Timothy Hall

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True, most entrants have indeed entered into the “low end” or “new market” of higher education, often as community colleges. And they have almost uniformly driven up-market to offer bachelor's and advanced degrees in more and more fields—just as the theory would predict. But the demise of the incumbents that characterizes most industries in the late stages of disruption has rarely occurred among colleges and universities. We have had entry, but not exit.
The Innovative University: Changing the DNA of Higher Education from the Inside Out
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