OverviewTechnology

The New Media Consortium and the Educause Learning Initiative, , (2008)

The Horizon Report: 2008 edition

From Educause

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Review by: Brahm, Taiga (2008-02-12)

The 2007 edition of the Horizon Report – issued by the New Media Consortium and the Educause Learning Initiative – is a research-oriented collection of emerging technologies which are deemed to have an impact on higher education in the near future. To identify the relevant technologies, first, key challenges for learning organizations are identified. These challenges will be summed up in the following:

The key trends which might affect higher education include the expanding usage of web 2.0 and social networking, the changes in how we work, collaborate and communicate, globalisation, access and portability of content with even smaller devices (see above), widening of the gap between students' pereception of technology and that of faculty. In addition to these key trends, seven metatrends were identified which have been persistent over the five editions of the Horizon report. "These seven metatrends include the evolving approaches to communication between humans and machines; the collective sharing and generation of knowledge; computing in three dimensions; connecting people via the network; games as pedagogical platforms; the shifting of content production to users; and the evolution of ubiquitous platform." (p7).

After identifying trends and challenges for higher education, six "technologies to watch" along three adoption horizons will be described briefly: nearest time to adoption horizon (one year or less):

time to adoption horizon of two to three years

time to adoption horizon of four to five years

In sum, the report provides a very interesting overview over the key trends and challenges likely to have an impact on higher education in the next five years. The technologies identified were chosen and described in a complex and deliberate process and the report links to many internet sources and provides a great repository of the emerging technologies. The identification of metatrends as a kind of reflection after the fifth issue of the Horizon Report is also noteworthy and provides a kind of anchoring; however, it seems impossible for higher education institutions to follow all of the trends and it would be helpful to make the usefulness for educational purposes (as partly expressed under the section of "relevance for teaching, learning, and creative expression) more clear.