CUNY First Computer System to Aid Administrative Control over Colleges at the Expense of Efficiency and Effectiveness
Guest Post Every once in a while I get a question, either privately or in a department meeting, regarding CUNYFirst. Here is what I know of CUNYFirst, based on a few years of working with the project as a "training liaison" (which is a fancy term for room-scheduler). (1) The idea of CUNYFirst is a good one: to have a unified, integrated "enterprise"-scale system that encompasses all university/campus business processes. Such a system could, in principle at least, have saved a lot of expenditure on maintaining dozens of disparate, redundant, barely cooperating third-party systems. Such a system could have offered information access that would have benefited the administration, the staff, the faculty, and students. (2) CUNY Central's motives in pursuing CUNYFirst were dominated by an agenda that has nothing to do with such benefits however. Rather, CUNY Central sought absolute control over all college activity, including curriculum. Think of it: whoev
The above post raises a number of important and long-known issues about online education. It is, however, very one-sided and so deserves a response, even a seat-of-the-pants one, in opposition and caution.
ReplyDeleteFor one thing, the initial impetus for MOOCs was driven by the excitement that some faculty feel about the possibility of leveraging technology to project what they have to offer to a much larger pool of students.
MOOCs are a combination of the old hat (correspondence courses?) and very new approaches to teaching.
They really do offer the possibility of providing some elements of higher ed to a much greater number of people.
MOOCs and their variations, may very well change everything about colleges: teaching, concepts of "credit", "courses". They may redefine what a professor is. So what? Are we so damn arrogant that we can't conceive of a world education modality without professors-as-we-know-it that is as good or possibly better than the one we have?
Or MOOCs may end up changing nothing. As Chou En-lai didn't actually say about the French Revolution: it's too early to tell.
"Declaring war on online education"? How sad and how embarrassing. Blacksmiths against Internal Combustion unite! Let's storm the electrical closets!
As far as "profit motives" are concerned. Holy smokes folks. CUNY and Higher Education is and has always been a profit oriented institution. But profits for someone else. The fat cats at the top make 1% level salaries. The large endowments of private institutions permit the boards of ruling class trustees to augment the control of corporations that their own personal portfolios permit. A vast amount of research is done and then made public for free use by the corporate profit-making world. And then there is the HUGE training operation we provide free of charge for the corporate world. Yes, I'm talking to you Art History, Classics, and Philosophy. Sure the future floor managers of Sears will do their simplistic Biz majors but the people hired by Goldman, Morgan, etc. get their exposition, analytic and class skills refined by the liberal arts departments of the academy. If some MOOCs are organized around a profit motive, well then hooray for the transparency.
I'm not saying that as academic unionists we should ignore issues like MOOCs. We need to control the process of higher ed evolution. So far we've all been abject failures at that. To be successful, we will have to do better than breathlessly pant in horror at the interests that capitalists and their stooges may have in MOOCS. Capitalist have potential interests in everything; so do educators.
-- David A.
PS: A Disclaimer is in order. Besides being a professor and a faculty union supporter, I'm a founder and principal of Turing's Craft, a small, (finally) profitable company specializing in online education. This academic year, over 40,000 students around the world will benefit (yes, benefit) from our offering of interactive online programming exercises. And I have to say, that as an educator, having built a system that helps that many students a year by far exceeds any other academic accomplishment (teaching or research) that I've achieved in 32 years at BC. http://www.turingscraft.com/
Here is another critique of MOOCs that is different in a number of ways. The discussion there is as interesting as the article. http://blogs.hbr.org/2013/10/let-them-eat-moocs/
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