
Who Needs College Anymore?: Imagining a Future Where Degrees Won't Matter
Format: Paperback
With keen insight, Kathleen deLaski reimagines what higher education might offer and whom it should serve in Who Needs College Anymore? In the wake of declining US university enrollment and widespread crises of confidence in the value of a college degree, deLaski urges a mindset shift regarding the learning routes and credentials that best prepare students for success after high school.
The work draws on a decade of designthinking research from the nonprofit Education Design Lab as well as 150 interviews of educational experts, college and career counselors, teachers, employers, and learners. DeLaski applies humancentered design to higher education reform, engaging the perspective of end users to search for better solutions. She highlights ten top principles based on user feedback and considers how well they are currently being enacted by colleges.
In particular, she urges institutions to better attend to the needs of newmajority learners, often described as nontraditional students, including people from low or moderateincome backgrounds, people of color, firstgeneration students, veterans, single mothers, rural students, parttime attendees, and neurodivergent students. She finds ample opportunity for colleges to support learners via alternative pathways to marketable knowledge, including bootcamps, skillsbased learning, and apprenticeships, career training, and other types of workplace learning. This work suggests innovation as a means of evolution.
Choose options
















