exploring the universe is downloading human consciousness to machines.”
January 2011 Marked The Beginning Of A New Demographic EraFirst Impacts Will Be Felt In The Workforce & Economic Growth • The workforce is aging • Retirements will increase sharply • The number of new, young labor force entrants will decline • The workforce will grow much more slowly • Economic growth will depend increasingly on productivity growth
Minnesota’s Labor Force Is AgingIn 1990, the peak was 30; in 2009 it was 46 1990, 2007 ACS, smoothed 3 year averages
Some Other Considerations In The Labor Market • More retirees and fewer younger workers should improve opportunities for job seekers • But employers may respond in other ways • Increase focus on productivity gains, filling jobs on less than a one-for-one basis • Relocate jobs to other, more favorable labor markets • Recruit workers from other markets • Alternative responses may be heightened with a growing skills mismatch.
The Old Normal+ The Great Recession + Long Run Demographic Changes= The New Normal
Creative Destruction/Disruptive Innovation Will Occur Forces for change are heightened during periods of economic stress Wholesale program changes will happen Disruptive changes are not evolutionary Some game changers will occur There will be short term losers as well as winners A set of new opportunities are revealed
What are some of the skills that modern manufacturers look for? • Knowledge of mechanical and electrical engineering processes • Ability to work with computerized systems • Ability to read and write machine programming code • Ability to readmanufacturing blueprints • Ability to operate automated manufacturing systems • Understanding of hydraulic, pneumatic, and electrical systems
Small Group Exercise Six Scenarios: Two Students Jose: 3 years old, first generation immigrant. Parents speak limited English and have manual labor employment. Sheila: 3 years old. Parents are a university professor and corporate executive.
Future Employment • Assembly worker • Attorney • Has no idea!
Concept Design Assignment: Design a learning path for this student, based on the selected occupation. • What assumptions about the future are you basing your design on? (e.g., demographic, fiscal, economic, technology) • What skills and knowledge will the student have acquired from K-12? • How does the student gain an understanding of the knowledge/skills needed to make sound career/education choices? • Describe the interface between employment and education. • What does the student’s post-secondary education look like—how is it delivered; when? • How much does post-secondary cost and who pays for it?
Six Scenarios: Rules Forget your pet ideas. As unknowable as the future is, base your concept on realistic assumptions for the future (e.g., demographic change, crazy changes in technology, institutional capacities for change). Design something you’d be proud of. Don’t get tripped up in the details of implementation. Have fun!