the changing role of higher education: meeting today's workforce needs

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The Changing Role of Higher Education: Meeting Today’s Workforce Needs *Evaluation Keyword: nebaker July 24, 2014

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Higher education is purported to be the next industry under disruption. This talk will outline some of the potential reasons as to why this might be so, the possible implications for higher education and provide examples of disruption taking place at Georgia Tech.

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Page 1: The Changing Role of Higher Education: Meeting Today's Workforce Needs

The Changing Role

of Higher Education:

Meeting Today’s

Workforce

Needs*Evaluation Keyword: nebaker

July 24, 2014

Page 2: The Changing Role of Higher Education: Meeting Today's Workforce Needs

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Who is Georgia Tech?

~21,500 degree seeking students 14,500 undergraduate students 7,000 graduate students

~13,525 non-credit students through GTPE 1,060 faculty; 6,490 staff ~$1.4B annual revenues ~$2.2B economic impact

Page 3: The Changing Role of Higher Education: Meeting Today's Workforce Needs

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Changing Role of Higher Education

Student debt exceeds consumer credit card debt Tuition increases outpacing all other sectors Higher education is tasked with:

Creating employable graduates Ensuring not only jobs, but careers Engaging students after high school…and forever Performing research AND creating companies Instilling innovation and creativity

Page 4: The Changing Role of Higher Education: Meeting Today's Workforce Needs

•Academic division•Credit/Non-credit programs• 13,525 individuals

representing over 3,000 companies

• Representation from more than half the world’s countries

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“The vast majority of learners in higher education are not eighteen to twenty-two. The minority is now the majority. We are still focusing a great deal of our research on what used to be the traditional. What was traditional is now the nontraditional. That is truly a seismic shift.” L. Lee Knefelkamp, professor of psychology and education at Teachers College, Columbia University, and a senior scholar at Association of American Colleges & Universities (http://www.aacu.org/peerreview/pr-wi11/prwi11_Interview.cfm)

Changing Student Demographics

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Adult learners aged 25 and over have grown by 41% in the last decade and are predicted to grow by another 14% this decade. National Center for Education Statistics. http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=98

Adults Exhibit Faster Growth

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Why do adults pursue professional education?

Want higher salary Want a better/new job Need to keep current/refresh skills Unemployed Want an advanced credential Enjoy learning Licensing/certification requirements Employer-mandated

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Why do employers pursue professional education?

Employers need better trained employees.

GTPE can help companies build their pipeline of employees from

the inside.

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Professional certificates make up 22% of all college awards, up from 6% in 1980. Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce

Credentialing

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Serving Learner Needs

Non-credit

Free Certified Certificate

Sequence Non-credit Course

Completion Certificate

MOOC

Non-credit Program

Certificate

Portion Credit

Credit

Degree

GT

Spectrum of Credentialing for Adult Learners

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Students expect flexible formats:

The Classroom Has Changed

Face-to-Face

Online

Hybrid

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Master’s Degrees via Distance LearningGeorgia Tech-Online has a catalog of more than 100 semester-based, credit courses.

Annual enrollment of 600 online grad students = 17% of Georgia Tech’s master’s degree students.

Online degrees conferred annually = 8% of all Tech master’s degrees conferred.

A nationwide study of distance education showed 22% enrolled in distance education in fall 2012 were at the graduate level. U.S. Department of Education, June 2014. Enrollment in Distance Education Courses, by State: Fall 2012

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Open Access

July 2012, Georgia Tech signed agreement with Coursera.

Tech currently carries about 10% of Coursera’s total MOOC enrollments (616,430 as of March 2014).

Nearly two dozen flipped class experiments.

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Udacity partnership AT&T gift MOOC platform GT governance GT degree /non-credit GT processes GT Intellectual Property

Online Master of Science in Computer Science

(OMS CS)

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OMS CS

Announced, May 2013 First Class, Jan 2014

385 individuals Average age: 11 years older Flipped nationality: 85% domestic

Expected 1,200 students Aug 2014 Expected 2,000+ Jan 2015

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OMS CS Non-Credit Program

Five courses from degree program launching fall 2015.

Courses identical to master’s program, with content revised to fit needs of busy professionals. – Students earn Certificate of Course Completion

and CEUs (Continuing Education Units) – 78 students in first summer ‘14 non-credit

machine learning course.

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Our Role in Responding to Disruption Developing more effective and relevant learning

solutions for students and employers. Not just technology, but transforming the model.

Designing programs to give students real-world solutions for the workplace.

Knowledgeable employees = improved human capital for companies. An engaged workforce translates to better

productivity and better bottom lines.

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Evaluation Keyword

nebaker