Giving Compass' Take:

· Michael B. Horn at the Christensen Institute explains why Professor Clayton Christensen of Harvard has predicted the closing of over 50% of higher education institutions over the next decade. 

· Why will colleges close over the next 10 years? What does this mean for the field of higher education?

· Here's more on the future of higher education in America


Harvard Business School Professor Clayton Christensen consistently turns heads in higher education by predicting that 50% of colleges and universities will close or go bankrupt in the next decade.

Christensen and I made a more measured prediction with more nuance in the New York Times in 2013: “a host of struggling colleges and universities—the bottom 25% of every tier, we predict—will disappear or merge in the next 10 to 15 years.”

Some higher education media have, in turn, used the predictions to lampoon the idea that disruptive innovation has a role to play in creating more affordable, accessible, and convenient higher education options for people who would otherwise have no educational option.

But the truth of the matter is that disruptive innovation is only part of why Christensen originally made his prediction.

Read the full article about closing colleges by Michael B. Horn at Christensen Institute.