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THE Asia-Pacific University Rankings 2018: students need digital immersion

As the jobs market transforms, universities must give students opportunities to learn-by-doing that mirror the new world of work, Sean Gallagher says

Published on
June 27, 2018
Last updated
June 27, 2018
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Browse the full聽探花视频聽Asia-Pacific University聽Rankings 2018 results

Learning is the tool of 鈥╥ndividual and organisational advancement. This process of learning is more than just acquiring formal education鈥 learning-by-doing 颈蝉听辫补谤补尘辞耻苍迟.鈥

These insights from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development stand up as well today as they did when they appeared in the group鈥檚 seminal 1996 report The Knowledge-Based Economy. Learning-by-doing 鈥 in the form of skills 鈥 the report stated, was essential for workers to handle 鈥渃odified knowledge鈥, the commodity that firms were using to drive productivity in the still emerging knowledge economy.

Fast-forward almost a quarter of a century and the world is vastly different.

Upwork, a freelancing platform, recently released research in its Freelancing in America report. The headline? 鈥淔reelancers predicted to become the US workforce majority by 2027, with nearly 50 per cent of millennial workers already freelancing.鈥 In the Asia-Pacific region, WeWork, a global network of co-working spaces used by freelancers, recently raised $1.4 billion (拢1 billion) to expand in China, Japan and South-east Asia. Welcome to one of the emerging futures of work in the digital economy.

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How do we prepare students for the digital economy? The 1996 OECD report is a helpful guide. First, let鈥檚 look at some context and activity in Asia-Pacific universities.

In the digital economy, data is the new commodity driving productivity, but in an environment in which knowledge is increasingly codified and handled by sophisticated cognitive and automation technologies. Artificial intelligence, for instance, is ever more adept at analysing data, categorising information, recognising patterns and making decisions. From journalism to medical diagnosis, from HR to audit, from logistics to manufacturing, AI continues to encroach on what has been human worker territory. And, in doing so, challenging the traditional business of universities.

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In May in Australia, the consultancy firm EY released The聽University of the Future report. The finding that led newspaper headlines across the country was: 鈥40 per cent of degrees will soon be obsolete鈥. According to the report, 鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 current university model, with its focus on 鈥榯raditional鈥 undergraduate degrees, will be less relevant in this future world.鈥

At the recent conference of the Asia-Pacific Association for International Education, Singapore鈥檚 minister for education, Ong Ye Kung, highlighted changes to the Singaporean university curriculum that stress the importance of experiential learning and digital literacy. Over in the Philippines, the 2017-22 Philippine Development Plan puts in sharp focus the need to develop 鈥21st-century competencies鈥 at its universities.

Indeed, governments across Asia-Pacific from Indonesia to Japan, from South Korea to China 鈥 and Australia too 鈥 are developing similar policy positions focused on universities鈥 role in developing digital skills.

Initiatives that provide students with digital skills are steps in the right direction for the future of work, but not leaps.

Tom Goodwin discusses the paradigm shift into the digital economy in his new book, Digital Darwinism. 鈥淲hen we face something new we find it hard to really rethink鈥e anchor it in processes, systems, infrastructure, [and] assumptions of the past.鈥

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Indeed, the EY report says that of the nearly 1,200 graduates surveyed in the research, 鈥42 per cent felt [that] their degree structure [was] outdated, [and] lacked digital skills training, complex problem solving, and team work鈥. This is no doubt true.

But to paraphrase Goodwin, digital skills cannot simply be an add-on to a traditional university education structured to serve the knowledge economy. Learning must be constructed around the emerging futures of work in the digital economy.

This is the essence of the OECD report. It recognised that to drive productivity at the wavefront of new technologies required learning-by-doing in 鈥渘on-formal settings鈥 (read 鈥渞eal-world situations鈥).

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Back to the freelance economy. According to the New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, who works with business strategist Heather McGowan on the future of work, 鈥渨ork is being disconnected from jobs, and jobs and work are being disconnected from companies, which are increasingly becoming platforms鈥. Like Upwork.

Platforms are flat, fast and furious. Where ecosystems thrive on disruptive and creative forces. Where value is created in networks, not chains. Where growth trumps innovation. Where risk-taking is not optional. Where there is no right formula for success.

Freelancing and other emerging futures of work 鈥 like agile approaches, exponential organisations (those that leverage/exploit exponential technologies to accelerate growth) and Industry 4.0 鈥 are rewriting the rules of how economic value is created. It is incumbent on universities to provide authentic opportunities for students to learn-by-doing in these environments.

Through an increasing focus on digital skills, Asia-Pacific鈥檚 universities are beginning to look forward into the new world of work. By throwing our students into the real future of work situations 鈥 such as co-working spaces 鈥 we will help ensure they learn how to thrive in the digital economy.聽

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Sean Gallagher is director of the Centre for the New Workforce at Swinburne University of Technology in Australia.

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