My friend Joe Duffey keeps sending me announcements about meetings in some vain hope that he can keep me more aware of what is happening in the world. I feel compelled to comment on two of his recent alerts because they do say a lot about what is going on. One depresses me, the other I find very hopeful.
1. The World Summit on University Ranking- this is the depressing one.
Readers of this blog know how I feel about university rankings: I dislike them greatly. I could spend a day listing all of the reasons why, but will just run over a few. First, the idea that the overall quality of universities can be reduced to a single number in silly. Every great university has some really terrible programs, and many otherwise mediocre institutions have some superb programs. When trying to rank programs (as the NRC does), one finds that the reputational data are squishy (who really knows very much about the programs at more than a hand full of rival institutions?), and the “harder” data are rather arbitrarily chosen (it can be easily measured). In the end, the statistical uncertainties of the data leave almost everyone in a statistical tie, but that doesn’t stop anyone from dropping the uncertainties and using the numbers as absolute.
Because research data are easier to obtain than teaching data, rankings focus on the research. This effective devaluing of teaching and learning in our self analyses is not healthy, and at some point will lead to difficulties in our relations with the societies that support us.
Whatever data are used, some person then must decide how to weight different inputs in order to add it up to a definition of the best university. Obviously, however, there is absolutely no unique way to combine the data. One way is arguably as good as another. This does not stop anyone either. In fact, the rankers like this aspect, since it means that an almost endless number of rankings can be published, each leading to a happy financial or reputational ending for someone.
Rankings are, of course, a celebration of the status quo. Consequently, they punish institutions that are trying to respond innovatively to the changing world. This would be of little importance if so many governing boards and presidents were not focused on “improving their rankings”. Thus badly needed innovation - including cost cutting innovation - becomes even more difficult to carry out.
Finally, when making “world” rankings, most often the criteria are based on venerable Western universities. Why? Why should looking like Harvard be a good idea in many countries of the world?
So overall, I think we can all be quite concerned that we now have an International Rankings Expert Group. They are producing a product that by definition is flawed, and serves almost no good purpose.
2.The Global Higher Education Forum 2009- this is the hopeful one.
This is almost the anti-meeting to the one described above;
The Global Higher Education Forum (GHEF) brings together scholars, policy makers, researchers, academics and administrators to reflect, analyse, discuss and debate on a wide variety of issues pertaining to global higher education in a south-south context. In particular, GHEF2009 will focus on the theme of Global Higher Education, seeking to ponder and reflect on the benefits and challenges and at the same time, envision the way forward for emerging and expanding, rather than for established, higher education systems.
This is a group that actually wants to think about alternative approaches to those which are celebrated above- approaches that may be enormously more valuable for the countries involved. As pointed out in the Background and Rational of the meeting:
In view of the many similar initiatives by different regions and groups
to promote the development of higher education through a common
platform (which is increasingly biased towards European/American
models), the deliberation on the practicality and appropriateness of
Asian, Latin American and African countries following the same pathway
is timely. The current global economic meltdown presents another
interesting backdrop and context to analyse and deliberate on the
suitability of European/American models for expanding and emerging
higher education systems in Asia, Latin America and Africa.
There is a wonderful article in GlobalHigherEducation written by two members of the organizing committee, Morshidi Sirat and Ooi Poh Ling, describing the goals of this forum. We should all wish them success.
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