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Minerva comes of age, hoping it鈥檚 not too late

New university finds early success with online teaching in local environments worldwide, but fears higher education may already have lost the public

Published on
June 2, 2022
Last updated
June 7, 2022
Football fans take a peek at Super Bowl rings in a glass display case to illustrate they are looking at  a 'small piece of excellence' which resembles the university as the university teaches in a research base approach producing high qualit
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Set apart HE systems won鈥檛 tackle social stratification 鈥榖ecause their business model depends on it鈥, says Minerva founder

After just four graduating classes, the online trailblazer Minerva University feels it has a model that could finally transform higher education 鈥 if the sector鈥檚 overall failures have聽not already left it reputationally ruined.

Minerva is a venture based on scientific understandings of human learning processes that are well known among pedagogical experts but too often ignored across the rest of academia. Its small cohorts of students travel the world applying project-based teachings to local challenges, generating off-the-charts rates of admissions selectivity, social diversity and professional outcomes.

Sustaining and expanding such paradigm-changing operations for a predominantly low-income student body will be a major challenge well into the future, said Minerva鈥檚 founder and chancellor, Ben Nelson, an Ivy League-trained entrepreneur.

But a far bigger challenge, Mr Nelson said in an interview, was expanding the awareness and acceptance of Minerva and its worldview just as higher education overall聽has been collapsing in public respect because of ever-escalating costs and the widening recognition of its low net value affirmed by families getting an at-home look behind the curtain during Covid.

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Higher education鈥檚 reputational collapse was a problem 鈥渢hat we鈥檝e been fighting mightily for 10聽years, and have been making ever so minuscule progress in 鈥 which is that universities are doing whatever they can to delegitimise themselves鈥, he said. 鈥淭his is a sector that is producing an output that no聽one is satisfied with.鈥

Minerva, on the other hand, appears to have some true believers. They include Bridget Burns, the chief executive officer of the University Innovation Alliance, a coalition of public US research universities working to improve success and diversity in higher education.

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Dr Burns, a former senior policy adviser in the Oregon University System, is deeply critical of much of what she sees in higher education. That is not the case with the decade-old Minerva. 鈥淲hat they鈥檙e doing, what they have done, in terms of the undergraduate experience, of making it the Socratic method, really immersive, digital 鈥 it鈥檚 so incredible,鈥 she said. 鈥淭o聽me, it鈥檚 the gold standard for online course delivery.鈥

Minerva uses teaching insights advocated by reformers such as Eric Mazur, the Harvard University physics professor widely known for developing interactive teaching methods. It employs a compendium of approaches that have extensive research backing yet struggle to gain adoption in traditional universities because of factors that include entrenched attitudes and preferences.

For their four years at Minerva, students spend semesters in locations around the world. Their current list consists of Berlin, London, Seoul, Taipei, Hyderabad, Buenos Aires and San Francisco. At each location, they live in rented housing, take classes in small groups through simultaneous online connections, and work on projects in the local community. Their travelling cohorts are kept at the 鈥淒unbar鈥檚 number鈥 of聽150.

Minerva uses a flipped model of reading and viewing instructor presentations in advance, then using class time to discuss and debate and collaborate. It aims at prioritising an attitude of questioning, challenging and problem-solving. It has an acceptance rate of a few percentage points, yet most of its students have family incomes below $50,000 (拢40,000) a聽year. Only about 15聽per cent of them come from the聽US.

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It claims a graduation rate near 85聽per cent, with chief career outcomes that include problem-centred entrepreneurship and education reform. The three companies launched by its graduates have a 100聽per cent record at the renowned start-up accelerator Y聽Combinator. Minerva charges about $35,000 a聽year for tuition, room and board, with aid for those who need聽it.

Yet it is still battling for attention. 鈥淚f we went to 100聽high school graduating seniors, 90聽wouldn鈥檛 have heard of us,鈥 Mr Nelson told 探花视频.

He nevertheless believes that the idea of Minerva is scalable, both within its own structure and as a proof of concept for changes across traditional higher education 鈥 which to his mind has yet to accept how truly endangered it is, even as enrolments drop amid a plethora of lower-cost online alternatives.

鈥淣obody in these quote-unquote non-profit institutions has an incentive to actually be focused on social mobility,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey have an enormous incentive to basically create a social stratification, or perpetuate a social stratification, because their business model is dependent on聽it.鈥

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An example that appears to especially gall him, from his base in San Francisco, is Stanford University鈥檚 of a $1.1聽billion donation to create a new school dedicated to climate change and sustainability studies. Most of that money will be sunk into another physical building, and the rest will be used to poach faculty from other top universities, Mr Nelson predicted.

鈥淲hat is the social value of that?鈥 he asked. 鈥淭hat $1.1聽billion could have endowed 鈥 I鈥檓 not kidding 鈥 10 Minervas in perpetuity.鈥

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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