World university presidents discuss opportunities, challenges in education digitalization

The new generation of in­formation technology, represented by artificial intelligence (AI), big data, and cloud computing, has brought new opportunities and challenges for the future development of higher education, said Gong Qihuang, president of Peking University, at the World University Presidents Forum held recently in Beijing.

 

More than 500 participants from 36 countries and regions attended the forum, and 65 presi­dents from high-level universities delivered speeches on topics such as the digitalization of education, future required competence for talents, challenges and innova­tion of sustainable development of universities, and university co­operation and exchanges.

Gong said digital transforma­tion has brought new vitality to university innovation and devel­opment, triggering a reshaping of higher education. He said new technologies diversify teaching, and the traditional knowledge transfer mode — centered on teachers, textbooks, and class­rooms — has been transformed into an ability-cultivation mode centered on students’ activities based on many different learning resources.

 

Transformative Impact of Dig­italization

Digitalization will bring un­limited potential and new vision to higher education, which will change the organizational struc­ture, factor relations, functional utility, cultural form, and value proposition of higher education, and form a new form of higher education that is more open, more integrated, and more resilient, said Xia Lixin, secretary of the Party committee of Central China Nor­mal University.

 

Javed Mahmood Bukhari, rector of the National University of Sciences and Technology of Pa­kistan, raised a potential benefit of education digitization in develop­ing countries to help address the challenges of population mobility and to provide educational oppor­tunities for young people who have left their country.

 

Ding Zhongli, vice chairman of the National People’s Congress (NPC) Standing Committee and an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, stressed the need to accelerate the digital development of education in devel­oping countries to promote higher education to be more inclusive and fair.

 

He called for promoting the digital development of education to continue eliminating digital barri­ers, narrow the education gap, and promote the dissemination and sharing of high-quality education resources across schools, regions, and countries.

 

Efficient and Reliable Digital Education Platform

China will comprehensively implement the national strategy for education digitization and pro­vide society with an efficient, safe, and reliable digital education plat­form to share education resourc­es, said Chen Jie, vice minister of education.

 

While acknowledging the positive effects of digitization in education, the participants also expressed concerns about its chal­lenges to higher education.

 

Universities can no longer monopolize knowledge, and the subjects involved in knowledge production and dissemination are more diverse, requiring universi­ties to explore and establish a new mode of talent training, Gong said.

 

He also noted that knowledge fragmentation has led to learning fragmentation, and it is difficult for students to construct a systematic and structured knowledge system, which poses a huge challenge for higher education to cultivate stu­dents’ deep learning and system­atic learning ability.

 

Jacques Fremont, president and vice-chancellor of the Uni­versity of Ottawa, pointed out two challenges for universities regard­ing AI and technological devel­opments. One has to do with the transformation it brings to teach­ing and researching, and the other has to do with the responsibility universities have towards society with tools and approaches needed to ensure that technologies are not harmful to humankind.

 

Global Digital Governance

Universities have the respon­sibility to actively participate in global digital governance to solve the problems of privacy protection, ethics, and fairness brought about by the digitalization of education, said Zhang Pingwen, president of Wuhan University, at the forum.

 

Du Yubo, president of the Chi­na Association of Higher Educa­tion, called on world universities to help improve the standard and regulatory system and develop­ment promotion mechanisms for the digitization of global higher education.

 

Participants also called on universities globally to strength­en cooperation and exchanges to tackle challenges facing the world.

 

Stefania Giannini, assistant director-general for education at UNESCO, regarded the collabo­ration across disciplines and be­tween academic institutions as the core of higher education reform in her video speech at the forum.

 

Fostering Global Citizens and Innovation

Cooperation and exchang­es among universities promote cross-cultural understanding, knowledge sharing, and the nur­turing of global citizens. Partner­ships between universities provide opportunities for collaborative re­search, student exchanges, and the sharing of educational resourc­es. These initiatives contribute to advances and innovation in sci­ence and technology, and foster a deep appreciation for diverse perspectives and cultures, said Shi Yigong, president of Westlake University.

SOURCE: Xinhua