We feel it too—the future shape of higher ed is uncertain.
It’s full of ambiguity, changing constraints, and new student challenges. Yet we can all agree that education is a cornerstone of a thriving society. We’re collectively inspired by a huge opportunity: if we address contemporary needs and design new approaches, higher education can be truly transformational.
There are two parts of the Stanford 2025 project; our own exploration of possible futures at Stanford, and an exploration of the ways institutions have already begun to chart new paths through this evolving environment. We’re excited to share what we’ve learned from featured innovators whose work is illuminating new pathways and possibilities for the sector, and most importantly, for students.
Part 1: What possible futures can we imagine for the college experience?
The original Stanford 2025 project responded to a specific moment of disruption: the growing popularity of MOOCs and online learning, and the rising cost of higher ed. We saw then that a number of forces were beginning to destabilize traditional models. It is in such moments that change often happens—even within an entrenched system.
Back in May 2014, many aspects of the undergraduate experience appeared ripe for reinvention. We brought our community along on a thought experiment or “journey” to the year 2100. We imagined a range of different futures, including the rise of the Open Loop University, which entails lifetime learning rather than a four year experience, and Purpose Learning, in which students declare missions not majors, among other ideas.
We received an enthusiastic response from institutions around the world that began looking for ways to implement some of the themes that were highlighted in our four original provocations.
For the original Stanford 2025 project, visit www.stanford2025.com.
Part 2: What's already reshaping education?
A few years after the Stanford 2025 project concluded — but still pre-pandemic — we saw other institutions exploring the boundaries of the student experience.
Colleges and universities were experimenting with blended online and in-person classes, finding new ways to reduce costs for students and funding the enterprise. More schools were expanding the definition of a ‘student’ to include adult, first-gen, part-time learners, and more. New disruptors had emerged: third-party education providers, funders, education technology companies, and start-up colleges and universities, all now part of the sector.
Bold visionaries continue to shed the constraints of what higher education has traditionally looked like; they are creating radical new models increasing access for a more diverse set of students, enabling them to better bridge the academic institution and the world they enter after graduating. Their belief in designing a better student learning experience—and in the true value of a college education— becomes their animating force for change.
We collected some of these stories in 12 case studies that span work happening at the individual level at the fringes of an institution, to systemic changes driven by people at the dean or administrative level, and reach all the way to the extra-institutional, where the pace of change happens more quickly. We hope they will inspire and stimulate the thinking of leaders and dreamers who are itching to make a change at their own institutions.
In addition to representing a range of institutions, we focused on examples where we found vivid footprints left by the innovators as they journeyed: the early steps they took, the hurdles they faced, and the insider tips they want to impart to others. This backstory, the how, not just what, might be the less visible but more impactful actions of our innovator guides.
We think the leaders profiled in this guide are making important contributions to how we all can think differently about the future of higher education. Their persistence, bias toward action, and just plain gutsiness, is an inspiration.
We hope this guide will make you feel in good company and want to spring into action. The examples throughout this guide remind us that there are many creative people working across all levels in all kinds of educational institutions to reimagine college in a student-centered way.
Inside the guide
Immerse yourselves in 12 case studies and actionable tips for how to get started on your campus, from long standing institutions to new ground-up institutions:
African Leadership University
Bates College
College Unbound
Duke University
Georgia Tech
Georgetown University
Indian River State College
Make School
Minerva
Maharishi Invincibility Institute
University of Utah
Western Governors University
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