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The World Is Flat: Globalization and America

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Title: The World Is Flat: Globalization and America


1
The World Is FlatGlobalization and America
  • Flat world reshapes higher
  • education..

2
What has caused the world to flatten?
  • Globalization 1 (1492-1800)
  • Globalization 2 (1800-2000)
  • Globalization 3 (2000 to Present)

3
Ten Forces Contributing to Flattening of the World
  • The Berlin Wall Fell 11/9/89
  • Netscape Went Public 8/9/95
  • Work Flow Software late 1900s
  • Open-Sourcing
  • Outsourcing Y2K
  • Offshoring
  • Supply-Chaining
  • Insourcing
  • Informing
  • The Steriods

4
The Triple Convergence
  • Convergence I
  • Convergence II
  • Convergence III

Globe model with China at the center
5
America and Free Trade and The Untouchables
  • Workers Who Are Special
  • Workers Who Are Specialized
  • Workers Who Are Anchored
  • Workers Who Are Really Adaptable

6
The Quiet Crisis and The Message
  • Dirty Little Secrets
  • American Leadership
  • Emerging Third World Countries

7
San Jose City College and the Flattening World
  • How flat are we?
  • How flat should we be?
  • What should we be doing to address this issue?
  • Individually
  • As a College

8
World Flattening Forces
  • Global transformation from a manufacturing
    economy concentrated in a few countries, to a
    knowledge economy which, empowered by information
    technology and the internet.
  • Knowledge travels even more effortlessly than
    money.
  • Upward mobility, available to everyone through
    easily acquired formal education

9
Ignorance is NOT a Bliss
  • The NASULGC report noted that while foreign
    language study rose slightly in the 1990s, the
    percentage of four-year institutions that have
    language-degree requirements has dropped by
    nearly 30 points since the mid-1960s.
  • http//www.virginia.edu/insideuva/2006/03/globaliz
    ation.html

10
Importing Minds
  • America used to make up for the shortages of
    talents by importing them, but in a flat world,
    where people can now stay home and compete with
    us, and in a post-9/11 world, where we are
    insanely keeping out many of the first-round
    intellectual draft choices in the world for
    exaggerated security reasons, we can no longer
    cover the gap. That's a key reason companies are
    looking abroad.
  • Education Gap

11
American high-school education is ''obsolete,''
Bill Gates
  • Here is the dirty little secret that no C.E.O.
    wants to tell you they are not just outsourcing
    to save on salary. They are doing it because they
    can often get better-skilled and more productive
    people than their American workers.
  • China graduates twice as many students with
    bachelor's degrees as the U.S.
  • America is falling behind

12
National Association of State Universities and
Colleges
  • Internationalization is not the latest academic
    fad, nor is it a simple add-on to existing
    practice. It is deemed essential for schools
    survival in the years ahead.

13
Cultural Differences
  • Shifting political realities and the ever-present
    threat of terrorism call for increased
    understanding of and sensitivity to cultural
    differences.

14
Broader Implications
  • Higher education should become less of an elite
    enterprise a much larger fraction of the world
    population will need higher education.
    Furthermore, mass higher education with lower
    standards of quality will not work.
  • Everybody will not need or achieve a graduate
    education, but many more people must be educated
    to a higher standard than previously required.
  • Achieving this goal will require both more
    effective education of disadvantaged groups and
    social policies to enable them to pay the costs
    of higher learning.

15
Implications
  • People are likely to obtain higher education
    throughout life, both as an economic necessity
    and as consumer good. Many young are likely to
    make the transition from adolescence to adulthood
    in brick and mortar colleges and universities,
    but this will not be the end of their higher
    education.

16
Technology
  • The means of production in higher education and
    the providers of higher education will continue
    to become more diverse. More and more we are
    likely to employ technology to reduce costs and
    increase effectiveness, new providers will spring
    up to serve emerging markets, and established
    providers will diversify their services.
  • http//www.oecd.org/dataoecd/51/37/37145728.pdf

17
Many nations have surpassed the U.S. in
educational attainment for young people under the
age of 35.
18
Reality
  • To maintain their standard of living, the people
    of the United States must be among the best
    educated workers in the world.

19
Our Responsibility
  • As educators, we must have faith in and respect
    for our students.
  • We must motivate our students to pursue higher
    education.
  • We must encourage social responsibility.
  • We must teach respect for our world, our planet

20
Responsible Globalization
21
Lake Chad
22
Credits
  • The World is Flat Implications for Higher
    Education Planners and Leaders1
  • Paul E. Lingenfelter President, State Higher
    Education Executive Officers- May 29, 2006

23
The Yes Men
  • A must see documentary on the dysfunctional and
    dangerous World Trade Organization (WTO)
  • http//www.theyesmenmovie.com/intro.html
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