IMS Global: So when
you talk about the accelerating needs of students, what you're talking
about is that diverse range of needs?
NA: Yes. Look how
everything is changing in the workplace and in our society. And it is
partly brought on by the technology revolution. There is so much
students need to learn today, and I don't mean just memorizing facts
and data, but knowing where to go to get information, and then being
able to determine whether it is any good in the first place.
Information literacy is one of the crucial skills students must have
today, especially with the emergence of Web 2.0. This skill ought to be
required in every curriculum, taught early, before students get to
higher education. At the university level, it must be required as an
early course when students come in.
IMS Global: You
mentioned a moment ago the Spellings Commission report. As a result of
that report, there has been a lot of conversation in higher education
circles about affordability, accountability, and accessibility. What is
your perception of some of the things discussed in that report and what
issues do you believe will continue beyond the current administration?
NA: I know there
has been a lot of criticism about the report, especially related to the
process in which the report took shape. I think there is some truth to
those concerns. But I do think that however faulted the process, the
Commission got the report right with the emphasis on accessibility, affordability, accountability, and
quality.
Those key words are going to be around for a long time. There has to be
greater access to higher education than in previous generations. The
rising tide of expectations demands it, and if educational institutions
and governments don't provide access, humanity as we know it will be
headed toward catastrophe. The widening gap between those who fulfill
their needs and those who are stuck at unimaginable levels of poverty
and despair is not a prescription for a planet that will survive.
Affordability
is a related issue I mentioned earlier. Compare industries around the
country; and guess which one comes out with one of the highest rates of
cost increases. We constantly hear about the rising cost of health care
and health insurance, but higher education is way above them all. And
that's unacceptable. Both political parties are recognizing it is
unacceptable. And if higher education doesn't find a way to fix it,
then government will eventually impose corrective measures that
institutions will not want.
Accountability
is another example where our industry has come up lacking. As an
industry, higher education has paid little attention to the results end
of the equation. We're an industry that loves inputs and processes, but
we have an entrenched culture that avoids looking at outcomes, at least
where student learning comes in. It's a culture that has run away from
accountability. We think that if we can hire the right faculty with the
right credentials, put enough computers in the lab, enough books in the
library, have great athletic teams, and require students to spend "X"
hours in classroom seats, then learning will occur. Well, maybe it does
and maybe it doesn't. How do we know other than faculty grades, and we
all know about the problem of grade inflation. Until recently, little
attention was given to learning outcomes assessment; evaluation was
left in the hands of individual faculty where everyone does it
differently.
Quality
is another crucial, but no less complicated issue. A long-held myth in
higher education that if we were to have quality, we had to restrict
access and that quality equated to high cost, and higher tuition. I
believe technology has given us the means to change that equation. High
quality education can be available to everyone on a mass basis, and at
a cost that is affordable.
Of course
that statement raises the question of how do we define quality? And
what is the bottom line in quality? And how much more can everyone
afford? I like to compare education to the automobile industry, much to
the horror of some of my colleagues. Not everyone gets to buy a
Mercedes or a Jag, and if that were the only defined level of quality
in automobiles, perhaps more of us would be taking pubic
transportation. But the auto industry has been able to build good
quality transportation for large numbers of people and to mass
customize it to people's needs. I think the same approach holds true
for higher education. One size does not fit all. Not everybody will get
to Harvard or Princeton, but everyone should be able to get a good
solid education at whatever point in their life cycle they need it, and
customized to meet their own individual needs.