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Why MOOCs won’t kill universities

Why MOOCs won’t kill universities | Cross Border Higher Education | Scoop.it

The MOOC evangelists have predicted that the disruption they will wreak will mean that universities are dead in the water. Christiansen foretells wholesale university bankruptcies within 10 years (since extended to 15 years). Sebastian Thrun goes further, asserting apocalyptically that within half a century there will only be 10 (10!) universities left in the world. (read the full post at http://registrarism.wordpress.com/2013/02/15/why-moocs-wont-kill-universities/ ;)

Vangelis Tsiligiris's insight:

Some excellent obsrvations from Paul Geatrix. 

I strongly agree about the importance of quality. Particularly by going the opposite direction than the MOOC. That is, trying to identify the individual characteristics of students and provide personalised learning. 

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World class? An investigation of globalisation, difference and international student mobility - Findlay - 2011 - Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers - Wiley Online Library

World class? An investigation of globalisation, difference and international student mobility - Findlay - 2011 - Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers - Wiley Online Library | Cross Border Higher Education | Scoop.it

This paper explores the motivations and meanings of international student mobility. Central to the discussion are the results of a large questionnaire survey and associated in-depth interviews with UK students enrolled in universities in six countries from around the world. The results suggest, first, that several different dimensions of social and cultural capital are accrued through study abroad. It is argued that the search for ‘world class’ education has taken on new significance. Second, the paper argues that analysis of student mobility should not be confined to a framework that separates study abroad from the wider life-course aspirations of students. It is argued that these insights go beyond existing theorisations of international student mobility to incorporate recognition of diverse approaches to difference within cultures of mobility, including class reproduction of distinction, broader notions of distinction within the life-plans of individual students, and how ‘reputations’ associated with educational destinations are structured by individuals, institutions and states in a global higher education system that produces differentially mediated geographies of international student mobility.

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