- Emerging Education Technologies - http://www.emergingedtech.com -

Western Governors University - Measurable Academic Innovation Success, Enabled by Technology

Share [1]

WGU is a model for many of the ways that technology can facilitate instruction, and enable the non-traditional student to earn a higher education credential.

This is the second in a series [2] of articles celebrating educational institutions that have achieved proven, measurable success with the integration of technology into their instructional processes. This week we look at Western Governors University [3] and the empirical evidence that demonstrates how this technology-enabled academic institution has been an outstanding model of innovation.

[3]

The Back Story
WGU is a non-profit online educational institution chartered in 1996 by a coalition of 19 United States Governors seeking to address rapid population growth and confronted by limited public funds for educational services. The governors enlisted the Western Interstate Commission on Higher Education and the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems to help design the newly envisioned university.

Five themes formed the underlying goals of the envisioned institution:

The governors also insisted that WGU be affordable, flexible, and student-focused. They serve as many students as possible, across the spectrum of minorities, first-generation college students, students with modest or limited incomes, and those whose lives or geographic locations do not allow them to attend traditional, campus-based colleges. WGU is accredited by four of the regional accrediting institutions in the U.S. and has flourished into a national university, serving more than 30,000 students from all 50 states, yet remains non-bureaucratic and innovative.

The Technology
While WGU’s approach to higher education comprises innovations beyond just the technological, the technology is clearly at the core of their highly successful web-based model. Here are a few of the ways they have leveraged technologies to deliver and ensure a high quality experience for their students and facilitate meeting learning outcomes and retention:

The Results
This is what it all comes down to, and Western Governors University has an impressive track record of measurable successes [5] that testify to the impact of their approach. Here’s just a few of the results WGU can boast to prove out their institution’s effectiveness:

Western Governors University continues to receive praise for its academic model and to enhance its reputation with employers for the emphasis on graduating highly competent professionals. US Department of Education Arne Duncan recently stated, “While such programs [like Western Governors University] are now the exception, I want them to be the norm.” Not only is this technology-rooted model higher education delivering on the promise of education for their students, they are a beacon of innovative success and leadership amongst educational institutions.

Related Posts (if the above topic is of interest, you might want to check these out):
Education Technology Success Story – Carpe Diem Collegiate High School

Mark Milliron’s Sobering, Honest, and Inspiring Keynote Address at CT2012 [6]
12 Common Education Technology Implementation Problems and How to Prevent and Remediate Them

About Kelly Walsh [11]

Kelly Walsh is Chief Information Officer at The College of Westchester, in White Plains, NY, where he also teaches. In 2009, Walsh founded EmergingEdTech.com. As an education and instructional technology advocate, he frequently delivers presentations on a variety of related topics at schools and conferences across the U.S. Walsh is also an author, and online educator, regularly running Flipped Class Workshops [12] online. His eBook, the Flipped Classroom Workshop-in-a-Book is available here [13]. Kelly also writes, records, and performs original music ... stop by kwalshmusic.com [14] and have a listen!

[Disclaimer: The opinions expressed here are my own, or those of other writers, and not those of my employer. - K. Walsh]