a16z Podcast - Online Learning and the Ed Tech Debate
Episode Date: August 17, 2020This episode is all about education and technology, a topic that’s especially top of mind this week as students in much of the country return to school—virtually. The intersection of learning and ...technology has been accelerated by the pandemic, but the debate around education's "disruption," and what that means for educators doing the hands-on work of teaching, has been swirling for years.In this episode, a16z general partner Connie Chan and host Lauren Murrow are joined by educators and experts Josh Kim, the Director of Online Programs and Strategy at Dartmouth College (whose most recent book, Learning Innovation and the Future of Higher Education, was published earlier this year), and David Deming, Professor of Education and Economics at the Harvard Kennedy School and the Harvard Graduate School of Education.We explore the complicated issue of online education from a variety of angles: Can the quality of online learning stack up to an in-person education? What improvements have we seen over the past decade and what improvements are we likely to see this fall, compared to the COVID scramble last spring? And might this moment be the push we need for educators and technologists—sometimes at odds—to collaborate more closely?We discuss and debate the research behind online learning, the dual impact of tech and COVID on the future of higher ed, and tech's potential in everything from curriculum to access to structural inequality.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi and welcome to the A16Z podcast. I'm Lauren Murrow, and today's episode is all about
education and technology, a topic that's especially top of mind as students in much of the
country are returning to school this week, virtually. Much of the discussion has been in the
context of COVID and safety, but there's a greater debate around ed tech's potential that's been
decades in the making. In this episode, A16Z general partner Connie Chan and I are joined by
educators and experts Josh Kim, the director of online programs and strategy,
the Dartmouth Center for the Advancement of Learning.
His most recent book, Learning Innovation and the Future
of Higher Education, was published earlier this year.
And David Deming, Professor of Education and Economics
at the Harvard Kennedy School and the Harvard Graduate School
of Education.
We explore the complicated issue of online education
from a variety of angles.
Can the quality of online learning stack up
to that of an in-person education?
What improvements have we seen over the past decade
and what improvements are we likely to see this fall
compared to the COVID scramble last spring?
And might this moment be the push we need for educators and technologists, sometimes at odds,
to collaborate more closely?
The first voice you'll hear after mine is Josh, followed by Connie, then David.
So much of the discourse around ed tech or online education is often posed these stark terms.
Much of the discussion seems to be online education was this abject failure in the spring.
Now kids are doomed to lose another year if we don't go back in person.
So I think what I'd like to post to the group is what are some of the most common misconceptions you see in the discourse around online education?
Well, first of all, we didn't really have online education in the spring, right?
That wasn't anything that any of us who've been in online education for a long time would recognize his online education.
So I think we first have to completely move away from making any conclusions about online education,
from this emergency pivot to remote learning due to COVID.
Right, and I would argue that we should also make sure that we aren't just judging the concept of online education by what we see today.
There's just so much potential for further innovation around the platform, around the medium that I think we just don't see, but we already see in other countries around the world.
I think one common misconception is more of a conflating of two things.
One is the medium by which education happens.
Is it online or in person or some mix of the two?
And then the pedagogical approach.
Is it lecture-based?
Is it discussion-based?
How much of it is student-facing?
What is the size of the class?
What's being taught in what way?
And I think what you see for most of the pretty brief history of online education is that
classes that are online tend to be of one type that is often quite different than what you see in person.
And so when people say online education, they often have this idea.
Maybe it's a superstar lecturing that's broadcast all over the way.
or it's a for-profit college that people perceive as being predatory on some types of students
or whatever. But there's nothing that is intrinsic about online that makes it better or worse.
At its core, online is a mode of delivery for education that has tremendous potential to reach
people that couldn't be reached with in-person education models.
With far better curriculum than they could have afforded.
Potentially.
Potentially.
Although I don't think that's a guarantee.
So I think we should get into that.
I think there's a question of whether the education can be better and under what.
conditions. It is true that you see a lot of education innovators in the online space, but a lot of
what they're doing could just as easily be done in person. What I would like to hear is more
discussion of what should education look like, and then we decide whether it's easiest or best to
deliver it online versus in person, rather than debating about online versus in person and only later
talking about what we're actually teaching and how we're teaching. Yeah, I agree that. One of the
challenges we have when we talk about all this is definitions, that people often talk about online
education when they're talking about a lot of different things and very different things.
Yeah, and I think to that point, some people are thinking of this as strictly K through 12 or K through
college. In reality, you can also lump in things like a master class, things like lifelong learning,
things like worker training, things like extracurricular classes that have been already online
well before COVID. So one of the confusions we often hear is to conflate online education at
scale, which kind of started with MOOCs and now have moved on to what Coursera does and what
edX does with what's been going on with online education now for a couple decades, which
it looks very different than that, which is about very small classes, lots of active learning,
lots of engagement between students and faculty, a lot of work with instructional designers.
They happen to be in the same medium. They happen to be education that's done with technology, but they're completely different things.
You mentioned the precedent of MOOCs, which is massive open online courses. So those have been hyped for a decade or so. And I've had limited success in disrupting education. It's pretty commonly agreed. So what has changed? Why do you see this new fund optimism now? What specifically are we seeing that we haven't seen in the past?
Well, I think if you judge MOOCs, historically it's been really targeted for college students and post-college graduates.
And I think the effectiveness of MOOCs varies dramatically based off the age group and the kind of content you're trying to teach.
This is an important point to make, which is online education is not optimal for every subject or every learner.
And so I think we can get into a bit more need-gritty when we're talking about how it translates for younger kids versus older kids.
Shy kids, right? Kids who are bullied. You hear about them preferring online school. It really just ranges on the type of student and the age range. And I can understand why in the college bracket hasn't necessarily taken off. There are so many other things that a college provides the student. And oftentimes the students want to be on campus. They do get different kinds of credentials with every university. But if you take that concept of a very large classroom and you target a different age group with different kinds of content,
the value proposition could actually be quite different.
So for example, if I was teaching, say, a singing class and I opened it up to a thousand students,
and because I had that many students, the prices were very affordable or could even be free.
One could argue that that potentially could work.
So a lot of the criticism around MOOCs has been, I think, a function of the age group they targeted
and the type of content they tried to deliver.
That's a good point to bring up in that many educators have been skeptical.
of online learning to date because it's difficult to run, say, discussion-based courses
or lab work and group work can pose challenges. David, you've noted that what's called
high-doseage tutoring, so that's small groups, meeting frequently, has been shown to be one of
the most effective ways to improve learning in addition to individualized feedback. So I guess the
question is, can ed tech deliver this kind of personalized education that traditional education can?
I think it definitely can. I think the question is whether it can do so at lower cost and to reach people who wouldn't be able to be reached. So it's an access question and a cost question. And I would put MOOCs toward one end of a spectrum where the extreme is just a lecture you post online or just like a TED talk or content that's just online. You know, somewhere online you can find the very best lecture on the principles of microeconomics by the very best explainer of those principles. And you can watch it. And that's something that's widely available. And the marginal cost of providing that to another person,
once you produce it is zero. And so you put it online and as many people can access it as possible,
but there's absolutely no personalization at all. Everyone's watching the same lecture.
And that's good for some people, but most people learn through some element of personalization,
meeting people where they are, addressing their specific learning, motivating them to care
and show up to class and turning assignments and stay on task when things get difficult.
And that's the hard work of education. And that doesn't scale as easily as the MOOC or the online lecture.
And so I think the question is whether ed tech can deliver that at lower cost.
And I think it's possible.
I think it's much harder than just creating great content and putting it up on the web and charging
a very small fee for it.
And I think that's basically why MOOCs haven't revolutionized the market, because that's
not really what education is.
Education is not just content.
It's also engagement and personalization.
It's the peer group.
It's the feedback.
There are startups, though, that are trying to tackle that, that are creating these
small breakout groups for any of these large topics.
Yeah, I think those are very promising.
I just think that to me, that's where educational learning really needs to go is some combination
of personalization and scale. It's a very hard problem. It is a hard problem. And the content has to be
really good so that there's higher completion rates than what we have currently. I think a lot of people
are realizing that content can be improved, especially with multimedia. Can you use some interactive
hand gesture even to make sure the kids stays engaged and finishes the class? The trickiness is going to be
how it feels at the end of the day
different than a YouTube video.
So I think a lot of it still comes down to
how do you design it in a way that will
have a motivating factor
for the student to go seek it out
and complete it. Are there types
of subjects that lend themselves
better to an online curriculum versus
in person? So I think about
this lot because my daughters are
a rising junior and now going to be a rising
grad student. Where I see
the future going, which
I see benefits and risks, except the
master's level and it's master's degrees at scale. Basically, low-cost, hopefully high-quality
master's degrees at scale. We see Illinois with its I-MBA. We see BU with their low-cost MBA,
Georgia Tech, with computer science. And basically, these are master's degrees that will not
supplant MBAs or computer science degrees from elite institutions and not supplant the experience
you get when you come to campus and can hang out with great faculty like David. There's no way
to replace that intimate learning experience where you're with that cohort and had that experience
that's priceless. But most master's degrees now don't provide that. My younger daughter wants
to be an elementary teacher, and she has to get a master's in education and get a good job.
I'm not convinced that she needs to go to a very expensive master's program.
I think that she could actually do fine with a master's program that is low-cost,
more at scale, where she gets the content, a peer group, she gets coached and mentored by maybe not a faculty member.
So I think it would be wonderful if she could become a teacher with a master's degree without all that debt.
I think there's an enormous potential here.
Yeah, Josh, when you talk about the master's program, it really makes.
me think a lot of it comes down to credentials too, right? And so can you use technology to
allow more people to get those credentials in a cheaper way? And can you use technology to also
have new signals that go beyond just the credential certificate? Like if your daughter took classes
online, theoretically, whatever program supplied that service would know her grades, would know
her scores, would know her performance. There's a lot of opportunity, I think, in helping people
get those credentials in a more affordable way. On the downside, colleges and universities have used
master's degrees to support their money losing undergraduate programs. Tuition discounting is so high now
that they really need these master's degrees, which have grown much more quickly than undergraduate
degrees to balance the books. So what we're going to see is for middle tier schools or schools
without elite brands, their high-cost master's degrees are going to become less and less
tenable as top-branded schools bring out these degrees as well as non-degree credentials.
And in addition, there's other outside forces affecting it, right? Like losing international
students this year or massive state budget cuts that we haven't seen the consequences of yet?
So you're moving into the economics part of the discussion. And it's something that has been in the
news in that many college graduates are graduating with debt. It's also popped up in younger age
groups more recently, as many upper-income families are trying to create their own pod schools,
it's this question of the economics of education and whether it may be turned into some kind of
a luxury good.
You know, David's talked about this.
What we have to guard against is this bundled experience that my kids got, that it doesn't
just become the province for the wealthiest, for the most privilege.
And it's very worrying and disturbing about how we're moving in this direction and this country.
This is where the VC and the ed tech community really can talk about inequality and concentration of wealth and hold schools like where David and I are, where there's more people from the top 1% than the bottom two-thirds.
Right. So, Connie, you've talked about how you think tech may be this kind of great equalizer, right? With this one-to-many model, it can provide access to the best instructors at any location without the hefty buy-in of a year of tuition at Harvard.
But, David, you've also hypothesized that on-campus learning will become this increasingly important quality differentiator.
So it may become a luxury good that only students with means can afford.
How can we assess that fuzzy question of quality?
Can island education provide that same level?
And does ed tech pose the potential solution to the economic inequality?
I think that it's very important to distinguish between different types of education that have
different purposes. So Josh mentioned these master's degrees when there's other things like
coding boot camps and other innovations out there in the ed tech space. And I think the ones that
you see achieving success and will continue to be successful are the ones that, A, offer something
specific that people are looking for, they know what they want and they're going for it. And B,
is sort of run assuming that the people who enroll in them have a set of basic
whatever you want to call them, 21st century skills. They're good problem solvers, they're self-starters,
they understand how to work in a team, they can think abstractly, et cetera. And I think all of those
things are also learned in school and are often learned in college, in a four-year program or in high
school. And that's exactly the kind of thing that the public needs to be subsidizing because
no company wants to subsidize you to go learn something that's useful everywhere. They want to
subsidize you to learn something that's useful for the job you're doing for them. But those skills are
incredibly important for succeeding in the modern workplace. And my worry is that all of the
budget cuts and other things that Josh and Connie mentioned are going to cut to the bone in terms
of the really core important skills that education is teaching. I do think those things can be
taught online. I don't think it can only be done in person, but I also think the in-person experience,
particularly at public flagship universities and mid-tier public universities, is much more
successful than people give it credit for. It provides a very high-quality education.
in terms of future earnings at relatively low cost.
And many of the schools that educate our nation's students
are not the ones that are written about in New York Times
where you see, you know, climbing walls and lazy rivers
and incredibly lavish, extracurricular things
that detract from the core purpose of education.
They're actually pretty lean organizations
that do a lot of teaching and provide a lot of student support
without spending very much money.
And they're about to get hit terribly by budget cuts, as Connie mentioned.
And so to me, I think ed tech and this general enterprise will all succeed much more when we, as a public tax base, subsidize those colleges to do their thing.
And then we let the market do all the extra stuff, which I think it will do better than our public universities.
That's how I would do it if I could play puppet master.
And kind of going back to David's point, there's not a lot of history in the valley of being champions for funding of public education, post-secondary education.
In fact, if you look at the rhetoric, it's often not then.
So I would say, you know, in the extent that academics feel sort of comfortable and feel
like we're actually partners and collaborators with the VE community, the funding community,
I think it's very important to engage because David's exactly right.
The crisis we have now in higher education is about the defunding at the state level of
post-secondary education.
There's no technological silver bullet.
Point taken.
Is funding the biggest problem?
in your mind then?
I think there's all sorts of entrenched challenges that higher ed faces, which we face as
economy. I mean, David teaches about all the growing inequality, these are structural issues
that we have to work on together. Can I draw an analogy? So if you think about some of the
most successful startups in Silicon Valley companies, almost all of them have relied on public
infrastructure in some way. So there is no Uber without public roads that work and get people
from point A to point B reliably.
And that's an obvious point, but many, many countries, that doesn't exist.
There's not a tax base to fund roads where there aren't gigantic potholes in them,
maybe constant maintenance, et cetera.
And there's many other examples like that.
We need public infrastructure for private enterprise to succeed.
And that's our physical infrastructure.
But education is our human infrastructure.
And every ed tech startup will succeed better when we have more self-directed learners
as a baseline pool of people who are interested.
And that's what public education does.
and if we don't invest in it as a society, we're eating our seed corn.
Yeah, no, I totally agree.
And I know teachers are bearing a good chunk of the brunt.
And, you know, I hear stories of a lot of teachers getting hired away for private education
or for basically teaching small pods of children instead.
So I do think the way our public school system and the resources they have today
are going to look very different in a year.
I mean, I think it's a good discussion to have. The reputation of ed tech amongst academics and within higher ed is not great. Professors don't feel that great about the ed tech industry.
Why do you think that is? Well, what you often hear from the industry at large is that we're going to disrupt higher education, that you guys are bloated, you're expensive, if you've been doing it the old way, you have to pivot, you have to evolve.
And it really does not match the realities on the ground where most education is public, 40% of students go to community colleges.
There's a real mismatch. And I think often our communities are talking past each other.
I do think we do have to acknowledge, though, that there are people going to colleges graduating, taking on a ton of debt, unable to find good jobs.
And the also quality of teaching drastically, even within a university, varies by your professor.
So it's really hard to say that education is fine as is.
I would say there's still lots of low-hanging fruit and ways to improve it.
And it's not even just improving the status quo.
It's also getting more students in the door.
Again, figuring out the access question, right?
How do we incent more students to even go to community college?
Is there a way that we can either drop the prices even further using technology?
Or can we make the classes happen at the right schedule so the kids can still have a full-time
daytime job to support his family, but still take classes at night.
I think community colleges have been leading the fight into online education.
The reality is that no sector has had larger declines in public funding than community colleges.
Certainly.
That's a huge problem.
But theoretically, if you had every community college course available online to any student
at any community college in the country for every single quarter,
then it's hard to argue that more students wouldn't be taking more class.
I'm also really curious what everyone thinks about. You start hearing these rumors of schools potentially
doing away with some standardized testing in terms of admissions. And I'm curious if there will need
to be new signals and will that need to require ed tech. I think it's great that we're getting
rid of them. The SECs, they're somewhat predictive of first year success, not predictive of college
success at all, and they're highly correlated with all sorts of other advantages. The more
we move away from standardized tests, which really only benefit people based on privilege, the better
we would be. And, you know, I think part of that is schools like the schools that David and I work at,
we have to really ask ourselves, are there ways that we can expand opportunity? Is it morally
defensible anymore to judge our success by our scarcity? What role can we actually play in
creating opportunity by growing? But to answer your question, I'm all for getting rid of those
tests. Is there a tech potential solution to still provide some kind of unbiased way to evaluate students?
I don't think it's possible to answer this question in a vacuum because it all depends on what
replaces the test. Standardized tests are almost certainly biased, but are they more or less biased than
what they replace is the question? And if you suddenly continue to do college emissions without a test,
are people of privilege going to find other ways to signal that and to get ahead in the admissions game?
Yes, they are. And so the question.
question is, is this the most direct way achieving the goal? To me, like, getting rid of the
SAT and the ACT is probably not by itself going to make a dent in this problem. My preferred
solution would be if we just think colleges ought to be more diverse, they should just admit a more
diverse class and set that as the final goal rather than this quite indirect solution of
changing which criteria can and can't be used for admission. In other words, if you have a goal,
which is diversity, directly achieve that goal by deciding who you admit and worry less
about disparities in test scores and things like that.
Yeah, we worry way too much about who we admit,
but there's this enormous range of who can succeed at various institutions.
It's less about who comes in at a pretty big range
and more about the supports and resources that are provided.
The fact is that wealthy institutions provide way more resources
and support for learners,
and they graduate at very high rates.
At non-flagship public institutions,
they just cannot provide those resources for the learners.
And you see that in attrition rates that are very high.
By the way, the scale of inequality and resource allocation
and higher education is way, way higher than in case as well.
So, like, schools like Harvard and Dartmouth are spending
about $100,000 per student per year on education.
And schools like Bunker Hill Community College down the street from me
are spending about $10,000 a year.
So that's 10x at the most elite schools.
And then many people don't go to college at all,
so they're basically getting zero.
Now, compare that to K-12 education,
the richest districts are maybe spending $15,000, $20,000 per student per year,
and the poorest districts are maybe spending 12, right?
So there are gaps, but they're just way, way greater in higher.
I do think it's a very interesting question.
What is the tech community's role?
Like, if the real issues is public disinvestment
and inequalities in investment in higher education
and class and racial lines,
what is the role of the ed tech and the VC community in that?
I don't know the answer.
There are startups already trying to offer that kind of curriculum for very low cost or free.
And there are also startups that are working on worker training.
I mean, I know people go to hire and not just to get a job, but that is a big part of the incentive.
And so there are startups that are helping people become better sales reps, marketing reps,
computer scientists, you name it.
There are also startups that are helping people apply to college, fill out their forms and get
into college and then get support when they're there. And that's an important piece of the landscape, too.
So the way I think about it is, I think Josh is right that it's simplistic to say that ed tech will disrupt higher education and just like leave it a wasteland.
I don't think anybody really believes that, but that's often the caricature.
But I do think that ed tech places very beneficial pressure on institutions of higher education to innovate.
So to me, what I like about the ed-sex space is that it shows us new ways to be better within traditional educational institutions.
I don't think that higher ed is on the verge of being completely turned upside down.
I mean, some colleges will go out of business in the next couple of years because of COVID.
And some of those were probably going to anyway, it's just going to accelerate the process.
But I don't see a future where everyone's doing college online or through new startups and things like that.
But I do think that many of us don't teach as well as we should.
You know, Sage on the stage, so to speak, is like mostly what happens.
a lot of large colleges, lecture hall type.
And that's just not a good way to learn.
And we sort of know that, but we don't face any pressure to change as 10ured faculty members.
And maybe nothing can make tenure faculty members change.
But if anything can, it's this idea that other people are out there getting a different
and better type of education.
So to me, that's really the vision is that everything will be better because of a little
bit of competitive pressure.
And I think that's already happening.
And I think ed tech also encompasses tools, right?
It's not necessarily about replacing the teacher.
It could even be just like the clicker you check so you can track student
attendance, right? Or other ways to make sure that people are abiding by the honor policy.
I'll give you an example. I was talking to a high school teacher and she was explaining how
even just having Google classrooms show automatically when every student has submitted the homework,
it's time stamped. That has saved her tremendously in terms of all the arguments she used to have
with parents. Parents would argue that their kids' grades were not accurate. And now she can just
open Google classroom and show, hey, the kid didn't hand in this assignment. Hey, this assignment
was handed in three days late. And so even something like that, it's just a small little tool
but has significantly helped her in managing her classroom. I feel like there are other ways
that tech can be helpful and beneficial to the existing system. I totally agree. And I think the
other reason why I'm optimistic about not just public higher education or traditional higher
education, but education in general is, if you look at the history of technological change,
one thing you learn is that there's some products that when we get more innovative at making
them at less cost, we don't want more of them, like food. Right. So, you know, 100 years ago,
40% of all jobs in the U.S. were in agriculture, and now it's less than 2%. Because we got more
productive in making food, and we only need so much. So now we just devote fewer resources in the economy
to make food. But education, health care, and a few other things are not like that. When we get
richer and more prosperous, we want more of it. So I don't think education as a sector is going
anywhere. I think there's going to be more space for everybody. I think that a lot of these
innovations in the ed tech space are going to exist on top of traditional institutions, not replace
them. Many teachers on the ground do pocket this top-down infiltration of big tech and education
without this baseline classroom experience. What should technologists in this space know from an
educated perspective. If you're addressing ed tech founders, technologists in the space,
what should they know that they don't? Yeah. We like talk to people in the ed tech world.
We like people in the VC world because you guys are all about change. You have all these new
ideas. And we don't think that the status quo is what it should be. We are in this game
because we believe that higher education should be an engine mobility. But where I think the
conversation often breaks down is that there's a mismatch and understanding of our time scales.
So we're looking at very long time scales with our institution. We believe in that.
And also in higher education, we never start with the technology. But technology for us is just a
tool. We don't even really talk about online or blended or residential. You use the best
methods for what's appropriate at the time. It's not actually reaching faculty in ways that they feel
like it's supportive and helpful to them and not. I agree with you. I feel like there's a real
divide between the tech and the actual educators. I think that if our communities are going to come
together in a more authentic way, we have to talk about where are the issues of access and costs and
quality, find that common ground, and then figure out together how we can create shared value
with the expertise and the resources and the capital that we can all bring into this. And there's
not really a space for that. If you look at the ed tech conferences like ASUGSV or Southwest,
Southwest, it's all this is about disrupting higher education. And, you know, and we're sitting here saying,
well, we don't really want to disrupt higher education. We want to invest in higher education. So I think
our language just misses each other often. I agree. The language is very polarizing right now,
and it should change, because I think ed tech's role should be to improve, and everyone wants
to improve education, but it doesn't necessarily mean to replace or to disrupt it in a negative
sense. I have one thing I would like to communicate to the ed tech community. I would love to
see folks focus more on curriculum and less on a delivery model. You know, everybody says things
like a lot of the things I do on the job I never learned in school or I had to learn on the fly
things that I never learned in the classroom. And that's true for a lot of people. Why don't we have
more education that is actually new content, new curriculum that the public school system is not
covering? Just to give one example. For years and years, the standard for high school math
that you take if you're good at math is calculus. And only a few people take probability and
statistics. But probability and statistics is far, far, far more important for life success at this
point in life, given the growth in data science, given the importance of data for making decisions,
for managers, that we should be teaching that in every high school in the country. And if we're not
going to do that, we should have you have ed tech focusing on delivering good content to teach
numerical reasoning, decision making under uncertainty, probability statistics, to fill the void
that is left in our public high school. I would love to see more talk of curriculum innovation.
Which, by the way, though, I was really shocked that you said that, David, because I would have thought
that focusing on the curriculum might feel even more threatening to the existing system and
professors and teachers today?
Well, I'll speak for myself.
Maybe it is.
But for me, that's not threatening.
That's an opportunity for collaboration because there are faculty all across the country
who have knowledge about content that isn't in a curriculum that is widely taught that
can be communicated.
But we don't speak in the language that the public understands without a lot of practice.
Most of us are not good communicators or at least we can be better at it.
Part of that is that we're just not trained to do it.
You know, no one teaches us how to write a good op-ed
or how to communicate, how to do a podcast.
You sort of have to learn on our own.
But there's so much knowledge and expertise embedded in the university
that needs to be drawn out.
And that would require ad tech to work closely with people.
There's just so much interesting content that could be made more available.
Like if somebody were to work with me and say like, oh, you know, you teach this class
about economic inequality, how can we make it speak and live to people?
Like, I don't have time to do that.
But I would love to work with somebody to do that.
But if we took that to the extreme and say we had the perfect curriculum for that particular course,
and then we offered it to every university, doesn't that threaten the professor in some way?
Because now every school has access to the same curriculum?
Well, ultimately, the professor isn't a constituency that we should be interested in.
It's the student.
I agree with that.
If the cost is making some tenured professors feel threatened,
I think that's a cost that I'd be willing to pay in exchange for educating our nation's students
and spreading the knowledge that exists in institutions higher learning around more widely.
I think the issue is that most academics don't work at the kind of places that David and I work at.
I agree with David that I'm positive about the overall trajectory of higher education,
but I'm very concerned about the individual institutions, particularly the smaller, tuition-dependent, private institutions.
So, well, we have more students who attend public institutions, we actually have more private institutions.
We have an amazing diversity of schools, and that kind of diversity has been a strength.
I mean, in a world where everything is coming into one or two monopolistic providers,
you only have three cell phone providers and four airlines.
One of the gifts of higher ed education is how diverse the ecosystem is.
But right now, with COVID, it's very much accelerating the trends to put these schools at risk.
We're seeing the demographic headwinds, the costs are going up.
And I think that if ed tech can come into this world to actually help out these institutions in some ways,
it really should not be paying attention to the places where David and I teach and work.
We're really not that important.
You should really be thinking about the big flags of universities and this diversity of tuition dependent.
If you can do that, the faculty will not be so threatened because you're actually helping to save their institutions that help keep their jobs.
I mean, think about it, all those institutions, there are professors in departments all across the country
who have developed a really thoughtful and interesting way of teaching certain material.
And if you could combine it all into the perfect syllabus for teaching certain topics that are not widely taught,
you could really supercharge the amount of learning that people can access.
And if it's threatening, so be it.
Right. So that could then potentially lead to this culling of teachers where if we have online courses
taught by the quote-unquote best instructors that could make lesser lectures obsolete or redundant?
Well, I mean, just to piggyback on that, I do think that you would have superstar lecturers,
but I don't think that would make us all obsolete.
I think what would happen is when you'd rather watch a lecture from somebody who's better at teaching academics than I am,
my role transforms. I'm no longer the lecturer. Instead, my job is to basically guide people
through the material and to meet them where they are in their learning and to form a human connection
with them that makes them want to turn the assignment in because they come to my office hours
and make a personal connection with me, I mean, if you think about teachers that have touched your
lives, just imagine who are the teachers in your life that meant the most to you, it was a mix
of the personal connection and the stuff they taught you in the classroom. It wasn't like,
oh my gosh, you know, Mrs. Hicks was the very best first grade teacher in terms of teaching
bifonics. You probably don't even remember what they taught you. You remember the human connection
you had with that. And I don't think that's ever going to make a replay.
I remember hearing an argument that everyone should pre-watch the lecture beforehand and then just
do their homework in the classroom. And that guided time with the teacher would be far more.
valuable. Interesting. It's true that so much of what we get out of education is that personal
connection, that mentorship. Though Connie, I know some startups are actually trying to
tap into that mentorship model as well. Yeah, yeah. There's a lot of startups right now that are
trying to offer online tutoring and peer groups even for learning different topics to help
encourage each other or answer each other's questions. And in the online model, I think
The value proposition is you are able to access people who don't just live a couple
miles from you.
So if you lived in a place where you didn't have access to great tutors, you can now
still hire a tutor from one of the best universities or one of the best schools who can still
teach at a reasonable price.
I do want to get more into the actual design of education.
From a research perspective, what should educators know when they're delving into this world
of online learning. Many educators are using Zoom by default. How much of the effectiveness of an online
learning curriculum is impacted by that interface or what you might call the delivery method?
Would students and educators benefit from some kind of custom platform that was designed from
an education first perspective versus a Zoom, which was not originally intended for this purpose?
I mean, so the way we're using Zoom now in education is never how people who think about online
education thought this should be or would be or could be. Basically, when you design a good online
course, most of that work is asynchronous. You're building active learning, you're building
discussions, you're building formative assessments, you're building peer learning. Mostly it's asynchronous,
and then you can combine some synchronous conversations, discussions, it never works well to lecture,
but it's complementary and it's really for the relationship building. What we found in with the pivot
to remote teaching and learning with COVID is schools didn't have time to develop these really
well thought out asynchronous courses with everything you do with online. There was sometimes too
much emphasis on Zoom classrooms that are not very good and it burned people out. And so if you
assume what we're seeing now is actually indicative of anything, you're getting a false negative.
I think that's a point well taken. But if Zoom, as you say, is just not working, what will the
improvement B. You mentioned we'll likely see improvement this fall in that you know a lot about the
research of online ed and you've both done it. My answer is asked me in a couple of months because I'm
teaching a first year master's in public policy curriculum at the Kennedy School's stats course.
So I'm teaching it with some colleagues who've done it before and have already started to use blending
tools. So it's a pretty successful model that I'm stepping into luckily. But this will be
a challenge because you're trying to teach something that actually requires a lot of interactivity.
You know, I can make some asynchronous content. But when you're working through problems and
explaining concepts. Part of the challenge is to intuit when you're in a classroom and you're with
folks, when you need to slow down, when you need to speed up, when you need to step back and
explain something differently. And a lot of good teaching is not about what you prepare ahead of
time. It's how you react, at least in my experience. I'm like reading the room. And my observation
from doing a lot of seminars is that the four of us right here, I don't find it to be meaningfully
worse in terms of reading your reactions and talking with you. But when you get to above 10 or 12 or so,
it's just very hard to read the room and read people's faces and get a sense for what's
happening. You don't have any body language. You can't look at 15 faces at once. And I just find
it, frankly, very difficult to pace correctly. And I don't know if there's a technological
solution to that. It's just something about when you're in a room with people sitting there,
you can just pick up more information from scanning the crowd. And I think that's a real limitation
of online teaching, at least for me. So I'd be really open to any technology to help me do that
better. But challenges, it doesn't scale very well.
having the real authentic education that is personal and transformative, where it's built on
relationships, it's expensive to do because, like, David's time, he only has so much time
in the day.
I never sleep.
And so it really doesn't scale very well.
So it's figuring out how you can actually use the affordances of the technology and realize
the limitation.
That's a great point.
I think it's one that you've both made, which is some of the inherent features of a great
education are very difficult to scale up. Connie, how would you respond to that? As David was describing
reading the room, I couldn't agree more when you're talking about, you know, say 30 students or less,
just witnessing my daughter's kindergarten online experience through Zoom in the spring. It's hard for
the teachers to control 35-year-olds, really, really hard. But I can also see the flip argument,
which is say if you have a lecture hall of five, six hundred students, even being able to see
the attendance and technologically, there's no reason why you wouldn't be able to use software
to figure out if the students paying attention or making eye contact. So theoretically,
you should be able to read the room in a very, very large class sizes, potentially better than
even in person. So I think there's still an argument that tech can still even help you read the room more
than what you see today. Yeah, I definitely think that's possible. I just wrote a book called
learning innovation, the future of higher education. So one of the things we talk a lot about in the book
is how education is changing to become much more in the key in sport. Like David and I, when we
went to grad school, we sort of learned to teach the way we were taught by our professors, which means
not at all. We learned our discipline. I'm a sociologist and demographer for my training. I didn't learn
anything about teaching. Now at certainly schools with more resources, they've been able to bring in
people who are learning designers, instructional designers, media experts, those kinds of things,
which really teaching learning is becoming a team sport. I think that's a positive because
education is getting much better. I also think one of the underlying issues that we have to think
about when we're talking about higher education in the future and technology is we're seeing
growth in inequality. We're seeing that the schools with the most resources are really able to
bear this COVID and the current trends. Schools that don't have the resources to bring in all these
folks to work with faculty around designing online courses, low residency, blended courses.
You know, it's a much different type of thing. So it's a real question. Well, how do you bring
those resources to places that really don't have the money to pay these kind of folks,
how education is changing? I don't know the answer to that. I think it's a really difficult
problem, but I do think we've seen the inequalities grow and grow over the last five, six months.
I agree with that, although I do think probably the solution to improvement is the sort of complementarity
between people who have content mastery and the tools, right? You still need a person to figure out
the best way to read people to teach a complex topic, like let's say economic inequality or something.
So I'm an economist by training, and I never encountered economics until college. And there is an AP
micro-macro-economics curriculum, but most people never realize until they take an economics class
that economics is not just money and finance, that it's actually the study of human behavior
and choice under constraints and economists have interesting things to say about all kinds of social
issues. I started teaching a freshman seminar at Harvard about economic inequality, basically for the
sole purpose to introduce to freshmen at Harvard a few at a time, this idea that economics can be
the study of social problems and of human behavior and that it's far more interesting than most people.
I would love to get some of that insight into the hands of high school students and middle school
students. You can make that stuff accessible to people without it being technical. The core insights
of economics are not about math and abstract probability. They're about human behavior and things
like sunk costs, et cetera. In order for me to entrepreneurally go and create that content and
like go take a roadshow around and talk, it's just no way that professors have the capability
of doing that or the time to do it. But that's a place where innovation could, and maybe there's
not enough money to be made in it, but it would just be an incredible benefit to society if we could
like, had innovative content creators pair with people who have content expertise and create
stuff that really spoke to people, whatever, multimedia content that kids are interested in watching.
And then you've got other tools that let you, you know, annotate slides on an iPad,
or you've got these beautiful lightboards where you can teach and reverse and look at the camera
while you're teaching and write on them. And like, those are all tools that by themselves don't
do anything. But if they're combined with people who have content knowledge, it can be leveraged
to teach more people at the same cost
or to increase productivity.
So we've talked about how tech
should play a supporting role
in in-person education.
This is an interesting moment in time
and that tech has to play a much greater role
than I think many educators desire
or are comfortable with.
But as we come out of this
and we go back to normal life,
do you think this is an inflection point for ed tech?
Is it just a temporary inconvenient scramble
that will eventually reset to the way that we were,
or do you think that there will be lasting changes?
I think that people prefer to be educated in person.
Many people do.
And so I don't think the in-person market for education
is going to disappear or go into a long-term decline.
But I do think there are going to be a lot of people
who understand that there are many more options available to them
in the tech space, that if they can't be on campus for whatever reason,
there's a much richer landscape out there,
than most people realized. So to be optimistic, I think what we'll see is more education
happening in a lot more different ways rather than the tech sector competing away in-person
education. So that's my hope. And I actually do think that's what will happen. But I could be wrong.
K-12, I think almost everyone universally prefers in person. I think the kids prefer in person. I think
the teachers prefer in person. And I think the parents very, very much prefer in person.
Second that.
So I feel like K through 12, while we are all surviving in an online context,
the preference will be to go back to school,
especially all that social interaction for young kids is so critical to their development.
And my hope is that a lot of this disruption, this moment in time,
will result in better curriculum and allow for the best curriculum to get to all of the teachers.
Because if you think about, especially K through 12, the Common Core programs,
and most schools are teaching the same topics, right?
The same kindergartner is learning about how plants grow in one school
and learning about it in a slightly different way in another school,
but why aren't those teachers having better collaboration tools
so they can share tips and learnings and content
and the best YouTube video on the topic that they found?
Josh, I want to get your view as well.
Is this temporary and we're going to go and reset,
or do you think we'll see lasting changes in the way that we learn?
Yes.
in terms of like how we're going to come out, I'll say something very positive in that over the last
few months, what we've really seen are that professors and learners have had to have a different
kind of relationship. Like we've all been at home. We've seen how complicated and crazy our lives are
and how difficult it is. I'm hoping that as we come back and when we come back that professors and
students will kind of have a better understanding of each other as people and how just complicated and
difficult our lives are and we'll have more of an ethos towards care and caring for each other.
Oh, I think parents appreciate teachers far more now than they did before.
Totally agree.
They're much more grateful to teachers now than before.
Well, and the whole ed tech debate brings up that interesting dichotomy and that teachers are
recognized as being largely underpaid.
I say that being married to one.
But also in the ed tech space, they're also expensive and there's ways that we can
bring down those costs with online models.
But if you take what David mentioned about teachers playing a different kind of role,
the guided role, there's still always going to be a need for that,
this smaller group or one-on-one interaction.
It's undisputable that people do learn certain topics that are one-on-one.
That's right.
And I think that would be a really great development because speaking for myself,
that's really where I derive joy from teaching is that moment when I see understanding in
student's eyes and I make a connection with them. And that's something that, whether it's
online or in person, is just the joy of teaching. And if we can immerse ourselves more fully in
that, using the tools of technology, then I'm all for it. Can you have that same emotional
connection through a Zoom screen as you can, an in-person classroom? I think you can. I mean,
we'd prefer to be in person, but I've felt at times in the past few months that connection with
students or with colleagues. I mean, I think if nothing else, the one thing you don't get online is
serendivity. Like, just think about when students file into the classroom, there's that five minutes
before class starts and people connect and, you know, how's your weekend and they talk about this and
that. And then you have that at the end. They come after to talk to professor. I mean, you can
engineer that in the online space and be thoughtful about it. When you're in person, it just happens,
like magic. Josh, you seem to slightly more skeptical of that. I mean, I don't want my college kids
having online. I want them on campus. I'm the director of online programs and strategy,
but I know you can't replace what happens when people get together.
It's such an important thing, and it shouldn't just be a luxury for the few.
I really do think there's a lot going on now with this nonprofit, full-profit partnerships
that we all need to work together because it's such a difficult challenge.
We all have a stake in this.
Like, this is not someone else's issue.
This is what we have to do.
And we're not going to be able to do it on our own.
Non-profit colleges and universities, we need to be part of,
the larger ecosystem and we need to be working together. Software is eating the world, but
maybe education is eating the world also. Well, thank you all so much for joining us on the
A16D podcast. It's been a pleasure. Thanks for having us. Great to meet all you guys. It was fun.
It was great. Thank you guys.