The New Power University by Jonathan Grant — a call for transformation - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 大学教育

The New Power University by Jonathan Grant — a call for transformation

Author examines how universities must adapt to blended and online learning but sidesteps the issue of finance
00:00
{"text":[[{"start":13.82,"text":"It began, literally, with the thesis of John Ralston Saul. "},{"start":17.999000000000002,"text":"When the Canadian philosopher realised the sources in his PhD on Algerian intelligence might be identifiable from the roman-à-clef he penned soon afterwards, he stole his doctorate from the library of King’s College London. "}],[{"start":30.22,"text":"When he returned the manuscript half a century later, he met and inspired Jonathan Grant, who had been recently appointed by the university, and whose own provocative and important new book The New Power University describes his mission. "}],[{"start":43.14,"text":"Saul’s The Collapse of Globalism, published in the build-up to Brexit, argued that the world was experiencing the latest in a cyclical series of “in-between times”, when the existing system is being overturned and the value of knowledge, the role of the expert and the purpose of learning are called into question. "}],[{"start":59.16,"text":"Just as the disruptions of digital access would have rendered Saul’s self-censorship more difficult today, so Grant’s own journey through academia would have been less likely in the past. "},{"start":68.67699999999999,"text":"He came from the different worlds of funding at Wellcome and independent research at Rand Europe; joined King’s to lead a new Policy Institute focused on interdisciplinary research and impact more than publishing in obscure journals to win tenure; and helped shape its “Strategic Vision 2029”. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":84.14999999999999,"text":"Grant is inspired by Henry Timms and Jeremy Heimans’ New Power, which describes a shift from formal, centralised, hierarchical, closed and managerial systems to ones that are participatory, transparent and governed by networks. "}],[{"start":98.00999999999999,"text":"He describes the increasing culture of “marketisation”, “managerialism” and job insecurity in universities, and the distorting role of global rankings, with reputation based on self-referential, insular yardsticks of research read only by other academics. "},{"start":112.52699999999999,"text":"In the process, he argues that higher education has lost touch with its wider social responsibilities. "}],[{"start":119.32999999999998,"text":"He is critical of the structure of university research. "},{"start":122.73399999999998,"text":"He cites analysis showing that more than 85 per cent of the $120bn invested globally each year in biomedical health research is wasted, through insufficient focus on important questions as well as inappropriate, non-replicable or inaccessible outputs. "}],[{"start":137.40999999999997,"text":"He also calls for a transformation in teaching, dismissing claims that Gen Z are “snowflakes” bent on undermining free expression. "},{"start":144.33899999999997,"text":"He says universities should embrace their social activism and respond to rising mental health concerns — which he attributes to a mixture of the accelerating influence of social media and the slowing transition to adulthood. "}],[{"start":156.24999999999997,"text":"To survive, he argues that universities must shift towards blended and online learning in which students teach each other and lecturers become expert facilitators; overturn tenure; redirect research to the most pressing problems such as climate change; and develop deeper engagement and partnership with their communities to enhance social good. "}],[{"start":175.02999999999997,"text":"They must also overhaul their role as gatekeepers of accreditation, adapting to a world with an ever greater need for the provision and recognition of affordable life-long learning taken in bite-sized chunks from different providers. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"

Covid-19 will only accelerate the pressures for disruption to the university model, and force higher education to adapt more rapidly

"}],[{"start":187.29999999999998,"text":"The most important limitations of Grant’s book are those he himself concedes at the start, and yet which are closely intertwined and existential to the themes he addresses. "},{"start":195.79199999999997,"text":"First, his analysis is primarily based on the “anglosphere” universities of the UK, North America and Australia, which have much in common including a strong research reputation and the successful “export” of their model by attracting foreign students to their campuses. "}],[{"start":211.27999999999997,"text":"Yet that requires comparison with other models, including the continental European state-funded university systems, which also generate important academic breakthroughs, charge lower fees and are more rooted in the local communities from which most of their student intakes are drawn. "}],[{"start":226.28999999999996,"text":"Second, he sidesteps the issue of financing, pleading the complexities of comparing different jurisdictions and the need to focus on defining the purpose and values of universities before worrying about the funding models that will follow. "}],[{"start":238.98999999999995,"text":"He is less strong in defining societal impact, identifying the best mix of priorities and how to achieve them. "},{"start":245.21899999999997,"text":"King’s College has certainly demonstrated impressive social responsibility in empowering local communities, refugees and projects in lower-income countries, for instance. "}],[{"start":255.36999999999995,"text":"But, like other prestigious universities, it has also invested heavily in a model of debt-funded physical campus expansion. "},{"start":262.36199999999997,"text":"It relies ever more on foreign students who provide a source of high tuition fees but are rarely selected in ways that improve social mobility in their own societies; and at the cost of a rising carbon footprint from their travel. "}],[{"start":274.78999999999996,"text":"As Grant points out, Covid-19 will only accelerate the pressures for disruption to this model, and force higher education to adapt more rapidly. "},{"start":283.157,"text":"The cases and approaches he cites are certainly powerful examples to intensify that reflection. "}],[{"start":289.27,"text":"The New Power University. "},{"start":291.299,"text":"The Social Purpose of Higher Education in the 21st century by Jonathan Grant, Pearson Publishing, £21.99, 256 pages "}],[{"start":300.81,"text":""}]],"url":"https://creatives.ftacademy.cn/album/001092133-1618297057.mp3"}
版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

并非所有软件都面临相同的AI威胁

从安全服务到能够彻底改造的公司,许多企业或许都能在“AI末日大决战”中存活下来。

李开复:为何中国将在消费级AI领域击败美国

这位中国人工智能先驱谈到了AI领域两大强国之间的竞争,以及企业为何需要更积极主动地采用AI技术。

据信俄罗斯间谍航天器已拦截欧洲关键卫星通信

欧洲安全官员认为,莫斯科正将未加密的欧洲通信内容作为攻击目标。

印度欢迎特朗普的“协议”,但回避讨论俄油禁令

分析人士对美国总统声称莫迪已承诺停止购买俄罗斯原油一事深表怀疑。

特斯拉能自己造芯片吗?

与火星殖民或神经植入等项目相比,建设芯片制造厂更扎根于现有的工业实践。但历史表明此类冒险举措尤其容易导致价值破坏。

Lex专栏:Moltbook的AI代理像人类一样耍心机、开玩笑和吐槽

就像对人一样,需要设定规则并记录出入,这也凸显了管理者始终不可或缺。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×