The words in inverted commas are not mine but ones I have seen in innumerable media releases churned out by Federal and State Governments – and because these Governments hold the purse strings, the places of higher learning have to take note.
I really wish however, that there was a little more
“push back” from the leadership of the these institutions, pointing out that
education should go beyond cramming for qualifications that will earn the right
kind of job.
Sadly, many key figures in academia seem eager to
acquiesce in this trend. The Vice Chancellor of the University of Canberra, Professor
Stephen Parker, looks forward to the day when a great deal of his institution’s
infrastructure will be redundant because students will come on to campus less
often and for shorter periods.
In his vision students will do increasing amounts of
their learning online, working with videos and text “reserving every minute of
personal time of the teacher to smaller group encounters where students defend
and discuss their work”.
This sausage-machine mentality may produce the
short-term results that politicians want, but there are so many flaws. One
being the assumption that by 18, all young people know exactly what they want
to do with their lives and therefore the courses they should follow.
I quote an academic from an American university who
believes that in addition to providing its students with qualifications, higher
education should be equipping them to answer four questions:
What is worth knowing? What is worth doing? What
makes for a good human life? What are my responsibilities to other people?
If the trends in Australian higher learning continue
their answer to the first question would be: The information that gets me a job;
to the second would be: My job; while the third and fourth questions would
probably not be answered at all.
Higher education should be shaping a person to make
a worthwhile contribution, not just to an employer, not just to the economy,
but to the community, locally, nationally and globally. Above all it should
teach that minds should be open to all influences, and to develop the maturity
to judge them, to accept them, or to reject them.
It should teach them about compassion about justice
and yes, about a fair go; it should point out to them that the society they
have been raised in is just one among many on this earth. Part of that
knowledge doesn’t come from the internet or even from the lecture hall, but
from interaction on campus in all sorts of contacts, formal and informal. It
comes from debate and discussion, not just about work, but about the world in
general. What’s right; what’s wrong, what should be preserved; what needs to be
changed.
If we don’t do that, we deserve to be judged as the
generation that for its own, selfish, materialist ends sought to impoverish its
young people by denying them the basic knowledge of what it means to be human.
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