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Validating a Collective Scenario for Tertiary Education in 2016 with SITE

Validating a Collective Scenario for Tertiary Education in 2016 with SITE. Niki Davis with Pinelopi Zaka Andrew Higgins, Gordon Suddaby & Bill Anderson Society of Information Technology and Teacher Education 2012 annual conference, Austin, Texas. Tena koutou katoa Kia Ora.

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Validating a Collective Scenario for Tertiary Education in 2016 with SITE

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  1. Validating a Collective Scenario for Tertiary Education in 2016with SITE Niki Davis with PinelopiZaka Andrew Higgins, Gordon Suddaby & Bill Anderson Society of Information Technology and Teacher Education 2012 annual conference, Austin, Texas

  2. TenakoutoukatoaKia Ora DEANZ requests delegates’ support in our exciting project to help inform leadership of education, particularly tertiary education, in these challenging times - in our Forum and Blog here: http://akoaotearoa.ac.nz/projects/2016-scenario-guide-effective-tertiary... Your role Please identify examples to fit one or more quadrants Or email: Niki.Davis@Canterbury.ac.nz Twitter #DEANZ2016

  3. DEANZ 2016 Project Team (July 2011) Inset: Gordon Suddaby (Researcher), Bill Anderson (Researcher) & Mark Nichols (Mentor) In group: Janinka Babcock (Designer), Pinelopi Zaka (RA), Niki Davis (PI), Julie Mackey (Mentor), Andrew Higgins (Co-PI)

  4. Scenario Set for 2016 V1.0 Customized Quality branded consortia Self determination Facing NZ employers, professions & iwi Facing the academy The “supermarket” Minimal change Standardized

  5. The Axes Vertical “Students should be able to select more freely for their courses... we need fewer restrictions on what can be taken toward a programme” (NZ leader in ITP) • Horizontal • “Mismatch between the outputs from tertiary education and the needs in the workforce” (European expert) Recycle & Blend all 4

  6. 1. Minimal change • Tertiary education continues on the same track • Reduced focus on the trades as global markets flatten employment is this area. • Flexibility for students is apparently improved through increasing mapping of courses. • Relatively few developments, held back by: • ‘Facing’ the academy • Concentration of programmes/ qualifications into few or one institution • The lack of development of national agencies e.g. NZQA, CUAP, NZTC (NCATE) • Research performance assessment Minimal change “A few years ago New Zealand saw the emergence of strategic thinking and action around blended learning, connectivity and educational development. That tide has receded because of a greater emphasis on individual institutions making their own way in constrained circumstances” (NZ consultant)

  7. 2. The Supermarket Prescriptive standards set out to face employers, professions & iwis drive the production of massive range of courses and units of study/training. Effective where relevant e.g. up-skilling. Research & consulting services reduce their connection with teaching Digital technologies are employed to increase production & efficiency of guidance & assessment of students, but personalisation is limited. A future MUVE game may engage thousands of students online while generating individual learning analytics for teachers, who guide use of supplementary resources (inc OER) The “supermarket” “– a significant number of faculty teaching introductory courses are using course packages from publishers. … - We will become much smarter about what we can share and what we can benefit from.” (USA university leader and technology expert) “ … an affirmative action policy to foster more Maori and Pasifika students to study at university? … (Pasifika Leader)

  8. 3. Quality branded consortia “Emphasis on diversity and caring for minorities could become a strength and part of the branding for NZ. The emphasis on success for Maori and Pacifika might be attractive to a larger Asian market, ... NZ. It may also be seen as an interesting model for smaller European countries” (European expert) The academy responds to increasing demands from students for programmes that link them to professional networks within & beyond NZ. Digital technologies enable project work, links to business & OERs. Consortium brands bring NZ tertiary education into the global market as a partner with an edge on creativity through diversity. Increases in interdisciplinary programmes and faculty collaboration include students project work in modes of multinationals; products showcased in e-portfolios. A small pool of high quality among the massive growth of resources reassures the nation that tertiary education is valuable. Quality branded consortia

  9. Self determination emerges to become part of life-long learning starting in schools. Staff recruit and work with mentors in employment & communities who motivate, add QA & benefits for their organisations. Networked digital technologies & analytics integrate with learning /assessment. Interdisciplinary materials complement vocational & research opportunities. Advising, library and other support staff play key roles in creative learning teams. Students & advisors draw as needed on expertise captured in lectures, tutorials, readings & multimedia. Space utilised in different ways. A few overseas partnerships, inc. multinationals & Pacific communities. 4. Self determination Self determination Note: Also borrows from sectors 1 and 3

  10. Quotes from leaders on 4. Self Determination Self determination “The tertiary sector, and universities in particular focus on excellence and scholarship but more effort might be made to engage with other cultures and ethnic groups in New Zealand. That engagement may work to recognize and integrate other kinds of understanding and enhance the Maori and Pasifika world views through the application of good will and commitment to social justice and equity in New Zealand.” (Pasifika leader) “a change, from the ‘institution bound logic’ to an ‘individual-based logic’ based on the ‘learning space’ of each individual student which is partly based in the university, at home, in the community, [work] , and en route between these places. In essence the tertiary education process follows where the student goes and when they move.” (European expert)

  11. JISC Methodology 1-4 from JISC, 2010 http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/generalpublications/2008/scenarioplanningflyer.aspx

  12. Scenario Set for 2016 V1.0 Customized Quality branded consortia Self determination Facing NZ employers, professions & iwi Facing the academy The “supermarket” Minimal change Standardized

  13. Questions & commentsNiki.Davis@Canterbury.ac.nzUniversity of Canterbury e-Learning Lab Lopez et al virtual SITE session for examples … Project web site for more information & input please, kiaora! http://akoaotearoa.ac.nz/projects/2016-scenario-guide-effective-tertiary-education-new-zealand DEANZ 2012 conference April 10-13, Wellington Thanks to • DEANZ and participants including today • AkoAotearoa for network funding, esp. Dr. Peter Coolbear • TeLRG as Reference Group • Researchers’ universities: AUT, Canterbury, Massey & Otago • Horizon collaborators especially Larry Johnston, NMC, USA

  14. Next steps • 1. Socially network this V1.0 • AkoAotearoa website, Facebook, Twitter, Webinar etc. • Workshops alongside NZ Horizon Report events 21-25/11/11 • Panel at e-Learning Futures conference led by Andrew Higgins 30/11/11 • Tertiary Education Summit by Niki Davis 28/11/11 • Here at SITE, inc. virtual presentation • TeLRG workshop in March • DEANZ 2012 in Wellington mid April • Review and develop • Clarify underlying factors, inc technology and policy • 2. Produce and disseminate V2.0 • Paper for DEANZ journal JOFDL • Workshop at DEANZ 2012 conference 10-13/4/12 Wellington

  15. Methodology • Interview leaders & gather relevant literature • Analyse using JISC tools

  16. Leaders’ organisations • Organisations represented by leaders interviewed: • Universities, ITP, PTE, Employers

  17. Horizon Technology Outlook for NZ Tertiary Education 2011-2016 Time-to-Adoption Horizon: One Year or Less • Cloud Computing • Collaborative Environments • Mobile Apps • Tablet Computing Time-to-Adoption Horizon: Two to Three Years • Digital Identity • Electronic Publishing • Game-Based Learning • Personal Learning Environments Time-to-Adoption Horizon: Four to Five Years • Augmented Reality • Gesture-Based Computing • Next-Generation Batteries • Smart Objects Launch: 29/11/11: Auckland at AUT 2/12/11: Wellington at Massey

  18. Top Challenges • Digital media literacy continues its rise in importance as a key skill in every discipline and profession. • Economic pressures and new models of education are presenting unprecedented competition to traditional models of the university. • Most academics are not using new and compelling technologies for learning and teaching, nor for organising their own research. • New modes of scholarship are presenting significant challenges to libraries and university collections, how scholarship is documented, and the business models to support these activities.

  19. The representatives of the founding anchor partners of the OERu initiative in Otago Polytechnic, November 2011 • The OER university is a virtual collaboration of like-minded institutions committed to creating flexible pathways for OER learners to gain formal academic credit. The OER university aims to provide free learning to all students worldwide using OER learning materials …

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