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  • iPad and the Risk of 'Sustaining Innovations'

    By Joshua Kim January 27, 2010 8:57 pm EST

    The risk of the iPad for higher education is that the device will prove a "sustaining innovation" in learning technology.

    Sustaining innovations, as explained by Michael Horn in his amazing talk at the 2009 EDUCAUSE ECAR Symposium, increase the quality of the service or product but also drive up the cost. Higher education has been moving through cycles of sustaining innovation, where improvements in facilities, amenities and technology have increased the fidelity of the campus experience while simultaneously driving costs (and tuition) faster than inflation.

    The iPad could drive a new round of sustaining innovation as institutions seek to design specialized campus and educational apps for the new platform. We will want to design these learning and campus apps, and invest in tools that allow our university content to be accessed by the iPad, for the best of reasons. These reasons include the desire to stay relevant to our students' experience, to compete for their scarce attention, and to use the iPad to reach multiple learning styles.

    We will see the ability of the iPad to digitize curricular texts and aggregate curricular media as progress. We will be excited that students will be able to easily sync up a syllabus' worth of course content, consuming the materials via the iPad's gorgeous interface. We will be excited by the possibilities of students engaging in formative assessments and collaborative work (wikis/blogs/discussions) through the browser, without the need to sacrifice the fidelity of reading (iBooks) or media viewing.

    The possibilities for learning, student interaction and enhanced campus services that the iPad unleashes will all come at a price. Nothing about a tool as wonderful as the iPad will lower the cost of constructing or delivering education. We will need to invest in buying iPads, developing apps for iPads, and experimenting with new pedagogies and training around iPads. Perhaps the iPad will be a disruptive force for lifelong learners, as they will be able to sync up the lecture content from iTunesU, pair it with book content, and than engage in discussions of the material (through the browser) with other autodidacts.

    It might be unpopular to say right now (and I'm sympathetic to the Edupunk movement), but an argument can be made that the LMS was a disruptive innovation for higher education. The LMS allowed, for the first time, hybrid and online learning to scale. Prior to the LMS any pedagogical innovation enabled by technology required custom development and a high degree of faculty technical proficiency. Faculty could make course Web pages, but they needed to know HTML. Assessment and collaboration tools could be built, but they were built one-by-one and by hand. The low technical threshold necessary to maintain and utilize and LMS opened the door to pedagogical innovation and a disruption of the status quo higher ed model. We are still struggling to walk through that door. (And yes, we can and should be debating if Web 2.0 tools have supplanted or complemented the LMS as catalysts for disruption -- but that is the topic of another discussion).

    How can something as uncool and unsexy as the LMS be disruptive for higher ed, while something as cool, sexy and elegant as the iPad only be sustaining? And what do we do with the recognition that no matter how wonderful a sustaining innovation can be, the end result is to increase costs as quality also rises?

    Do we stop adopting sustaining innovations?

    Do we only innovate with learning technologies that can increase quality (active learning) while decreasing costs?

    I have no idea, but while we figure all this out I'm totally excited to get my hands on a shiny new iPad. How about you?

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Comments on iPad and the Risk of 'Sustaining Innovations'

  • Absolutely
  • Posted by Ken McElrath , Professor, Art at Covenant College on January 28, 2010 at 8:45am EST
  • Also love to get my hands on an iPad. As to sustaining innovation, yet, it certainly could be if we do not focus our development talents on innovation rather than infrastructure. What I mean is, we need to drive cost out of IT infrastructure in order to have the money to use IT to innovate. So for every iPad app, we need to find a corresponding cost savings in areas that have become painfully expensive and unfortunately, entrenched. We all know where the costs savings can be found (eliminating server farms, silos, redundant desktops, and other related hard and soft costs), but we must be willing to adopt entirely new paradigms (the internet as the computer, cloud computing, openness, the university as a true ecosystem) to get there.

  • Wait and See
  • Posted by Dr. Pepper , Academic-In-Training on January 28, 2010 at 10:30am EST
  • I am skeptical of the iPad for the same reason as I am skeptical of eReaders - you need at least two in order to do your research, and you can't annotate or copy and past from the content. When I research I tend to read one thing at a time, but when time comes to write something I frequently have a desktop full of open articles and books, all with their separate annotations, as a start to put my thoughts together. eReaders are too expensive to do this with.

    On a different level, I tend to see the iPad as a blown up iPod Touch. It doesn't really offer me anything different. There isn't even flash or the capability for plug-ins in the browser which cuts down on the number of websites that I can visit. As a pedagogical tool technologies need to be permissive and extensible. The iPad by nature is not extensible. You can add new apps, but you can extend the existing apps (or add features on an OS level). Heck, I can't even get full access to Bb Vista and WIMBA on my iPhone (and iPod Touch) - a larger screen won't help, it just makes the frustration more tangible ;-)

    I'll take a wait and see approach. When Amazon.com can sell me MP3s and videos straight on my iPad, when I can watch Hulu on my iPad and flash is fully supported, when I can annotate books and PDFs, when I can take handwritten notes and when my LMS fully works with the iPad (requires Java), AND when I can resell my ebooks (because I don't want to hold onto a $100+ Biology 101 textbook) then I can look at it as a pedagogical implement that *might* replace *some* books.

  • iPad=Innovation?
  • Posted by Jim Groom , Reverend at UMW on January 28, 2010 at 11:00am EST
  • Josh,

    I too am sympathetic to a kind of middling compromise, but I just don't know why all-of-a-sudden the iPad brings on this whole new level of necessary, but expensive innovation. This quote in particular has me wondering:
    <blockquote>Nothing about a tool as wonderful as the iPad...</blockquote>
    It's as if the iPad was the internet when you read this sentence, when in fact the iPad i s another tool for make the internet that much more proprietary. I don't see the iPhone or the iPad or ay of the other app-driven, pay-to-play platforms as the road to innovation at all for higher education. In fact, it is quite the opposite, like with the LMS---which I grant may have been disruptive at one point, but that point is long gone now---th iPa and closed platforms like it further remove universities and institutions from innovation by replacing their investment in people with tools. The "ipod/iphone/ipad" campus-wide pilots are so much publicity stunts we've seen over the last 5 years, and I'm not sure we can argue their investment was sustaining the most important kind of innovation: making education more open, affordable, and ultimately democratic. In fact, I think they push it the other way, and that is concerning.

    UMW has been on the leading edge of innovation for over 3 or 4 years now when it comes to web publishing, pedagogical information, and sharing. We've done it with open source tools that can easily support the uses of iPhone and iPad online, but are not driven by the same lock-in model. Innovation has to be driven by a model that enables people to experiment and explore with the technologies through their own spaces experimenting with open source applications and a web server. Open Ed and texts need to live openly on the web, not behind some paywall modelled device like the iPad that is more of a nightmare than a dream come true when we think about it.

    Quite frankly, there is far too much pandering to these devices, and far too little conceptual and creative though about opening up the mother of all teaching innovatiosn: the web. That's were innovation lives and dies, and a new interface may change certain lessons and approaches, but locking our innovation into a device is nothing short of collusion with commerical interest to make sure education doesn't get any cheaper any time soon.

    There has been too much compromise in edtech around the LMS and every new device that comes our ay, and that is killing innovation more than a lack of funds. Invest in people to experiment, and innovation will not be far behind, leave the latest devices to the fanboys and girls.

  • Posted by Steve Foerster , fellow blogger at eLearners.com on January 28, 2010 at 12:45pm EST
  • While I also agree with others' comments here on the iPad, I'm also actively concerned about it as a safe repository of e-books after the Kindle fiasco:

    http://tinyurl.com/y8afh4a

    Give me my e-books on a platform I can trust, please.

  • Kindle
  • Posted by Charles Levine , Former publisher at Random House Reference on January 28, 2010 at 9:30pm EST
  • In response to Dr. Pepper's post, a minor corrective regarding the eReaders, using the Kindle as an example: You can’t make comments or corrections to a document on the Kindle—I can envision that someday soon the Kindle will have reviewing and commenting functions comparable to those of Adobe Reader—but you can highlight words or passages and also create notes linked to specific points in the text. Kindle stores all such highlighted text and any associated notes in a text document (.txt), which can be downloaded to your computer and then copied and pasted wherever one wants. This is by no means a perfect process--in fact it is clunky as hell--but it does mean that you can review a book or document on the Kindle and keep track of and capture in digital form your observations and comments and highlighted text you may want to cite.

  • Our take for mobile education on the iPhone and soon the iPad
  • Posted by Sandy Khaund , Founder at Irynsoft on February 3, 2010 at 5:15am EST
  • As a general consumer, I don't know if I am very excited about the iPad. But, at the risk of a shameless plug, my company Irynsoft is very excited about what the iPad holds in store for education. We have a software platform called VIRT2GO (http://www.virt2go.com), which delivers online video lectures to students within a rich smartphone interface. It also boasts of many features such as forums and note-taking which combine to provide a unique interactive mobile learning experience. We built VIRT2GO for the iPhone with Facebook Connect integration and are now expanding to other platforms (Android in development and eventually Blackberry). We have a YouTube video (http://bit.ly/c7vsUG) that gives a two-minute drilldown on what it looks like and how it works. There's also a free version on the App Store that allows you to access open courseware from top universities: http://bit.ly/11VYhK

    Our primary goal for building it out was for it to complement traditional distance learning content that students enjoy via PC and we believe that enough tradeoffs exist that students would do well by having both options. But with the iPad, the gap might be bridged just enough so that the desktop isn't the primary vehicle any more. The portability of the iPhone is still there, but the video screen and input keyboard just gained some significant real estate that could make all the difference in the world.

    We're already working with the new iPad SDK to adjust our app to better take advantage of the additional screen real estate and know we should be able to generate a better experience with the bigger screen. I'm certainly biased, but I love the way the future is shaping up. If anyone has thoughts on how we're approaching mobile learning (and suggestions to extend for the iPad), I'd love to hear from you. I'm sandy AT irynsoft DOT com.