How will these global
trends affect education?
In part, the answer may lie in
existing trends in the delivery of educational programs.
Educational programs cannot operate without educational
materials and equipment (or 'goods') and in the absence
of quality educational 'services.' Increasingly
educational goods and services are being privatised. The
Education and Training industry is now North America's
second largest accounting for nearly 10 per cent of GDP.
It is also the fifth largest service export in the USA
(and seventh in Australia). Of the $26 billion spent on
educational goods and services in 1997, $2.1 billion was
for the web and about $1 billion for software. For other
OECD countries, the export of textbooks and services is
also big business: in 1997, the UK exported over $114
million worth of textbooks. Worldwide, the market for
educational software now stands at over $4
billion.
In a highly competitive and
polarised world, there has also been a significant growth
in the 'shadow education system' &emdash; the world of
private tutoring: more than half of the students in
secondary school receive tutoring in countries like
Japan, Mauritius and ROK. In ROK, spending on private
tutoring in 1996 was half as much again as public
expenditure. Such growth seems to be a social response to
inadequacies in government support for education, both in
quantitative and qualitative terms, and can only lead to
further exacerbation of inequalities and
polarisation.
If current global trends continue,
commercial activity in educational goods and services can
be expected to grow substantially and education itself
will become more 'globalised.' Highly capitalised
educational publishers are shifting from marketing
individual titles to marketing services to local
publishers, while modern testing agencies are following a
similar path. Standards for educational performance are
becoming international as we have seen from OECD's
Education at a Glance. The student body, faculty,
courses and teaching provided by major universities are
all being increasingly 'internationalised.'
Globalisation and the right to
basic education for all
Over the past two years, UNESCO and
its partners (mainly UNICEF) have worked with 180
countries to assess their progress towards basic
education for all (EFA) since 1990. Our statistics
(UNESCO, 2000) show that most developing countries are
making steady progress towards the goals of universal
primary educational and reducing adult illiteracy, and
that despite their limited resources, some developing
countries (eg. Bangladesh) have made surprisingly good
progress.
The quest to provide education for
all has made little headway in countries ravaged by armed
conflict, crippling debt and rapid population growth. In
particular, the data show a worrying increase in the
number of out-of-school children in the poorest
countries, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. Over the
past decade, public expenditure for primary education in
the LDCs remained static at about $20 per pupil, while
among the developed countries it rose to well over $5000.
In 1980, expenditure at the pre-tertiary level in the
developed countries was 37 times higher than that of the
LDCs: in 1997, it was 137 times greater. Education may be
the key to poverty alleviation, but the education offered
to the poor and in poor countries is one of the first
victims when resources are being cut. Unless the global
forces impacting on these countries and their internal
situation changes dramatically, our estimates indicate
they will fall further behind during the next
decade.
While most countries have been able
to keep pace quantitatively with the growth in numbers,
few countries have been able to find the resources to
provide a quality education for all. If anything, the
quality of the education offered to the masses has
suffered. For example, the picture emerging from the
analysis of the situation in Central and Eastern Europe
reveals that the transition to a market economy has been
extremely difficult for most countries in the region, the
economic downturn precipitating cuts in educational
expenditure and with that a deterioration in the
conditions for teaching and learning, to growing
inequality in education and high drop-out rates,
especially in rural areas.
The evidence also suggests that
even in the rich countries, increases in income
inequality are associated with increases in education and
social inequality. For example, not only does the UK have
one of the largest income gaps among OECD countries, it
also has the highest proportion (19.4%) of young people
aged 16-19 years who are neither attending school nor
employed, higher than Italy, Spain or Greece and roughly
five times that of Denmark and Germany. The concerns
about the quality of education expressed by the Heads of
Government at the G-8 summit in Koln are predominantly
related to this 'underclass' of disadvantaged young
people most of whom leave school early, are functionally
illiterate, and whose anti-social behaviour at school and
in the community increasingly constitutes a threat to
security and quality of life of others.
The cumulative social and
educational effects of disadvantage have been well
documented. The research shows that the impact of
disadvantage on a particular child's education and
subsequent behaviour depends on the cumulative effects of
several risk factors including poverty, family breakdown,
sustained patterns of impaired child-parent
relationships, instability and disruption in key
developmental contexts such as the family and school. The
research suggests that irrespective of cultural context,
it is difficult for families and schools to maintain the
sustained care and interaction needed by a child to
develop in conditions of poverty, conflict and constant
change.
There have been many attempts to
ameliorate the effect of disadvantage on educational
opportunities. Mortimore and Whitty (1997) outline four:
one based on the concept of meritocracy, one on the use
of compensatory mechanisms, one on the creation of
intervention projects, and the last, change through
school improvement. The first emphasises
competition, but the evidence show that although
it works for a few (as many of us here can attest) it
does nothing to improve the situation of those left
behind &emdash; be they individuals, communities or
countries. Compensatory measures may target
individuals or families (eg. school meals), disadvantaged
schools or groups (eg. Aboriginal Schools) or, at the
international level, countries or even regions (eg. UN
Special Initiative for Africa). In general, these are
somewhat more effective, but targeting is not always easy
and the root causes may remain untouched.
Intervention projects such as Headstart,
Success for All and the Reading Recovery Programme
do seem to help combat the individual consequences of
disadvantage but none of these remedies seem to be
effective in altering the overall patterns of inequality
in education. The roots of school improvement lie
in the research on school effectiveness. This approach
places the responsibility for change in the hands of the
school and its community and the evidence suggests that
when committed and talented school heads and teachers
work in partnership with parents and the community even
in disadvantaged areas, schools can improve.
Of course, it is not surprising
that a strong negative correlation between most measures
of social and cultural disadvantage and educational
outcomes persist. Even a cursory glance at the league
tables (cf. IEA, Education at a Glance) shows that
schools and nations at the top are invariably those of
the rich, and those at the bottom the most disadvantaged.
Whatever changes are made at the school level or in the
education systems of poor countries, their efforts will
be constrained to the extent which inequalities within
and between countries are structural and powerful
mechanisms are maintained to reproduce existing
hierarchies, and to the extent that 'social capital'
continues to decline as relationships and supportive
social networks collapse. The situation has been made
worse by policies at national and international levels
which deny the right of all to a decent education and
thereby undermine the principle that education is a
public good and the responsibility of the whole society,
especially of governments.
If we are to overcome disadvantage
at the individual, national or international level, we
need education programs which respect the cultures and
address the realities of the families and children to be
served and give priority to the alleviation of poverty
and building support structures for families and nations
in difficulty. The stark facts on growing inequality and
polarisation presented above drive home the reality that
it is simply impossible to improve access to education or
the quality of the education in poor countries without
extra resources, and that within countries extra
resources must be found to improve the quality and
functioning of schools, families and communities,
particularly those located in disadvantaged
areas.
But from where must these resources
come? In the end, governments and international
organisations (public and private) must assume their
national and global responsibilities and reallocate
resources to meet targets (eg 0.7 per cent for aid, 6 per
cent plus of GNP for education etc) &emdash; even if that
means taxing the rich, cutting arms expenditure or
putting people before profits.
If we do not assume a new path,
life will be particularly difficult during the
Twenty-first century for the already disadvantaged. At
the World Conference on Education for All (Jomtien,
1990), we insisted on meeting the basic learning needs of
all, the emphasis being on learning achievement, not
merely attending school. But acquiring the knowledge and
skills needed to participate in the life and work of
communities in the Twenty-first century is possible only
if the essential conditions for learning are present in
the formal and non-formal education programs. In the
schools serving the poor and marginalised, these
conditions are absent. Children cannot be expected to
learn or to stay in school if they are sick, hungry and
exhausted, if the school is overcrowded and unsanitary,
if there are few or no books and teachers are unpaid and
unqualified.
At best progress towards the
alleviation of poverty will be slow if the present
international economic and political order remains
unchanged &emdash; if the poorest countries and groups
are locked into a seemingly endless downward spiral of
poverty, debt, conflict and misery and if inhuman traffic
in weapons, drugs, arms, women and children continues
unchecked. Education may be the key to the alleviation of
poverty and to sustainable development, but not if the
global economic order leads us to high quality private
education for an elite and a poorly funded and inferior
public education system for the masses. There will a
global crisis in education if we allow our market forces
to polarise the world of education, internationally and
nationally.
Globalisation and Higher
Education
Today, global wealth is
concentrated less and less in factories and the land, and
more and more in knowledge and skills. In the USA human
capital is now estimated to be at least three times more
important than physical capital. Participation in the
rapidly changing knowledge society of the Twenty-first
century demands new knowledge and skills and learning
throughout life, and higher qualifications than ever
before. As a result, the demand for higher education is
growing constantly, higher education systems are under
great strain to cope with dramatic increases in numbers
without a commensurate increase in public funding. In
many countries, expansion, both public and private, has
been 'unbridled, unplanned and often chaotic'. The
results &emdash; deterioration in average quality,
continuing inter-regional, inter-country and
intra-country inequalities, and increased for-profit
provision of higher education &emdash; could have serious
consequences' for developing countries and disadvantaged
groups and the very concept of the
'university.'
The World Conference on Higher
Education (Paris, 1998) sought to 'set the direction
needed to prepare higher education for the tasks that
await it in the Twenty-first century, and to help mankind
and the community of nations to strive out towards a
better future, towards a world more just, more humane,
more caring and more peaceful' by establishing a few key
principles and priorities for action. The Conference
showed the need to strengthen the traditional research
and specialised teaching functions of the university,
while at the same time to insist on its intercultural and
international mission of higher education in the
Twenty-first century.
Globalisation processes have led to
an unprecedented demand for access to higher education
while at the same time most governments are unwilling or
unable to provide the necessary support to public
institutions. Thus the dramatic growth in private and
open higher education, the financial and identity crisis
facing universities worldwide, and the intense and
increasing competition for overseas students among the
big league of internationalised universities and for
adult learners from open and virtual corporate
universities. In this context, I would hope that
governments see beyond the immediate and understand that
within the walls of the University there is a treasure
within.
Globalisation and Teacher
Education
The Delors report (UNESCO, 1996)
sets out an agenda for the future which implies that
significant changes are needed in pre-service teacher
education programs if we are to select and prepare a new
generation of teachers equipped with the knowledge,
skills and values to help their culturally different and
their socially disadvantaged students to learn, to
resolve conflicts peacefully, to respect each other's
dignity and cultures, and to become socially responsible
citizens. What emerges from the research is that teacher
education which follows the 'Do as I say, not do as I do
model' has to be replaced by one which sees learning to
teach as a deeply personal activity in which includes
activities designed to develop sensitivity to cultures,
languages and lives of children coming from different
social and cultural groups, and which provides constant
and significant support, working with cohort groups, and
a systematic long-term message which provides guidance
and direction for personal development.
The direction and culture of
educational research must also change if we are to reform
educational policies, established practice, curricula and
teaching materials in ways which facilitate intercultural
learning and ameliorate the problems created by
disadvantage and discrimination in education and society.
For example, there is a great deal that we do not know
about the impact of international and government policies
what is happening in our multicultural schools and
universities; about the content and processes of
education in traditional and contemporary cultural
contexts; about the conditions under which intercultural
learning and conflicts are resolved peacefully in
different settings; about how best to select, prepare and
support teachers and communities to cope with the
realities and contradictions created by shifts in
population, technology and policy; about the
effectiveness of different approaches to combating
violence, racism, substance abuse and suicide in our
schools and universities.
Another research agenda for the
Twenty-first century relates to the impact of different
types of student and faculty exchange programs,
citizenship education, interactive multimedia packages
and the web on intercultural sensitivity and the
conditions under which various types of learning
experiences transfer into acceptance of difference and
tolerance in one's own community, school or
university.