Innovation flourishes when businesses are encouraged to take risks and try new things. This dynamism propels industries forward and keeps them relevant. Higher education is no different.
In a school where I worked once upon a time, there were cupboards filled with old textbooks and other materials used in courses that were supposed to make everything better. The wave of newness came and went, and its by-products went in the cupboard. As with course materials, no doubt so also with the products of the newly revived TEC.
Commonsense to anyone but a bureaucrat. But bureaucracy is one of the few growth elements in the Australian economy, to the detriment of the community.
In a school where I worked once upon a time, there were cupboards filled with old textbooks and other materials used in courses that were supposed to make everything better. The wave of newness came and went, and its by-products went in the cupboard. As with course materials, no doubt so also with the products of the newly revived TEC.
Commonsense to anyone but a bureaucrat. But bureaucracy is one of the few growth elements in the Australian economy, to the detriment of the community.