I don't necessarily agree with the netflix analogy considering how many subscription streaming services many of us are now paying for (a student generally doesn't go to more than one college at a time unless they are a savvy transfer credit aggregator).
While colleges themselves haven't been aggregated, the underlying technology they rely on has largely been, you can see this in the learning management system market (dominated by Canvas in the US, but D2L, Moodle, Blackboard and others continue to thrive), academic integrity tools market (Turnitin being great aggregate).
Great post!
I don't necessarily agree with the netflix analogy considering how many subscription streaming services many of us are now paying for (a student generally doesn't go to more than one college at a time unless they are a savvy transfer credit aggregator).
While colleges themselves haven't been aggregated, the underlying technology they rely on has largely been, you can see this in the learning management system market (dominated by Canvas in the US, but D2L, Moodle, Blackboard and others continue to thrive), academic integrity tools market (Turnitin being great aggregate).