Slides from my presentation at the 2014 Mazatlan Forum:
“Technology and the Future(s) of Education: U.S. and Mexican Perspectives.” I believe we need a mosaic of education: A situation where our best material is available when the student and their organization needs it.
Lead by Letting Go: Creating a Mosaic of Education
1. Lead By Letting Go
Create a Mosaic of Education
Prof. Terri L. Griffith
Chair, Management Department
Leavey School of Business
Santa Clara University
17. Less “White Space”
More Opportunity for Focused Electives
Greater Service to
Student and Organizational Needs
18. Mosaics of
The Best Course Modules
Taught By The Best on the Topic
Open to the World
In Forms that Fit Real World
Learning Moments & Job Needs
19. Loosen Our Grip On:
Traditional Degrees – Lifelong Learning
Our Students – Efficiencies
Our Campus Walls – Reach
Our Faculty – Best Faculty/Topic
Our Assessments – Value
20. Additional Framing Question
If we innovate away from
traditional degrees,
how do we co-create value with
hiring organizations?
Notas do Editor
Introduction: Thank you. Chair of the Management Department as we struggle with the idea of a management major. Wrote a book (The Plugged-In Management) looking at how to combine human, technical, and organizational aspects performance. I have the opportunity to meet with industry leaders and other educators to talk about the future of work and the role that education can play. Some of what I’ll be talking about comes from a conference earlier this week at IBM Almaden Research Center.
I took this opening question
And thought about it in the context of my current research and book project and in light of what I’m seeing in industry. It’s not that we’re letting go, it’s more that we may use a lighter touch – as is true in many different fields. Pros rarely take a “death grip” – instead, they lightly control. And the data supports this – especially as we integrate technologies into how we do our work.
Loosening your grip on...boundaries around limited traditional degrees, and instead build systems that focus on lifelong learning moments....walls will let us engage with the world rather than a bounded geographical area...ideas around "our" faculty will let us engage our students with the best faculty for the topic, and let our faculty present their best topics to more students...traditional degrees enables us to take a mosaic view of education, rather than a lumpy view (I wish I could remember who said that we should treat education the way we treat fitness -- no one would ever think it was a good idea to spend two/four years getting fit, and then think they were finished). Where we often talk about “educating the whole person,” I’d like to adjust that to be “educating the whole person their whole life.”
It’s as if we thought students “flatlined” after their “terminal” degree.
I think the students have figured this out. This looser model fits what we can see from thisGoogle Trend chart looking at searches for the terms MBA and Coursera (leading on-line education platform founded by two Stanford University Faculty – This week Coursera hired the past president of Yale University as it’s new CEO.
I believe we need a mosaic of education: A situation where our best material is available when the student and their organizations need it. Not in lumpy degrees, not restricted to the students in our locale, not just inside our walls, and not separately from our organizational partners.
Less white space, and more matching of needs to timing of the topic.
Loosen your grip on… traditional degrees, and instead build systems that focus on lifelong learning moments.…students to create efficiencies around courses and faculty…walls to engage with the world rather than a bounded geographical area......ideas around "our" faculty to build courses with the best faculty for the topic, and let our faculty present their best topics to more students..assessments to co-create real world valueWhere we often talk about “educating the whole person,” I’d like to adjust that to be “educating the whole person their whole life.”
I don’t know the answer, but I do know it will be a combination of human, technical, and organizational dimensions… and it will come from events like the one we are having here.