The Practical University
    
    By DAVID BROOKS < 
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/davidbrooks/index.html>
    
    
    Published: April 4, 2013
    
    The best part of the rise of online education is that it forces
    us to ask: What is a university for?
    
    Are universities mostly sorting devices to separate smart and
    hard-working high school students from their less-able fellows
    so that employers can more easily identify them? Are
    universities factories for the dissemination of job skills? Are
    universities mostly boot camps for adulthood, where young
    people learn how to drink moderately, fornicate meaningfully
    and hand things in on time?
    
    My own stab at an answer would be that universities are places
    where young people acquire two sorts of knowledge, what the
    philosopher Michael Oakeshott called technical knowledge and
    practical knowledge. Technical knowledge is the sort of
    knowledge you need to understand a task ââ¬â the statistical
    knowledge you need to understand what market researchers do,
    the biological knowledge you need to grasp the basics of what
    nurses do.
    
    Technical knowledge is like the recipes in a cookbook. It is
    formulas telling you roughly what is to be done. It is
    reducible to rules and directions. Itââ¬â¢s the sort of knowledge
    that can be captured in lectures and bullet points and
    memorized by rote.
    
    Right now, online and hybrid offerings seem to be as good as
    standard lectures at transmitting this kind of knowledge, and,
    in the years ahead, they are bound to get better ââ¬â more
    imaginatively curated, more interactive and with better
    assessments.
    
    The problem is that as online education becomes more pervasive,
    universities can no longer primarily be in the business of
    transmitting technical knowledge. Online offerings from
    distant, star professors will just be too efficient. As Ben
    Nelson of Minerva University points out, a school cannot charge
    students $40,000 and then turn around and offer them online
    courses that they can get free or nearly free. That business
    model simply does not work. There will be no such thing as a
    MOOC university.
    
    Nelson believes that universities will end up effectively
    telling students: ââ¬ÅTake the following online courses over the
    summer or over a certain period, and then, when youââ¬â¢re done,
    you will come to campus and thatââ¬â¢s when our job will begin.ââ¬
    If Nelson is right, then universities in the future will spend
    much less time transmitting technical knowledge and much more
    time transmitting practical knowledge.
    
    Practical knowledge is not about what you do, but how you do
    it. It is the wisdom a great chef possesses that cannot be
    found in recipe books. Practical knowledge is not the sort of
    knowledge that can be taught and memorized; it can only be
    imparted and absorbed. It is not reducible to rules; it only
    exists in practice.
    
    Now I could give you a theory about how universities can
    transmit this sort of practical moral wisdom, but letââ¬â¢s save
    that. Letââ¬â¢s focus on practical wisdom in the modern
    workplace.
    
    Think about Sheryl Sandbergââ¬â¢s recent book, ââ¬ÅLean In.â⬠Put
    aside the debate about the challenges facing women in society.
    Focus on the tasks she describes as being important for anybody
    who wants to rise in this economy: the ability to be assertive
    in a meeting; to disagree pleasantly; to know when to interrupt
    and when not to; to understand the flow of discussion and how
    to change peopleââ¬â¢s minds; to attract mentors; to understand
    situations; to discern what can change and what canââ¬â¢t.
    
    These skills are practical knowledge. Anybody who works in a
    modern office knows that they are surprisingly rare. But
    students can learn these skills at a university, through
    student activities, through the living examples of their
    professors and also in seminars.
    
    Nelsonââ¬â¢s venture, Minerva, uses technology to double down on
    seminars. Minerva is a well-financed, audacious effort to use
    technological advances to create an elite university at a much
    lower cost. I donââ¬â¢t know if Minerva will work or not, but
    Nelson is surely right to focus on the marriage of technology
    and seminars.
    
    The problem with the current seminars is that itââ¬â¢s really
    hard to know what anybody gets out of them. The conversations
    might be lively, but they flow by so fast you feel as if
    youââ¬â¢re missing important points and exchanges.
    
    The goal should be to use technology to take a free-form
    seminar and turn it into a deliberate seminar (Iââ¬â¢m borrowing
    Anders Ericssonââ¬â¢s definition of deliberate practice).
    Seminars could be recorded with video-cameras, and exchanges
    could be reviewed and analyzed to pick apart how a disagreement
    was handled and how a debate was conducted. Episodes in one
    seminar could be replayed for another. Students could be
    assessed, and their seminar skills could be tracked over
    time.
    
    So far, most of the talk about online education has been on
    technology and lectures, but the important challenge is
    technology and seminars. So far, the discussion is mostly about
    technical knowledge, but the future of the universities is in
    practical knowledge.