Education technology: what does 2018 have in store?

Martin Hamilton on four edtech trends to look out for over the next 12 months

十二月 30, 2017
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Blockchain with everything 

Like Ubik, the entropy-reversing spray from Philip K. Dick’s cult novel of the same name, blockchain is everywhere right now. The technology that underpins the bitcoin cryptocurrency and lots of other zeitgeisty developments, blockchain crops up as a miracle solution so often that you could be forgiven for thinking that it was the solution to all the world’s problems. Unsurprisingly, the higher education sector has some intriguing ideas for how the technology could be used. 

A start-up company called Doctors Link has created a blockchain-based “digital passport” for doctors, which gathers together a verifiable record of professional accreditation and training, while the University of Northampton-supported Blockchain Alliance for Good has developed a cryptocurrency that records social value (you could be receiving “eduCoin” for volunteering in the community, or for releasing your research data under a Creative Commons licence for reuse). 

Another more controversial use of blockchain could be in reducing the friction of border checks and customs processes when the UK leaves the EU. And with today’s economy predicated on a highly mobile professional workforce, the UK can use all the help we can get. But there’s another side to Brexit that we need to be planning for: what happens if international students simply can’t get to the UK to study at their universities and colleges of choice? 

Learning analytics for a better Brexit? 

So how can we help international students who are no longer able to obtain visas? One way would be for institutions to step up their use of techniques like blended learning and augmented reality – and if we don’t do it, someone else will. 

The online education startup Udacity is promoting its “nanodegree” in self-driving car engineering. This is a wholly online course complemented by mentoring from engineers already working in this sector. What’s really telling about this nanodegree is that no universities are involved – Udacity has completely bypassed the sector and gone directly to the firms that desperately need people with these new skills. Universities should be wary of being sidestepped by such programmes. 

Learning analytics could really help universities to stay ahead of the game; it’s all about repurposing data that come out of our interactions with IT systems. This information is typically overlooked, but potentially has great value. Simple things like taking a library book out on loan or clicking on a link in the virtual learning environment can tell us a lot about how engaged a student is with their course. Putting these data together lets us use artificial intelligence to predict which interventions might help a student to achieve their full potential. 

At Jisc we’ve worked with software vendors and about 100 universities and colleges to create a national “learning analytics service”, along with common standards that we hope will be transferable internationally. 

Going underground: academia takes to the ‘Dark Web’? 

Issues around freedom of movement are one problem higher education must contend with in 2018, but on both sides of the Atlantic there’s also a distrust of experts and, yes, intellectuals (stoked by far Right media outlets). There is something insidious going on here – deliberate damage is being done to the scientific record and the practice of science. 

Perhaps the most notable example of this vandalism is in the field of climate change, with the wilful destruction of online climate data from some US federally funded programmes. It has been heartening to see the climate science community come together to preserve as much data as possible through collaborations like Data Refuge and Climate Mirror. It’s not hard to see the crunchier end of academia being forced, in some countries, to resort to the tools of the Dark Web in order to continue functioning. 

Let’s do everything we can to ensure that the UK doesn’t become one of them. 

We are all librarians

Another defining UK trend of recent years has been the forced closure of community centres and libraries as councils frantically struggle to reduce their expenditure. In many cases these facilities have reopened on a volunteer basis, but is there a role here for institutions in supporting their local community – for example, by letting staff participate in community-owned social enterprises like Libraries Unlimited, which now runs Devon’s public libraries? 

If we think about the future social purpose of our universities and colleges, there is a much deeper role here for our institutions – playing an active part in community and in the upskilling of children and adults alike.

The Code Club project from the Raspberry Pi Foundation has shown us the power of this kind of idea – there are now more than 6,000 Code Clubs in the UK alone, teaching coding to over 86,000 children. Our institutions could step up to play a more formal role, say by turning abandoned libraries into maker spaces, and reaching out to adults who desperately need up-to-date digital skills in order to find work. 

Whether it’s being led by start-ups or social projects, edtech is taking its place centre stage within the higher education sector, and 2018 will no doubt see more developments afoot. Let’s make sure we’re ready to embrace the possibilities for positive change in our institutions and beyond.

Martin Hamilton is a futurist at Jisc.

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Reader's comments (1)

While I appreciate the sentiment, we are not "all librarians". Librarians are educated to post-graduate, often masters level, and have professional qualifications awarded by CILIP, the chartered institute of library and information professionals. Volunteering in a library does not make you a librarian, in the same way that working in a university does not make you a professor.