Farshida Zafar is director of the Erasmus Centre for Entrepreneurship at Erasmus University Rotterdam, where she has pioneered the university鈥檚 work in digital technology and online education. When she was a child, her family聽left聽Afghanistan as political refugees.
Where and when were you born?聽
I was born in Kabul. According to my passport my birthday is 2聽March聽1978, however it could also be sometime in late May 1979. There is some debate in my family on the聽exact聽date. Let鈥檚 just agree that I鈥檓 old.
How has this shaped you?
My upbringing and journey to聽the聽West have made me very aware of my environment as well as cultural聽differences and聽new perspectives. All the experiences I have had in life have enabled me to be highly adaptive, creative and inventive.
What kind of undergraduate were you?
Unmotivated and lonely. I had a hard time fitting in at university, and balancing my jobs and studying was stressful. I felt quite lonely because I was one of those students who had to work really hard to make ends meet while my peers were socialising and building up their r茅sum茅s. Uninspiring classes, hardly any interaction with professors and rarely being given a chance to ask critical questions made me skip a lot of classes and study the books by myself. I made it, but am not proud of those years.
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When did you first become interested in new technologies?
My dad introduced me to a computer when I was 12. Back then it was quite a thing to even see a computer, let alone know what you could do with it. But it was in 2012 when I joined the Erasmus School of Law that聽I really got into emerging education technology.
Why was this experience so influential?
I was told to come up with a plan to close our lifelong learning programme in undergraduate law that was specifically designed for students to combine studying with work but, with only 18 enrolments per year, was not viable. I had four months to do it by myself and there was no budget, no IT infrastructure and no guidelines. I started to research novel ways to teach and learn and created a business case to make the programme work.聽It was the first聽blended learning undergraduate programme at the university and most likely the first in the country. I had planned for 30 students but in the first cohort we had 230 and there are currently 1,000 enrolled. This kickstarted innovations across the university leading to a professional studio, digital infrastructure and more focus on innovation and pedagogy.
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What are the biggest mistakes most people make when trying to innovate in higher education?
I don鈥檛 think innovators聽always fully grasp the importance of understanding the politics of an organisation. Knowing the system and the 鈥済ame鈥 that is being played is really important; who pulls what ropes and how can you gain their聽commitment to聽your cause. There鈥檚 also sometimes too much focus on the product and too little focus on the service-level design. A lot of us think that one piece of technology will make our lives so much easier and work so much more efficient. As innovators we often jump on the next tech hype; we have seen this happen with Moocs, we still see it with the metaverse, AR, VR, XR and so on. But we rarely question the actual problem they are solving and, by extension, whether the problem and solution fit.
How do your colleagues react when you try to introduce changes?
They freak out. And with reason. Everyone wants change聽as long as it doesn鈥檛 impact their daily work. Which is why it is wise to not frame any change as a big utopian vision; taking small steps is sometimes more effective. I once had a colleague who threatened me with a lawsuit if I recorded a lecture. After sitting down with her, and talking about the real issues, we found a solution for the problem. She became my biggest champion and pioneer. Respecting one鈥檚 decision not to join a project or be involved in the change is also OK.
What can higher education learn from the gaming industry?
The way I see it, education is a big game. There are levels (undergraduate, masters etc), there are challenges (exams, tests, assignments) and there is a boss you have to defeat to聽end the game聽(thesis).聽Every game has a serious note to it; you have to聽collaborate, use creativity to find solutions,聽negotiate to get what you want or prioritise your moves. None of these skills聽are taught in traditional curricula.
Tell us about someone you鈥檝e always admired.聽
My parents鈥 ability to start a new life on a continent they knew nothing of and provide a better future for their聽children after fleeing聽Afghanistan is truly admirable. Their聽struggle in Europe and by聽extension my struggle finding my聽identity and a sense of belonging have shaped me in ways that no educational聽experience could.
What keeps you awake at night?
The most obvious answer would be climate change but, although it concerns me, it is the shifting dynamics in society that really keep me up. The polarisation between groups with no debate or dialogue is worrying. The social and digital divide, the gap between the haves and have-nots is also widening and I don鈥檛 see enough action to counter this. While we are all working on creating new technological tools, we forget that a huge percentage of the global population do not have access to the hardware needed.
If you weren鈥檛 an academic, what do you think you鈥檇 be doing?
I would be a CEO of a mission-driven company focusing on making education accessible. And if I couldn鈥檛 find one to work at, I would most likely set one up myself.
tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com
CV
BA in law, Erasmus University Rotterdam
MA in constitutional and administrative law, Erasmus
2012-15聽lecturer in constitutional and administrative law, Erasmus
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2015-17聽project leader, Vision Online Education, Erasmus
2018-19聽chief innovation officer, Erasmus School of Law
2019-2022聽director, ErasmusX
2019-present聽senior fellow, Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence for Digital Governance
2020-present聽director, Erasmus Centre for Entrepreneurship
Appointments
Kim Schatzel has been named president of the University of Louisville. Currently president of Towson University, the professor of marketing will take on the post in February, succeeding Neeli Bendapudi, who is now president of Pennsylvania State University. Professor Schatzel previously served as provost of Eastern Michigan University and dean of the College of Business at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. She said she would work to advance Louisville鈥檚 reputation 鈥渁s a pre-eminent institution nationally recognised鈥 for its work in education and research.
Fiona Devine has been appointed vice-president at the University of Manchester, and dean of its Faculty of Humanities. The professor of sociology, who has聽led the Alliance Manchester Business School for the past 10 years, will succeed Keith Brown when he steps down at the end of the academic year. Dame Nancy Rothwell, Manchester鈥檚 president, said Professor Devine would 鈥渃ontinue to shape the future of a faculty which is absolutely at the heart of the university鈥檚 success鈥.
Simon Ringer and Louis Sharpe are being promoted to fill two newly created leadership positions at the University of Sydney, becoming pro vice-chancellor (research infrastructure) and pro vice-chancellor (researcher training), respectively. Professor Ringer is currently director of Core Research Facilities at the institution, while Professor Sharpe is director of graduate research.
Claire Macken will be the next pro vice-chancellor and general director of RMIT University Vietnam. Previously she was associate deputy vice-chancellor (learning and teaching) in the College of Business and Law at RMIT鈥檚 Melbourne campus.
Andy Chan is joining Robert Gordon University as dean of its School of Engineering. He is currently vice-provost of research and knowledge exchange at the University of Nottingham Malaysia.
Melanie Bish will be La Trobe University鈥檚 next pro vice-chancellor (regional). An associate professor of nursing, she moves from her current position as deputy dean of the La Trobe Rural Health School.
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