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Globalisation debate ponders strategies for developing countries

Diverse university models and academic freedom are key to resilience, participants hear

Published on
June 13, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Source: Getty

Counter culture: some Western universities follow the ā€˜shopkeeper model’

Rapid globalisation in higher education is down to ā€œmassive governance failuresā€ that mean developing world governments respond inadequately to the vast hunger for knowledge among their populations. But Pratap Bhanu Mehta, president of the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi, warned that such countries should avoid copying a single Western model in their race to build university systems.

Speaking as part of a debate on ā€œthe university in a global contextā€, held at Tate Modern in London on 3Ā June, Dr Mehta said the ā€œresilienceā€ of the UK and US systems was based ā€œon the diversity of their institutionsā€.

As a result, he said, developing countries should avoid adopting any single model they found there.

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Dr Mehta also said that although productivity and job creation do not necessarily go together, universities were often burdened with the unrealistic hope that ā€œif we get higher education right, it will solve the problem of jobless growthā€.

Meanwhile, Richard Sennett, centennial professor of sociology at the London School of Economics, recalled that when ā€œthe Chinese began to put serious money into research in the late 1980sā€, they had adopted what he called ā€œthe shopkeeper modelā€. Everything was tightly controlled and designed to answer carefully defined questions – and the results were ā€œdismal, boring and produced no patentsā€.

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That had led them to turn instead to ā€œthe MIT [Massachusetts Institute of Technology] modelā€, based on trial and error and the acceptance of inevitable failures, just as painters often scrape away what they have done and start again.

ā€œThis might not sound like a sensible model,ā€ Professor Sennett continued, ā€œexcept that it works and produces tons of patents.ā€

His fear was that many leading Western universities were now ā€œreturning to the shopkeeper modelā€ by embracing ā€œaccountabilityā€ and ā€œwalking away from the idea of discretionary spending and personal judgementā€.

Waste not, want not

Stefan Collini, professor of intellectual history and English literature at the University of Cambridge, also spoke up for the ā€œwastefulā€ aspects of the MIT model and argued that ā€œthe best way to get academics to perform their public task is by leaving them alone a good dealā€.

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With ā€œintellectual agendas largely set by a few well-funded First World universitiesā€, he said, it was important to create counterbalancing institutions elsewhere that were not driven by short-term goals.

But responding to what he called ā€œthe Sennett-Collini critiqueā€, universities and science minister David Willetts claimed that ā€œthe Ivy League is a red herringā€ because ā€œStanford and MIT are not relying on public money for their big speculative work. Much though IĀ admire that model, the issue is how we can allocate public money to create departments [like theirs].ā€

Today, the minister suggested, ā€œmuch of the world is facing its Robbins momentā€, trying to address the issues of university expansion that the UK first encountered after the Robbins report of 1963.

When the government of Indonesia came asking for help with its plans to expand student numbers by a quarter of a million a year, Mr Willetts had been disappointed by the response of UK universities. He was also ā€œunclear how much the MIT/Oxbridge model can really rise to the challengeā€, he said.

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The debate was chaired by Paul Webley, director of Soas, University of London, and formed part of a series of lectures on global citizenship, coordinated by the communications organisation Zamyn, ahead of next week’s G8 summit in Northern Ireland.

matthew.reisz@tsleducation.com

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