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Harvard University's President Will Step Down in June 2023

Lawrence S. Bacow announced yesterday that he will step down as Harvard University's president in June 2023. During his tenure, Bacow, a lifelong academic, fought a COVID infection himself, steered the institution through the pandemic, and dealt with an attack on its admission policies, one that will face a Supreme Court test later this year. This spring, Harvard University committed $100 million to make amends for its historical ties to slavery. "Enslaved people worked on our campus supporting our students, faculty, and staff, including several Harvard presidents," he wrote. "There is never a good time to leave a job like this one, but now seems right to me," he said in a statement. "Adele [his wife] and I are looking forward to spending more time with my children and grandchildren." His five-year tenure as Harvard president is brief compared to that of his predecessor, Drew Gilpin Faust, who served 12 years. Bacow spent over fifty years studying, teaching at, and presiding over three major universities in the Boston area, including seven previous years as a member of the Harvard Corporation, the university's governing organization. Before being appointed Harvard’s president, Bacow spent ten years as president of Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, and 24 years as a faculty member and administrator at MIT. Son of immigrants who escaped Nazi persecution, he attended college at MIT and then earned three degrees from Harvard, including a Ph.D. in public policy. • The news on The Harvard Gazette

Harvard University's President Will Step Down in June 2023
The Biden-Harris Administration Will Forgive $5.8B in Federal Loans to Students of Corinthian Colleges

The Biden-Harris Administration Will Forgive $5.8B in Federal Loans to Students of Corinthian Colleges

Bentley University Becomes One of the First Colleges Accepting Crypto for Tuition Payments

Bentley University Becomes One of the First Colleges Accepting Crypto for Tuition Payments

Coursera Launches a Collection of Short Videos and Lessons Intended for Skills Development

Coursera Launches a Collection of Short Videos and Lessons Intended for Skills Development

Advanced Technology Will Boost the Global Market to One Trillion by 2030

Advanced Technology Will Boost the Global Market to One Trillion by 2030

The global education technology market will reach $998.4 billion by 2030, with a CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 17.3%, according to market researcher P&S Intelligence. The market size was estimated at $237.6 billion in 2021. The growth will be fueled by the emergence of AI, IoT, digitalization, and EdTech solutions. The incorporation of VR and AR will support a more interactive learning experience. Additionally, blockchain technology will enable users to store and secure the records of students and learners, thereby allowing administrators and educators to analyze the consumption patterns and make data-driven decisions. Other driving factors will be the developments in connectivity infrastructure, surging smartphone penetration, increased speed of the internet and 5G technology, smartphone apps, and growing investments by private equity and venture capital firms. This researcher emphasizes the rising usage of EdTech in China and India, boosted by their government's financial help. Today, China has 282 million students and 17.32 million teachers in more than 530,000 schools, according to UNICEF. The COVID-19 pandemic has boosted the adoption of advanced educational technology, forcing many students to enhance their skills and strengthening their reliance on educational technology.

Open edX Reorganizes Its Collaboration Tools on the Software Roadmap

Open edX Reorganizes Its Collaboration Tools on the Software Roadmap

The Open edX organization, now called The Center for Reimagining Learning (tCRIL), reorganized the spaces and tools for developers to interact with the software of the platform. The idea is to provide more transparency and facilitate engagement with Open edX product managers across the ecosystem. The Open edX Roadmap captures and documents all the contributions to the platform. Now, it includes all the contributions that will be shipped in the Nutmeg release — the last version of the Open edX platform — in June. An issue template on Github, along with a how-to guide and a FAQ page, allows developers to submit their contributions to the roadmap. The Open edX Product Management Wiki facilitates the sharing of documentation, UX designs, and discovery findings in the early stage of product development. The Open edX Working Group on Slack at #wg-open-edx-product-management works as a public space to engage in product-related conversations, decisions, and updates. The Product Working Group will meet for the first time at the Open edX conference in Lisbon on April 26-29, agree on a manifesto, and discuss goals and focus projects for the next three months.

Three Spanish Universities Will Fund the Transformation of Open edX into an On-Campus LMS

Three Spanish Universities Will Fund the Transformation of Open edX into an On-Campus LMS

The 2023 Open edX Conference will take place at MIT in Cambridge, MA

The 2023 Open edX Conference will take place at MIT in Cambridge, MA

Elon Musk Buys Twitter for $44 Billion and Takes Private the Social Network

Elon Musk Buys Twitter for $44 Billion and Takes Private the Social Network

Cornerstone Acquired EdCast, a Learning Platform that Uses Open edX

Cornerstone Acquired EdCast, a Learning Platform that Uses Open edX

Cornerstone OnDemand announced this month the acquisition of EdCast, a learning platform featuring a skills engine and a content marketplace that uses Open edX as part of its software stack. The transaction terms — expected to close in Q2 2022 — were not disclosed. To date, EdCast raised $107.3 million in funding over eight rounds and 21 investors. EdCast has a post-money valuation in the range of $100M to $500M as of Dec 12, 2019, according to PrivCo. Analyst Josh Bersin wrote that EdCast was around a $40 million company, growing 80% per year. Himanshu Palsule, CEO of Cornerstone, said that his company and EdCast have "the potential to deliver a next-generation learning and talent infrastructure." He added that this acquisition is a strong fit with Cornerstone's strategy to transform the learning software market. "Today’s fragmented HR technology landscape is ripe for reinvention as organizations seek new ways to unify people and business in areas most critical to growth — workforce engagement, talent retention, skills transformation, and career mobility," he explained. Acquired last year by Clearlake Capital Group for $5.2 Billion, Cornerstone has 6,000 corporate customers and 75 million users. This Santa Monica, California-based company competes with enterprise learning and talent management platforms such as Degreed, Microsoft Viva Learning, Workday, SAP SuccessFactors, Oracle HCM, Intrepid, and NovoEd. In the area of training-oriented platforms, it competes with Docebo, Valamis, 360Learning, Totara, Absorb, and Learn Upon, Saba, Fuel50, and Gloat, among others. EdCast was founded by entrepreneur Karl Mehta in 2014 as an Open edX provider. Later, it evolved into a learning experience platform (LXP), competing primarily with Degreed. .  

"People Will Be Learning All Their Life," Said Crow at the ASU+GSV Summit

"People Will Be Learning All Their Life," Said Crow at the ASU+GSV Summit

"At ASU (Arizona State University), we are creating an environment to prepare students to be master learners," said Michael Crow, President of Arizona State University, during the ASU+GSV Summit that kicked off in San Diego yesterday. Education leaders, entrepreneurs, investors, and policymakers gathered for three days to dissect where the educational business is heading. The 2022 ASU+GSV conference attracted 6,000 attendants, a record number of participants, through an edition well-organized and successfully executed. The event included the 2022 GSV Cup Top 3, with three start-ups: Clayful, Collective Academy, and Kibo. Kibo was the winner, as disclosed during the closing party last night. In a Q&A conversation with The New York Times columnist Tom Friedman, Michael Crow redirected the conversation on the future of education into the life-long learning scenario. "Now people will be learning all their life," he said. "We need to change pedagogical design and add more tools. We need better ways to teach and learn. Universities need to figure out how to produce better teachers and students." Regarding the value of degrees, Crow said, "we have to stop thinking of a college degree in the traditional sense, and we have to think of it as a learning moment on a pathway." "It’s a measurement of learning capacity rather than an achievement in itself. We have to move away from the notion of kindergarten through college, and then you’re done with learning, and you go to work." ASU started its School for the Future of Innovation in Society to address these issues, Crow said. "We felt the university sector had missed the boat in trying to understand how to guide technology – not just the market forces, but the social complexities and the disruptive positives and negatives that are occurring." Tom Friedman praised ASU's effort by saying that "you make education hot and cool."   Announcing the 2022 GSV Cup Top 3 – Clayful, Collective Academy, and Kibo! Join us live for the finale this evening on StageX. #asugsvsummit https://t.co/jTja5nw60F pic.twitter.com/Fyly0oTa0Q — ASU+GSV Summit (@asugsvsummit) April 6, 2022 The world's largest pitch competition for "Pre-K to Gray" #EdTech startups unfolds live today at #asugsvsummit. Join us at 4pm for the Elite 200 Demo Round-Robin followed by the Top 20 pitches on Stage X. https://t.co/2EQRK7ZCdB pic.twitter.com/1FHbJQhQD1 — ASU+GSV Summit (@asugsvsummit) April 5, 2022 That’s a wrap on our time at @asugsvsummit! We are leaving San Diego invigorated by the ingenuity, passion, and collective will of this community to advance inclusive, ethical innovation and ensure powerful learning experiences for every learner. #ASUGSVSummit pic.twitter.com/Fcceyf2Dwu — Digital Promise (@DigitalPromise) April 7, 2022 Plenty of takeaways to reflect upon, thanks everyone attending and presenting @ #asugsvsummit pic.twitter.com/tPEphRjYOi — cyriloberlander (@cyriloberlander) April 7, 2022

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Today's Summary

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Education technology today is marked by rising AI adoption among educators and innovative personalized learning approaches.

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Today in AI & EdTech

Saturday, November 22, 2025

AI is transforming the education technology landscape as more teachers adopt intelligent tools, driving forward and adaptive learning experiences.

AI & EdTech Videos

OpenAI Launches Educational GPT Model

OpenAI Launches Educational GPT Model

Adaptive Learning Platforms Show 40% Improvement

Adaptive Learning Platforms Show 40% Improvement

Microsoft Education Copilot Beta Launch

Microsoft Education Copilot Beta Launch

Today in Education

U.S. Department of Education Announces New Funding for STEM Programs

The initiative aims to support science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education.

Global Education Summit Highlights Digital Learning Innovations

Leaders from around the world discuss the future of remote and hybrid learning models.

New Study Shows Benefits of Early Childhood Education

Research indicates significant long-term academic and social advantages for students.

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