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TEDxVillanovaU - Michele Pistone - The Future of Higher Education

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Published on Apr 12, 2012

This talk discusses the future of higher education, which has been based on the same educational model for more than 100 years. But the status quo is about to be disrupted, by the Internet and those educators -- including new competitors -- who would unleash its potential. Higher education institutions at a whole have not adequately recognized the threat to the status quo, or come close to responding adequately to it. In truth, responding adequately will be very difficult, because higher ed face a classic innovator's dilemma.

Michele Pistone guides law students as they evolve from student to lawyer at the Villanova School of Law. She founded its current clinical program and is the Director of the Clinic for Asylum, Refugee and Emigrant Services (CARES). Through CARES she and her students provide free legal representation to asylum seekers fleeing persecution, torture, unlawful imprisonment and other forms of mistreatment. Her clinic's clients are survivors of human rights abuses directed at them because of their religion, their political opinions, or other beliefs and characteristics that we as a nation have always sought to protect. Among the clients that she has represented are former child soldiers from Sierra Leone and Uganda; political dissidents from Belarus, Cameroon, and Afghanistan; women's rights activists from Nepal and Kenya; children's rights activists from Peru; and religious minorities from Iraq; among countless others.
She is a lifetime learner, always curious about other cultures and ideas, and loves to create anything, from tasty meals, to crafts, to engaging scholarship.

In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

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Top Comments

  • Lowry Pei

    What's significant here is this idea: all the parts of higher ed that are information transfer will migrate online; all the parts that are dialogic, and only those parts, will remain on campus, to be experienced in person. This means a revolutionary change in the pedagogy of all those fields that currently depend on lectures.

    · 5

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  • Frank Heppner

    I guess I'm missing something, but what's new except the big-name branding? We've had "distance education" for 25 years. The technology is better now , but the principle is the same. We learned from "distance education" that 1)The dropout rate is fierce 2)The cost of having production values that maintain attention is ferocious, 3)Not everybody who is a great classroom teacher knows how to use video, 4)A brilliant leader in the field is not necessarily a good teacher. So, where's the revolution?

    · 3

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All Comments (12)

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  • Angela Sanchez

    what is a "library" ??  :)

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  • Paul Jinks

    One difference from traditional (box of books and discs) distance learning is that access is increasingly free. This is access not only to materials - lectures, etc. but also to a kind of community if you want it. Attrition rates are indeed eye-watering, but when you didn't pay for the course anyway, this doesn't have the same meaning. Teachers can use existing materials rather than make their own and focus on interaction, feedback and support. But I agree, this isn't a revolution.

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    in reply to Frank Heppner (Show the comment)
  • Nap Liang

    dull and emotionless voice,low speed, waste talk...

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  • Eric Roth

    More provocative than persuasive.

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  • iganzabissassa

    Maybe a better National Geographic analogy would be if we were to turn the magazine into a twitter only medium. That would be "progress" after all, and with an emphasis on technology. Anyone should be able to see that removing the human aspect, and replacing it with a one way communication in the form of filmed lectures and a digital library pass is NOTHING like adding images to National Geographic (even if you can compensate with e-communication with a teacher). It's more like taking them away.

    · 2

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  • iganzabissassa

    Part of the University experience is social. You make connections, join political action groups, even become radicalized by your friendships and associations. Online universities will automize these and other human aspects of education away Like every Ted lecture I've ever seen, the lecturer seems to exist in a historical vacuum where there is no consideration or awareness of the austerity/attacks on the working class. No wonder the casualization of university staff is simply not an issue here.

    · 2

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  • John Rafferty

    Great National Geographic analogy...

    · 3

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    in playlist TEDxVillanovaU
  • shawtyaustin5

    Great job and fantastic ideas!

    · 2

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