Skip to main content

Tesla, ‘Power Play’, and the Future of Online Learning

Power Play: Tesla, Elon Musk, and the Bet of the Century by Tim Higgins

Published in August of 2021.

How might we think about Tesla in higher ed terms?

Try this on for size:

electric cars = online/blended learning

autonomous driving = low-cost online scaled degrees

Over the next X years, transportation will progress through two revolutions. (I say “X” because we don’t know how long these changes will take.)

First, we will transition from internal combustion engines (ICE) to battery-powered electrical propulsion. From gas to electricity.

Next, cars and trucks and busses will become self-driving. Or more self-driving. Or something.

The first transition - gas to electricity - is inevitable. We just don’t know how long it will take.

The second transition - human-driven to AI/sensor-driven - may or may not be perpetually five years off. 

To come back to our transportation/education equivalencies, we can be confident that most (not all) postsecondary education will transition from a fully residential format (ICE) to some form of blended/online learning (electric).

We have no idea - at least I have no idea - if we will ever achieve high-quality/low-cost online degrees at scale (autonomous driving).

What I’m going for is to convince you - higher ed reader - to read Power Play: Tesla, Elon Musk, and the Bet of the Century. You don’t need to be a Tesla owner (or wannabe owner) to get value from reading this book. (Although, of course, it helps).

If you read Power Play (and you should), keep the transportation/higher ed equations in your mind.

Think about what it has taken for Tesla and the electric car market to get to where it is today while pondering what path blended/online learning is likely to take. And then give some thought to the challenges of autonomous driving, and think about what will need to happen for us to vastly reduce the cost of degrees through scaled online programs.

With that higher ed framing in mind, what we learn in Power Play might be a bit worrisome.

Why is it that Tesla has achieved dominance in the electric car market, and the incumbent (legacy) automakers (GM, Toyota, Volkswagen, Ford, etc.) are all playing catch-up?

If today’s universities are more like GM than Tesla, then what new organizations will emerge to push the frontiers of learning and credentialing forward?

If Power Play is to be believed (and I find Higgins reporting credible), the only reason that you and I are coveting that Model Y today is the idiosyncratic tenacity of Elon Musk

Musk mostly comes across as not a very good human (sometimes abusive, always grandiose, etc.) but as a singular visionary who willed the modern electric automobile industry into existence.

In reading about the history of Tesla with higher ed eyes, one is most struck with the idea that a personality like Musk would never ascend to a university leadership role. At least one hopes not.

In academia, we value collegiality, consistency, civility, and calmness.

Effective higher ed leaders are said to do what they will do.

Musk has none of these attributes.

If Musk did, Tesla would still be producing a couple of hundred electric roadsters - or more likely would have disappeared.

Will higher ed needs its own Elon Musk to accelerate the diffusion of online learning and push the creation of genuinely high-quality/low-cost online degree programs?

Do you read books on electric cars to make sense of the future of higher ed?

What are you reading?

Show on Jobs site: 
Disable left side advertisement?: 
Is this diversity newsletter?: 
Is this Career Advice newsletter?: 
Advice Newsletter publication dates: 
Tuesday, August 31, 2021
Diversity Newsletter publication date: 
Tuesday, August 31, 2021


Udimi - Buy Solo Ads from Inside Higher Ed https://ift.tt/3kM7uGu
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Author discusses book on grad school

Graduate school is a great mystery to students, and to some faculty members, says Jessica McCrory Calarco, the author of A Field Guide to Grad School: Uncovering the Hidden Curriculum (Princeton University Press). Calarco is an associate professor of sociology at Indiana University. She believes many faculty members (as well as graduate students, of course) will benefit from her book. She responded to questions via email. Q: How did you get the idea to write this book? Why did the issue speak to you? A: This book started as a tweet . Or, rather, as a series of tweets about the hidden curriculum of higher ed. Ph.D. student Kristen K. Smith had tweeted about the need to better educate undergrads about grad school opportunities, and it made me think about how opportunities in academe are often hidden from grad students, as well. Reflecting on my own experiences in grad school, I thought about the many times I'd found myself embarrassed because of what I didn't know -- the

Guest Blog: Where Does the Bizarre Hysteria About “Critical Race Theory” Come From?—Follow the Money!

Blog:  Just Visiting Guest Blog: Where Does the Bizarre Hysteria About “Critical Race Theory” Come From?—Follow the Money! By Isaac Kamola Trinity College Hartford, CT There are now numerous well-documented examples of wealthy right-wing and libertarian donors using that wealth to transform higher education in their own image. Between 2005 and 2019, for example, the Charles Koch Foundation has spent over  $485 million  at more than 550 universities. As demonstrated by Douglas Beets and others, many of these grants include considerable  donor influence  over what gets taught, researched, and even who gets hired. It should therefore come as no surprise that conservative megadonor, Walter Hussman Jr.,  lobbied hard  to deny the Pulitzer-prize winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones a tenured professorship at the UNC journalism school that bears his name. Nor that her offer of tenure, awarded through the normal channels of faculty governance, was ultimately  revoked   by a far-

Live Updates: Latest News on COVID-19 and Higher Education

Image:  Woman Charged With Faking Positive COVID-19 Test From U of Iowa   Nov. 5, 6:14 a.m. A lawyer in Colorado has been charged with faking a positive COVID-19 test from the University of Iowa to get out of a court appearance, The Gazette reported.   Emily Elizabeth Cohen was booked Tuesday on a detainer from the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office, shortly after she tweeted that the Colorado court system “just had me arrested alleging I lied about having COVID. Tweeting from cop car.”   The Boulder Daily Camera reported that Cohen is scheduled for a 10-day trial in Boulder County in Colorado starting Dec. 6 for 11 felony counts stemming from allegations she collected fees from immigrant families before losing contact with them without producing visas or work permits.   -- Scott Jaschik Judge Permits Suit Against Montana State to Go to Trial Nov. 3, 6:18 a.m. A Montana judge has ruled that a suit against Montana State University over the shift to online education