5 alarming trends facing higher education in the digital age

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www.enterprisebuilder.us 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age And What Can Be Done

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5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

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Page 1: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

www.enterprisebuilder.us

5 Alarming Trends Facing HigherEducation in the Digital Age

And What Can Be Done

Page 2: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

The End Game

Page 3: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Current Facts of Higher Education

in the US

Page 4: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

The US Undergraduate Enrollment in 2010

17,542,000

Source: National Center for Education Statistics

Page 5: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

2,719

The number of degree granting four year colleges in the U.S.

Source: National Center for Education Statistics

Page 6: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Percentage Distribution of Enrollment of Full-Time Undergraduates and All Undergraduates in Degree-Granting

Institutions by Sector, Fall 2009

!SOURCE: The College Board, Trends in College Pricing 2011, Figure 18.!

Page 7: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

1/3The number of full time

students paying full tuition

Source: College Board Advocacy & Policy Center

Page 8: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

1. The Job Market For Graduates is Bleak2. Public Confidence in Education is Deteriorating3. Budget Cuts are Straining the System4. Financial Inequality of Students for Access to IT5. Many Parents Inability to Take on Additional Credit

The 5 Most Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education Today

Page 9: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Unemployment then...

Page 10: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Unemployment now

Page 11: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Recent College Graduates

26% Unemployed55% Underemployed

Source: Northeastern University Report Andrew Sum US Bureau of Labor Statistics

Page 12: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

The aging workforce is making it tougher for the recent graduate to

get started.”

Gary Burnison: CEO Korn FerryCNBC interview March 2012

Page 13: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Once a foregone conclusionas world leaders

Page 14: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Can US Higher Education Be Threatened Too

?

Page 15: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

30%

20%

25%

25% The percentage of students who won’t graduate from high school.

Another percentage that will not go to college.

Another percentage who will only go to college if they enroll in remedial courses.

The percentage of students that will go to college prepared for college.

Joan Weiss: Chief of Staff, Secretary of Education

Page 16: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

National Center for Education StatisticsInternational Ranking of 15 year olds

Mathematics Literacy

Science Literacy

Above Average

Average

Below Average

Low Average

Take your time and

review these statistics

Page 17: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

51%The percentage of parents who feel

their high school student is better, or equally, prepared for college compared to how they were.

Source: Gallup Poll- The Public’s Attitude Towards the Public Schools

Only

Page 18: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Q: Compared to the rest of the world, how would you rate the higher education system

in the United States?(asked of college presidents)

Only 1 in 5 college presidents think the

US system is the best in the world...

Pew Research Center Survey: “Is College Worth It”

Page 19: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Q: Thinking ahead 10 years from now, do you think the higher education in the

United States will be...?

Less than 1 in 10 college presidents think US higher education will be the best

system in the world 10 years from now.

Pew Research Center Survey: “Is College Worth It”

Page 20: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Pew Research Center Survey : “Is College Worth It”

Question to General Public

Q: How would you rate the job of higher education in this country in

terms of providing value?

Page 21: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age
Page 22: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Notes: Figures include state tax appropriations, other state money and federal stimulus money. N. Dakota, OR, WA, & WYenact state appropriations every two years. Figures for NY include only state support for the City University of NY State

University of NY and student aid. These figures do not include appropriations for capital outlays and debt service, nor do they include appropriations from local governments. The data were collected from September to mid-January 2012 and may be subject to change. Percentages shown are rounded to one decimal. Different budgeting practices among the states make it

impossible to ensure that all figures are perfectly comparable.

Sources: “Grapevine” survey of the Center for the Study of Education Policyat Illinois State U. and State Higher Education Executive Offices

National Budget Cuts between Fiscal ’11 & ’12(does not count prior years’ reductions)

Page 23: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

26

Is College Worth It?

www.pewsocialtrends.org

College Expenses Average stated tuition and fees have roughly tripled since 1980-81, even after accounting for inflation. In 2010-11, the typical in-state full-time undergraduate was charged $7,605 in tuition and fees at public four-year colleges and universities (before grant aid), an increase from $2,119 in 1980-81 (all figures adjusted to 2010 dollars). Other colleges and universities have increased tuition and fees by similar orders of magnitude. Average tuition and fees at private colleges and universities increased from $9,535 in 1980-81 to $27,293 in 2010-11.

Tuition and Fees Have Increased Since 1980-81

(all figures in 2010 $)

Source:  Data  underlying  College  Board’s  Trends in College Pricing 2010 Figure 5

Notes: The amounts shown are the list or published tuition and fees, not what students actually pay. Most undergraduates receive grant aid. The  amounts  shown  are  the  “sticker  price”  and  do  not  account for grant aid. The College Board estimates them by weighting published tuition and fees by full-time undergraduate enrollment. They are deflated using the CPI.

PEW RESEARCH CENTER

$0

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

$25,000

$30,000

80-81 84-85 88-89 92-93 96-97 00-01 04-05 08-09

4-year public

4-year private

2-year public

10-11

Page 24: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Average Public Four-Year In-State Published Tuition and Fees by State, 2011-12

!SOURCE: Trends in College Pricing website (http://trends.collegeboard.org)!

Page 25: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

13%The percentage of college students

who do not own a computer.

Source: Onlinecolleges.net survey

Page 26: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Will those 13% be left behind?

Page 27: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

US Consumer Debt: $2.5 Trillion Many Parents are

financially strapped

US Federal Reservestatistic G. 19

Page 28: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

4 in 5 bankruptcy attorneys polled reported a jump in the number of student loan debtors, including parents.

Source: National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys

“You’re seeing it now and you really never saw it before. Five or ten years ago it was more or less unheard of.”

Jonathan Frutkin, Bankruptcy Attorney speaking in regards to parents on the verge of bankruptcy with debts including college loans

Page 29: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Question: Is college affordable formost people?

Page 30: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age
Page 31: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

What do students say?

Page 32: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

43% of students agree their

school needs more technology

Only 22% of students agree their school

uses technology effectively

Page 33: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age
Page 34: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Put the most current technology in the hands of your students.

Page 35: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Restructuring the curriculum to incorporate technology is no

longer a trend but a requirement”“

Source: “A Study of Perceptions of College Professors”Ouzts & Palombo

Page 36: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

New styles of teaching are getting attention

Over 135,000,000 lessons delivered

Page 37: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age
Page 38: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age
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Part of their solution to the dilemmas many cash-

strapped colleges are facing today: embrace online

learning and technology in the classroom.

Clayton Christensen : Harvard Business School

Page 40: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Higher Education needs to produce top job candidates,

critical thinkers.

Page 41: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Kevin Kelly: Co-founder of Wired Magazine

“Every career is going to be a career in technology, it’s

inescapable. Life long learning is going to be fundamental to survival. Technology allows

everyone to have a chance ”

Page 42: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

IT CAN BE DONE

but only if it’s the priority!!!

Page 43: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

Call Us Today to find out how!!!

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Page 44: 5 Alarming Trends Facing Higher Education in the Digital Age

John Turnacliff President

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145 Corte Madera Town Center, Suite 120, Corte Madera, CA 94925 Direct: 415-932-8354 | Cell: 415-505-4277 | Fax : 415-380-8471

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