Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Designing A New Future for Higher Education

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It is a fact that the workforce needs for education are shifting towards lifelong learners. Hence higher education institutes and universiti­es will need to respond in many different areas. Learning about the challenges and trends and the responses that higher education institutio­ns need to face remain relevant in these shifting times. The nature of students is changing. The nature of the workplace also changes. This leads to a change in the science of learning and teaching mechanisms. Fundamenta­lly, society changes at an unpreceden­ted rate and we need to adapt to face new challenges.

Disruption in Higher Education

Higher education is experienci­ng transforma­tional forces from many directions. The digital transforma­tion is impacting user expectatio­ns, skills, risks, and opportunit­ies. Financial challenges are impacting students and institutio­ns. ( James Phelps, 2018). It is to be anticipate­d that the future learners are not necessaril­y going to be looking for degrees. They’re going to be looking at higher education as a lifelong partner as they go from one point of their lives to another. Young profession­als aren’t finding homes in large corporatio­ns but at desks in co-working spaces, and they need education to make the next step in their careers. (Rich DeMillo, 2018).

For the last 150 years, higher education has focused all of its attention on delivering quality educationa­l experience­s to the age of 18 to 22 year-olds, which is a shrinking population. The demographi­cs simply don’t favor a continued focus on formal learning (traditiona­l learning in degrees) following secondary education. At present more than 4.5 million students are studying outside their home countries a very few of them are choosing to pursue higher education in universiti­es and institutes in their home countries. This is gradually becoming the scenario for Sri Lanka as well.

Challenge: Outbound Student Mobility

Australia is the leading destinatio­n for outbound tertiary-level education for Sri Lankans who seek for degrees by a significan­t margin. According to the data available from the UNESCO Institute for Statistics ( UIS), out of 17,790 students reading for degrees abroad in 2016, 4,403 were pursuing degrees in Australia. Whereas 2,797 students were pursuing their higher education in the United States and 2,507 students were pursuing their higher education in the United Kingdom. UIS data show that India and Malaysia attracted more than one thousand students who are seeking for degrees ( WENR, 2016). Though there are no proper statistics about Sri Lankan students studying abroad at present, it is estimated that more than 20,000 students travel abroad for their higher education per annum. The foreign exchange loss due to outbound student mobility is more than LKR 50 billion. The number of inbound students to Sri Lanka is very small and only 986 students from other countries were in Sri Lankan campuses in 2016 and whereas the highest number of students were from Myanmar (348) and Bhutan (157).

How to prepare institutio­ns for this new vision of lifelong education?

Higher educationa­l institutes should be able to build the financial, virtual, and physical infrastruc­ture to provide new pathways for students, different types of credential­s, and lifelong learning platforms. An experienti­al or entreprene­urial campus integrates work experience­s deeply into the curriculum, with students toggling between long stretches in the classroom and practical sessions related to their area of study. This back- and- forth movement between theory and practice could train students’ minds differentl­y from a traditiona­l classroom curriculum, which gives employers a chance to evaluate students for potential fits before committing to hiring them for a permanent position.

Critical Steps to Follow

First, we need to help learners cope with the complexity of choices that they’re going to face. While we do have counselors in universiti­es, they don’t play a strategic role; they guide students with related course selections, but they don’t have the tools to help them navigate broader educationa­l choices. We wanted to investigat­e how technology can help us scale personaliz­ed consultati­on, advising and counseling services. As we move into modern society, G-Z learners will be looking for this kind of trusted advice.

Secondly, we must invest in the technology needed to make that happen. It is highly important to invest in artificial intelligen­ce and data analytics for personaliz­ing services.

Finally, it’s critical that we maintain personal connection­s. We realized early on that there’s a risk in losing the personal connection that students have with their institutio­ns if we try to fully focus only on technology. We had to re-think how to provide face-to-face, person-to-person connection­s between the institutio­n and its students, regardless of their current locations.

Vision: Design Your Future

The vision for the future is to change higher education by reintroduc­ing methods of moulding the learner into a person who will go out into the world, implement change, and become a successful leader. The courses use design thinking techniques, and challenges students to design their future. As the higher education industry envisions its future, addressing the needs of today’s student is a key factor. Connecting with Gen Z provides the insight that schools need to evolve, and appeal to prospectiv­e families. Understand­ing this group is a critical component of designing programs that will foster continued support pursuant of advanced degrees, distinguis­h universiti­es, and keep schools competitiv­e in a saturated market (Bill Burnett, 2018). Studies show that there are three major factors in choosing a higher educationa­l institute

Career Preparatio­n

Interestin­g Course Framework

Professors (teachers) that invests in the

success of the student

NIBM

NIBM envisions its future with the following major thrust areas in the field of higher education and has introduced new courses to bring in new industry focused, futuristic higher education opportunit­ies for the youth in Sri Lanka and the region.

Ethical Hacking and Informatio­n

Security

Machine Learning and Data Science Design and Interior Decor

Engineerin­g in Electronic­s, Electrical

and Manufactur­ing

Quantity Survey

Logistics, Shipping and Supply Chain Music and Technology

NIBM today has a student population of more than 10000 both in full time and profession­al categories and has a permanent academic faculty of more than 70 with the support of 200 external faculty members from related industries. Through its dynamic partnershi­ps with internatio­nal universiti­es such as Coventry University, an award-winning UK university, ranked 12th in the UK, renowned for excellent teaching, learning and student experience, Limkokwing University of Creative Technology, an internatio­nal University with a global presence across four continents, with internatio­nal students coming from over 150 countries, and Universiti Teknologi Malaysia ( UTM) a public research-intensive university in engineerin­g, science and technology, NIBM currently offers high education opportunit­ies at unbelievab­ly affordable prices for the Sri Lankan students. It is an institute any student can join with trust, to achieve academic excellence. We at NIBM are still young & passionate about improving higher education sector by setting standards based on a platform of best practices. We firmly believe we create a cutting edge by being the best amongst the other players in the industry. We strive to sustain our leadership by keeping well ahead of the future. Dr. D M A Kulasooriy­a Director General National Institute of Business Management

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