Already, commercial organisations are gearing up to reap the lucrative profits that lifelong Internet-based education and training promises. They are hiring the full-time educators, media and other specialists needed to produce and deliver high quality educational material, which will include interactive simulations and even live and recorded video. They will also offer 24 hour online support to students via email and live audio/video conferencing facilities. Universities might try to compete with them, but they are unlikely to succeed without sacrificing so much of their character that they are no longer recognisable as universities.
So, what will the universities of the future look like? It seems to me that traditional campus-based universities will only survive if they concentrate, not on mass vocational training, but on pure academic research. Since most learners will take the more profitable, short cut career path offered by commercial (or possibly governmental) organisations, university education is likely to change substantially. Freed of the necessity to educate vast numbers of students and now more isolated from the vagaries of the commercial world, campuses might once again become home to communities of thinkers. Formal classes might be replaced by groups, working, discussing, researching and learning together. Learners at all levels (faculty and students) might thus have the time and the opportunity to become more involved and caring.
Undoubtedly, there will be many different viewpoints and opinions on this subject, and I would encourage everyone to think about it and share their ideas. The new horizons being opened up by information technology is just one of the many topics to be discussed at the Second International Distance Education Symposium being held here in Ankara this week. Organised by the (Turkish) Distance Education Foundation (UZEV) and the Ministry of Education's Film, Radio and Television Directorate (FRTEB), it will feature keynote speeches by many world-renowned figures including Sir John Daniel (Vice Chancellor of the UK's Open University), David Jonassen, Michael Moore and Tony Bates. The symposium is open to everyone and entrance is free. Details can be found on posters around the campus and on my web page.
David Davenport (Computer Eng. & Info. Science Dept.)