A US education company involving Arizona State University aims to create a global network of private universities with 1 million students, bringing the possibility to collect data on studentsâ learning on a mass scale, after partnering with an initial 12 institutions.
Cintana Education was set up by Douglas Becker, founder of for-profit university company Laureate Education, in collaboration with ASU â a public university known as a giant of online education â and its president, Michael Crow.
Cintana fully launched in 2021 after being held up by the pandemic and has grown to have 12 partner universities in its first year.
Among those partners are two new âstart-upâ institutions â the American University Kyiv and the Egyptian government-founded Galala University, one of a new model of national universities â and 10 âacceleratorâ institutions aiming to significantly grow their scale.
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The latter group includes Istanbul Bilgi University, Almaty Management University in Kazakhstan and NorthCap University in India.
Mr Becker, who left Laureate in 2018, said the aim was to âbuild a global network of universitiesâ, mainly private institutions that âbenefit from the support and resources Cintana could bring and ASU could bringâ, with partnerships involving a âbig commitmentâ of typical 20-year contracts.
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An aim to grow to 50 or 100 partner universities âmeans we should be able to pass a million students in this networkâ, said Mr Becker.
Cintana partners have access to ASU curricula and content, and to dual degrees with the US institution.
The creation of such a large network will bring the possibility of âcollecting data on how a million students are learning and what techniques are working or not workingâ, Mr Becker also said.
ASUÂ was âvery comfortable with scaleâ, he added. âIf I say we want a million students, Michael Crow will say, âWhy stop there?ââ
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At the American University Kyiv, aimed at building âworkforce capabilitiesâ sought by business leaders in Ukraine, plans to open the institution stalled amid the Russian invasion, but it will welcome its first cohort of 160 students, initially taught online, in early September. The institution would be âuniquely positioned to contribute to the rebuilding of Ukraineâ, said Mr Becker.
With the âacceleratorâ institutions, the aim is supporting private universities that are often the first such institutions in their nations, countries with âno source of income other than tuitionâ fees and little tradition of philanthropy, he continued.
Asked about Cintanaâs business model, Mr Becker said: âOur model is to share a small piece of the incremental revenues these partners can generate from our impact.
âThey all do the same math in their head, which is: âHow fast are we growing on our own; how much faster do we need to grow with the support of Cintana and ASU to warrant a [revenue] sharing of some modest level?ââ
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Cintana, he said, assists the universities with advice on strategic questions, such as âshould they open a new campus, should they open a medical school, should and how should they go online, are they charging the right amount of fees for their market, do they have the right organisational structure and team, do they have the right financing structure for their universityâ.
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Print headline: Cintana eyes a million learners
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