At our higher-ed shark tank, innovators pitched new models for international education, âauthenticâ admissions, building social capital, and career development. ADVERTISEMENT [The Edge Logo]( Did someone forward you this newsletter? [Sign up free]( to receive your own copy. Iâm Goldie Blumenstyk, a senior writer at The Chronicle covering innovation in and around higher ed. Weâre doing some innovating of our own here at The Edge. Each week I will share my latest thinking on the people and ideas reshaping higher ed, alternating between my own reporting and my picks for thought-provoking and useful stories and resources from other organizations. Iâll also mix in some quick takes, noteworthy quotes, and stats that catch my eye, as well as occasional contributions from my colleagues. This week I report on four ideas to improve higher ed that were featured at our âshark tankâ session at SXSW EDU, last week in Austin, Tex. ADVERTISEMENT SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE Enjoying the newsletter? [Subscribe today]( for unlimited access to essential news, analysis, and advice. Where higher ed is headed. Selecting the contestants for our higher-ed shark tank at SXSW EDU always puts a lens on the state of innovation in the sector and serves as a bellwether of emerging or lingering challenges that people are trying to solve. The pool is too random to be fully representative of new ideas â itâs limited by who comes forward and is going to be in Austin â but itâs revealing for the signaling. This year was no exception, as contestants pitched ideas to foster international education, bring equity (and a hint of TikTok?) to the college-admissions process, help students develop social capital, and nudge soon-to-be graduates to get their career planning on track. As in past years, neither the judges nor the audience offered investment money â just commentary and advice. Unlike prior years, an injury left me unable to take part (Iâm on the mend). But I listened to a recording of last weekâs session, where my my replacement, The Chronicleâs editor, Brock Read, joined veteran sharks Paul Freedman, president of the Learning Marketplace at Guild Education, and Catharine (Cappy) Bond Hill, managing director of the nonprofit research consultancy Ithaka S+R. Here are the pitches and reactions, along with a taste of the kibbitzing I might have offered had I been able to travel to Austin myself. The idea: A coaching platform to guide students in launching their careers, presented by Dan Gusz, co-founder and CEO of [Lloyd](. The pitch: By embedding a series of career-coaching exercises into a traditional academic course, Lloyd aims to help students, particularly those who would never make it to career centers, prepare résumés, and explore professional paths. Gusz likened the approach to the psychological guidance behind the dieting app Noom. Students wouldnât have to seek out that support, he said, and it could augment services that colleges already offer. The Lloyd platform can also handle much of the âannoying administrative work,â Gusz said, freeing up college advisers to do more actual advising. The reaction: All the sharks saw value in embedding career development into courses. But they questioned how Lloyd planned to personalize the coaching and measure whether it was making a difference. Students may still not realize all the paths they could pursue, Hill noted. âHow do you open the world of options to them?â My kibbitz: No doubt requiring these exercises as part of a course would encourage more students to reflect and plan (as I recall from a webinar I did years ago, integrated career development is standard practice at some institutions). But many professors would probably still argue that that doesnât belong in class, so a big cultural divide might need to be bridged before Lloydâs approach would get much traction. The idea: A tool for students to âinsert their authentic voiceâ into their college applications, presented by Terry and Gloria Crawford, co-founders of [Initial View](. The pitch: Looking to reduce the many inequities in the college-admissions process, Initial View provides students with an easy-to-use platform to record a 90-second video story about themselves and share it with colleges. (Before Covid, the Crawfords were based in Beijing and offered video-interview services to local students applying to colleges in the United States and other countries. In Atlanta when the pandemic hit, the couple stayed and shifted their focus to the domestic admissions scene with this elevator-pitch product.) The tool is a way for first-generation applicants in particular to share their own stories, especially if they canât visit campuses for interviews. âTheyâre the ones that need the voice,â said Gloria Crawford. And developing a personal pitch can be valuable in itself. âItâs a good skill to have, and it can be taught,â said Terry Crawford, noting that one college counselor described the model as âTikTok with positive consequences.â The reaction: The sharks wondered how quickly wealthy applicants and fancy private schools would find a way to game the system. Already, said Hill, many studentsâ application essays are âvery curated,â and she predicted consultants âwill charge $250 an hour to create those 90 seconds.â Read wondered if the approach would favor extroverted applicants, and Freedman asked for any evidence that the tool was actually increasing the diversity of collegesâ applicant pools. My kibbitz: When Goucher College announced in 2014 that it [would accept some applicants based solely on a video application]( I initially saw it as a silly gimmick. But in an increasingly test-optional admissions environment, I now see real value in ways for colleges to hear those âauthenticâ student voices. I would just hope that the Initial View platform could keep the playing field as level as the Crawfords are envisioning. The idea: A program to teach low-income and first-generation students to recognize and showcase their own resilience, presented by David Obstfeld, a professor of entrepreneurship at California State University at Fullerton and founder of its new [Social Capital Academy](. The pitch: The academy is designed for students who spend so much of their out-of-class time working or caring for their families that they donât have many opportunities to develop professional networks, and often donât appreciate the skills they have that would make them attractive to employers. The participants â typically juniors â spend four Saturdays over four months with volunteer mentors, learning to convey their personal stories in a way that is compelling to potential employers. The perspective of mentors who are themselves working professionals is key, Obstfeld said. Students tend to âdiscount their resilienceâ until itâs validated externally. The academy is still in the pilot stage at Fullerton, and Obstfeld would like to see the model go national. The reaction: The sharks questioned how the program recruited and trained mentors, and how it was able to attract already-busy students to show up on Saturdays. Students receive $50 gift cards at the beginning and end of the academy, and the author and futurist John Seely Brown has donated some start-up funding. As with Lloyd, the judges also wondered how Obstfeld would measure impact. My kibbitz: I noted Obstfeldâs plans to work with Fullertonâs psychology department on a pre-course and post-course test, and potentially some longer-term evaluations. Regular readers of this newsletter (and listeners [to my podcast]( know Iâm a fan of the evaluation and reporting that the organization Braven uses to measure the impact of its program to help students [develop social capital and land strong jobs](. (Its latest report [was published last month]( Given the similar missions, I hope Obstfeldâs academy looks to the Braven reports for guidance. The idea: An âequitable and ethicalâ tech system for collaborative international online learning, presented by Loye Sekihata Ashton, a former religious-studies professor at Tougaloo College now working as chief academic officer at the social enterprise [Class2Class](. The pitch: Already working with more than 700 institutions and some 3,000 instructors, the Class2Class platform aims to provide students with meaningful international educational experiences âin a way that doesnât cost an arm and a leg,â Ashton said. The technology is based on the principles of Collaborative Online International Learning pioneered by the [SUNY COIL Center]( and since adopted by many other institutions. And the platform can support synchronous or asynchronous learning, Ashton said, as well as virtual internships, project-based learning, and other forms of collaboration. Because it integrates with learning-management systems Class2Class doesnât require a lot of technical expertise to get started:. âYou just need a good department chair who will let you work with it,â he said. He called it a virtual âthird place for global education,â while noting that the features that connect campuses across continents could also foster cross-departmental collaborations at a single institution. The reaction: Our sharks wondered what it would take to generate more interest in the product, and Freedman in particular noted that despite its nifty features â for video conferencing, for example, discussion, and course planning â the success of the product would be âonly as good as the pedagogy.â My kibbitz: That the tool might facilitate cross-departmental collaboration reminded me of the continuing need for more interdisciplinary teaching. Beyond that â and especially considering the fragile and fraught state of the world right now â Iâm happy to hear about any tool that might bring about greater understanding across borders. Lord knows we need it. Got a tip youâd like to share or a question youâd like me to answer? Let me know, at goldie@chronicle.com. If you have been forwarded this newsletter and would like to see past issues, [find them here](. To receive your own copy, free, register [here](. If you want to follow me on Twitter, [@GoldieStandard]( is my handle. Goldieâs Weekly Picks GLOBAL ENTANGLEMENTS [The Ukraine Dilemma: U.S. Colleges Debate Whether to Sever or Sustain Ties With Russia]( By Karin Fischer [STORY IMAGE]( An academic boycott could end up penalizing one of the countryâs most moderating forces, its professors. SPONSOR CONTENT | The University of Queensland [How AI is being used to fight fake news]( STRATEGIC THINKING [The Puzzle of Student Data]( By Taylor Swaak [STORY IMAGE]( Collect and harness information about your students to make strategic and cost-effective decisions, while avoiding ethical missteps and privacy risks. A CIRCLE OF SUPPORT [The Redemption of Frederick Shegog]( By Eric Hoover [STORY IMAGE]( What a six-time dropout learned about getting through college. SPONSOR CONTENT | New York Institute of Technology [Space for Innovation]( A unique agreement between New York Institute of Technology and NASA provides real-word experiences for students. ADVERTISEMENT FROM THE CHRONICLE STORE [Managing the 21st Century Parent]( [Managing the 21st Century Parents]( Engaging with parents has become a major challenge for many colleges. [Order your copy]( to explore how colleges are partnering with families to boost student success. 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