As a number of publications reported last month, including Education Dive, Inside Higher Ed, and Campus Technology, one of the most surprising takeaways from our survey findings was the discrepancy between students’ and educators’ estimation of their digital media know-how.
Student Self-Perception
45% of students consider themselves to be highly digitally literate
Another 31% would describe themselves as moderately literate
Only 19% of students consider themselves somewhat literate
Outside Evaluation
Only 14% of educators rated their students as highly digitally literate
40% of educators consider their students to be moderately literate
An almost equal percentage of educators—39%—would rate their students as only somewhat literate
Educator Self-Perception
49% of educators described themselves as highly digitally literate
36% of educators rate themselves as moderately literate
Only 14% of educators consider themselves as somewhat literate
Outside Evaluation
Only 23% of students rated their instructors as highly digitally literate
35% of students consider their instructors to be moderately literate
An almost equal percentage of students—33%—would rate their instructors as only somewhat literate
Microsoft’s forthcoming AR headset, HoloLens, is at the forefront of this technology. The company calls it the first holographic computer. In AR, instead of being surrounded by a virtual world, viewers see virtual objects projected on top of reality through a transparent lens.
“With a computer or tablet, we always have to look at a screen. … The technology is always in between the people. With HoloLens, the technology very quickly becomes invisible, and we have seen groups of people have very intense interactions around models that are completely digital — they aren’t really there.”
“Schools are beginning to use data and analytics (D&A) to enhance areas such as enrollment, budgeting and fundraising,” according to “Embracing Innovation,” KPMG’s 2015-2016 Higher Education Industry Outlook Survey of 102 senior higher education leaders
An April 2015 white paper from Oracle, “Improving Higher Education Performance with Big Data,” points to diverse use cases that could drive D&A initiatives, from student acquisition and retention to research optimization to operational efficiency.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics backs that up, predicting that employment of statisticians will grow 34 percent between 2014 and 2024. Not surprisingly, the bureau notes, that is “much faster than the average for all occupations.”
April 22, 2016 Google has recently launched a new interesting website called Computer Science Education to help students learn coding and computer science.