Increasing partnerships with industry can help institutions succeed and survive, say experts
The 糖心Vlog Student Success Forum 2020 heard that institutions can leverage technology to create a cloud-powered student life cycle where learning and teaching can thrive.
Speaking at the panel discussion 鈥淎聽cloud-powered student life聽cycle鈥, Kelly Sundberg, director, education strategy, business applications and power platform at Microsoft, told the forum that universities had an opportunity to transition to new IT聽systems built with flexibility in聽mind.
鈥淲e鈥檙e talking a聽lot about returning to聽normal. But is that really what we聽want? Or do we want to transform into a new normal?鈥 she asked. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where the cloud-powered student life cycle is really key 鈥 to ensure you have that flexibility to look forward and interact with whatever you need to聽face.鈥
Sundberg added that higher education institutions typically faced three challenges in relation to their IT聽systems: accidental architecture (a聽legacy of older technology), technical debt (where a聽rushed project roll-out now requires fixes) and educational culture (for example, staff being resistant to adopting new systems).
David Minahan, chief information officer at TEDI-London, said the institution had adopted a cloud-first approach with a focus on mixed-mode learning. The design-led engineering school successfully ran a fully remote summer school for 147 students from 21 countries using Microsoft Teams and other systems.
Minahan聽argued that institutions with older technology should not put off updating their systems.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to try to eat an elephant a聽bite at a聽time. The problem doesn鈥檛 resolve itself, so at some point you have to make a聽start,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he biggest piece of advice I聽could give anybody senior at a university or higher education institution is to really think about your planning cycles. Think about your budget allocation and how you can shift that to more agile delivery methods.
鈥淲hat the world is showing us now is the organisations that are going to succeed and survive are those that can respond in more agile ways.鈥
Minahan added that there were often success stories within universities: for example, a聽department with an advanced IT structure that the rest of the institution could learn from.
The panel agreed that collaborations between institutions and IT partners should be 鈥済enuine partnerships, not just a transactional relationship鈥.
鈥淭he more that we can work in partnership, the more we can transform our industry and transform our institutions,鈥 said Sundberg. 鈥淟ook back on 2020 as a聽year that you were able to transform your institution by leveraging the new technology that is out聽there.鈥
Watch 鈥淎聽cloud-powered student life聽cycle鈥 in the link above or on the .
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