ABSTRACT

The accelerating technological transformation in learn- ing has necessitated an ability to search and differentiate among the one billion web pages, libraries, databases, books, newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations, and opinion columns available online. This volume focuses on the normative challenges that the current technological transformation presents to all professionals engaged in higher education. Part I concentrates on the current social and technological trends. David Snyder presents an outline of technologies that have made open knowledge systems possible. Majid Tehranian argues that the new technological environment has made learning to seek out information more possible than ever before. Robert Fuller calls for an egalitarian rather than hierarchical approach to communication systems. Harlan Cleveland proposes integrative learning, broad thinking, and globally aware citizenship through "education for wisdom." Part II focuses on problems of governance and finance in the new technological environment. John Hinchcliff takes up the problem of values and argues for the maintenance of traditional altruistic rather than Promethean goals. Karou Yamaguchi comes to the problem of the futures with the tools of system dynamics. William Bergquist calls for a reorganization of higher education to meet the needs for creation, transfer, and inculcation of knowledge and skills. Hamid Shirvani calls for the core values of transparency, integrity, open communication, and dignitarian approach as the guideposts in educational leadership. Walter Truett Anderson concludes by attempting to bring the complex technological, social, economic, and political variables into a holistic approach for the management of higher education. In 2005, at the Universities of the Future Conference, participants were asked to envision the future of higher education. Part III, presents their visions.

part |1 pages

Part I Social and Technological Trends

chapter |17 pages

Academia and Access to Knowledge in the 21st Century

The Coming Dynamic Encounter between Open Knowledge (an “Irresistible Force”) and the University (an “Immovable Object”)
ByDavid Pearce Snyder

chapter |5 pages

Knowtopia The Futures of the University

ByMajid Tehranain

chapter |12 pages

Learning in a Dignitarian World

ByRobert W. Fuller

chapter |8 pages

Universities of the Future: Education for Citizen Leadership

ByHarlan Cleveland

part |1 pages

Part II Governance and Finance

chapter |10 pages

Governing Values for Future Universities

ByJohn Hinchcliff

chapter |9 pages

Mapping Future Higher Education

ByKaoru Yamaguchi

chapter |8 pages

Governing the Universities of the Future

ByHamid Shirvani

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion The Global Learning Academy

ByWalter Truett Anderson

part |1 pages

Part III Appendix

chapter |10 pages

Visions of the Futures of Higher Education

ByWalter Truett Anderson, Jim Dator, Majid Tehranian

part |1 pages

News and Views

chapter |5 pages

Toda Institute Annual Report 2005

ByWalter Truett Anderson, Jim Dator, Majid Tehranian

part |1 pages

Peace Poetry

chapter |1 pages

We Came Whirling by Jalal al-Din Rumi (1207-1273)

ByWalter Truett Anderson, Jim Dator, Majid Tehranian

chapter |4 pages

Love by Jalal al-Din Rumi (1207-1273)

ByWalter Truett Anderson, Jim Dator, Majid Tehranian