Starting my future of higher education seminar tonight: the syllabus

Tonight I’m starting my future of higher education seminar for Georgetown University’s Learning, Design, and Technology program.  (I’m also teaching a seminar on technology and innovation for LDT. If this sounds interesting to you, considering applying to the program!) Here I’d like to share my syllabus along with some notes on the class.

This class is about helping the students think more creatively, knowledgeably, and strategically on the potential futures of colleges and universities.

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  To that end we explore a series of future-oriented materials, from a Stanford design document to several books imagining new post-secondary institutions. We also take time to explore the present, partly to expand and deepen their understanding of how colleges and universities work (or don’t), and also to teach them how to look for signals of the future in the current moment.

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Speaking of which, the class also introduces students to several major futuring tools.  We experiment with horizon scanning, the Delphi method, trend analysis, and scenario creation.

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In fact, every week I’ll ask students to share what they discovered in their horizon scanning. There’s a week on science fiction, because that’s a powerful way of getting to think about the future.  There’s also a couple of weeks when we play a simulation game I’ve created, because gaming can be another vital tool for apprehending what might come next.

Man, I love this class.

SCHEDULE

August 26

Topic: introductions

Designing the class: technologies, community, practices, pathways

Forecasting methods: introduction

Exercise: introduction thread

September 2

Topic: higher education and the future

  1. Tressie McMillan Cottom, “The Education Gospel” (introduction to Lower Ed: The Troubling Rise of For-Profit Colleges in the New Economy)
  2. “Horizon Report: 2021”  https://library.educause.edu/resources/2021/4/2021-educause-horizon-report-teaching-and-learning-edition 
  3. Gidley, The Future: A Very Short Introduction, chapters 1-4

Forecasting method: Delphi

September 9

Topic: signals on higher ed’s operating horizon

Readings:

  1. Brian C. Mitchell and W. Joseph King, How to Run a College A Practical Guide for Trustees, Faculty, Administrators, and Policymakers, chapters 1-6
  2. Gidley, The Future: A Very Short Introduction, chapters 5-6
  3. horizon scanning: the past week from Inside Higher Ed, the Chronicle of Higher Education, and selected blogs and Twitter feeds

Forecasting method: horizon scanning

September 16

Topic: trends in higher education

Readings:

  1. Alexander, chapters 1-6
  2. Brian C. Mitchell and W. Joseph King, How to Run a College A Practical Guide for Trustees, Faculty, Administrators, and Policymakers, chapters 7-9

Forecasting method: trends analysis

Exercise: trend identification

Horizon scanning

September 23

Topic: race, gender, and profit in higher education

Readings:

  • Tressie McMillan Cottom, the rest of Lower Ed: The Troubling Rise of For-Profit Colleges in the New Economy

Horizon scanning

September 26: mid-term project 1 due

September 30

Topic: the uses of imagination

Readings:

  1. Hernan Ortiz, “The Punishment Room” (https://www.edsurge.com/news/2016-07-07-fiction-the-punishment-room
  2. Padgett, “Mimsy Were The Borogoves.”
  3. Suzette Haden Elgin, “For The Sake Of Grace.”
  4. Saxey, “Not Smart, Not Clever” (https://www.apex-magazine.com/not-smart-not-clever/ 
  5. Stanford 2025 (http://www.stanford2025.com/; scroll down)

Forecasting method: science fiction

Horizon scanning

October 7

topic: technology and education

Readings:

  1. Martin Weller, “25 Years of EdTech “(http://blog.edtechie.net/category/25yearsedtech/
  2. Staley, 120-158

Horizon scanning

October 14

Topic: the science of learning

Reading: Joshua R. Eyler, How Humans Learn: The Science and Stories behind Effective College Teaching (5-64; 113-148; 171-217)

Horizon scanning

October 21

Topic: narrating the future

Readings:

  1. Staley, pp 160-217
  2. Alexander, chapters 7-14

Forecasting method: scenarios

Exercises: constructing scenarios

Horizon scanning

October 28

Topic: AI

Readings:

  1. Charles Fadel, Wayne Holmes, Maya Bialik, Artificial Intelligence In Education: Promises and Implications for Teaching and Learning (read backwards!)
  2. AI-related horizon scanning

October 29: Mid-term project 2 due

November 4

Topic: simulating the future

Readings:

  1. Alexander, “A Web Game for Predicting Some Futures: Exploring the Wisdom of Crowds” https://er.educause.edu/articles/2009/5/a-web-game-for-predicting-some-futures-exploring-the-wisdom-of-crowds 
  2. Game materials: The Future University Matrix game  (download TBA)

Horizon scanning

Role assignments: TBA

November 11

Topic: decolonizing the university

Horizon scanning

Readings: la paperson, A Third University Is Possible

Exercises:

  • one more turn of Future University Matrix game
  • group prototyping of a University Model

November 18

Topic: determined by the class:

Readings: TBD

Horizon scanning

Exercise: group prototyping of a University Model

November 25 – no class; Thanksgiving holiday

December 2

Topic: the next universities

Readings:

Presentations

December 17: FINAL PROJECT DUE

READINGS

Books

  • Bryan Alexander, Academia Next.
  • Tressie McMillan Cottom, Lower Ed: The Troubling Rise of For-Profit Colleges in the New Economy.
  • Joshua R. Eyler, How Humans Learn: The Science and Stories behind Effective College Teaching.
  • Charles Fadel, Wayne Holmes, Maya Bialik, Artificial Intelligence In Education: Promises and Implications for Teaching and Learning.
  • Jennifer Gidley, The Future: A Very Short Introduction.
  • Brian C. Mitchell and W. Joseph King, How to Run a College A Practical Guide for Trustees, Faculty, Administrators, and Policymakers.
  • la paperson, A Third University Is Possible.
  • David Staley, Alternative Universities: Speculative Design for Innovation in Higher Education.

Recommended readings

  • Adrianna Kezar, How Colleges Change.
  • David Edgerton, The Shock of the Old.
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4 Responses to Starting my future of higher education seminar tonight: the syllabus

  1. Dahn Shaulis says:

    Bryan, maybe you could address the higher ed business in terms of of Human Capital Theory and with contemporary etech examples like TuitionFit (Mark Salisbury), College Viability (Gary Stocker), Guild Education, Noodle (John Katzman), EducationDynamics, Purdue University Global and Arizona Global, Navient, and Moody’s.

    I think Gary Roth’s “The Educated Underclass” would be a great reference too.

    https://higheredinquirer.blogspot.com/2021/07/academic-capitalism-and-next-phase-of.html

    https://higheredinquirer.blogspot.com/2021/07/the-growth-of-robot-colleges.html

    https://higheredinquirer.blogspot.com/2021/07/slabs-soylent-green-of-us-higher.html

    https://higheredinquirer.blogspot.com/2021/04/us-higher-education-and.html

    https://higheredinquirer.blogspot.com/2021/04/guild-education.html

    https://higheredinquirer.blogspot.com/2021/03/even-elite-schools-have-subprime-majors.html

  2. I’ll admit that I’m a little surprised not to see Ryan Craig, Kevin Carey, or Bryan Caplan on the reading list for a course about the future of higher education. Not that I agree with them about everything, of course, but they do offer alternative perspectives worth discussing.

  3. Glen McGhee, FHEAP says:

    Good luck with your new course!
    I was wondering why there’s no historical framing going on here. What is the starting point — these books all seem to assume too much and are unable to imagine a future WITHOUT higher education (or even what it was like BEFORE higher education).

    I like Cristina Groeger, The Education Trap: Schools and the Remaking of Inequality in Boston (2021) that covers 1880-1930 because she has historical and theoretical depth.
    How will the controversies about human capital theory versus signaling and stratification theory and other credentialist approaches be handled? I didn’t see that.
    Bryan Caplan is a good source in this regard.
    The danger is that NOT declaring or revealing the theoretical approach(s) used, you end up in a narrow and unsustainable position.

  4. Glen McGhee, FHEAP says:

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