Watercolor World Map

Retired and Former AACRAO Members

Connect to the world of higher education

With AACRAO membership you'll be connected to more than 11,000 members from institutions around the world. Facilitate your professional development by attending discounted meetings, gaining complimentary subscriptions to our College & University journal and more.

Why should you join? Development never ends, retired or not. Keep current on trends in the field by collaborating with our members and lending your voice to discussions about practices in the field. 

Annual Membership Price: $151

Requirements: YOU BE A RETIRED MEMBER OR A MEMBER WHO LOST EMPLOYMENT AND IS NO LONGER ELIGIBLE FOR INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERSHIP.  

Develop Professionally

Retired Members - Professional Development


Professional Competencies

Keep up to date on skills areas like technical knowledge and professional development and contributions to the field. We have the tools for you.

Online Learning

From free webinars to self-paced on-demand learning, AACRAO's online learning covers a variety of subjects—technology, strategic enrollment management, admissions, FERPA, transfer, credential evaluation, and international education—and allow you to engage with the presenters and instructors.

Take the next step in your career

Maybe you want to reenter the workforce or change the trajectory of your career--AACRAO's Career Navigator is a wealth of job postings and resources for you. 

Gain Recognition

Retired Members - Gain Recognition


Get Published

AACRAO's professional journals College & University and SEM Quarterly are always accepting articles and have a wide circulation base.

Research Opportunities

Leverage the expertise of our over 11,000 members and contribute to one of the premier sources of practice related research within the global higher education community. 

Join a committee

Do work you're passionate about, with support and mentoring from fellow members. From Caucuses to specialized topics, it's all one community. 


AACRAO_Connect_logo_final_transparentbkg

AACRAO's bi-weekly professional development e-newsletter

Is blockchain the answer to all our questions?

Jun 20, 2019, 00:00 AM
legacy id :
Summary : Forget the hype. What problem does blockchain solve, anyway?
Url :

Ever heard this famous maxim, known as the “law of the instrument” or “Maslow’s hammer?”: If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

Is blockchain basically Maslow’s hammer?

“You often hear people speaking excitedly about blockchain technology like it’s a giant hammer and every problem is a nail,” said Andy Dowling, Founder and CEO of the secure online credential company Digitary. “But established providers have offered secure credentialing solutions without blockchain, so we need to ask -- what value does blockchain add? What problem does it solve that hasn’t been solved by existing technology?”

In the context of digital credentials, blockchain technology has the potential to radically transform the student record.  Traditionally, records are verified at the source -- the issuing institution. With blockchain, the record would be ‘owned’ by the learner and verified using cryptographic technology without going back to the source. Because blockchain is validated using digital signatures, safeguarded using intricate math, and preserved by everyone on the chain so there is no single point of failure, the technology offers a totally new way to store and validate the student record.

“But blockchain is not a silver bullet,” Dowling said. “It’s just a technology, and like any technology, we need to evaluate it properly to see if it meets a need, and to understand the associated benefits, risks, and costs, etc.”

One potential challenge: cryptokeys

Giving the learner possession of the digital credential trades current problems for new ones. With online systems, learners have access to an online portal and if they forget their passwords, they can usually initiate a ‘forgot your password’ process. With blockchain, secure cryptographic keys, known only to the learner, are used instead of passwords. While they are generally more secure, they must be remembered by the learner and if the keys are lost, recovery is impossible (that’s the point) and digital credentials need to be re-issued to a new set of keys.

“Learners taking ownership only scales if we have a situation where the cryptographic key is totally integrated into everyday use,” Dowling said. “If you’re only using your keys every few years, they can be easily forgotten. It needs to be tied to the identity you use to unlock your phone, access public services, and integrated into other identity management systems.”

The hurdle: standardization

“Though blockchain has been used in bitcoin for more than 10 years, its use in digital credentials is relatively new. We’re early in the adoption cycle so we don’t have standards,” Dowling said. “We have open source but not ratified standards. So if individual institutions adopt blockchain because it’s shiny and new, before standardization, a few years from now their technology is at risk of being siloed.”

That’s why it’s important for institutions to ask the right questions and identify areas for collaborative work -- such as how to integrate the cryptographic key into everyday life -- before jumping in.

“The hype isn’t all bad; it’s bringing focus and momentum to digital credentials,” Dowling said. “Now it’s time to take that momentum into the work of standardization, perhaps through PESC or somewhere else, rather than taking a siloed approach through immediate implementation. That will give us our best chance of assessing the challenges and seeing what the gaps are before harnessing this technology.”

Dowling will bring his insight to the Innovation Hub session “A Load of Blocks? A Considered Analysis on Blockchain Credentials” at the AACRAO Technology and Transfer Conference in July. Learn more and join us in Las Vegas in July. 







Categories :
  • Competencies
  • Meetings, Workshops, and Trainings
  • Student Information Systems
  • Technological Knowledge
  • Technology
  • Technology and Transfer
Tags :
  • blockchain
  • innovation hub
chain link with code on the outside
Related people

Build Connections

Retired Members - Build Connections


Attend a event

Our meetings, workshops, and international institutes are designed instruct, educate and foster collaboration between professionals and institutions. Connect with old friends and register for one today.

Learn More

Member Only Benefits

AACCRAO_Transcript-purple

AACRAO's weekly e-newsletter delivering policy and industry news

Member Login Required

Questions? Contact us at membership@aacrao.org or (202) 355-1040