The route to one million, digitally
A challenge of this scale — incorporating and embedding digital technologies into the HE curriculum sector-wide — requires buy-in and strategic leadership from vice-chancellors and their senior teams.
Staff designing and adapting curricula need support and resources to review and implement progressive change for the good of the student’s learning journey. Each digital opportunity must be weighed against the needs of the subject and students.
Building a data infrastructure and data governance processes that support learning requires strategic planning, widespread coordination across the organisation, and an agile plan to review and develop data governance to support updated aims.
Facilitating students to engage with digital course elements requires not only online elements but physical infrastructure on-site, too: Wi-Fi on site, and areas that allow students to work uninterrupted away from lecture theatres are vital parts of facilitating greater numbers of students.
Digital inequality needs to be addressed by providing devices, facilitating network access, and providing accessibility features on learning platforms. Digital and data inequality have been around as long as the internet, but it took a pandemic to highlight how severe the divide can be. As the student cohort diversifies, the provision of the vital basics such as suitable devices, a reliable internet connection, a safe and private place to work — needs to be considered from the start of the student's journey.
Both staff and students need to be supported with regular reviews of their digital skills and targeted training. Jisc’s recent digital experience insights HE teacher survey found less than half of teaching staff are satisfied with the support they get for their digital skills, and only 6% are rewarded or recognised for work with digital technologies.
Students have high expectations of HE courses today — they expect them to use data to help them track their progress and succeed — this expectation extends to teaching staff: they need to understand the technology they are using to teach and be able to use it effectively.