Posted by Andrew in Pop Culture, Web 2.0
on Jan 29th, 2009 | 4 comments
Note: This post may seem to digress from the normal topics heralded in this blog, but I promise there’s a connection to technology and higher ed. Read on to find out more!
We were having dinner with friends last summer, and they were telling us about the amazing new cable service they had installed. It’s called U-verse, they said, and instead of traditional cable service, AT&T actually delivers the TV over the internet. Loving technology, the idea of TV over the internet seemed pretty amazing to me. I actually got up from the table (right in the middle of dinner), got my...
Posted by Andrew in Recruitment
on Jan 26th, 2009 | 2 comments
It’s no secret to any of us that the economic recession that both our country and world are feeling right now will (already is) having a direct impact on higher education. All signs point to the challenges that colleges and universities will encounter this year and next, at the very least. As I heard our President remark on these types of national issues this morning, it hit me (maybe for the first time) how the efforts of myself and my colleagues in the Admissions office influence the viability of our institution. Wow. That’s pretty heavy-duty stuff on a Monday morning.
So here’s...
Posted by Andrew in Design, Recruitment, Web 2.0
on Jan 13th, 2009 | 5 comments
I take no credit for our latest venture. After stumbling upon Rachel Reuben’s recent post on .eduGuru just after our Christmas break, we quickly decided it was something we needed to move on for our fall 2009 students. It was actually something that I had been mulling over since the Innovative Educators’ conference in Cincinnati this past June, but I wasn’t sure we had the resources to make it happen. Once I had read Rachel’s post, I knew it was something that we could get going quickly.
So last Wednesday I began the process of putting a similar site together from Hope. ...
Posted by Andrew in Recruitment, Web 2.0
on Jan 5th, 2009 | 4 comments
Wow, this one’s really interesting. It seems that 1st Financial Bank USA has launched a site called CollegeData, a place where students can search for colleges, sort through the financial aid process, and perhaps most interestingly, calculate their odds of getting in with the Admissions Tracker. Credit card and student loan offers also abound on the site.
The Admissions tracker is interesting because students can indicate whether they’ve applied to a specific school and also if they’ve been accepted, waitlisted, or denied. Other students can then assess their chances of getting...