Flipping the Script: Opportunities, Challenges, and Threats of a Digital Revolution in Higher Education

Abstract

In a world that is experiencing sharp digital transformations guided by digital technologies, the potential of technology to drive transformation and evolution in the higher is apparent. Higher education is facing a paradigm shift that exposes susceptibilities and threats to fully online programs in the face of post-COVID-19 trends of commodification. This historical moment is likely to be remembered as a critical turning point from analog to digital degree-focused learning modalities, where the default became the pivot point of competition between higher education institutions. Fall 2020 marks a significant inflection point in higher education as students, educators, and government leaders scrutinize higher education’s price and value propositions through the new lens of traditional lecture halls versus multiple digitized delivery modes. Online education has since tiled the way for a pedagogical shift in how teachers teach and students learn. The incremental growth of online education in the west can now be attributed to the increasing patronage among students, faculty, and institution administrators. More often than not, college instructors assume paraclete roles in this learning mode, while students become active collaborators and no longer passive learners. This paper offers valuable discernment into the threats, challenges, and opportunities of a massive digital revolution in servicing degree programs.

Presenters

James P. Takona
Professor of Research and Statistics, College of Arts and Sciences, and Education, Coppin State University, Maryland, United States

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Histories of Technology

KEYWORDS

Collaborative work, Digital learning, Digital technologies, Digitized technologies, Distant Education

Digital Media

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