Even before the pandemic, we have always had control of our education and credentials we attain through the learning process from our government and learning institutions. This perception was recently emphasized by the American council of education that has focused on the relevance and use of blockchain in higher institutional learning.
Ted Mitchell, the president of ACE, on the 8th of June, published that “blockchain, in particular, holds promise to create more efficient, durable connections between education and work.” He further stated that “in the wake of the covid-19 crisis, learners will be more mobile, moving in and out of formal education as their job, health, and families change.”
This report was quoted to ’emphasize how” distributed ledger technologies (DLT) can democratize data and empower individuals with their personal information.
Traditionally, our credentials are stored on a centralized system. This poses a problem because a centralized system leaves room for errors such as altering data, deleting data, or sharing individual or institutional information. However, the report states that blockchain technologies “are inherently more transparent, persistent, immutable, and secured by encryption.”
According to Kim Hamilton Duffy, an architect at the digital credentials consortium, the covid-19 pandemic had hastened demand for digital credentials: “because of that and existing educational blockchain-related pilots, I expect these credentials will be commonplace over the next 2-3 years.
Hamilton explained that an end-to-end pilot program was scheduled for later in 2020 where permissioned and pubic blockchains will demonstrate learner-controlled digital diplomas and degrees on the blockchain. Findings from permissioned blockchains will be stored on the chain, while those of public blockchains will use blockchain anchored identity registries while stored off-chain.
The plan was formed with no privilege roles for the decentralized and verifiable credentials. This made it an open infrastructure corporation where anyone has access. Christopher Allen explained saying that “this makes it possible for there to be peer-to-peer (p2p) competence credentials from fellow students, teachers, co-workers, clients, contractors, employers- not just educational institutions.
The labor market goes hand in hand with education. Therefore, once education changes, so do the future of the labor market. Typically, the only way to get your credentials is by completing the entire conventional course. “What if you attend college but do not finish your degree? Today, you don’t have anything to show for it,” says Duffy.
Every day is a learning experience, and for this reason, efforts have begun to “represent competencies” regardless of having completed your conventional training.
These competency credentials are excellent for the global market. “This is the fascinating part if employers discover talent in their existing workforce and empower learners from non-traditional backgrounds.” Like Becky, other pros believe that a blockchain-based system could liberate citizens and give them control over their credentials.
Digital credentials are excellent, especially for migrants whose certificates are invalidated once they leave their home country. This way, they have access to universal credentials.
Digital universal credentials will also help eradicate the “staggering” international fake credential trade because it is a decentralized and verifiable creditor.
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