The article 鈥鈥楶olitical experiment鈥 must not reduce education to a commodity鈥 (15聽August) informs us that 鈥渢he UK鈥檚 pool of higher education experts鈥as arguably taken a聽turn to the right鈥. It then announces the arrival at the University of Southampton of J眉rgen Enders, 鈥渨ho comes to the UK with a聽deep scepticism about the perceived attempt to turn higher education into a market and the student into a consumer鈥.
This leads one to hope that some radical changes are about to be proposed from the Left. Not so. What we hear instead is that Enders does not believe that it is truly possible to create a market in education because it is hard to gauge the value of a course; he is worried about the drift towards 鈥渄egree mills鈥; he does not object to students contributing to the cost of tuition; he would be surprised if British students started turning their backs on university; and he believes that 鈥渘obody quite knows if [in international ventures] students are any brighter after graduation鈥.
Given that Enders describes English higher education as a聽鈥渨onderful real-life laboratory鈥 in which to study 鈥渞adical policies鈥 and their impact on universities, teaching and research, he is presumably going to make some concrete suggestion for improvement.
If so, he might well be looking for some very different 鈥渞adical policies鈥. He could turn his attention to Venezuela, where 134 indigenous Venezuelans are heading off to begin study at the Latin American University of Medicine in Miranda State on the condition that they return afterwards to serve their local communities (a聽similar reasonable request was made to me when I聽was seconded on full pay by the Inner London Education Authority to do a master鈥檚).
Education in Venezuela is, of course, political. However, as I argue in the forthcoming book Education and Social Change in Latin America, which I edited with Sara Motta: 鈥渨hereas in the UK鈥he capitalist state increasingly uses formal education merely as a vehicle to promote capitalism, in the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, 鈥榯he political鈥 in education is articulated against capitalism and imperialism and for socialism鈥.
Mike Cole
Cass School of Education and Communities
University of East London
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