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1 The University is
Dead! Long Live the University!
2 James L. Morrison
3 Editor, The Technology Source
4 For
Discussion Purposes Only
5 This draft is based on a presentation found at http://ull.horizonlive.com/launcher.cgi?channel=WFS_JM_2002_0725_1507_58
6 In
speech 101 I was taught to begin a presentation with an attention-getter, and
this one, “The University is Dead! Long Live the University!” fit quite
nicely—both in getting your attention, and in suggesting that colleges and
universities are in a major transition period that will fundamentally affect
the way they conduct their business. The title of this paper is a takeoff on
the words used by town criers in historic England who, upon the death of the
king and the forthcoming crowning of a new king, would go through the streets
proclaiming, “The King is Dead! Long live the King!” (Or “Queen,” as circumstances
required.)
7 Of course, change in social
institutions is seldom as rapid as a change in reigning monarchs. I do believe,
however, that we are currently undergoing substantial changes in the way
colleges and universities will be organized and will function in the future.
This change is being driven by the combined forces of demographics,
globalization, economic restructuring, and information technology that will,
over the coming decade, lead us to adopt new conceptions of educational
markets, organizational structures, how we teach, and what we teach.
8 The Evolution of American Higher Education
9 Colleges and universities
have undergone dramatic change in the past. For example, in this country, the
earliest colleges were established in order to have an educated ministry. These
colleges gradually became much more secularized. In particular, after the
middle of the 19th century, with the pressure of an industrializing
society plus the passage of the 1864 Morrill Act establishing federal funding
for agricultural and mechanical colleges, America’s institutions of higher
education began to develop curricula designed not only to prepare young people
to be good citizens, but also to also prepare them for careers. In the early
1900s, many colleges added graduate programs, following the German university
tradition, while continuing their undergraduate education function of preparing
relatively privileged youth to enter the adult world (following the English
tradition). In the mid-twentieth century, with the passage of the GI Bill,
colleges and universities became more concerned with broader access to higher
education. Simultaneously, U.S. universities became infused with a research
mission under the influence of federal funding in response to the Cold War’s
arms race.
10 By the second half of the Twentieth Century, the American higher education
system was essentially organized to socialize young people into the adult
culture largely on residential campuses. Institutions had graduate programs to
prepare professionals, conduct research, and perform public service through
continuing education courses. Under this system, colleges and universities also
allowed professors to consult with other organizations during a part of their
work-week. All of these functions varied in extent by type of
institution: research universities, comprehensive colleges and universities,
and two-year colleges, both public and independent, Each type of institution
had a defined marketing area, ranging from local communities for two-year
colleges; regions, states, or sections of states for comprehensive
institutions; and world-wide for research institutions (for students who could
travel to them).
11 In all cases, however, with
the exception of the apprenticeship aspects of doctoral education (e.g., graduate
assistantships, rounds, cases, moot court, and labs), the lecture mode of
instruction was predominant. Moreover,
most faculty members considered presenting content and assessing how well that
content was learned as their primary teaching responsibilities. Curriculums
were built on the logical progression of introductory content courses to more
specialized or advanced content courses, and were offered in specific time
frames (semesters, quarters, trimesters) within which students were usually
only able to matriculate at specific times during the year—in many cases only
once per year. Degrees were based on the number of credit hours earned (seat
time). Professors’ research products were refereed and sanctioned via
professional associations and commercial publishers, primarily through print
journals and books. Although some colleges and universities participated in
consortia, most institutions operated independently.
12 Today’s Change Drivers
13 My thesis is that the forces
of demography, globalization, economic restructuring, and information
technology are affecting the organization and functioning of higher education
described above; the results will be at least as dramatic as the changes
already experienced by our early colleges through the end of the twentieth
century.
14 Demography
15 Four demographic changes are
affecting higher education today. First, the ethnic identification mix of the
general population is changing both in the US and in the world, although the
changes vary by geographical area. For example, in the US, between 1970 and
2000, New York City’s population shifted from 2/3 white to 1/3. In 1970, 5% of
U.S. residents were born elsewhere; in 2000, this figure increased to 11%. In
several states white children are no longer the majority in the elementary
grades. This change is reflected worldwide, in that the proportion of the
population that is white is decreasing and is projected to continue to
decrease. Before the end of this century, demographers generally expect
Euro-descended Americans to make up less than half of the U.S. population.
16 Second, the demand for
access to some form of postsecondary education is increasing dramatically. Not
only are the numbers of secondary school graduates increasing, but an
increasing proportion of high school graduating classes are also applying for
college. The size of the high school graduating class will grow by more than
20% between 1996 and 2005, and an ever-greater proportion of the high school
graduating class is enrolling in college (67% today; 56% in 1980). With a
record 15.3 million students expected to enter colleges and universities this
year, America’s population of postsecondary students will continue its
seven-year increase. U.S. Education Department figures reflect a 2% increase
over last year, and they project that enrollment will grow by an additional 16%
over the next decade, mainly because of an increase in the college-age
population.
17 Third, the age-structure
within the US and within industrialized countries is changing. In the US, by
2010, 43% of adults will be age 50 or older. By 2010, 50% of all college
students will be adults. By 2004, 100 million Americans will take part in adult
education programs (for 1995, this figure was 76 million). The “graying” of the
population is also reflected in the graying of the workforce, a workforce that
needs continuing education to remain viable.
18 Fourth, within this decade,
over 20% of college and university faculty members will retire, thereby
allowing new talent into the ranks of the professorate, talent that is
comfortable with using information technology tools in their work.
19 Globalization and the Economy
20 Globalization is
characterized by the international movement of capital, labor, products,
technology, and information in increasingly expanding amounts. The global
economy is driven by regional free trade, multinational corporations, and
information technology. In 1970 there were close to 7,000 multinational
corporations; by 1990 the number swelled to 30,000. Today, there are more than
63,000! Many of these corporations are big, and they are getting bigger. Of the
world’s 100 largest economies, 51 are corporations. Exxon Mobil, the world’s
largest corporation, has more capital than over 180 nations.
22 Information technology
industries play a major role in the global economy. In the US, 60% of the GNP
is related to IT industries. Since 1995, IT has accounted for more than one
third of US economic growth. In five years most new U.S. jobs will occur in
computer related fields (and 80% of these jobs do not even exist yet); half of
those workers will be employed in industries that produce or are intensive
users of information technology.
23 In this environment,
business to business e-commerce is also expanding rapidly. The Gartner Group
estimates that this sector will approach 8 trillion dollars by 2005.
Consequently, some 95% of all workers need to use some type of information
technology in their jobs.
24 In response to emerging free
trade initiatives, business organizations are downsizing and restructuring to meet
an increasing competitive global economy; workers need constant retraining if
their employers are to stay in business and if they are to retain their jobs.
The American Society for Training and Development has estimated that 75% of the
current workforce will need to be retrained just to keep up.
25 To summarize, in the US and
in the mature industrial democracies around the world, there is increasing
demand for access to higher education from increasing numbers of secondary
school graduates. When we combine this increased demand for higher education
from youth with the increasing need for retraining workers in mid-career, we
can confidently assume that the existing bricks and mortar campuses will not be
sufficient to meet the demand.
26 The bottom line: in order to
meet the increased demands for access, colleges and universities need to
increase their use of information technology tools via online learning, which
will enable them to teach more students without building more classrooms.
Moreover, in order for professors to prepare their students for success in the
global economy, they need to ensure that their students can
27 access, analyze, process, and communicate
information;
28 use information technology tools;
29 work with people from different cultural backgrounds,
and
30 engage in continuous, self-directed learning
31 Information Technology
32 Information technology (IT)
is the major driver affecting our lives today and will continue to do so in the
future. Moore's Law, formulated over 20 years ago by Intel co-founder Gordon
Moore, states in effect that the power of computer technology doubles
approximately every 18 months while the price of technology declines at the
same rate. Intel has transistors with elements as narrow as three atoms wide.
Chips with these elements can contain approximately 400 million transistors and
run at 10 GHz on less than one volt of power. (Current Pentium 4 chips run at
1.5GHz and contain 42 million transistors.) Although the rule has held steady,
researchers have speculated about when the laws of physics might stop it. Early
in the last decade, Moore himself said the industry probably would hit a wall
when transistors shrunk to around 0.25 microns. But chips with transistors that
size came out in 1997. And IBM has developed a gigabyte hard drive that is the
size of two quarters pasted together (large enough to contain 1,000 books). In
August 2002, Seagate announced that it had exceeded IBM, squeezing 50 terabits
to a square inch, and indicating that it will eventually offer a 1 terabyte (2-3
million books) drive for $300.00.
33 When we combine smaller,
more powerful, and less expensive and therefore more accessible computers with
the power of the Internet to quickly connect people around the world via audio,
video, and text, we have the means to transform our culture. And that, of
course, is what is happening now. In the future we can anticipate that
computers will be as easy to use and as ubiquitous as telephones are today.
These machines, equipped with decision algorithms and expert systems will
enable schools to greatly enrich the educational experience through simulations
using virtual reality and through such tools as peer-to-peer groupware to
facilitate project-based team-learning.
34 Signals of Change
35 All around us, there are a
number of signals that higher education is headed for a major transformation.
Consider the following:
36 4
Internet use doubles
every 90 days, going up at the rate of about 140 persons a second and almost 72
million a year.
37 4
The number of e-mails
sent on an average day was 10 billion in 2000; 35 billion are expected in 2005.
38 4
Cable and phone
companies are consolidating to provide interactive multimedia programming.
39 4
Educational courses and
programs are being produced by corporations.
40 4
The UK Higher Ed
Funding Counsel estimates the global online learning market to be 71 billion
dollars.
41 4
A recent study by
Merrill Lynch found that the higher-education market outside the United States
is worth $111-billion a year and has as many as 32 million potential students.
More than half the market, in terms of both students and money, is in China.
42 4
The National Institute of Standards and
Technology estimates that the e-learning market in the US will grow to
$46 billion in five years. And the International
Data Corporation projects that the US e-learning market will grow from
10% of the total training market in 1999 to more than 35% by 2004.
43 4
Virtual consortia
(e.g., eU, Universitas 21, uNext) of prominent international universities are
marketing educational degree programs around the world.
44 4
Army online
(eArmyU.com), started last year and projects 85,000 online students by 2005.
45 4
The Pew funded program
at Rochester has sponsored demonstration projects at VPI and other institutions
to demonstrate how colleges and universities can use Web-enabled courses to
handle more students more efficiently, and at less cost, without loss of
quality.
46 4
Cisco's classroom
programs cost as much as $1,800 per worker, while Web-based classes are
approximately $120 per worker.
47 4
Corporate universities
grew from 400 in 1990 to 2,000 in 2000. The number of students in these
institutions is increasing 30% per year. By 2003, corporations will conduct 96%
of training online. By 2010,
corporate training universities may outnumber traditional colleges and
universities
48 4
IBM saved $200 million
by moving 20% of its training to e-learning and has converted its side
e-learning business into a stand-alone business
49 4
The dean of the
University of Chicago School of Business says, “Corporate training and distance
learning will ‘wipe out’ many of the 700 MBA programs that issue 100,000 MBAs
each year.”
50 4
The Western Governors
University, a virtual university sponsored by 10 western states, requires
competency-based degrees.
51 4
At the University
College of the Caribou students pay by the month until they have completed
their courses.
52 4
At Rio Salado College
new classes begin every two weeks.
53 4
The percentage of
colleges and universities offering distance education courses in 2001 was 72%;
only 48% offered them in 1999. Thirty-four percent provide an online degree
program in contrast to only 15%
providing such programs in 1998.
54 4
In 2000, 49% of
colleges provided Internet connections in classrooms; in 2002, the percentage
is 64%.
55 4
In 2001, online enrollment applications were available at 77% of colleges,
up from 68% in 1998, according to a National Association for College Admission
Counseling survey. Some colleges (West Virginia Wesleyan, MIT) require all
applicants to submit their applications online.
56 4
The Library of Congress
and its partner libraries are launching a pilot project to bring librarians'
expertise to the Internet by forming a global reference desk that is available
24 hours a day, seven days a week.
57 4
Five percent of all
postsecondary institutions require students to have a computer.
58 4
This past spring,
Stanford University graduated the first 25 students from its global online
engineering program.
59 4
The next year will see
whether Universitas 21—a high-profile international consortium of 17
universities from Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America—can sell online
degrees worldwide. Created in 1997, the consortium plans to offer its first
product, a master's degree, throughout Asia in early 2003.

60 Finally, the nature of
students is changing in that on the whole, they are far more comfortable with
using computers, telecommunications, and multimedia than their elders. The
upcoming Generation Z may be computer literate before they hit grade school.
Currently, over 50% of the school districts in the US rely on student
assistance for networking and for helping teachers to use IT tools. In a recent
article in On the Horizon, Prensky
(2002) characterized the current breed of young students as “Digital Natives”
who are accustomed to hypertext, phones in their pockets, a library on their
laptops, and instant messaging. They have little patience for lectures, or
"tell-test" instruction. They
also speak a different language: for example, one hungry kindergartener
expressed his feelings at lunchtime by saying “www.hungry.com,”
whereas a high school student was reported as saying “Every time I go to school
I have to power down.”
61 The Paradigm Shift
62 What do these signals
portend for how higher education will look in the next decade? I think that we
will see both institutional shifts and faculty mindset shifts. Specifically, in
the coming decades, most educators will no longer view knowledge transfer to be
primarily accomplished via the classroom or lecture hall, but as ubiquitous,
unlimited by time, place, or media. Similarly, no longer will colleges and
universities focus on a geographical market area; instead, most research
universities will view their markets as bound only by people who do not have
Internet access or who are not literate in English (although computer-mediated
language translation programs will eventually change this). This perspective
will be shared by an increasing number of comprehensive institutions as well as
two-year colleges, public and independent.

63 Moreover, although there are
inter-campus consortia today, such collaborations will be commonplace in 10
years. More and more institutions will partner with vendors and with other
institutions to enrich their online curricular offerings. Many colleges and
universities will be completely virtual, while residential campuses will offer
predominantly hybrid
courses—which will meet face-to-face, supplemented by online work. Practically
no institution will be without substantial online instructional capability.
Moreover, these institutions will predominately use competency-based exams for
awarding degrees, and will guarantee that individuals who pass these exams are
indeed competent to perform at the level implied by their degrees.

64 In the coming decade,
traditional semester/quarter/trimester academic schedules will evolve to
incorporate varying lengths of time for learning modules. Enrollments, once set
at specific times during the year, will become continuous (e.g., once every
month).

65 Most important of all, as
changing demographics and technology alter the context of higher education, the
mind-sets of faculty members will have to change as well. Specifically, instead
of being content providers, professors will have to transform themselves into
designers of learning experiences for an increasingly diverse student
population. Students, meanwhile, viewed today as empty vessels into which we
must pour content, will be increasingly seen as junior colleagues who acquire
knowledge while working through project-based courses. Faculty will serve on
instructional teams consisting of instructional designers, media specialists,
and assessment experts. These teams will prepare courses that can be taught
online or as hybrids in on campus classrooms. Classes will be handled
predominantly by junior professors, instructors, or, in universities, by
graduate assistants who will interact with students as they progress through
virtual courses.
66 At the same time that IT is
transforming the world of teachers and students, it is also changing the
context of scholarship. Specifically, the movement spearheaded by MIT in 2002
to put faculty scholarship online, in conjunction with the efforts of the
Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPAR), plus the free
online scholarship movement, will establish the acceptability of peer-reviewed
online scholarship in terms of merit, tenure, and promotion considerations.
67 The higher education
landscape will look quite different in 2020 than it does today. There will
still be many “bricks and mortar” residential campuses, particularly for the
young, but their classes will be hybridized (i.e., a combination of online and
in-class instruction). Lectures will no longer be the predominant mode of
instruction; rather, group and individual project-based learning will be the
norm. The focus of education will be to produce graduates who can use a variety
of information technology tools and techniques to access, evaluate, analyze,
and communicate information and who can work effectively in teams with people
from different ethnic groups to address a wide range of real world issues and
choices, the tidy answers to which are not in the back of a textbook.
68 The hidebound,
authoritarian, hierarchical, self-reverential university is dying. But
progressive educators and innovative reformers can still revivify the
institution, using rapidly maturing information technologies and building upon
the timeless values of scholarship, collegiality, open dialogue and
intellectual integrity to create a post-industrial university that will be
capable of reaching both new heights of academic excellence and new breadths of
community access and social utility. And that would be a death-bed conversion
worth cheering.
69 “Long life to the new
university!”