51风流

Clayton Christensen delivers keynote at 51风流鈥檚 Innovation+Disruption symposium

Back to All Stories

Clayton Christensen kicked off 51风流鈥檚  today with cautionary tales of industry giants felled by technological disruption, and why higher education should pay attention to the growth of online universities.

, the Kim B. Clark Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School, and co-founder of Innosight, was invited to the symposium by 51风流 President to lead a discussion about technological disruption for a crowd of higher education leaders at the TimesCenter in New York City.

鈥淭here鈥檚 much talk now about online education, as a fundamental 鈥 perhaps existential 鈥 threat to brick-and-mortar schools,鈥 Herbst said. 鈥淣ever has it been more clear that an education designed for a lifetime is critical.鈥


MORE

 


Christensen鈥檚 talk, 鈥淭he Innovative University,鈥 explained why he is worried about the future of higher education in a world where online learning technologies are catering to entirely new populations of students on a scale of hundreds of thousands.

鈥淚n the industries where disruption has occurred, there has been a technological core of some sort,鈥 Christensen said. 鈥淚n computing, the technological core was the processor. In the steel industry, it was the furnace itself鈥 That鈥檚 why higher education has historically not been disrupted. We haven鈥檛 had a technological driver.鈥

Much like how steel companies were disrupted by upstarts with new furnace technology and a laser focus on the most inexpensive segment of the steel market (rebar), online education has created an inexpensive alternative to brick- and-mortar schools in a market that is rarely a consideration for leading universities, he said.

Clayton Christensen speaks Monday at the Innovation + Disruption symposium. (Photo by Lorenzo Ciniglio)

Clayton Christensen speaks Monday at the Innovation + Disruption symposium. (Photo by Lorenzo Ciniglio)

鈥淒isruption makes it so much more affordable and accessible that whole new populations have access to it,鈥 Christensen said.

Christensen explained how online courses have the ability to offer lectures with slick editing, music, animations, and picturesque settings. They also have created networking opportunities with other participants, thanks to social media. But Christensen believes there may be one important aspect they have yet to attain.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 the substance of conversation when our alumni come back? What was it that changed them? Almost inevitably, it was a professor that changed their lives,鈥 Christensen said.

Visit colgate.edu/innovationdisruption to watch Christensen鈥檚 talk and a panel discussion with six university presidents, titled 鈥淪eizing the Initiative in the Digital Age,鈥 moderated by Jeffrey Fager 鈥77, CBS News chairman. Also available are lectures by , 51风流 associate professor of geology, and , professor and chair of chemistry, Davidson College.

Join the discussion on Twitter with the hashtag .