As lockdown closed schools in Brisbane last week, we saw the return of a familiar refrain: “What about Year 12 students? What about their ATARs?”
The ATAR (Australian Tertiary Admission Rank) is the chief way students access the nation’s public universities. Each university and course has a minimum ATAR rank (or cut-off) which decides whether a 17- or 18-year-old “earns” a place in the university course. Last year exemptions were made and universities changed entry procedures, recognising the unforgivable slog that goes into the final years of high school.
But does an ATAR truly show the capacity of an individual to succeed? And at what point will we begin to acknowledge the other attributes that are more important than a mark on a page?
Let’s take Andrew Laming as an example. Educated at one of Brisbane’s finest private schools, he went on to study medicine before gaining qualifications in the highly-specialised field of ophthalmology. He holds diplomas in other areas of medicine, along with a string of Master’s degrees in public administration, public policy and philosophy. One of those is from Harvard University, no less.
And this week, he’s taken time off his job as a taxpayer-funded MP to attend “empathy” school.
Perhaps I’m being unfair to Laming, given there are so many other stellar examples. The Hayne royal commission produced thousands of pages about our top bankers, their apparent lack of empathy, and their inability to communicate even basic knowledge of the lives of their customers. Now, two years later, some of the boom companies on the stock exchange are the consumer lenders who charge higher rates to people who have trouble repaying.
Or what about the companies collecting and counting the JobKeeper allowance with one hand, and giving bonuses to their executives with the other?
The public has consistently been let down by the poor judgement, appalling leadership and basic lack of compassion by those running our big companies, churches, public utilities and police services. Read a report from a royal commission into any one of those, and you’ll see they pinpoint many of the same problems.
The best people are not always — and very often not — those in the top jobs. And therein lies the problem with what is being taught in our schools and universities.
A clever doctor might get the diagnosis right. But a good doctor will get the diagnosis right and be able to explain it to their patients. A clever CEO might raise profits and delight shareholders. But the best will do that, while understanding diversity and the importance of culture and morale in a workplace.
Over the past few years, both here and overseas, many have called for a greater focus on these skills that dictate whether someone will be a good leader. Empathy. Compassion. Leadership. Critical thinking. Good judgement. An ability to communicate. A focus on listening. Valuing diversity. They’re called “soft skills”, but these are the things that determine whether someone is truly good in their field — whether they’re a plumber, a teacher, a doctor or an MP.
Having undervalued these skills, we find ourselves facing the comical situation where someone like Laming is being paid by the taxpayers to be taught to understand the viewpoints of others, and where many of our MPs don’t appear to understand the basic fact that women are equal to men (and should be treated as such).
Schools have so much on their plate, and our educators do their best to help students understand these issues in a packed curriculum. But until we value them enough to measure and test for them — and include them on an ATAR — we’re never going to get the leaders our communities deserve. (And yes, you can assess them: psychometric-type testing is included in all sorts of job applications across all sorts of industries.)
If we don’t disrupt education we risk continuing to limp along, sending CEOs and priests and bankers and MPs to jail or night school to learn that a good mark on a page is just that.
Good leadership requires so much more.
the degradation in quality leadership goes hand in hand with the neo-capitalist push of the last 40 years, that devalues community, and rewards profit above everything. Great leaders inspire and take their people along with them, but today the prize goes to the bean counter best at maximising profit for minimal outlay. if Amazon could get rid of all the pesky humans tomorrow, and replace them with AI machines, Bezos would do it in a sec, and probably get some “Greatest Boss in the World” award.
All a bit simplistic. Don’t blame it on schools and curricula. It goes much deeper – to the fundamental values and ideology upon which our society and economy is now founded i.e. the great ethical vacuum that is neoliberalism and the free market. How to shift that foundation? It certainly ain’t going to come from more teaching of the soft-skills. These in fact have been a been part of the neo-liberal agenda for several decades now. The so-called 21st century skills that business and the corporations so vigorously demand turn out to be not much more than being a slick communicator, ready to spin the company/party line on cue. I’d suggest our fine PM is the perfect graduate of the school of soft skills.
The skills agenda in our universities over the last 20 odd years has done so much to undermine the quality and integrity of undergraduate education – so much so that one now genuinely fears for the collective brain power of our future generations.
(78) (PDF) The degrading of higher education – the failure from within | Tim Moore – Academia.edu
Agree, having observed an acquaintance who has researched and lectures on MBAs in ‘leadership’, captaining an amateur cricket team; seemed more about NPD narcissistic personality disorder.
‘Leadership’ was marked by his narcissism/insecurity, presentation (all the best/latest gear), verbal provocations (of opposing teams), cowardice (re. previous), absenteeism ( re. previous vs. tasty bowling hence recurrent back injury), restricted ‘leadership team’ or inner circle making unannounced decisions, privileges etc. till finally disappearing….. with no lasting personal legacy…..
However, the club continues on and survives, due to others not in the spotlight, taking responsibility quietly, without expectation of praise, rewards and the spotlight.
You can teach “journalism” too – but is that taken in? More often that not such churned “graduates” tend to become touts and press-agents for one party : rather than act as journalists.
Liberal (Limited News Party) Laming’s been sitting out there (in Qld too) doing what he’s been doing for some years – but only now it’s time to call him out?
Then when you get so much of the media (like the one King used to work for) passing on everything one side of politics do, with bugger-all criticism, or question, for so years, why wouldn’t that side of politics think they can continue to get away with whatever?
That is a media that sells itself as “holding the powerful to account” : when they do anything but – using their positions playing favourites.
Why wouldn’t the other (left) side be envious and try to ape that behaviour, that that media has been allowing to go unchecked for so long on their side of the political aisle?
King used to do that for a paid living at the Curry or Maul – doing little more than PR for hers, Rupert’s and Dave’s Limited News Party : slagging off the left/Labor/Greens etc?
Call out the lack of ethics and leadership in our media too. They set much of that pace after all.
The trouble is, all these jobs are tailor made for clever psychopaths, and that’s now what we’re seeing, more and more often – Australian politics could almost be a case study in it!.
The one thing they can be almost guaranteed to do, is eventually run what they’re in charge of, into the ground, one way or another, whilst causing massive amounts of pain and suffering to those affected by their decisions. The ‘West” are inundated with them – not so much in Asian countries – yet.
What this says to me is the on-the-job expectations of what it takes to succeed in politics / business discourages the kind of thinking needed. I remember reading about a study of bankers ethical judgements and it turns out they make decisions in much the same way as everything else – except when reminded that they are bankers, a reminder that made them far more ruthless.
Not sure education can solve this problem when corporate and political culture rewards it.