21st century transcripts
Academic librarians find it frustrating that much of what they teach students never finds its way onto the official record of learning, the transcript. There’s growing recognition that the transcript format in use for generations is inadequate to reflect the full range of experience students gain in college. That should be promising news for academic librarians. My institution is looking at a new type of transcript that is more a curated record of student learning experiences than simply a flat, mostly meaningless (to employers at least) list of course taken and grades received. If the technology allowed for students to more easily gain official academic recognition for participation in library education classes, that could lead to earned credentials for digital literacy skill building, personal consultations with librarians, or time spent in Wikipedia edit-a-thons. Imagine how that would increase student engagement in library learning experiences. These new types of transcripts could also capture student worker activity, another type of out-of-the-classroom learning experience. When it comes to transcripts, higher education needs to rethink their purpose and allow them to evolve into documents with more meaning.Move to microcredentials
College affordability is a significant barrier to access. Academic librarians know the havoc that student loan debt plays with our students’ futures. MOOCs could help some students to earn credentials, but these rarely work well for less experienced learners. Short-form programs that lead to certifications or other employer-sought skill sets could give these students a better, affordable path to a college degree. Imagine colleges re-engineering degrees around sets of microcredentials, at far lower tuition, that allow students to more quickly gain career-oriented skills. To earn their bachelors or masters, students would continue to earn microcredentials or enroll in full-tuition courses. If an elite institution such as MIT can launch a MicroMasters program, is it possible that some LIS graduate programs could do something similar to create more affordable entry to the library profession? We can hardly expect to diversify librarianship if the cost is out of reach for underrepresented minorities.Tuition-free higher education
Higher education emerged from a Middle Ages system where those seeking knowledge would pay learned individuals to teach them the skills required for new types of jobs, such as accounting for a growing world of trade merchants. Students have paid some form of tuition for nearly as long as higher education has existed. Is that about to change? From Tennessee’s Promise to New York’s Excelsior program (currently providing free college for 22,000 students with some strings attached), states are exploring no-cost college. These are programs to watch, but doubts that free college will become widely available anytime soon, especially with an administration that champions the rights of for-profit colleges, are understandable. That said, expect more states to give it a try. Making something free tends to reduce its value. Adding some requirements or dropout penalties seems reasonable to ensure student commitment to graduation. How states will pay for it and what impact it would have on our libraries are just two among many unanswered questions.Analytics on the rise
Colleges and universities have long collected data about students and used it for feedback on their academic performance, as well as institutional decision making. What’s changing is the application of big data technology that allows institutions to mine student information for diagnostic and predictive indicators to support just-in-time intervention for personalized learning. While analytics are controversial, this trend will eventually find its way into most institutions. Given the pressures to retain and graduate students in a timely fashion, colleges and universities are eager to adopt tools to help students succeed. For better or worse, analytics are proving useful. My own institution has a full steam ahead take on learning analytics, and it’s not a question of if but when there will be expectations for the library to engage with analytics as well. Academic librarians demonstrate more concerns about student data privacy and confidentiality then other academic support colleagues, but some academic librarians are already collecting and analyzing student data, and I believe we will find ways that allow us to contribute to and benefit from analytics without compromising our commitment to the privacy and confidentiality requirements of our professional code of ethics.Librarian as campus leader
It’s likely I’m the lone higher education pundit who sees this trend: Librarians emerging as campus leaders for multiple movements that will change higher education. Advocating for openness is slowly but surely gaining the attention of faculty and they are propelling the movement’s momentum. Librarians are leading the way towards openness in higher education with their advocacy for open education and open data sharing. We have a knack for observing service and educational gaps, and then figuring out ways to work with faculty, students, and other academic support colleagues to close them. Librarians lead by leveraging collaboration to get things done. At my own institution, I’m exploring a partnership with a new program that seeks to provide underprivileged middle and high school students with a pathway to college. The library could lead to help these students find employment and career possibilities. Do faculty and other staff see us as campus leaders? It may be a trend they have yet to notice, but we can change that.Pay attention to trends
Choosing just five trends is hard given the considerable change in higher education. The open pedagogy and social justice movements, institutional mergers, demographic change, accessibility, declining international student enrollment, new competitors, and the growth of online learning are all trends worthy of academic librarians’ attention. What matters is that we make time in our professional lives for exploration of emerging developments in the world of higher education. Some require our immediate attention while others can be put off until tomorrow. Knowing the difference requires a steady observation of change in the higher education landscape. Academic librarians can certainly satisfice with occasional environmental outlooks from our associations, think tanks, and analysts that alert them to trends, but why wait when there’s greater reward in personal pattern recognition? What higher education trend has most captured your attention? What am I overlooking or getting plain wrong in my own observations? I look forward to hearing more about the higher education trends you are following and why academic librarians need to watch them.We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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Pamela Benjamin
I would like to note that Steven may not be the "lone higher education pundit" recognizing librarians as campus leaders. Here in Montana, the Board of Regents is starting to make note of the statewide academic library consortium, TRAILS (http://trailsmt.org), as a source of guidance for general collaboration between our universities and colleges. The MUS (MT University System) was created/mandated in the 1990's but never truly realized, e.g. separate provosts, budgets, course systems, etc. As such, the schools have largly operated independently. The BoR is now seeking efficiencies for higher education in MT through centralization. Since librarians do this well, we may be able to help direct our parent institutions in how to not only "play nicely," but how to actually work together. (I'm sorely tempted to say we have an affinity for this type of thing because of our feminine professional heritage, but I prefer not to be torched.)Posted : Dec 27, 2017 09:18