What is a university for? This sounds like the kind of vague question author Albert Camus once reflected could make us dream, but hardly think rationally about. In the time of the University of Melbourne’s multimillion dollar “Dream large” campaign to sell its new “Melbourne model”, however, Camus’ reflection can sound almost satirical.
Fortunately, Australians can get some concrete sense of the way their government thinks about the role of the universities, by looking at the December 2008 Bradley Review. The review suggests increased Commonwealth block grant funding to the tertiary sector address what it calls “the now clear signs that the quality of the educational experience is declining”. A central prong to the report is also the aim of making higher education more available to more Australians from rural and traditionally disadvantaged backgrounds, which clearly differentiates the Rudd policy from its Howard predecessors.
Less clear from the report, however, is the exact role the report foresees for the university in contemporary Australia, or the reasons for the changes, beyond perfunctory references to a “decisive” moment in our nation’s history, and the “international consensus that the reach, quality and performance of a nation’s higher education system will be key determinants of its economic and social progress”.
Markedly increasing student intakes as Bradley recommends, on apparent equity grounds, is a noble enough aim. But it is also extremely ambitious to say the least in the light of the widespread demoralisation of tertiary teaching staff over the past two decades, who already face workload demands and staff-student ratios previous generations of academics could not have dreamed of, not to mention widespread casualisation and job insecurity across the sector.
In fact, a little word analysis tells a large part of the tale of what the university reforms seem really to be about.
In the executive summary of the review, the reader will search in vain for references to scholarship, values, truth, the humanities, mind, intellect, character, right or rights, the words “liberal” or even “civic” — all words until two decades ago inescapably wedded to higher education. Whereas “economy” and cognates appears 17 times, “society” and “democracy” are mentioned just once, and “culture” twice. “Knowledge” fares scarcely better, with three references (with one being to that proven performer, the “knowledge economy”), in contrast to “market/s” (12 uses), “regulatory” (16), “audits” (7), “market/s” (10), “industry” (10), “skills/skilled” (9), and “competitive/compete” (10 uses).
Whether the Rudd government’s post-Bradley reforms will then provide for better conditions for tertiary teachers and administrative staff — and whether this shows up as anything more than a regrettable risk or threat in policy circles — is at best an open question. The truth the Bradley Report confirms again is that the universities have completely lost their vocational or operational autonomy, and will continue to be wagged by the dog of economic and other concerns tangential to their traditional aims.
In fact, the Bradley Report does in passing mention the key motivator for the changes. They come from an analysis by private firm Access Economics of the situation facing tertiary education today. Access’ report is entitled The Economic Benefits of Increased Participation in Education and Training. In another time it might have been a Jeremiad, if it also was not so wholly immersed in the same colourless managerialese, which now pervades all Australian public discussion (no mentions of knowledge, scholarship, culture, character, civics and the like here either, you guessed it).
“Australia has a problem”, this report begins, in a lively enough clip. But the problem is an ageing population. The solution requires, in a metaphor which long ago died, a “larger pie” (that’s the economy) which “will reduce the competition over the slices from it as Australia ages”. And this means the urgent need to get more younger Australians into higher education to speed “faster productivity growth”. So equity meets economic necessity, and the need is “to act, and to act now”.
So however much Rudd’s Bradley vision of the new Australian university differs from that of his predecessor, the overwhelming framing of higher education policy remains the same. So, too, does the continuing atrophy and loss of anything more than an economistic vision for Australian higher education, and wider public culture. The larger dream of the new university, its surface rubbed, gives way to the continuing reign of economic reductionism in Australian life, which means the continuing transformation of universities into “human capital providers” for the global economy for some time to come.
There will be a public forum on “What are universities for?” this Friday, October 16, hosted by the Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy at the 1888 Graduate Building, Grattan Street, Carton, from 11am.
As the Secretary of the LEXUS Union of Students at the Southern Cross University I have been dealing with ‘University Reform’ on a daily basis for the last few months.
‘Reform’ for our University consists of taking the traditional semester system (which was two times sixteen weeks plus a summer school) and reformulating it as a trimester system of three thirteen week ‘sessions’.
Very few students or staff are in favour of this alteration which was introduced by fiat.
Following on from months of agitation the VC of SCU decided that he would instigate a review into the proposal.
As soon as the review was announced the VC unilaterally altered the timetable again.
Two weeks into the review period he decided to alter the timetable once more (three timetables within three weeks).
Then as soon as the consultant undertaking the review looked like handing down findings that might be critical the VC simply announced that the three session timetable was now the official timetable that the University would adopt, henceforth, and the review be damned! Perhaps the findings of the review wouldn’t even be released.
When the Head of the Law School pointed out that the University might lose its accreditation if it persists in teaching a full Law Degree over just 2.8 years of study the VC commented that there is a ‘technical fix’ available. No consideration that perhaps the Law School should provide sufficient units to abide by the requirements of accreditation – let’s just ‘work around’ all that education stuff!
Universities in Australia are suffering from a ‘sausage factory’ mentality.
The sooner we have administrations looking towards the quality of the education being provided rather than the money they can make from overseas and external (on-line) students then the sooner we will be able to stop the rot started by the Liberal Parties desire to eliminate an educated class from our society.
James Moylan
LEXUS Union of Students Secretary
Lismore Campus of the Southern Cross University.
I can’t see what the fuss is. The government has to justify increased funding somehow. The economic argument provides a good framework to get it approved by the bean counters at Treasury. Nothing wrong with that.
Ah, the quaint whiff of the musty don emerging from his cloister! The report of the Bradley review is that of a committee advising government. Fortunately even governments don’t move as slowly as academe, for the Australian Government gave its response to Bradley and its plan for higher education in ‘Transforming Australia’s higher education system’, available at
http://home.deewr.gov.au/Budget/documents/TransformingAusHigherED.pdf
I realise that it’s been only a short 5 months since the government released its policy with the 2009-10 budget papers, but hopefully you’ll be able to give it a quick squizz before your forum.
Incidentally, I couldn’t find ‘economistic’ in my dictionary; does it mean anything different from ‘economic’?