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Higher Education
Home›Higher Education›How Higher Education Should Prepare for Generation Alpha

How Higher Education Should Prepare for Generation Alpha

By Matthew Lynch
August 5, 2023
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They’re on their way.

Generation Alpha, the children of millennials, are on their way to a university near you, and their expectations for greater training will be not like something we have considered before.

In 2011, Generation Alpha celebrated its first birthday. These 6-year-olds aren’t ready for college, but college can start planning to meet  future influential people. These children are already having an impact on their parents’ spending habits. Millennials are eager to provide their generation Alpha children with the tools they need to succeed, and these parents are looking for non-traditional opportunities.

There’s no reason to believe that this trend will abate by the time Generation Alpha is ready for college.

Here are some ideas for how colleges can prepare for Generation Alpha:

Less is more in this case.

Colleges would do nicely to create packages or learn about that require deep gaining knowledge because technology broadens the world. Generation Alpha is made up of millennials who refused to inherit their parents’ furniture, art, and family heirlooms. They will, like their parents, be laser-focused on needs rather than wants. This rule will apply to education as well.

Colleges can help students prepare for this singular approach to learning by offering fewer degrees and a richer context for learning.

Generation Alpha students will work hard to become subject matter experts in their fields, and they will be willing to put in the effort required.

Technology acquaintance

Generation Alpha students are expected to have a level of comfort with technology that has never been seen before. They will have only known a world where technology and everyday life are seamlessly integrated.

These understudies will anticipate that innovation should be incorporated into their school and college reviews, and they will direct their shopping and learning on the web.

Perceptible Learning Effects

Don’t expect Generation Alphas to wait until college to begin their education. This age will be more innovative than some other, and a significant number of its individuals will have proactively established their own organizations.

They will come to your college with experience, and they will want you to help them refine their knowledge so that they can apply it creatively.

Generation Alphas are greater probably to stay in their 100s, and their long lives will provide them with a wealth of knowledge gained through their studies and experiences.

You’ll be ready for the class of 2033 if you format it in advance of time.

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Since technology is not going anywhere and does more good than harm, adapting is the best course of action. That is where The Tech Edvocate comes in. We plan to cover the PreK-12 and Higher Education EdTech sectors and provide our readers with the latest news and opinion on the subject. From time to time, I will invite other voices to weigh in on important issues in EdTech. We hope to provide a well-rounded, multi-faceted look at the past, present, the future of EdTech in the US and internationally.

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