Below is an email I sent today to a few Rensselaer faculty and staff. If you are one of my RPI friends, please consider pushing a few buttons on campus as well and please cut and paste from my diatribe if you like. The first MOOC I used was at
Cal Berkeley as I was preparing to go back to RPI in late 2006. It is astonishing that RPI was a national leader in distance education in the 80's and they are now so far behind.
To: president@rpi.edi;
edop@poly.rpi.edu;
Subject: Don't forget alumni in the MOOC discussion
For many,
Rensselaer's April 10th Colloquium on Teaching & Learning will be about the pedagogy of MOOCs. But for
everyone
associated with RPI, it should first be about Rensselaer's brand -- our
reputation. Understanding why this topic has far-reaching strategic
value to Rensselaer is more important than tactical implementation
considerations. At the heart of that strategic value is understanding
how to leverage Institute resources to engage the imaginations of alumni
who can uniquely influence RPI's reputation.
Before we arrived on campus as students, faculty or staff, we chose
to invest our skills and our time at RPI because of some positive
association or affinity we each had previously developed for this great
Institute. With some reflection, I bet each one of us could identify
that positive influence. Perhaps it was a friend or relative that spoke
highly of the schools educational rigor. Perhaps you highly regarded a
distinguished researcher. Perhaps a trusted professional colleague had
graduated from the school or was an employee. That feeling and influence
is the foundation of RPI's brand. Upon that foundation, faculty, staff
and alumni frame their professional lives.
Unlike most faculty, tens of thousands of RPI alumni will only have
one university affiliation. When asked in a professional or personal
context where we chose to spend our formative undergrad years, we will
proudly exclaim RPI ! Most alumni hope that everyone who has been
associated with RPI will enthusiastically promote this school. But
realistically we all know that some will not. Faculty and staff have
their own alma mater and may advance their careers elsewhere. Some
alumni secretly regret attending Rensselaer for various reasons.
Regardless of your passion or your loyalty to Rensselaer, if
Rensselaer is on your resume then YOU NEED the school's reputation to be
of the highest caliber. YOU BENEFIT when people within your
professional life associate Rensselaer with greatness. You need that
positive reputation to spread and grow. YOU GAIN when corporate
executives, entrepreneurs, members of the press, academics, industry
leaders, government bureaucrats and millions of casual professional
colleagues understand the value -- respect the brand -- of Rensselaer.
Learning is the core business of any school and
Rensselaer is no different. Research is learning. Getting a degree is
learning. Advancing your professional life requires continuous learning.
It is only in the most simplistic view that online course content could
be viewed solely as a tool to help professors deliver content to
students enrolled at RPI. A long pedagogical discussion about
"residential students", "assessment", "asynchronous interactivity", etc
etc fails to acknowledge reality. The Colloquium first needs to consider
how to maintain relevant contact with 90,000 influential alumni.
Alumni represent
the greatest collective power to influence the reputation of the school.
We are the ones who can most effectively tell our friends, family and
millions of professional associates about
the great achievements being made at RPI and the value of an RPI
affiliation. In the absence of RPI online content, RPI alumni will seek
out content from other great schools such as those shaping
Coursera and
edX. Alumni can drive more prospective
grants and dollars to the school or we can deliver those dollars
elsewhere. It is a fiduciary responsibility of the Trustees to ensure
that the Institute employees are sustaining and growing the reputation
of Rensselaer. As a direct consequence, the Institute employees should
be focused on delivering quality learning to both current students and
alumni. Any business that disregards their existing customers will
wither against competitive forces. Alumni are established customers.
Without a proactively engaged alumni, RPI will wither.
If you are a distinguished or emerging academic at Rensselaer, I
would imagine you want to attract industry funding and grants from
governments and private foundations. You probably want the most
talented and creative grad-school candidates. Symmetrically, those same
individuals and institutions want to work with the best possible
researchers. Think of an online course as one of your tools for
attracting unsolicited research projects and inspired students.
The
Rensselaer faculty MUST begin this year to deliver openly available
content or you force 90,000 graduates to look elsewhere for their
intellectual curiosity and casual professional development. This is an
issue of basic marketing -- maintain the loyalty of your
existing customers so they become a source of future revenue. You will
not find an easier group of people to attract to the RPI website. Many
alumni are puzzled by the absence of content available from RPI. We look
to innovative content projects such as edX and Coursera and feel
disappointed and embarrassed that RPI is not represented. We search in
vain on the RPI website for similar intellectually engaging content.
Please, do not ignore the influence of Rensselaer alumni.