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SUMMARY:New Universities of the 21st Century
DESCRIPTION:\n\nIn the first of three webinars in our April 2024 series 
 "Imagining the Innovative University of the Future\," Duke Associate 
 Provost Noah Pickus\, Dr. Sanjay Sarma and Dr. Bryan Penprase will discuss 
 innovative new universities of the 21st century around the world. The 
 discussion will explore themes highlighted in Pickus’ and Bryan 
 Penprase’s new book\, “The New Global Universities: Reinventing 
 Education in the 21st Century" and how higher education can set new 
 standards for teaching and learning and nurture a new generation of 
 leaders. The discussion will be followed by moderated Q&A with Pickus and 
 Penprase\, followed by comments from Dr. Yakut Gazi.\n\n\nAbout the 
 series:\n\nImagining the Innovative University of the 
 Future\n\nInstitutions of higher education are facing numerous stressors 
 and challenges in an evolving landscape of learner and employer needs. 
 Newly established universities and colleges may have certain advantages to 
 well-established institutions\, in that they can focus their programs\, 
 curricula and pedagogies on what learners need now and will need in the 
 future. How can established and respected institutions such as Duke evolve 
 and innovate based on strong foundations\, to expand their quality 
 offerings to reach new audiences of learners\, teach new skills and 
 capabilities\, and develop new ways of recognizing and tracking learner 
 accomplishment? \n\nThis webinar series will highlight some of the ways 
 that innovation can and is happening in higher ed -- at the university 
 scale (macro innovation)\, program scale (mezzo innovation)\, and 
 individual course scale (micro innovation). \n\nPlease register below\, and 
 also join us for either or both of the other webinars in the 
 series:\n\n\n	Alternative Credentials and Modularity as Innovative Learning 
 Pathways\, Friday April 12\, 12 - 1 PM EDT\n	Applied Research and 
 Classroom-Based Innovation\, Friday April 19\, 12 - 1 PM EDT\n\n\n\nSpeaker 
 biographies\n\nNoah Pickus\n\n\n\nNoah Pickus is associate provost at Duke 
 University\, with responsibilities in academic strategy\, global 
 initiatives\, educational innovation\, and policy engagement. A faculty 
 member at Duke for 25 years\, he served as vice-chair for the 
 university’s 2017 academic strategic plan and managed the Duke 2030 
 strategy team\, as well as cross-university initiatives in health system 
 organization\, experimental and collaborative learning\, continuing and 
 online education\, and state-wide leadership training. As the Nannerl O. 
 Keohane director of the Kenan Institute for Ethics\, he led a signature 
 university-wide interdisciplinary program for ten years and oversaw its 
 expansion in research and high impact undergraduate programming. He also 
 currently serves as dean for academic strategy and learning innovation at 
 Duke Kunshan University\, where he previously led curriculum design and 
 faculty hiring as dean of undergraduate curriculum and faculty 
 development.\n\nPickus has led several other educational ventures. As chief 
 academic officer for Minerva Project\, he managed a 40 person team that 
 provided curriculum design\, instructional training\, data collection and 
 analysis for online and in-person teaching in the U.S.\, Mexico\, Asia\, 
 and Europe. As the founding director of the Institute for Emerging Issues 
 under former Governor James B. Hunt Jr. at NC State University\, he 
 established a university-based venture in shaping public debate and public 
 policy. He also co-directed the Arizona State University-Georgetown 
 University Academy for Innovation in Higher Education Leadership Intensive 
 Program\, a training ground for entrepreneurial academic 
 leaders.\n\nFormerly a faculty member at Middlebury College and an American 
 Council on Education fellow at Franklin & Marshall College\, Pickus has 
 written widely on innovation and globalization in higher education 
 including (with Kara Godwin) Liberal Arts & Sciences Innovation in China 
 (Center for International Higher Education). His book The New Global 
 Universities: Reinventing Education in the 21st Century (with Bryan 
 Penprase) is forthcoming from Princeton University Press. It tells the 
 inside story behind the launch and development of eight innovative new 
 colleges and universities in Africa\, Asia\, the Middle East\, and North 
 America. It captures the dramatic quest by academic entrepreneurs to 
 re-imagine education across the globe.\n\nA professor of the practice at 
 Duke\, his previous work focused on immigration and citizenship.  He is the 
 author of True Faith and Allegiance: Immigration and American Civic 
 Nationalism (Princeton University Press) and Immigration and Citizenship in 
 the 21st Century (Rowman & Littlefield)\, and he co-directed the 
 Brookings-Duke Immigration Roundtable. He received a bachelor’s degree 
 from the College of Social Studies at Wesleyan University and a doctorate 
 in politics from Princeton University.\n\nSanjay Sarma\n\nSanjay Sarma is 
 CEO\, President and Dean of the Asia School of Business\, and a Professor 
 of Mechanical Engineering and the Sloan School of Management at MIT. Sarma 
 was one of the founders of the Auto-ID Center at MIT\, which\, along with a 
 number of partner companies and its "spin-off\," EPCglobal\, developed the 
 technical concepts and standards of modern RFID. He also chaired the 
 Auto-ID Research Council consisting of 6 labs worldwide\, which he helped 
 set up. Today\, the suite of standards developed by the Auto-ID Center\, 
 commonly referred to as the EPC\, are being used by over a thousand 
 companies on five continents. Sarma serves as chairman of EPCglobal\, the 
 worldwide standards body he helped create. \n\nBetween 2010 and 2012\, 
 Sarma helped establish a new university in Singapore called the Singapore 
 University of Technology and Design (SUTD). Since 2012\, he served as the 
 first Director of Digital Learning at MIT and the VP of Open Learning 
 there. His Office\, the Open Learning\, oversaw MIT’s Open CourseWare 
 project and the development of MIT’s pioneering Massive Open Online 
 Courses (MOOC’s)\, MicroMasters\, the MIT Integrated Learning 
 Initiative\, the Jameel World Education Lab\, MIT xPro and Horizon. Sarma 
 also served on the board of edX\, the global MOOC provider. \n\nSarma 
 received his Bachelors from the Indian Institute of Technology\, his 
 Masters from Carnegie Mellon University and his PhD from the University of 
 California at Berkeley. Sarma's research has been recognized with several 
 best paper awards. He is a recipient of the MIT MacVicar Fellowship\, 
 National Science Foundation CAREER Award\, the Daniel and Fort Flowers 
 Chair at MIT\, the Den Hartog Award for Excellence in Teaching\, the Keenan 
 Award for innovations in undergraduate education\, the New England Business 
 and Technology Award\, and the MIT Global Indus Award. He was selected on 
 2003's Business Week ebiz 25\, Fast Company Magazine's Fast Fifty and the 
 RFID Journal's Special Achievement Award. He has authored several books 
 including “Grasp: The Science Transforming How We Learn\," in 2019 with 
 co-author Luke Yoquinto\; and “Workforce Education: A New Roadmap\," in 
 2020 with William Bonvillian.\n\nBryan Penprase\n\nDr. Bryan Penprase is 
 currently a visiting scholar at Harvard University\, conducting research on 
 the future of higher education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education 
 (HGSE). He is a professor of Physics and Astronomy at Soka University of 
 America (SUA) and also serves SUA as Vice President for Sponsored Research 
 and External Academic Relations. In this role\, his work is to foster 
 externally funded projects that will help SUA’s faculty expand their 
 research and scholarship and also enable SUA as an institution to more 
 fully realize many of its strategic priorities.  Bryan is also working to 
 expand connections between SUA and regional and peer institutions\, to 
 enable SUA to have more academic collaborations and partnerships as it 
 expands and becomes more recognized as a world leader in global liberal 
 arts and as it defines and builds on its mission for fostering global 
 citizenship.\n\nPreviously he served at SUA as the Dean of Faculty from 
 2017 to 2020. As Dean of Faculty\, Bryan worked with SUA faculty to help 
 develop a new interdisciplinary Life Sciences program\, developed new 
 programs for incentivizing faculty research\, worked to improve teaching at 
 SUA\, helped SUA connect with peer liberal arts institutions\, and improved 
 Soka’s unique Core and GE curriculum. At SUA he developed the 2018 
 Globalised Liberal Arts conference\, which was co-organized by SUA\, Pomona 
 College\, Carleton College\, Middlebury College\, and  Yale University. He 
 also created a Science Advisory Board to advise SUA on its new Life 
 Sciences curriculum and worked with faculty and administration to develop a 
 new Fellowship advising program\, a new CPT program\, an accelerated MA 
 degree program with CGU\, a new Faculty Merit program\, a Teaching 
 Innovation Grant program\, more inclusive practices in search committees\, 
 and also led the transition to online instruction with new training 
 programs for faculty in Spring of 2020. \n\nBryan received both a BS in 
 Physics and an MS in Applied Physics from Stanford University in 1985\, and 
 a PhD in Astronomy and Astrophysics from the University of Chicago in 1992. 
 He was a National Research Council NRC Postdoctoral Fellow at Caltech and 
 has held numerous fellowship and research appointments\, including an ASEE 
 fellow at NASA/JPL\, a visiting Downing Fellow at Cambridge University\, 
 and a Visiting Associate appointment at the California Institute of 
 Technology.  Bryan was a professor at Pomona College between 1993 and 2016 
 and was awarded the Frank P. Brackett Professorship in 2007. At Pomona\, he 
 served in numerous leadership roles\, including Chair of the Physics and 
 Astronomy Department from 2007 until 2011\, member of the Pomona College 
 Executive Committee\, chair of the Teaching and Learning Committee\, and 
 Division Director for the Pomona College Science Division.\n\nSession 
 facilitator\n\nYakut Gazi\n\nAs the Vice Provost for Learning Innovation 
 and Digital Education\, Yakut Gazi (she/her) oversees digital and lifetime 
 learning operations at Duke University\, including the pre-college and 
 retirement programs.\n\nPreviously\, she was the Associate Dean for 
 Learning Systems at Georgia Tech Professional Education. Her higher 
 education experience spans over 29 years in four countries. She served on 
 the Academic Advisory Council for Quality Matters©\, is an elected council 
 member and First Vice President of the International Association for 
 Engineering Continuing Education (IACEE)\, and an at-Large Board Member of 
 the University Professional and Continuing Education Association 
 (UPCEA).\n\nDr. Gazi has her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from Texas A&M 
 University\, and an M.A. in Educational Sciences and a B.S. in Teaching 
 Chemistry\, both from Bogazici University in Turkey. \n\n
ORGANIZER;CN="Duke Learning Innovation & Lifetime Education":MAILTO:learninginnovation@duke.edu
CATEGORIES:Teaching and Learning
CONTACT;CN="Duke Learning Innovation & Lifetime Education":MAILTO:learninginnovation@duke.edu
STATUS:CONFIRMED
UID:LibCal-12177935
URL:https://duke.libcal.com/event/12177935
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