Google pitching to Higher Education

According to this story on the BBC today, Google is expanding its empire into universities – with entire campus e-mail networks switching over to using Google’s e-mail service. Apparently Trinity College Dublin has switched over entirely to Google’s e-mail.

The new Google-based e-mail addresses (which can still be applied to a university domain name, but which can be accessed from any online computer) can be kept by students when they leave. I’m not sure this is a good idea. There are all sorts of reasons (e.g., authenticity and identity) why a university email address should be limited to those actually studying or working in them. Surely it would be better if university email accounts simply automatically redirected once a student leaves, with a notification that “this student has left”.

Google says its higher education tools, hosted by them, allow students to work on files from any internet-connected computer, to engage in collaborative work – working together in real-time on the same document – and to use online timetables and calendars.

What’s next – the Google VLE?

I would have serious doubts about privacy and security of data by entrusting all to Google – but it’s certainly true that Universities can no longer ignore the rise of Web 2.0 applications.
As Michael Nowlan, director of information systems services at Trinity College Dublin, is quoted as saying, “The digital natives will find their own way, make their own discoveries.”