The Academic Futures subcommittees are submitting to campus some of the compelling ideas that have emerged from combined campus input over the fall semester.ÌýThese ideas arose from white papers, town hall meetings, unit-based meetings and themed discussions.Ìý
In the second of a multipart Academic Futures video series, Jon Leslie, associate vice chancellor for marketing and content strategy, is askingÌýfor your feedback on a set of ideas the technology and teaching subcommittee has coalesced around. This is your opportunity to weigh in on these ideas, submitting feedback by June 1.Ìý
- How do we go from ourÌýmany pockets of online and distance educationÌýexcellenceÌýto a more cohesiveÌýmodel thatÌýwill help us scale to meet the rapidly evolvingÌýneeds of students?
- How can ourÌýleadershipÌýhelpÌýto unify ourÌýacademicÌýthinking, our financial modelsÌýand our operational approaches to technology, online and distance learning?
- How do we transform to a continuum of services, technologies and partnerships that willÌýsupportÌýincreasedÌýenrollments,ÌýpositiveÌýacademicÌýoutcomes and a strongerÌýinstitutionalÌýreputation?
- How do weÌýmainstream technology-driven teaching practices to the same level as current presence-based teaching toÌýincentivizeÌýbroader facultyÌýparticipation in theseÌýtransformativeÌýmodalities?