Open education, cracks, and the crisis of higher education
The Browne Review and the cuts announced in the UK CSR have prompted much heat and some light around the idea of higher education [HE], and the notion of state support for the established social forms of higher education institutions. This is a crisis for those engaged in HE and for whom higher learning is more than economic outputs, and in that the crisis in HE takes on the characteristics of the broader political economic crisis within society.
In the model of coercive capitalism proposed by Naomi Klein, the impact of crisis is used to justify a tightening and a quickening of the dominant neoliberal ideology. This ideology highlights the transfer control of the economy and state or public assets from public to the private sector under the belief that it will produce a more efficient [smaller, less regulatory] government and improve economic outputs. This implies a lock-down of state subsidies for “inefficient” work [Band C and D funded subjects in UK HE], the privatisation of state enterprises in the name of consumer choice, economic efficiency or sustainability [like encouraging the privatisation of HE], a refusal to run deficits [hence pejorative cuts to state services], and extending the financialisation of capital and the growth of consumer debt [like the increase in fees]. What Klein terms the shock doctrine uses “the public’s disorientation following massive collective shocks – wars, terrorist attacks, or natural disasters [or in this case the trauma of a structural economic crisis] – to achieve control by imposing economic shock therapy.”
In particular we might now revisit the critical work on the neoliberal university, the student as consumer and the marketisation of HE, in order to critique and negate the path that we are pushed towards. This work identifies the types of controlled, economically-driven, anti-humanist organisations that will possibly emerge, and the ways in which oppositional, alternative, meaningful social change might be realised. This connects to the work of Harvey (2010), who argues that there are seven activity areas that underpin meaningful social change.
1. Technological and organisational forms of production, exchange and consumption.
2. Relations to nature and the environment.
3. Social relations between people.
4. Mental conceptions of the world, embracing knowledges and cultural understandings and beliefs.
5. Labour processes and production of specific goods, geographies, services or affects.
6. Institutional, legal and governmental arrangements.
7. The conduct of daily life that underpins social reproduction.
These activity areas help educators and students examine how HE might engage with Browne and the CSR’s neoliberal agenda, in order to develop shared, or co-operative alternatives. This re-imaging is critical if we are to remove the emerging iron cage of bureaucracy and technocracy.
Imagining and creating alternatives is critical and might usefully be seen in terms of the dialectics of social change. As the hegemonic view of society radicalises itself, in turn other opportunities for change emerge. Holloway’s ideas of exploiting cracks in capitalism is important here, in seeing how the internal tensions in the dominant political economy offer up possibilities for radical change at very specific moments. Some of these opportunities exist in the more open and radical (Trapese), or the local (The School of Everything), or the co-operative (as outlined in Affinities and within the UK Co-operative College) forms of educational organisation. We do not have to settle for a pre-determined business-as-usual.
This also goes for the University itself, as a social form. One of the key areas that is opened-up for critique and re-imagining is the openness of our social forms of HE, crystallised in-part through technology. An outcome of Browne and the CSR is a shrinking of the institution and a negation of non-economically determined activities, based around efficiencies as a predetermined scale and the consumption of higher learning by students as consumers. It may be that Browne’s focus on the idea of the student gives us a chink here to focus on issues of open identities and open engagement with the institution by its stakeholders. Browne clearly views students as consumers. The report argues (p. 25):
“We want to put students at the heart of the system. Students are best placed to make the judgement about what they want to get from participating in higher education.”
Whilst the actuality and maturity of this view is highly contested, it implies that HEIs should engage meaningfully with their stakeholder’s unique and possibly shared identities, rather than forcing them to adapt to the institutional position. There is a space here within which work on OpenID, OAUTH and more broadly on open educational models might be catalysed. This user-centred work is less about control and moulding of a user’s identity to meet institutional standards and is more about co-operative engagement and sharing.
This view hints at our ability to move away from thinking about technology to thinking about relationships and people, so that technology is just one component within a broader socio-cultural approach to change [as noted by Harvey, above]. So, institutions might work towards being open, rather than branded as, for example, an iTunesU or a Microsoft/Google University. We should be aiming for openness, and allowing users to engage with other (web-based) services in ways appropriate to them. This view connects to that of DEMOS, in their view of The Edgeless University (pp. 54-5) that:
“Technology should be in the service of an ethic of open learning. Just as technology provides ways to open up access to information, there are technological tools to close it off and reinforce existing barriers and potentially inequalities. Wherever possible investment should encourage open standards and avoid overly restrictive access management.”
Brian Kelly highlights clearly the contested nature of the place of technology within higher education in the face of cuts, and the impact on the HE environment. Brian argues that “we will need to accept many changes in order to survive”. Acceptance is not necessarily the view one might take at this radical juncture, if one viewed adaptation through resilience as a possibility. Irrespective of whether demonstrations and protests in support of business-as-usual [i.e. pleas for the same model of state funding], or re-modelling service provision in the dominant economic mode [i.e. re-shaping services in the face of cuts], are viable options, there are alternative forms of social organisation emerging.
In a separate Resilient Nation paper, DEMOS argue that communities have a choice between reliance on government and its resources, and its approach to command and control, or developing an empowering day-to-day, scalable resilience. Such resilience develops engagement, education, empowerment and encouragement. Resilient forms of HE should have the capacity to help students, staff and wider communities to develop these attributes. As technology offers reach, usability, accessibility and timely feedback, it is a key to developing a resilient higher education, with openness (i.e. shared, decentralised and accessible) at its core. Seizing these opportunities to reshape the dominant institutional forms of HE and their ways of operating, in the spirit of promoting co-operation and openness, offers hope.
This reshaping is proactive and creative, and is not focused upon crisis planning. It might also focus on the shared production of distinctive services by and for institutions, rather than the consumption of services provided by outsourced providers and a focus upon tying the institutional brand to products and vendors. The recent EDUCAUSE ECAR Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology argues that “there is no stereotypical student when it comes to technology”. Can institutions afford to be stereotypical when it comes to engaging with those students’ and their identities/individuality? This doesn’t mean leaving those students to create their own outsourced personal learning environments. But it might mean an activist role for institutions in building frameworks that are open enough to make sense to the variety of students in their own contexts. The reality and medium-term effectiveness of centralisation or outsourcing of homogenised services is therefore a major issue, in light of the need for institutional uniqueness.
One of the key outcomes of Browne and the CSR is that modularity, rather than homogeneity, in the HE sector will out. Modularity and diversity are key planks of resilience, tied to feedback from key users. Thus the scope, values and visions of institutions are key, and the ways in which social media or technology are placed in the service of those values and that scope is pivotal. George Roberts engages with this idea of the form of higher education, and the ideas raised by David Kernohan’s recent critique of the idea of the University, by asking whether “it may be time for the academy to abandon the institutions which have housed it for the past several hundred years”. George concludes by asking “So, where does the academy go?” This is an important question related to alternative social forms, away from that of the university, and supported by appropriate, distinctive and open technologies. However, this is also a scary question for those wedded to financialised capital through mortgages, debts and consumption.
I have no answer to George’s question here, but I suggest that we need to re-focus our critique in-part on the place of technology in the idea of higher education. David Jones argues that “It’s the focus on the product that has led university leaders to place less emphasis on the process and the people”. We need to address whether an obsession with tools is helpful in the face of crises. I suggest that a discussion and critique of what higher education is for, and how it is actualised has never been more pressing. I suggest that business-as-usual is not an option, and that goes for the determinist use of technology as outsourced, as integrated, as PLE, as whatever. I suggest that we need to offer up alternative views of the idea and forms of higher education, based on shared values beyond acceptance of economic shock doctrines. I suggest that we might focus upon resilience and openness as alternatives, and as cracks in the dominant ideology.
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about 1 year ago
My apologies in advance for the unashamed plug for the forthcoming JISC CETIS conference in November :http://wiki.cetis.ac.uk/Conference_2010_Programme
In the session :http://wiki.cetis.ac.uk/Cheaper%2C_flexible%2C_effective_institutions:_technology%2C_politics_and_economics
We will be attempting to discuss and address many of the issues raised here initially trough a scenario planning exercise, the student as a customer? with all that this may imply is a key theme of the Customer Relationship Management (CRM) strand.
about 1 year ago
I think that the CSR brings us up sharp and demands we ask what (higher) education is for. We cannot escape the fact that we live in a capitalist society but that doesn’t mean we have to be factory drones, we can try to do some good within the constraints that exist. We need to accept that for many – perhaps most – students getting a degree is a way of furthering their career or improving their job prospects; they are not coming to university just to nourish their souls or for the intrinsic good it will do them. However we can use the fact that they are with us for the period of their degree to open their eyes, widen their horizons and give them space to think, debate and change. that is what a higher education should be about; it should emancipate. The problem we have is that, because we live in a capital driven society, this opportunity needs funding. In a forward-thinking world it would be obvious that helping to develop citizens who can think, reflect, evaluate is a positive and therefore public finance (taxes) should pay for that. How many places and who the students are is a second order discussion. What we face now is the possibility of having to charge potential students more money for the same or even less. I can think of no other example where this economic model operates, can you? This dilemma is particularly accute with the Arts, Humanities and social sciences – the very places, one might argue, where reflection and rhetoric are at the core of what it is to be a student. As long as we insist on seeing higher education as providing a product in the form of a graduate who has the necessary skills and training to meet the current and future needs of industry – a highly trained round peg for a round hole – then we risk missing the point of what (higher) education is about.
about 1 year ago
Cracking post. It is indeed time to exhume the “what is a university for” chestnut. But this time we’re playing for keeps.
about 1 year ago
Do we (institutions) have the infrastructure to support this ‘openness’? I see the positives in the Resilient Nation paper but how far is this sustainable? Are these communities empowered enough to make these kinds of choices or see it as high on their agenda in face of other financial threats? How do we set the scene for communities to ‘shift’ in this way of thinking and doing?
You can contest Browne’s point about “We want to put students at the heart of the system. Students are best placed to make the judgement about what they want to get from participating in higher education.”
The paragraph before this point on this report (p2.5) states “Prospective students do not always get adequate advice or information to help them choose a course of study. Most of the investment in higher education goes to institutions through a block grant and students have no sight of what it is buying.”
This can imply that HE is not the only route to improving ones career prospects but that there are other avenues and students need to judge if they want to pursue HE in the knowledge that they will incur a debt on completion if they choose to purse a HE degree qualification if that’s what they really want.
I’m wondering how institutions stand on ‘open standards’ with student fees going up. Will students as consumers buy into it?
I agree we need to re-focus our critique of the place on technology in HE not only in the light of opportunities in the current climate but evaluate the drivers on how we got where we are today before the cuts and what impact of these drivers now looking ahead.
about 1 year ago
Early childhood education and higher education for adults needs a drastic change, in my opinion.
about 1 year ago
Been waiting to see what these announcements would generate here, and you haven’t disappointed! Enjoyed this, and found it thought provoking.
Personally, I’m caught between an idealised and a pragmatic response. Ideally, I can see the rationale for re-thinking Higher Education and its place in peoples’ lives, and for staking more modest claims to its position in society. (Personally, I think that the official rhetoric positioning it as an engine for economic innovation sets us up as a scapegoat as well as denigrating all the ‘unproductive’ subjects. We’d be far better off, I think, developing and rehearsing a more cultural, developmental narrative about our purpose – although who’d pay for that, today…?)
However, looking around me, I can also see all the people who could lose their jobs moving to such an ideal. (And that includes me.) Granted that’s short-term pain for the sector, but that doesn’t reduce what it means to those involved.
I guess that’s why we need to be in unions as well as having thoughtful debates.
As a practical point, though, we do need to try out these open forms now. If we can’t work out how to do it – and just as importantly, how to tell credible stories about its value, and about what resources it really needs – then we won’t have it in our repertoire when we need it in the future. We also wouldn’t be able to resist inappropriate versions of that path if we couldn’t spot them and understand what made them inappropriate.
So – where can we start sharing stories about this?
about 1 year ago
Another wonderful post Richard. My attempt to connect and extend on it. Keep up the great work!