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Globalization, Educational Trends, and the Open Society

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Title: Globalization, Educational Trends, and the Open Society


1
Globalization, Educational Trends, and the Open
Society
  • Martin Carnoy, Stanford University

2
Globalization and the Knowledge Economy
  • The world economy has become more competitive
    because of many new players and new technologies.
    Employers want more flexibility to compete.
  • The workplace is becoming a less permanent social
    site-- increasingly, individual employees define
    themselves socially and economically in terms of
    their own characteristics rather than where they
    work.
  • Main bases of globalization are information and
    innovation, and they are knowledge intensive.
  • Globalization has a profound impact on the
    transmission of knowledge.

3
Effects of Globalization on the Transmission of
Knowledge
  • Globalization increases demand for education
    this increases pressure on the system for higher
    quality schooling, often producing perverse
    consequences, mainly from standpoint of
    educational equity.
  • Is higher quality education for all is
    necessarily consistent with individual-centric
    democracy, particularly in societies marked by
    deeply-rooted ethnic conflicts and weak states?
  • Globalization also produces reaction, often in
    form of ethnic-religious nationalism/regionalism.
    This represents a search for identity--can be
    antithesis of globalism/internationalism and even
    of individualism

4
Globalization and Labor Markets
  • Employers in developed countries are also more
    likely to hire part-time or temporary labor. The
    proportion of non-standard work arrangements is
    increasing in most developed countries.
  • With increased competition, employers attempt to
    move to just-in-time labor.
  • One apparent result of increased competition is
    increased inequality of wage distribution.
  • The feminization of the labor market is one of
    the most salient characteristics of the growth of
    the new information economy.

5
Rising Payoffs to University Education
  • Increasing emphasis on knowledge industries and
    more information-based technologies increase
    relative demand for higher education.
  • New organization of labor force emphasizing
    changing workplace and multitasking increases
    demand for higher levels of education.
  • Tendency for governments to abandon politics of
    income equalization (welfare state), increases
    income inequality, with a bias to falling
    relative real incomes for the less educated,
    hence higher payoffs to university education.
  • Although women are paid less than men, the
    payoffs to women for completing university may be
    higher.

6
Increased Pressure for Students to Get Into
University
  • Increased competition at lower levels of
    schooling.
  • Development of private education.
  • Increased pressure on students to succeed, and on
    families to invest in their children so that they
    can succeed academically.
  • Increased inequality of schooling quality.

7
Changes in Education in the Former Soviet Bloc
  • In countries of former Soviet bloc, now
    democracies or transitioning to democracy,
    transition from state schooling and focus on
    vocational education to increased privatization
    and general education.
  • Under Communism, teachers and students
    distributed by centralized state insulated from
    influence of international competition.
  • In new democracies, educational system no longer
    insulated, and quality teachers and students
    increasingly distributed among schools according
    to families ability to pay.

8
Increased Pressure on Universities to Expand
  • Higher rates of return mean that more students
    want to attend universities.
  • Universities feel pressure to accept more
    students.
  • Increased pressure on public finances since
    universities are more expensive per student than
    lower levels of education.
  • This may tend to reduce public spending on lower
    levels of schooling or, alternatively, may
    increase privatization of universities, making
    them accessible only to those who can afford to
    pay.

9
Globalization and the Increased Payoff to Womens
Education
  • Globalization has raised the rate of return to
    womens education.
  • The spread of feminist ideas and the increased
    demand for low-cost semi-skilled and skilled
    labor.
  • Worldwide movement for womens rights.
  • This, in turn, has increased the demand by women
    for higher and higher education levels.
  • Women are still discriminated against in labor
    markets and are still under-represented in the
    most lucrative professions even in the most
    feminized countries, Sweden and the U.S.
  • But globalization is changing that because it
    requires flexible labor.

10
Changing Demographics and the Impact on Education
  • Families have changed in developed
    countries--later marriage, fewer children, more
    likely divorce and remarriage.
  • The family began these drastic changes before the
    onset of the current phase of globalization and
    work restructuring. The source of family changes
    is in women demanding changes in their status in
    society.
  • However, once women began opting out of the
    domestic roles allocated to them, the
    increasingly flexible labor market was ready to
    accept them into more and more wage jobs, and
    eventually into more professional jobs.

11
Changes in Demographics II
  • Perhaps the most profound effect in the developed
    countries is the decline in fertility rates.
    These have dropped to such low levels in some
    countries that severe population declines are
    predicted.
  • The offsetting movement is to accept increasing
    numbers of immigrants, and this is changing the
    ethnic and language makeup of nations such as the
    US, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK.
  • A higher percentage of children is being born
    into low-income families the costs of education
    for these children is higher than for the
    children of high-income families, but less is
    spent on them, creating continuing disparities.
  • Eventually, these issues reach into the
    university level.

12
Increased Income Inequality and Declining
Educational Quality
  • Push for decentralization of education delivery
    increases inequality in the quality of
    educational services because the capacity to
    deliver educational services varies among
    communities.
  • Democratization and marketization is associated
    with increased income and social inequality,
    greater choice, and less order.
  • State-driven social capital is not replaced by
    family and community social capital in societies
    with poorly organized civil societies.
  • Schools become less effective because it becomes
    more costly to produce student achievement than
    before the democratic transition.

13
A Contradiction of the Transition to Democracy
  • Democratization may produce a decline in the
    quality of schooling and greater disparity in
    quality.
  • Globalization represents the next stage of
    democratization, this time on a world scale, but
    it also threatens democratization with increased
    social inequality in access to high quality
    education and with greater inequality of income
    and wealth distribution.
  • It may also pose a threat to democracy by
    decreasing the quality of education or at least
    creating barriers to increasing educational
    quality.

14
Globalization and Identity
  • The state in capitalist societies has
    historically attempted to individualize members
    of the working class, separating them from their
    class identity formed in the social workplaces of
    the industrial age.
  • In the post-industrial age, workplaces cease to
    form worker identities. Work is no longer
    permanent. Workers form identity around their
    cvs or around an educational institution.
  • When the state still tries to individualize
    people into individualized citizenship as the
    workplace ceases to provide social identities,
    workers are disintegrated from society by both
    the workplace and the state.
  • Fundamentalist religion is often new source of
    identity for those threatened by global markets
    and multicultural version of welfare democracy.

15
Globalization and Culture Clash
  • Global culture values scientific knowledge and
    market rationality, but it is not inclusive, and
    it is highly unequal.
  • This clashes with more traditional knowledge and
    more localized forms of identity that give
    impression of greater inclusion.
  • Educational institutions are major centers for
    the formation of culture in the knowledge
    society, but they risk becoming a form of
    exclusion, and so are a site of struggle between
    localized and global identity.

16
Educational Institutions and Culture
  • Schools and universities are the institution
    responsible for developing the skills that are
    associated with global culture, but at the same
    time, localized cultures seek support there.
  • It is also in schools and universities that new
    movements develop and impact global culture--the
    womens movement, the environmental movement, and
    movements against many elements of global culture
    itself.Womens movement has made inroads in
    education even in traditional Muslim countries.
  • Knowledge producing institutions simultaneously
    create schisms in national cultures, develop
    global culture and combat global culture.
  • Schools and universities need to accept this dual
    role and use it constructively.

17
Implications for Educational Policy in the Open
Society
  • Transition societies have generally inherited
    well-developed, high quality and rather inclusive
    educational systems, in which teachers were paid
    same wages as other professionals.
  • Now public education suffers severe budget
    constraints, teaching has become low-paid
    profession, and private funding is replacing
    public funding, with predicted increases in
    inequality.
  • Rather than being a path to resolving old ethnic
    conflicts, educational system is at the forefront
    of the conflicts.
  • Danger in the present environment that societies
    divide into groups incorporated into the
    knowledge economy and those left out..
    Universities can play a constructive role in
    bridging these differences, not exacerbating
    them.
  • Danger that universities exacerbate social
    inequalities with inequitable financing and
    exclusion as they expand.
  • .

18
Education and the Challenges of Globalization
  • Two models for education in global economy
  • Highly decentralized, with all community groups
    (ethicity-based organizations, gender-based
    social movements, religious organizations)
    developing their own education.
  • Centralized, multi-cultural self-knowledge
    approach to socialize all young people in the
    public system. State continues to impose
    ideological perspective, but one reflecting the
    diversity of todays post-industrial societies.
  • Decentralized approach assumes that market
    relations enough to keep diverse societies
    working together successfully.
  • State-driven model helps various groups gain
    understanding of their own history and culture
    but helps them think critically about it.
    Consistent with constructive vision of
    post-industrial society.
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