Digital Transformation In Higher Education: Will Universities Survive?

Digital Transformation In Higher Education: Will Universities Survive?
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Summary: Higher education and the nature of universities is changing and will continue to change for the next decade. Twenty years ago, 'digital' was not a major concern for universities. Although the World Wide Web started as an academic endeavor, universities were slow to catchup with a global digital transformation.

Problems And Prospects Deriving From Digital Transformation In Higher Education

'Digital' no longer means a university IT department. It no longer means rooms full of computers and printers, or keeping the WiFi running. Digital now needs to play a role in every department and function. Universities are now competing globally for students, academics, funding and business opportunities.

Physical universities are also competing against online competitors. In theory, traditional academic institutions are competing in some way against everything from Wikipedia and YouTube to Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), Open Educational Resources (OERs), podcasts, videos, blogs, and webinars.

Challenges Facing Universities

Despite the amount of free knowledge and content online, universities do have several advantages.

According to a PwC report [1]: "Students increasingly see universities as the main means of securing their future employment, rather than simply learning and self-development. The value proposition for universities is, therefore, changing, and this means that employability and the student experience are more critical than they have ever been."

A free "diploma" from the University of YouTube and Wikipedia is not going to get anyone very far in the world of work. But universities need to understand new generations embarking on courses. Younger generations grow up as "digital natives", spending up to 53 hours online—usually on a smartphone—every week. Universities need to offer them something more, something they can't get for free online, that challenges them and equips them with the ability to think critically and analyse, which the Internet can not achieve.

One more issue noted in PwC's study is that universities often "invest heavily in IT systems that don't deliver the anticipated benefits and outcomes. These universities fail to appreciate that they don't need a digital strategy – just a business strategy that is fit for the digital age."

For universities to survive in the digital age, they need to adopt the same approach as any large corporation. Drive a digital modernization forward with senior managers supported by academic departments and student representatives. It is a slow and steady project, not a race, with small wins easier to aim for than a massive overhaul in one or two years.

Another challenge, one that is harder to overcome, is the cost of higher education. In the U.S., annual tuition for an out-of-state student at a public college is around $25,000 per year. At private, non-profit four-year institutions, the price is around $33,000 – and that isn't including textbooks and the cost of living.

Can Universities Compete With Cheaper eLearning Providers?

Because students are increasingly looking at university as a way into employment, many are starting to take the view that enormous student loans aren't worth the investment. Instead, opting for cheaper colleges, online courses, and private eLearning providers.

How Can Universities Combat This Challenge?

Take Lecturio, for example; it provides over 200,000 medical students with online videos that contribute to medical qualifications. With professors—acting as independent production partners—from 6 of the world's top 11 medical schools, including Harvard Medical School, Yale School of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles, University of Western Australia, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and University College London, they can claim enormous credibility.

However, for those wanting to complete accredited qualifications, eLearning is often going to fall short in sectors such as medicine, law, and engineering. Not only that, but the experience and friendships gained at university are always going to compete effectively against online equivalents.

What universities need to do is use digital technology to add more value before, during and after the three or four years and undergraduate spends at an institution. Ideas such as a 'digital campus', whereby digital apps augment and support service provisions. Making it easier for tutors and professors to be more effective. Improving the student experience. Making a campus safer for everyone, providing more information to guests and business partners.

Universities are sitting on an enormous amount of unlocked potential. Now is the time, with the right digital strategy, whereby they can unlock this potential and use digital platforms to create more value for students, competing more effectively against online learning options.

References:

[1] The 2018 digital university: Staying relevant in the digital age (https://www.pwc.co.uk/assets/pdf/the-2018-digital-university-staying-relevant-in-the-digital-age.pdf)

Originally published at anadea.info.