1 / 18

The Globalisation of Education - what are the implications?

The Globalisation of Education - what are the implications? . Revised version of a talk given for the Information Technology Strategy Committee seminar series, at the Hong Kong Institute of Education, November 2002. John Schostak. ‘Realist’ Architecture for action: Schostak (2002).

levia
Download Presentation

The Globalisation of Education - what are the implications?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Globalisation of Education - what are the implications? Revised version of a talk given for the Information Technology Strategy Committee seminar series, at the Hong Kong Institute of Education, November 2002 John Schostak

  2. ‘Realist’ Architecture for action: Schostak (2002)

  3. Background thinking • The idea: its ‘philosophical’ origins in: • Meaning of ‘education’ v. ‘schooling’, ‘training’ • ‘globalisation’ - are we at a critical point in history? • and discussions about possible on-line futures : EU ‘framework 6’ visions • Social and cultural practices: • the development of on-line mechanisms and cyber-structures to ‘invent’ the future: • Portals, dynamic data base management and ‘emergence’ mechanisms • Democratic processes governing interaction • The material realisation: • ‘technical developments in global communications’ ‘city of learning’, ‘city-plus’ and ‘Norwich Plus’

  4. Continuation of notes from previous slide

  5. Emergence of on-line ‘Education Space’ • Given: masses of distributed providers and clients • Given: global choice of “providers” • Given: increasing influence of global employers to define training, professional and skills needs • Required: strategies for “emergence’ of, and assuring quality of, on-line: • Curriculum, Assessment • qualifications • commercial institutions offering courses and qualifications • self-elected educational and schooling communities For social justice

  6. GLOBAL-LOCAL EDUCATIONAL SPACES • Ways of managing: • Local ‘Modernist, geographically specific -e.g., national • Supplied by specialist institutions • ‘Post-modern’, On-line, global • Distributed • Complexly supplied Education System Critical, creative processes Naturalising process Schooling/ training Education

  7. An On-line ‘fantasy’ Emergence of an Educational Innovation Network (EIN), connecting schools with a university, which is then connected to a community and is then connected to an E-city network

  8. EU Framework 6 - see http://www.cordis.lu/ist/ • A regional (not national) approach to infrastructure development • Large scale role-outs • Construction of collaborative networks across the public and private sectors • Ubiquity and mobility (anywhere, anytime, anyone) as key concepts: BANs, PANs, LANs, WANs, Full Internet • Open protocols to ensure sharability and communication across platforms, databases etc.

  9. Suppose • The infrastructures are in place from BANs to full internet - anywhere, anytime, anyone • The ‘ceilings’ have been removed, ie., no worries about broadband capacities for absolutely anything our imaginations can conceive of doing Now what?

  10. A ‘brainstorming session’ May 2002 Tools for: • Communications - loss of the power to ‘broadcast’ to captivated masses - replacement by ‘emergent districts and communities’; management of light and dark networks • Relevance and the adaptability of ‘learners’: loss of linearity - parallel activities • Emergence v. planning; Quality and “trust metrics”; IPR v freeware, free content • Management of Dangers

  11. So, what do we fear? • Erosion of HEIs autonomy, innovative and critical potentials • Erosion, even loss, of teacher role • Loss of face-to-face teacher student; student-student contact and community • Increasing ‘stealth powers’ (‘Dark side’) of global commercial enterprises to define and control ‘education’ for their purposes

  12. Stealth Architecture: Schostak (2002) ‘Light side’ Closed curricula Controlled ‘Dark side’ Open curricula Unpredictable

  13. Making open curricula educational • Self-governance to enhance: • Creative Powers • Expression • Access to Information • Generating and exploring ‘agendas of interest’ through critical dialogue • Engagement in Action to realise curricular interests • Access to Resources to support needs, interests, and opportunities

  14. Political Contexts of Education • Guardianship • Anarchic • Totalitarian • Polyarchy (as threshold to democratic, and characteristic of most contemporary ‘democracies’) • Democratic

  15. So, what do I see as the most important challenges facing the accomplishment of ‘education’? • Fragmentation - collapse of boundaries/identities • Personal • Political • Ethical • Cultural • Alienation/freedom from the ‘real’ • Virtual realities - everywhere and nowhere • Unlimited Transformation/translation • Uncertainty • Freedom from origins/identity/authority Resolved through emergence of ‘global-local’ educational communities?

  16. So, it’s time for discussion about: • The role of HEIs - if any - in consortia with other kinds of ‘providers’ as a catalyst of the new educational spaces (resource providers) • The governance of global educational communities and the management of quality, interests, and relevance to personal and local needs (practical mechanisms of governance) • The cultural, professional and organisational changes necessary to adapt to the new educational environments (relevant cultural, organisational, professional practices) • And, a concept of education appropriate to the new on-line worlds (appropriate philosophies)

  17. References • Dahl, R.A. (1989) Democracy and its Critics, New Haven and London: Yale University Press • Sayer, A. (1993) Method in Social Science. A Realist Approach, London, New York: Routledge • Schostak, J.F. (2002) Understanding, Designing and Conducting Qualitative Research in Education. Framing the Project. Open University Press

More Related