Komljenovic, Janja and Sellar, Sam and Birch, Kean and Hansen, Morten (2023) Assetisation of higher education's digital disruption. In: World Yearbook of Education 2024 : Digitalisation of Education in the Era of Algorithms, Automation and Artificial Intelligence. Routledge, London, pp. 122-139. ISBN 9781032417905
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
Edtech entrepreneurs, investors and international consultants have claimed that higher education is inefficient, inaccessible and fails to deliver employable graduates. They often promote the view that universities are broken and in desperate need of digital disruption. The rise of platforms like Uber, Spotify and Airbnb in other sectors is seen as indicative of what is to come in higher education. Instead of disregarding these calls for disruption as discursive tropes, we explore how value is constructed in the imagined digital disruption of higher education. We employ the lens of assetisation to analyse three variants of imagined disruption: disruption 'in', 'of' and 'to' higher education. First, we argue that value is constructed via intra-organisational asset co-creation in order to build efficiencies and personalisated services. Second, value is constructed by delivering service for consumption via assetised public-private partnerships. Third, value is constructed by coordinating new lifelong-learning education marketplaces, which are governed via assetisation. These variants need democratic and sector-specific discussion on digital asset governance to support fair, just and democratic futures for the sector.