16 Actions to Achieve a Hybrid Future

A new report from Educause offers a concrete plan of action to move colleges and universities toward the future of hybrid learning. To create "2022 Educause Action Plan: Hybrid Learning," the higher education IT association asked a panel of teaching and learning experts from a range of institution types to imagine the ideal hybrid future 10 years from today. Panel members drew from the trends, technologies, and practices outlined in the 2022 Horizon Report: Teaching and Learning Edition to come up with "practical action items the teaching and learning community can employ to make this future a reality," the plan explained.

In the ideal future, "everything is hybrid," the plan asserted. Learning modalities are selected to optimize pedagogical and student needs, and learning is no longer measured by seat time. Collaboration flourishes, learning spaces extend beyond physical campuses, instructional design is centered on equity, and professional development is "ongoing, integrated, and valued."

To achieve that hybrid vision, the plan offered 16 action items at the departmental, institutional, and cross-institutional levels, listed here verbatim from the report:

  • Use research-based methodologies and frameworks;
  • Make professional development a foundational part of instructors' jobs;
  • Support international hybrid learning;
  • Learn more about students' comprehensive needs;
  • Include experiential learning in all academic programs;
  • Expand instructional design capacity;
  • Establish best practices for sustainable technology-enhanced learning spaces;
  • Develop and share best practices for equitable teaching and learning;
  • Define privacy standards for higher education;
  • Develop funding models for expanding technology access across institutions;
  • Develop a nonacademic credit pipeline;
  • Establish cross-institutional programs and credentials;
  • Reimagine tenure;
  • Reevaluate the role of the higher education institution in a consumer-driven world;
  • Define state and national standards for hybrid learning; and
  • Change federal government funding models.

"The future we want is within reach, but only if we work together," the report emphasized. "Any stakeholder in higher education who teaches in or supports hybrid learning modalities will find this report helpful in preparing for the future of hybrid learning."

The full report, including details on each action item and planning activities to help develop an action roadmap, is available on the Educause site.

About the Author

Rhea Kelly is editor in chief for Campus Technology, THE Journal, and Spaces4Learning. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • The AI Show

    Register for Free to Attend the World's Greatest Show for All Things AI in EDU

    The AI Show @ ASU+GSV, held April 5–7, 2025, at the San Diego Convention Center, is a free event designed to help educators, students, and parents navigate AI's role in education. Featuring hands-on workshops, AI-powered networking, live demos from 125+ EdTech exhibitors, and keynote speakers like Colin Kaepernick and Stevie Van Zandt, the event offers practical insights into AI-driven teaching, learning, and career opportunities. Attendees will gain actionable strategies to integrate AI into classrooms while exploring innovations that promote equity, accessibility, and student success.

  • illustrated university campus with modern buildings, glowing binary code streaming straight and dynamically from multiple directions, integrated into the architecture, surrounded by stylized trees, grass, and walkways

    3 Ways Institutions Can Become Data-Driven Organizations

    Faced with declining enrollments and changing demographics, colleges and universities must make use of data and analytics to better serve students.

  • NVIDIA DGX line

    NVIDIA Intros Personal AI Supercomputers

    NVIDIA has introduced a new lineup of AI-powered computing solutions designed to accelerate enterprise workloads.

  • digital network with glowing blue and red lines, featuring multiple red arrows shifting in different directions

    Report: Attackers Change Tactics as Ransomware Payoffs Decline

    Attackers are changing tactics as they collect less money from ransomware payoffs, according to a new report from Chainalysis, a blockchain analytics firm.