From Mandarin Class to Market Player: Understanding the Transformation of Higher Education

Abstract of Keynote Presentation

Unstoppable economic and broad social forces are driving the creation and expansion of new markets in higher education. A short list of these forces includes:

Also included in this list are deferred retirement, longer work-life spans, and productive post-retirement service and careers. The above forces have been accelerated by the weaknesses of the legacy system of higher education to adapt. These weaknesses include:

Other forces are also driving specific change in the way higher education is developed, marketed, delivered, and managed. These are the forces of the new learners and include:

The confluence of these forces has cancelled all conservative bets. The largest and fastest growing university in the nation is a for-profit university that didnāt exist 30 years ago. Adult-centered degree programs, continuing education programs and corporate-focused community college programs are the fastest growing and most in-demand programs in the Nation. Large state institutions and prestigious private institutions have lost market share to lesser known but more aggressive and adaptable education providers. While still evolving, the pattern is now clear enough for any educational institution that wishes to pay attention. The future belongs to the innovative, market-focused programs, and those traditionalist institutions unwilling to adapt will continue to lose market share and, eventually, credibility.