[EEC] Questionnaire for your reports

~ en español ~

WANTED: Reports of education activist groups worldwide

During one of the "ISM" international chat meetings activists decided to send out the following propsal:

All groups are asked to prepare a "report" on their local situation so that all participants of the "European Education Congress" can learn about your situation. All groups are asked to send their "report" to united4education@riseup.net before May 20th!
Either you structure the report anyway you like or you can use the following questions as a guide:

  • Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?
  • How is the situation of the movement in your city/town currently?
  • What are the main aims/goals of your group?
  • What actions are planned for the future?
  • Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?
  • What kind of problems (pressure or resistence) are you encountering?
  • How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

All reports will also be published online.

UCD Students in Solidarity (Ireland)

European Education Congress

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

Students in Solidarity came out of Free Education for Everyone, we expanded to become a multi-issue network of activists. FEE was a single issue campaign against the threatened reintroduction of undergraduate tuition fees last year. We have campaigned on many issues both local and international.


How is the situation of the movement in your city/town currently?

The movement is small but growing, particularly on issues like library cutbacks and staff redundancies on campuses all around Ireland. The threat of direct tuition undergraduate fees for third level students is constant. It is on hold for the duration of this government, since the programme for government was renegotiated last October. With the dominant party in government and the main opposition parties still are pushing for their reintroduction. The registration fee and the maintenance grant system, which many students rely on, is in need of serious reform, with grants often arriving several weeks late to be effective. Students in Solidarity is active in 2 campuses in Dublin (UCD and TCD), Free Education for Everyone is still active in NUI Maynooth. We have worked together on different occasions and have links with other groups across the country. SIS is made up of socialists, anarchists, and other independent activists.


What are the main aims/goals of your group?

In a meeting last January, SIS adopted the following mandate;

- We are a network of student activists on UCD campus
- We will resist cutbacks and injustices that affect all student services in the University

- We will join in solidarity with workers and the wider community in their struggles
- Our aim is to pressure our own student council to deal with campaigns rather than just acting as a service provider
- To provide a platform for organising on many international issues
- To get involved with campus awareness weeks such as Women's week and LGBT week
- We will fight for a free, egalitarian and non-discriminatory education system from pre-school to third-level
- We will create solidarity links with other activist groups around the country and around the world
- All new issues that arise will be decided by a democratic vote of the group


What actions are planned for the future?

The academic year has come to a close; we have no independent actions planned for the summer, yet we have discussed what is to be done next semester. We plan to hold a series of public meetings on issues affecting students and if relevant, the wider community. We plan also to create more links with campus staff. Direct action is also planned in response to cutbacks across campus and the wider education sector in Ireland. In this way we hope to increase level awareness of students on campus as to why these cuts have been put in place and how they can get involved in the fight against them. Realistically our contribution to the global wave of action in November will be smaller than in countries with a higher level of student activism, but should help to organise large scale resistance to neo-liberalisation of education.


Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards your group?

We’re being supported by an amalgamation of left groups in Ireland, including Socialist Workers Party, Socialist Party (CWI), Revolutionary Anarcha-feminist Group, League for the Fifth International, Workers Solidarity Movement and Labour Youth (PES). We have links to independent campaigns, such as International Solidarity Movement, Haitian Solidarity Campaign, Latin American Solidarity Centre, the international Killer Coke Campaign, and the Social Solidarity Network, which was organised to establish links between different community groups and struggles against the neo-liberal policies of the government. We have supported workers on strike, as well as attending many protests for education rights and broader issues. Any interaction we have had with the wider community has been received positively.


What kinds of problems (pressure or resistance) are you encountering?

We are in constant conflict with the Students Union and the University administration. Our Students Union leadership is largely dominated by members of the two main right-wing political parties in Ireland, Fianna Fail and Fine Gael. After years of Student inactivity, many careerists have used the Union as a mere catalyst to further their own political aspirations. The university has constantly used every available loop-hole and law to disrupt and subdue any left wing activity on campus. No progressive group has been granted official society recognition for the greater part of a decade. Without recognition we cannot advertise ourselves and are technically prohibited from organising official meetings and protests.

 

How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

We have the e-mail address (ucdstudentsinsolidarity@gmail.com) and the google groups. 
We also have a facebook group that you guys can find here. If anyone wishes to join our
google groups, please e-mail us and we will add you onto it. These are the best ways to
get in contact with us. We are open to any and all help, and if anybody is in Dublin we
can aid them with both places to stay and getting into activism.

How Russian Universities Became the Future of World Education

http://isacna.wordpress.com/2010/05/03/how-russian-universities-became-t...

This article may also be added to the publication:

How Russian Universities Became the Future of World Education
In Russia on May 3, 2010

By Alexander Bikbov, Center for Modern Philosophy and Social Sciences, Moscow State University[1]

The Russian Ministry of Education entered the European Bologna reform club in 2003, five years after its foundation, having jumped over the constitutive phase. Such a delay accompanied by the government’s explicit hesitations and high resistance among university administrators, made Russian universities seem like an(other) example of obstructed modernization. This vision was and still is actively promoted by the advocates of reform in both national and international agencies. Ironically, the very same idea of efficiency has recently been imposed on the university in the European cradle itself, now proclaimed rigid and retrograde. Being an object of important public expenditures, the contemporary university is everywhere condemned by the new commercial doxa as never-good-enough.

The Russian rhetoric creates a clear line dividing the desired global market future of Russian higher education from the isolated and clumsy Soviet past. The attempt itself is far from being the first during the long post-war period. The categorical imperative of “optimization” in terms of effectiveness and adaptation to the “needs of industry and services” has been progressively applied to the expanding university system since the late 1950s. But even this protracted historical perspective does not explain the current impetus for university change. If we separate the new university model from its technical dimension (convertible credits, common levels of study, mutual recognition of degrees), the Russian version, as in the rest of the world, finds itself part of a global political trend guided by three key principles: reducing the costs for the public sector, privatization of common goods and the disempowerment of self-governed (peer-based) social bodies in favor of a directive state.

The fact that the Russian universities were radically pushed in this direction as early as the early nineties, is an attempt to reverse the usual hierarchy, forcing them to jump from the bottom to the top of the “modernization” ranking. Russian higher education may be an example of reform, in a certain way, brought to its ultimate success.

Back to the Future

One of the decisive indicators making clear this success consists in the proportion of the financial self-funding of universities. Public universities of the continental Europe (France, Germany) have 8-10% of their budgets coming from non-public sources[2]. Certain UK universities, which are often used as a didactic model by advocates of reform, receive up to 28% of their budget from endowments, tuition fees and other publicly independent sources (ibid.). Russian universities do not provide the public with statistics of this kind, with excuses such as calculation difficulties or appealing to the principle “it depends on what is taken into account”. Nevertheless in private discussions administrators of several great public universities and departments indicate a proportion of “around 50%” from private sources, which corresponds quite well with expert estimations of 45-55% given in the early 2000s. Even if university managers always love to get more from the public budget, last year’s State programs and State institutional grants, unknown in the nineties and even in the first half of the current decade, may result in some indigestion syndrome among university structures.

Such an extensive self-financing, compared to the modest 10% rising to 28% for European universities, sounds pretty seductive. So why is criticism of the lamentable quality of education in post-Soviet universities so common whether in professorial or in administrative statements and discussions? What makes these criticisms persist? The fact is, contrary to the mental experiments, financial self-sufficiency and commercial profit made under real economic conditions turn out not to improve but to lower educational standards.

Pushed by the “liberated,” i.e. profoundly deregulated, market in the early 1990s, and in absence of those economic agencies that could and would invest in non-profitable education and research, Russian universities set out to sell those goods which might provide them with a minimum level of survival. The goods that sold well were far from being fundamental knowledge and even educational services were still rather exotic in that early post-Soviet moment. They included, first of all, square meters of the university buildings and acres of the university lands proposed for rent to trading companies, commercial ventures, etc. They also included diplomas which may or may not have required any knowledge or learning. A significant factor behind the exponential growth of the diploma industry was the exemption from mandatory military service for students of the great public universities. All these self-financing measures lay at the limits of legality, and, indeed, often exceeded those limits, generating corruption rents. Such a situation was largely tolerated by State agencies since they were enmeshed in similar corruption “like everyone in the country”. This crisis-based management, while letting universities survive, had little to do with the quality of education and competition in pursuit of knowledge. It generated the income to pay electricity bills and basic (though miserable) professors’ salaries, but also personally benefited the university executive which re-established itself as a faction of the new Russian bourgeoisie, making its fortune in the emerging free market.

A university model based on the crisis management “naturally” required decision making to be concentrated in the hands of higher university administration. In the same period when Russian industries were privatized via the voucher system transforming managers into owners, the decision-making power of the never-too-strong Academic Councils was monopolized by senior management that made universities work under a paternalism that was even sharper than in the late Soviet era. Public universities were never privatized de jure but were (and are) often administered as if they were privatized de facto. This not only affected finances. It also included such an important procedure as staff recruitment which was appropriated by deans and chair administrators leaving the mandatory public competition for vacant positions, formally required even in the Soviet era, in abeyance.

Liberating commercial incentive and leaving local administrations to govern in their own interests was considered by the ultra-liberal government of the early 1990s to be an important advantage driving Russian education to produce new competitive knowledge and to leave behind all the disadvantages of the conservative Soviet system. Market autonomy destroyed both occupational security for the professorial body and its self-regulated quality control, which had the effect of a retrograde conservation of the degrading Soviet university structures and of its knowledge base[3]. The quality of education declined at traditionally strong departments in the natural sciences accompanied by a high brain drain towards other world scientific superpowers. Not surprisingly, the emerging post-Soviet social sciences have not produced an epistemic breakthrough so long as professors and researchers were seeking extra jobs inside and outside the university sector to compensate for their miserable salaries, and in this way intensifying their precarity not only in its economic but also in its intellectual dimension.

The tough survival years ended in the early2000s, with the growing public finance of secondary and higher education and with the introduction of new university supports such as State Target Programs and institutional grants. Aside from the growing public budget for education, Russian universities enjoyed growing tuition fees, now introduced officially as early as the mid-1990s. By the middle of the first decade of the new century, 62% of all the freshmen in public universities were paying for their studies[4]. Tuition was seldom below 3,000 dollars per year in the central universities (Moscow and St. Petersburg) or below 1,500 dollars in the regional universities. The most prestigious public universities charge annual fees of around 6-9,000 Euros. The market for legal education expanded considerably on the basis of a management model marked by the absence of peer-based decision making.

Controlling the growing public finance and commercial flows, the university-as-enterprise remains an important agency of the black and gray economy and is connected genetically and functionally to earlier institutional models. Maintaining illegal commerce in diplomas and reselling a part of the remaining 38% of the vacant student places that had already been paid for by the public budget (so called “budget places”), certain university administrations make double profit from their financial autonomy in spite of toughening State measures against unlicensed commerce and corruption inherited from the “wild nineties”. Private reselling of publicly paid places was already familiar under the rigid Soviet regulation but became much more widespread under harsh deregulation. The image of the university as violating basic principles of social justice continued unabated, even intensified, in the post-Soviet period. Such commercial autonomy kept the post-Soviet university afloat and its management motivated. In some cases, prestigious universities might take up to 50,000 Euros in cash from student families as the admission fee for vacant “budget places”.

It worth mentioning that another key factor of this model — along with a diploma of higher education to be presented on entry to the labor market and the avoidance of military service — consists in holding mandatory entrance exams (since the Soviet era) following the model of elite High Schools but now applied to mass education In 2009 a set of universally imposed but locally managed exams were replaced with a set of mandatory national tests which serve to regulate the role of private incomes including corruption that lie at the basis of university self-financing.

Under these circumstances, the significance of the current European (Bologna) university reform in Russia is quite unusual from a global perspective. The State wants to take over the underground financial flows which have been controlled, since the early nineties, by separate university groupings. The contest between a faction of university managers and the Russian government does not signify a struggle between two opposed principles, such as academic freedom and repressive State control, but rather it is a struggle between two rival models of commercialization of the educational sector, namely a “black” and private model versus a centralized and seemingly more transparent manner. From the outside, this situation is often seen in a distorted way, a contrast between the revival of state tyranny on the one side and the expansion of the mafia on the other. If we look closer, however, we see these two models are but slightly different expressions of spontaneous capitalist neoconservatism, or neoliberalism, depending on one’s viewpoint. What could better reassure the pro-“modernization” Western observers frightened by the threat of Russia’s ascetic despotism? Indeed, the new right governments in Europe are on the way to a profound mutual understanding. The actual governmental executives of Sarkozy or Berlusconi reveal similar political and economic sensibilities, and consider the Russian State as a successful enterprise which knows how to make a good profit from public goods.

Commercialization Equals Hierarchy

The fact that the actual educational struggles in Russia have been developing around an almost unchallengeable commercial and managerial/corporatist consensus has several interconnected and not always evident effects:

1. Neither government nor university administrations normally consider the problem of inequality of access to and success in education. In most cases such social justice issues are the concern of the left, vastly marginalized in the political decision making and often nostalgic for the “excellence” of the Soviet educational system.

2. At the same time that social assistance for tuition fees and other expenditures (such as housing) has decreased, students’ geographical mobility, especially between big cities and between regions, has also fallen considerably, when compared to the welfare decade of 1980s[5]. This does not concern students from wealthy families who can assist their children in pursuing studies at prestigious centers including international ones. But for the majority, especially for those coming from small and medium towns, a cheap dormitory and, in general, lower living expenditures are a key factor when choosing a university. In other words, the quality of education or a discipline’s attractiveness often play a less important role than basic material conditions. According to surveys conducted in the early 2000s in several major Russian cities, from 70% to 95% of students come from the same region[6]. The famous “mobility”, which was one of the main planks of the reforms, has an economic price which, at least in the Russian case, proves to be higher than the inflated social and economic value of the university diploma.

3. A large proportion of parents pay quite legally for their children’s studies (the above mentioned 50-60% in the recent years), but what they really purchase is not enhanced academic knowledge or skills adapted to the labor market. They pay for a diploma that is only a basic prerequisite for gaining access to a job. This fact makes the university a less probable institution for knowledge production, transforming it into a machine for extracting a “natural” rent for awarding degrees, with special appeal to young males wishing to avoid mandatory military service. In this sense, post-Soviet universities drop out of the history of world culture and find themselves, to a large extent, as part of the modern economy of rent seekers – an image that is all too closely associated with the New Russia. .

4. Increasing fees and inadequate social programs transform the university into a place of forced social consensus where no one has interest in claiming too much. Parents do not ask what they pay for, professors do not ask students to study hard, and students themselves feel uneasy to formulate any claims. Such a tight consensus reveals itself in various ways, including an extremely low failure rate from one year to the next. By the early2000s, the ratio of the number of graduates to the number of freshmen five years earlier was a sensational 102%, while in the early 1990s the figure was only 63%[7]. A success rate over 100% looks quite ironic as compared to the European situation where the recent governmental criticisms of the university has been directed at the low graduation rates which vary from 20-30% in Italy to 40% in France. In the Russian university, “liberated” more than 15 years ago, a student is never removed until the delivery of the diploma, whatever his or her scholarly prowess or success in intermediary exams. Far more than in the Soviet Union, commercial autonomy of universities has transformed higher education from a personal project into a weighty family investment.

5. Commercialization does not improve the most problematic parts of the university model, such as general entering exams serving as one of the main relays of educational corruption. Indeed, commercialization does not eliminate the weak parts but just makes them more profitable. Locally held mandatory oral and written exams (in 3-5 subjects, depending on the university), giving access to university studies, served as an important source of illegal income for university administrations and staff, until very recently. This elitist admission procedure was not abandoned, whether in favor of a open commercialized access or to take into account the fact that 72% of school leavers were entering universities in the early 2000s[8]. Mandatory written tests taken in schools and controlled by the Ministry (and not by the universities), mechanistic and often senseless, replaced the previous exam system in 2009. The formal procedure and the controlling body were changed but the principle itself remained immutable. Both forms had the same results – allowing the coaching industry to flourish and dividing all the vacant student places into those paid by the public budget and those paid by students’ families. In long oscillating polemics that have accompanied preliminary regional experiments and the ultimate shift from exams to tests, some university administrators confessed that none of methods of pre-selection had effectively measured student abilities. While claiming to “guarantee the level” of university entrance, this new method of selection works as it did before, namely to obtain, legally or not, educational rent from the student population.

6. The power balance between university management and collegiate bodies has shifted dramatically in favor of the former, leading, in effect, to various kinds of university privatization. Concentration of institutional power in the hands of university executives, while spontaneously implementing models of “effective” university-enterprises, detached Academic Councils from decision-making, both in career evaluation and in teaching. This detachment affects staff recruitment as well as the way the curricula are immutably (since the Soviet era) determined on the ministerial level. Universities seeking the State certification must then make sure professors follow the curricula in conformity with the ministerial “standards”. This balance has little chance of being recomposed within the crystallized model of a paternalistic and profit oriented university, and, moreover, one that is impervious to critique and revision.

7. One of the most immediate effects of such a model is a rapid increase in the “precarity” of the professorial body. This financial insecurity expressed itself in the nineties in the holding of several badly paid jobs, but by the end of the current decade, under a demographic and financial crisis, it involved the reduction of vacant positions due to the growth of teaching obligations. The Ministry of Education recently set the norm at 900 hours per year, as compared to less than 200 in European universities. University management does not explicitly make professors interchangeable, but in practice that is what happens. It can impose temporary lay-offs (furloughs) for periods during the summer holidays and profits from academic exchange that mean salary savings. Management may also dilute education by providing departments with packaged curricula in the form of ready-made powerpoint presentations. In the absence of active university trade-unions or collegiate structures, professors, especially younger ones, are often overburdened with unpaid administrative, technical (secretarial) duties or extra teaching making it even more difficult to do research and publish. Many universities do not even provide professors with a copy of their contract. Some contracts have an open ending-date, and in this way give management a tool for dismissing employees at any moment and with minimal legal risk. Legal trials are naturally rare in the academic environment which is governed by personal symbolic credit: Having lost their job, professors simply try to find another one. It is worth repeating that the proletarianization of the teaching profession is the reverse side of a no less “natural” evolution of the university’s higher management into an established bourgeoisie enjoying university rent. The intensification of social stratification among students, which accompanied the commercial drift of the nineties, thus went along with the social stratification of the university staff.

8. The same imbalance of university power translates itself not only into a low level of professional solidarity but also into a weak public activity of the professional corps. This can be observed in many domains starting with questions of establishing disciplinary boundaries, and ending up with struggles around the educational reforms. Such struggles are focused on the way that the professorial body is merely excluded from decision-making, often being manipulated by university management. That means that there is simply no chance for such a “French” confrontation (as in 2009) between professors and students on the one side and government and rectors on the other – struggles that have emerged more broadly in Europe from peer-based routines like self-governed professional and disciplinary associations, peer-to-peer career evaluations, university or department General Assemblies, etc. Russian university and ministerial administrations remain the key protagonists of reforms, and their decision-making is far from the public eye, never mind public debate.

The Chicken or the Egg?

The spontaneous “managerial turn” taken in the early nineties by the Russian universities and their progressive commercialization created overwhelming evidence that such a turn does not make for an effective higher education. The market “liberation” which reduced collegiate power, weak enough in the Soviet era, produced trends in the opposite direction from the expectations of Russia’s “Chicago boys”. The university has not escaped from oversized bureaucracy: while the institutional power has been privatized, the university has experienced a growth of bureaucratic ranks and of direct administrative intervention in every sphere. The European universities living the managerial turn since the early 2000s seem to confirm these trends in highly parallel forms[9].

The 50% self-financing that Russian universities achieved by the end of 1990s has helped neither the public budget nor the quality of education. Getting money from students’ families in the form of rent, the university-as-enterprise has rarely reinvested it in the production of nonprofitable knowledge via research, in developing longstanding professional cooperation or student incentives. Instead the funding that existed has flowed into ampler and more urgent matters such as restructuring or constructing new buildings, attracting fresh students, creating new “market-oriented” departments, playing with salaries, maintaining bureaucratic expenditures, acquiring status symbols, etc. In other words, commercialization of university has not created competition for the production up-to-date knowledge and higher labor skills. Moreover, the neoliberal or neoconservative reforms have created something different from an emancipated and dynamic international intelligence so much desired in the early post-Soviet era. What it has produced is a new sovereign and visibly provincial rationality, stimulating universities to obtain profit from secondary commodities such as buildings, delivery from mandatory military service, distribution of university degrees and academic grades, creating departments for political and economic use, etc. In spite of a clear rhetorical emphasis on “effectiveness”, the highly commercialized and newly hierarchized universities have proved to be even less educationally functional than the State model of the late Soviet era.

All this is often vaguely seen from outside Russia as a local specialty, like caviar, Bolshoi theater, falsified elections and Gazprom. It is true that the definitive transfer of decision making from the fragile peer-based structures to the university’s top executive was realized in Russia under an economic and social crisis whose depth was unimaginable in the Europe and America of the two latest decades. The commercial turn that followed the political liberalization of the late 1980s, brought an end to high hopes for an intellectually valid and socially just educational system. Taking into account the fact that the actual European reform was planned in the context of a strong regulative presence of the State, the Russian deregulation crisis of the early nineties could be seen and used as an argument to deny any relevance of the early post-Soviet and the current European experience. These nationally specific circumstances do indeed make a difference.

Even though, one should not omit a homology between these reforms quite visible on the structural level. The Russian transformation disabled weak counter-powers existing in the late Soviet university and thus discouraged both institutions and professors from competing in the field of knowledge. In the new Russia disempowering academics was a spontaneous invention of university managers; in today’s Europe it is part of governmental policy. Is there still a difference? The contrasted Russian experiences of the nineties and of the current decade are both significant because they clarify a key point: Either a “liberal” or a State regulated commercialization guides universities to a hard compromise between the old and the new forms favoring those elements which persist with minimal effort of collective collaboration and personal commitment.

In the long run, tightly commercial and paternalist management, precarious university labor, and the retreat of knowledge production from institutional competition emerged in different societies under different crises, taking different speeds in different directions. The Russian crisis was sharper after the welfare State was overthrown with the repressive Soviet regime. The European and probably the American transformations revealed themselves to be more gradual. Though the actual European (as the previous American) governments tend to reproduce the same institutional architecture, that was spontaneously found in the early post-Soviet perturbations. Normalizing the state of exception which awards top university administrators with supreme decision-making power, provokes a reverse effect which is too easily explained away as another instance of the “exotic” Russian case. This effect consists in the fact that implementing a model well fitted to a sharp crisis condition, even under a presumably bona fide State watch, creates a management which ends up provoking a deeper crisis, just like creating a strong army often ends with a great war.
[1] Alexander Bikbov runs a blog of his own on educational reforms in Russia and elsewhere. See

http://a.bikbov.ru/publ/media/#ref_edu

[2] Christophe Charle, Charles Soulié (eds.), Les ravages de la “modernization” universitaire en Europe . (Paris, Syllepse, 2007). p. 78 (data for 2005).

[3]A more detailed illustration of the same academic crisis in the Russian research sector could be found in p.ex.: Loren Graham, Irina Dezhina. Science in the new Russia: crisis, aid, reform. Indiana University Press, 2008. Ch. 2.

[4].Data by the Ministry of Education for 2006 (http://stat.edu.ru/scr/db.cgi?act=listDB&t=v_5&group=sub&ttype=0&Field=A7).

[5].In light of the permanently changing modalities of the official migration statistics, viable numbers of educational mobility are hardly accessible.

[6].Tchudinovskikh Olga, Denisenko Mikhail. Gde khotiat zhit vypuskniki rossijskikh vuzov?, Demoskop Weekly, 30 June – 10 August 2003 (http://demoscope.ru/weekly/2003/0119/tema02.php).

[7].Data by the Ministry of Education: the total number of graduates (http://stat.edu.ru/scr/db.cgi?act=listDB&t=2_6_19&ttype=2&Field=All) divided by the total number of freshly admitted to all the universities (http://stat.edu.ru/scr/db.cgi?act=listDB&t=2_6_13&ttype=2&Field=All) between 1985 and 2005, when the division into bachelor/master degrees had not yet been introduced.

[8].Data by the Ministry of Education for 2006 (http://stat.edu.ru/scr/db.cgi?act=listDB&t=2_6_15&group=sub&ttype=0&Fiel...).

[9].Besides the above mentioned collection of articles, Les ravages de la “modernization” universitaire en Europe, important testimonies are presented in Franz Schultheis, Marta Roca I Escoda, Paul-Frantz Cousin (eds.) Le cauchemar de Humboldt. Les réformes de l’enseignement supérieur européen,. (Paris, Raisons d’agir, 2008).

Unibrennt Munich (Germany)

Greetings from Munich!

* Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?
Students and pupils have been active in Germany again since about 2003, when the discussion about the introduction of fees for higher education came up. Since then, numerous demonstrations and other forms of action were organized, mostly using the name "Bundesweiter Bildungsstreik" (nationwide strike for education): http://www.bildungsstreik.net/
After several occupations in Austria in the autumn of 2009, Munich also started gathering. On November 5th, activists occupied rooms in the "Akademie der bildenden Künste" (Academy of Arts) in Munich. On November 11th, the occupation moved to the largest auditorium in Bavaria at the Ludwig-Maximilian-University (LMU) in Munich, rallying under the name of "Unibrennt". After formulating positions and demands, the Bavarian minister for higher education came to the occupation and was confronted with many demands - he had little answers and offered no change in government policy.
Continuing the struggle, heated debates followed a proposal with minuscule changes from the president of the university, which was declined early December. On December 28th, the occupied auditorium was evacuated by the police.
Here is a 30min-documentary about the occupation of the university: http://vimeo.com/11280934

* How is the situation of the movement in your city/town currently?
After the occupation, the activists had several difficulties (finding an open space being one of them, financing another). In the meantime, the students' council and its elected members are trying to make the most of the pressure that the activists created in Germany during the autumn. The conservative / neo-liberal / free-market government of Bavaria has no interest in making the changes demanded by activists. Only small concessions were made, mostly concerning the Bachelor / Master system.
Students and pupils are planing large manifestations in Germany during the week of June 7th to June 11th, this is where most of the attention is focused at the moment.

* What are the main aims/goals of your group?

  •  democracy in educational structures: making sure that the voice of students' and pupils' can be heard and that they have at least the same amount of influence on educational politics at universities and schools as do professors / teachers, scientific assistants and other assistants (at the moment, the professors' vote counts for about 90%)
  • ending economic influence on education (on the political level, but also on the level of the universities and schools themselves): the state has the obligation to finance education, but at the moment, it is continuously cutting back its expenses and allowing companies to invest - their agenda is never in the interest of students' but in their own interest. This means cutting back on non-profitable academics, focusing on profitable research only and spending less and less money on teaching.
  • ending selection: depending on your social, economic and immigrant background, you either have the possibility to reach higher education or not. It has nothing to do with whether you are interested in higher education or whether you are capable (<- this too being a questionable word), but mostly on whether you are financially stable and on whether your parents themselves have an academic background. Tuition fees discriminate against people with little financial security and need to be abolished again. Dividing pupils at the age of ten into three different types of schools with different diplomas - and obviously diverging value - systematically ensures only a small percentage of the population gains access to higher education - we aim for one school for all.
  • reforming the Bachelor- / Master system implemented after the declaration of Bologna in the European Union: making curriculums more flexible, allowing students to be more free in their studies and ensuring that studies are not simply vocational training but really education.

* What actions are planned for the future?
On June 7th - June 11th 2010 activists in Munich are organizing "Bildungscamp" - an open space for education, knowledge, art, combining our vision of a free society with our vision of an ideal educational system. On June 9th, a large demonstration is planned (as is in most cities in Germany). Members of the German and Bavarian parliament are taking part, as well as many different organizations, labor unions and other activist groups: www.bildungscampmuc.de
Also, students' are becoming active concerning the election of the new university president, where their voice is not being heard (they only have one vote, while professors have 5, and EXTERNAL advisors have 8 votes).

* Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?
Financing is always a problem, but we seem to manage. We also launched an association for this purpose (www.bildungsfreiraeume.de). The opposition in the Bavarian parliament (social democrats and green party, as well as left-wing party) is on our side, but have little influence.
The media follow our activities, mostly benevolently. The public opinion varies, but on the whole, they too are benevolent. The problem we face is that information about the movement, which is in the end fighting for the right of education for every person in society, is barely perceived by those who actually are excluded from education.

* What kind of problems (pressure or resistance) are you encountering?
Mostly political stubbornness, also not all students like the idea of free education for everybody - some want to stay closed off from the mass and like their status, looking down to others as inferior. The police stay calm on the whole, although we have noticed a slight increase in police force during manifestations.

* How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?) Homepages:
www.unsereunibrennt.de / netzwerk@unsereunibrennt.de
www.bildungscampmuc.de / bildungscamp@unsereunibrennt.de
www.bildungsstreik-muenchen.de

Solidarity to all movements worldwide, keep resisting!

Roxanne
Unibrennt München

Worldwide Nepalese Students' Organisation (WNSO) - Nepal

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

Worldwide Nepalese Students' Organsation-Nepal (WNSO Nepal) is a non political, non-profit making, volunteer based student organization that constitutes the Nepalese Students all over the world. WNSO-Nepal was established with the ultimate objective of helping students achieve their full potential in the easiest way possible with the regional slogan 'Education is Fundamental Right to Every Citizen’. Better considering the students and youth as a future of the nation, WNSO is coming at front line carrying a mission to lead students for quality education and to enroll them into social transformation and nation building. We work around ‘right to education’ approach from every aspect and cases prevailing in the society. We started with providing scholarships for needy students from our small efforts and we are now continuing our actions as policy intervention for governments especially through mass support against PRIVATISATION of public and good institutions.

How is the situation of the movement in your city/town currently?

Nepalese Student Movement on Free and Emancipatory Education emerged with the development of Political Movement since 1951. However the independent Student Movements emerged from 1970s. Students / Teachers and Parents have been demonstrating against the provision to establishment of private schools under 'Company Act'. This has mushroomed the private institutions so that the government can show the nice statistics to the donor agencies, but the ground situation is that peoples cannot afford education in Nepal as they wish.

The question of competent teachers and budget to public schools still need to be researched.
However, figures show that Government Fund to cover public education is adequate, but the administrators-in-charge reflect the false informations of inadequate budget. (we call mafia of private education). There have been success in students protest, but students are skeptical to governments.

The movement at present is led by:

• Eight students unions (8 student wings of major political parties in Nepal)

• ISTU (Institutional Schools' Teacher Union)

• Non-political Organizations like : Worldwide Nepalese Students' Organisation – Nepal (WNSO-Nepal)

• Nepal Guardians Organisation

However, the case-wise indefinite protests in particular universities, campuses, schools are happening; the need to get all round support is necessary. WNSO-Nepal is being successful in bringing all these bodies about the world movement on Free and Emancipatory Education. 

What actions are planned for the future?

The task of initiating educational activities throughout Nepal lies with the Ministry of Education (MOE).
The Ministry is responsible for educational planning and management, as well as in improving service delivery systems across the country. MOE is composed of three divisions:

  • Planning;
  • General Administration;
  • Educational Administration.

Educational programs and services are prepared by:

  • the Curriculum Development Centre;
  • the Secondary Education Development Centre;
  • the Distance Education Centre;
  • the Office of the Controller of Examinations;
  • the National Centre for Educational Development;
  • the regional education directorates and district education offices.

Education in Nepal is structured as school education and higher education. School education includes primary level of grades 1-5, lower secondary and secondary levels of grades 6-8 and 9-10 respectively. Pre-primary level of education is also available in certain areas. A national level School Leaving Certificate (SLC) Examination is conducted at the end of grade ten.
Grades 11 and 12 are considered as higher secondary level. Higher Secondary Education Board (HSEB) supervises higher secondary schools which are mostly under private management. Previously these grades were under the university system and were run as proficiency certificate level (PCL). Though some universities still offer these programs, the policy now is to integrate these grades into the higher secondary school system.
Higher education consists of bachelor, masters and PhD levels. Depending
upon the stream and subject, bachelors level may be of three to five years' duration. The duration of masters level is generally of two years. Some universities also offer programs like M Phil and postgraduate diploma. 

Legally, there are two types of schools in the country: community and institutional. Community schools receive regular government grant whereas institutional schools are funded by school's own or other nongovernmental sources. Institutional schools are organized either as a nonprofit trust or as a company. However, in practical terms, schools are mainly of two types: public (community) and private (institutional). 

Nepal has a dualistic system of schools with both public and private schools. Education in private schools is expensive and typically affordable only by the elite.

The economically advantaged high caste ethnic groups have literacy rates between 60 and 95 percent while lower castes have rates below 25 percent.
New Education System of Nepal was established in 1971. As a part of the five year plan, it was established to address individual needs, needs of society as a whole to mark national development. The main objective of Education system of Nepal was to develop mid level managers and skilled man power. Universal Primary education with emphasis on Nepali medium was the main agenda. In 1980, there was increase in private schools.
Free school education policy and education for all became the slogan in 90's. Despite the establishment of an education system in Nepal, poorer families could not afford to send their children to school and also wanted their children to work on the farms. Primary education was offered for free by the government as of 1975. Sadly, however, caste separation has denied many accesses to an education. Another factor holding some back from an education is that facilities are only in urban areas and it is expensive to send children to live in the towns. Illiteracy in Nepal sits at about 42%, 72% of which are women. 

** Key factor to PROTEST :: Phasing out of PCL and keeping only +2 colleges as 2 years high school, is extremely objectionable. Students each year protest to enforce Tribhuvan University who run PCL classes, these classes are of low fees and equal quality as compared to +2. Government has encouraged existing secondary schools to run +2, but has created loophole to Head teachers of public secondary schools to make profit. The +2 education is expensive; students cannot afford this, and lose their way towards higher education if PCL is phased out.

Community Management of Schools in Nepal

The Nepalese government announced a reform initiative to transfer responsibility for management of public schools to communities. This reform initiative was dictated by the strong public perception that public schools have failed far short of meeting expectations of the public. When this reform initiative was announced in 2002, based on an amendment to the Education Act in 2001, it met stiff resistance from teachers’ unions and later from the Maoist affiliated student union, and some resistance from the bureaucracy. The Community School Support Project (CSSP) was designed to support this reform initiative of the Nepal Government.
Community-managed schools (CMSs) are managed by School Management Committees (SMCs) elected and accountable to parents.

** Key factor to PROTEST :: In name of handover to the COMMUNITY, Government (or political parties) are giving away Public Schools to Private Management.

** PRIVATISATION OF NEPAL'S FIRST Public SCHOOL: The government on December 21, 2007, handed over Nepal's first public school (Durbar High School) to the management team of Schools Business Holders.

** Key factor to PROTEST:: This was done compromising Existing Legal Documents on Public Schools. This step is unlawful step performed by government.

There’s a point to oppose Privatization of public school because this will impose high fees for education and other issues too. But there is other side too.
Commercialization of education is growing as fast as mushroom. The difference in the standards of education is clearly seen especially between private
and governmental schools. Private schools are generally in English medium whereas governmental schools are generally in Nepali medium. Hence, the students from private schools are more confident and take easily with the English medium courses when they enter college life whereas students that passed SLC from public schools have to suffer and work hard more.

However, situation is opposite when we see the top engineering colleges like Institute of Engineering and medical college like Institute of Medicine, which are public. Only top students can pass the entrance examination of these colleges and the product produced is also of high caliber.

So, the main focus point is that students should be able to get high quality of education (either via private school or public school), which will make them competitive enough in this global world. Education is the right of every child.
Government should ensure that education is accessible to each and every child of the country. Free and quality education should be provided as well as maintained properly.  

Concern about curriculum

The education system in Nepal is more theoretical oriented than practical. There’s should be a balance between theoretical (40%) and practical (60%) education.
The curriculum should be redesigned in such a way that it will allow the students to explore  on their own, make field visits to remote areas of the country and share their knowledge with children of the villages. Bringing a revolution in the entire curriculum is one of future plans however it will be a long procedure and may involve governmental and political decisions too.
 

Student’s General Meeting at WNSO Nepal: Around 28th May 2010: Student’s General Meeting at WNSO Nepal central office for getting ISM’s activities in Nepal at local level.

Global Wave of Action for Education: June 16, 2010 and Beyond.


Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

Eight students unions (8 student wings of major political parties in Nepal), ISTU (Institutional Schools' Teacher Union), NTN (Nepalese Teacher Network) and WNSO- UK are supporting us. Our actions are much appreciated by general public in Nepal. 

What kind of problems (pressure or resistance) are you encountering?

The demonstrations and actions that 8 student unions, WNSO Nepal and other bodies performed used to get unsupported from security. We will definitely face more challenges, but we will make those things possible amidst resistances.

The political disturbances like bandhs (closing days) hamper a lot in the education system. All the schools and markets are closed. At times schools and colleges have to organize extra classes in weekends in order to complete the courses on time. But sometimes board exams also get postponed due to political instability and a considerable amount of valuable time of students is lost (sometimes even a year). It’s for sure that such bandhs will do no good to anyone in the society. So we should discourage them as much as possible.

For the organization like WNSO Nepal, funding has always been a problem. There are plenty of enthusiastic students with great ideas but when we try to implement them the main roadblock is the funding. Political scenarios and governmental rules have their own impacts. Definitely, Rome was not built in a day.
All the change can’t happen in a day but we have to keep on moving against all the resistance to make a positive difference in the society.
 
 

How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

Email: info@wnso.org.np

Web: http://wnso.org.np

Google Group: wnso-nepal@googlegroups.com

Facebook Group: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=154485277649
 

~ one world - one struggle ~

Education Action

Education Action Now
California State University of Monterey Bay
Seaside, CA, USA

• Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

Our group started in the fall of 2009. Our first major action that we organized was a walkout and rally on our campus on March 4 during the California state-wide day of action for public education. Some of our members worked with community organizations, including labor unions, to organize a community rally at the city hall of Monterey, CA on March 4 as well.

• How is the situation of the movement in your city/town currently?

The movement in our city is new and small. We continue to build coalitions on campus and within our community.

• What are the main aims/goals of your group?

The main goals of our group are to fight against the privatization of public education, create free and accessible public higher education, and to democratize the university.

• What actions are planned for the future?

We don’t have any specific plans yet, but we will likely take part in the global wave of action during October and November of 2010.

• Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

Several labor unions have supported us. The general public seems to support the cause for affordable and accessible higher education.

• What kind of problems (pressure or resistence) are you encountering?

We are a new organization so most of our problems arise from starting a movement of this nature on our campus and in our community.

• How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

Search “Education Action Now” on facebook for our group page, or use this link:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/education-action-now/175256652859

Student Movement in Togo

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

The student movements became active in Togo in the 90s thanks to the rising democratization. The institutional crisis arose from a totalitarian management of the country by the unique party in this period. Some demands were very fast transposed on campus. The demands generated over the years into real confrontations between
Today many students’ movements exist on the campus but all the actions are watched by many agents of control always in civilian and sometimes among the students.
students and strength of the order, what led authorities to lock the campus on April 30th, 2004. Furthermore during violent demonstrations people were badly wounded. Only one month later the campus was re-opened only one month later on May 25th, 2004.

How is the situation of the movement in your city/town/region currently?

The situation of the student movements in Togo is very complex. On the campus the groups do not manage to speak with a single voice, it handicaps enormously the students’ demands. Many movements have political bents. So some do not want to demonstrate for fear of harming the political authority and the others do not want to make concessions, to block the situation and damage the political authority. All this disrupts and weakens the real action in favour of the improvement of the students' conditions.
For example, when a movement issues an appeal to the students for a demonstration the others work against them and try to make them not go out.

What are the main aims/goals of your group?

Our actions aim at the following:

  • Train a large part of the student movements on diverse techniques of communication and negotiation;
  • Increase awareness and motivate the students in participation in decision-making processes concerning them;
  • Work to integration the dynamic and serious movements in a platform of international student movements.

Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

We have no support and no financing. We work on the exceptional contributions of our members. These exceptional contributions are sought when there is a punctual activity. Certain international institutions help us when the activity to be organized enters their line of action.

What kind of problems (pressure or resistence) are you encountering?

From the beginning we had no problem because we do not exist as a student movement. But some of the movements lwhat we find dynamic and dedicated to the student struggle are object of pressure on behalf of the other movements not sharing the same aims as them. The direct political pressures are increasingly rare nowadays compared to 1990 to 2005.

How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

 jvertstogo@gmail.com  / www.togo.jverts.org

UK - first article

Cuts to education exposed

22 March 2010

On Thursday the government announced how cuts to higher education will be distributed between the universities.
The long-awaited report confirmed the fears of many that education would
be made to pay the price of the £1 trillion given to the rich bankers. 

The report from the Higher Education Funding Council of England shows that four out of every five universities in England will face real-terms cuts. A total of £573 million in cash cuts (7.23%), have been announced for next year alone. This is nothing short of a catastrophe for education in England.

In order to make the cuts seem less bitter, slight increases have been made to teaching and research funding but this is still a real terms fall. The cuts by and large fall in the ‘capital funding’ bracket – mostly the money that universities are allowed to claim for new buildings. This may not seem like it will immediately effect students, but many university buildings are unfit for purpose and will be replaced by universities using funding from other areas – effectively sacking teachers and replacing them with bricks. This is currently happening at King’s College, where staff are being sacked at the same time as management are forking out £20 million for the grandiose Somerset House on the bank of the river Thames.

Just for profit, not for students

Research funding will be narrowed into a smaller number of ‘elite’ institutions, creating a two-tier system.

The general trend is to give more money to the universities that already have the most, by taking it away from the others. Oxford University’s research funding has increased by £7.1million up to £126million, and a third of the total research fund is distributed to just five key universities – Oxford, Cambridge, UCL, Imperial and Manchester. Less fortunate universities are set to become little more than teaching factories providing degrees aimed at workplace skills with much less funding to develop research practices.

But although these richer universities are more protected from the cuts, some are still making academic staff redundant as part of a drive towards “restructuring” –  providing only courses that are profitable in the world of business, and deprioritising education that is for the pursuit of knowledge.

Education for the rich

Many university managers want to shift the central funding crisis onto students – by campaigning for higher tuition fees. Shortly after the general election, the review into ‘Higher Education Funding and Student Finance’, headed by ex-BP chief executive Lord Browne, is expected to increase the tuition fee cap from £3,225 per year to £5,000 or even higher.

Some universities such as Oxford are pushing for the cap to be abolished altogether, allowing them to charge whatever they like. Fees have already been shown to put working class students off entering university, and the higher fees proposed are likely to mean that more prestigious universities such as those in the Russell group will become almost exclusively playgrounds of the rich. The combined effect will be that working class students will pay to be trained in careers, while rich students will receive a traditional ‘liberal’  arts and sciences education leading to cultural elitism. This would be a serious regression back in the direction of a Victorian style education.

Stealing our future

But with money, or without it, the HEFCE is threatening to keep higher education well out of reach of thousands of students in Further Education colleges who want to carry on their studies.

Entry quotas have been given to universities, and they will be required to keep within the limits or face financial penalties. At a time when unemployment is so high, many young people are desperate to start earning money, or continue education and are now being denied the opportunity for either, with an estimated seven applicants for every university place this year, leaving youth on the scrap-heap.

Courses cut – exec pay rockets

Many universities have already begun cutting staff and even whole departments. Sussex has lost linguistics, Leeds is losing classics, UCL is cutting language courses and Westminster is slashing IT. The cuts are not just a response to anticipated central government funding cuts, but university managers are cynically using them as an excuse to remove unprofitable courses and academics who perform useful research, but without immediate financial value to businesses.

This is part of the trend towards neo-liberalism in universities where academics have to justify their jobs based on economic value, ignoring the far more important value non-profitable research can have for society. The move towards business-orientated universities has expressed itself in other ways – vice-chancellors have seen their pay increase to a level similar of Britain’s largest national corporations, many earning in excess of £300,000 per annum.
At the same time their numbers have increased by a third, meaning a disproportionate amount of money is spent on management while academic jobs are being cut.

This is Britain’s role in the shady European ‘Bologna Process’ plan, which is attacking education across Europe, and has provoked mass uprisings of students from Italy, to Greece, to France, Austria, Germany, Switzerland and many more.

The process coordinates efforts by the leaders of 42 countries to standardise universities, allowing them to compete with one another – creating a market in education, where institutions that best serve the needs of business will thrive, whereas the others will be cut back. The global financial crisis seems to mean that the bosses are accelerating the process.

But the current attacks on education are no foregone conclusion, and the movement for education is starting to win victories. Occupations, demonstrations and strikes at Sussex, Leeds and London Met have already won some impressive victories along the way to defeating the cuts, and the similar struggles of our brothers and sisters in Europe show a potential to organise internationally – if we could do that imagine how powerful the student movement would be. The lesson – we need to organise and fight for learning, not profit!

UK - second article

Mark, Nursing student at King’s College, member of No Cuts campaign and of Revolution

The attacks we face are enormous in scale

There are currently 1.96 million uni students in the UK. Gov spends £7.8 billion. Fees amount to £1.4 billion Fees were introduced in September 2006 and this year they are planning to lift the cap from £3000 to who knows what level alongside massive cuts in university spending. So who are the main driving forces behind this?

Main players: Government, Business, University management

The cuts that are going on are part of a political agenda to transform universities and further education.
The government wants to pay the least amount possible for universities.
They want to do this by turning all uni’s into private, fee paying institutions which turn a profit. They are attempting to use the recession to make deep cuts with little resistance, to prepare the way for this, while blaming it on the capitalist crisis and the public deficit. They’ve announced they want to cut £449 million this year and plan to cut £913 million by 2013. They are attempting to create a market in education in the UK and across Europe as they need expanding markets for capitalism as places to invest and to produce more profits for business. Clearest example of this change is that univ
ersities now come under the remit of Peter Mandleson, secretary of state for business and innovation.

University management are using the current recession and anticipation of cuts to restructure universities in same way as postal service have just done under the pressure of privatisation and market competition. They are restructuring departments, getting rid of course which don’t contribute enough to their league table scores or cost too much to run. This is them adjusting to the competitive market in higher education which has been imposed on them, its sometimes called modernisation but in reality its cost cutting, driven by the profit motive to transform universities from educational institutes into profit making businesses.

Corporations and business are ready to invest and take over universities and they see the crisis as an opportunity to increase their already substantial inroads into education, but of course they will only fund subjects that have immediate relevance to research or industry. If your area of study is something like English Social history before 1900 like one of the humanities lecturers being cut at King’s,  you aren’t going to get funding for that from business.

University management are realists - they want money for their institutions and they don't care where it comes from or what strings it comes attached with. They are more concerned with their own personal gain or what place they hold in the league tables than with the quality of teaching or research that is produced. They are not against fees and have been campaigning for a lifting on the cap. Rick Trainor, Principal of KCL and Universities UK, the organisation for heads of universities, produced a report calling for fees to rise to £5,000 a year.

What’s the situation in the student movement? At present, mainly apathetic.  Generally opposed to cuts but are deluged with stories in the media about the need for cuts which demoralises them and dulls their will to resist. And shamefully they are provided with no leadership from the NUS which has no strategy for fighting back to defend education and has given up the struggle for free education.

However this is changing as we speak. Students are getting organised and starting to fight back, and even more will join us as the cuts start to bite and courses and uni’s start shutting down. Therefore today is about putting the structures in place, building the organisations of resistance so we are well armed and prepared as the cuts hit across the UK.

The next 12 months are absolutely key to our movement and our struggle. The Browne review of tuition fees being carried out as we speak will come out after the general election, this is examining the effect of fees on universities and will recommend what policy uni’s take regarding funding. The report will very likely say

- ... in order to keep universities world class we need to raise fees.

- ... a market in education is a positive thing- keeps universities relevant and competitive

- ... students need more information about their courses- teaching hours, facilities, graduate employment.

The Council for Industry and Higher Education, Business lobbyists who campaign for industry are already saying that if uni’s raise fees to £7,000 they could get students to take out loans from high street banks to pay for the rest. This gives an idea where the review will lead. This will radicalise students as they are faced with the reality of paying tens of thousands of pounds for an education being decimated by cuts.

Government will frame it as a choice: cuts or higher fees. Universities will naturally respond with a call that they have to have higher fees, and they’ve already done so through Universities UK.

We must:

1. Bust the myth that there isn’t the money, Britain is the fourth richest country in the world, tax evasion costs the government around £115 billion a year, the money is out there – we must consistently make the argument that an educated society is a healthy, progressive one and that education is a right for all, not a privilege for those who can afford it

2. Fight cuts on an individual level in the knowledge that if we win some initial battles they will get scared. We are doing this already.  There have been dozens of protests around the country at different uni’s. London Met got their Board of Governors to resign for mismanaging their uni, at King’s we got our library cafeteria reopened, temporarily, following a protest against the closure. We need to expand the individual campaigns and make them as big and lively as inclusive as possible

 3. Unite on a national level with students and workers from across the UK. This is why we are having the convention.  The student movement up to now has been fragmented, it has been riven by infighting  and sectarianism. This is not acceptable. We have to work together, we have to unite. Yes we will have our political differences, but we can settle these through democratic debate. We need to work together to mobilise everyone against these attacks, to build the structures of resistance, the local campaigns, regional and national coordinations we need to develop, link up and lead our struggles.

This is a nationwide attack, with similar attacks taking place internationally. The forces aligned against us are huge. We are up against the government, big business, the university management. They will try and divide us, and pit us against each other and make us feel small and powerless.

But there are millions of us and we have millions of allies. Every student in this country, every person who wants an education, is an ally. The 1 million young people without education, employment or training are allies. We are fighting for them. Every education worker, in university, in college, in school is an ally.

They are coming for HE first, but the government is lining up attacks on the rest of the public sector. The civil service, local government, the NHS. All those workers are our allies. Every trade unionist and class conscious worker who knows the history of the struggle for free education is an ally.

The minority communities, black, asian, gay, disabled, those who will suffer the most if these cuts come in, these are our allies.

The students and workers in Europe and around the world who have waged brilliant, inspiring struggles in defence of their education and their jobs, they are our allies.

If we work together to build an open, democratic student movement which draws in all students, and we unite with workers in a mass campaign which takes direct action against the management and government with strikes, walkouts and occupations we can magnify our collective strength into an unstoppable force. We need take to the streets and make the universities, in fact this whole country ungovernable. Thats how we can stop these attacks. They want us to sit quietly and let them get on with destroying our education. Our job is to make that impossible.

But we don’t want just want to stop the attacks this year, to have them come back next year even harder, we want to reclaim our education, take back our universities and secure education as a right, to develop ourselves and contribute to better society as a whole. This is central to our struggle.

Capitalism has created this situation, created this crisis which threatens us all. Now we need to build a movement which can change it once and for all. 

Then i would go into kings and ucl cuts (campaign and partial victory respectively) and you could even say a sentence or two with reference to each workshop, basically pointing out that they are all linked and we need experts in each area plus must work with trade unions, must say what we want to build as saying what we are against (my workshop), must include all types students (liberation) etc etc.  

Then i would say that there is a certain logic that comes with struggle

1. you see something is wrong

2. you find out why it is wrong

3. you talk to other people about it and debate

4. you make a plan of action

5. you do the action and win the day

we are stage 3 and together we will get to stage 5

Youth Labor Union - Taiwan

Overview of Youth Labour Union, Taiwan

Por-Yee Lin mibow0525.tw@yahoo.com.tw

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

"Youth Labor Union" is an independent NGO aiming at promoting labor rights in Taiwan. Founded in 2005, its members consist of young social activists, university students and scholars. Youth Labor Union focuses on the oppressive situation of all marginal workers, including part-time workers, outsourced or dispatched workers, internships, child-labors and student workers. We try to fight for their legal labor rights (minimum wage, overtime pay… etc) and try to organize them, especially the young marginal labors. In 2008, we successfully urged the government to raise the minimum wage from 66 NT dollars to 95 NT (about from 1.6 Euro to 2.4 Euro) per hour, and since 2008 until now, we have helped more than 500 young workers to fight back their labor rights. Besides this, we also focus on the issues that degrade the youth situation towards ‘youth poverty’, eg: the expansion of the privatization of education, the lowering rewards of higher education, the rising costs of housing and raising children… etc.

How is the situation of the movement in your city/town/region currently?

The labour movement in Taiwan has been weak for a long time, due to the repression from the authoritarian KMT government (1949-1988), the increasing tendency of capital controling the state, and the opposing national identities (pro uniting with China / pro independence from China) among labour movement activists. Since 2000 the young generation has been facing an increasing ‘youth poverty’ and privatization of public education, lower rewards of higher education, rising costs of housing and other essential goods. Especially after the economic crisis in 2008, claiming to lower the youth unemployment, the government initiated some policies to build a closer relationship between higher education and the industries, eg: more unpaid or low paid internships, a ‘last mile’ course for students, and labelling the ‘youth formal works’ as ‘informal internship for learning’ to lower youth wage. All these policies contribute to youth poverty. Besides, they also cause the vocationalization of higher education. As a result, we found that it’s important to fight the labor issues and education issues together, in order to overcome all the oppression in front of us.

What are the main aims/goals of your group?

The organization has four main goals:

1. To improve the working conditions and developing opportunities of young people, "unskilled" and marginal laborers in Taiwan.

2. To strengthen the legal as well as actual labor protection for part-time workers.

3. To encourage young laborers to unite and fight for their own rights through higher participation in public affairs.

4. To promote awareness of labor rights within the civil society.

What actions are planned for the future?

On the one hand, we will try to improve our NGO by making it more stable (including human and financial resources). For example by increasing efforts to recruit new core participants and to raise money publicly. On the other hand, we are planning to do more campaigns, especially in connection with ‘youth poverty’, as mentioned above.

Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

The progressive trade union, the teachers union, left-wing NGOs… etc support us. Generally issues like the protection of legal labor rights (minimum wage, overtime pay… etc) gain more public support than the issues of labor policies (eg: raising minimun wage, labour insurance…etc ).

What kind of problems (pressure or resistence) are you encountering?

We found that it’s hard to organize young workers as formal union members who will pay the union membership fee and interact with us regularly. To counter this phenomenon, we may try different kinds of organizing, eg: internet networking, online union, groups based on schools… etc.

Besides, we have some difficulties to recruit new core participants. Although we may help many irregular young workers, they usually don't join an NGO or union since it is not part of the tradition in Taiwan. As a result, it may be better to have enough financial resources to employ some full time staff to sustain and explore the movement for a stable development; however, it’s also hard to raise money for labor movement NGOs in Taiwan.

How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

You can send an e-mail to me: mibow0525.tw@yahoo.com.tw

Our Blog: http://blog.roodo.com/youthlabor95 (almost all in Chinese)

Innsbruck Uni Brennt student movement - Austria

EEC Report form the Innsbruck uni brennt student movement, sowimax.at

 

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

On 29th of September around 1000 people in a demo went to to the faculty of social studies, afterwards 500 of them occupied the Aula, the largest lecture hall of the University of Innsbruck. The Aula was kept occupied until 18th of December, until this date there were negotiations with the Vice-Chancellor (Rektor Karlheinz Töchterle), in exchange for the Aula we got two main concessions: A room specially for the student movement, and self organized lectures which are critical and form a place for exchange for students and lecturers of all facultys.

Since the occupation was quit, there are meetings on a regular basis; during the last few months transport and participation at the bologna burns demonstration in Vienna and large meeting with about 100 students and about 5 members of the head of the university were organized.


How is the situation of the movement in your city/town currently?

The room is now widely accepted and increasingly used by students and by our movement. At the moment there are two main projects:

The room and the self organized lectures. The room is used for discussions, presentations, archival, documentary, journalistic and activist work, and also for social aims, it is now widely accepted and increasingly used by students and by our movement. (Facts regarding the room: 50m², beamer, internet, couches, computers, working area)

The lectures are organized by a group of motivated people and the project is known as „Kritische Uni“ which means critical university. In the current semester are 10 courses shown under this name in the official course catalog; the budget for this project is 10.000 Euro per Semester.

Recently (11th May) we had a manifestation against the restrictions of access to unis that are probably installed very soon in Austria and about 50-80 people attended. Response in the media was low, but still something.


What are the main aims/goals of your group?

To raise a theoretical debate about the complex society - economy - education - politics and making people aware of the fact that without participation, democracy is doomed to fail.


What actions are planned for the future?

The actual projects will be continued, the focus will be on local actions, theoretical work, but also on networking and collaborations with other movements.


Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

The dialogue with the head of the university was in Innsbruck much better than in other cities. Also the media was surprisingly open (for Tyrol) to the ideas of the movement and the problems of the students.

The support of the lecturers was also better than expected and spread over all faculties.


What kind of problems (pressure or resistence) are you encountering?

The occupation and the different projects we accomplished were all quite stressful, so it was always hard to keep the motivation alive.

Right-wing politicians and activists had a problem with the legitimation of the student movement but could not achieve any pressure against the occupation.

During the occupation and in the room there were also some delicate situations with homeless and drug addicts to deal with.

The presidency of the local student organisation is against a student movement apart of them, which is unique in all Austrian Universities.

And there is always too less time to do all stuff which should be done.

 

How can others network with you? (e-mail? website?)

Website: http://www.sowimax.at

E-Mail: info@sowimax.at

Front Education - France

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

The "Front de lutte pour l'Education" (Defence Committee of Public School in France) was
born in August 2009 following the failure of the student movement. It aims to unite organizations
and individuals struggle for education.
Our collective has tried unsuccessfully to revive a massive fall, unfortunately, too few organizations
have invested in this movement. Our group now has 40 organizations and is continuing to grow.
We organized the wave of actions for education this fall.

How is the situation of the movement in your city/town/region currently?

The movement in France has failed to take off this year in spite of destructive forms for education.
The student movement stagnated following the occupations during the previous year. At a high school
across the country student demonstrations took place but too irregularly and scattered. We hope to
resurrect an overall movement next year.

What are the main aims/goals of your group?


We are fighting to save public schools. From kindergarten to university, our study conditions are
severely degraded.
We demand an end to lay-offs of teachers, smaller classes, decent conditions to study.

What actions are planned for the future?

Now is the end of the school year, we will try to establish the 16th June and are especially organizing
a wave of action for education this fall.

Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

40 organizations are part of the battlefront for education. In general, the public supports us in our
actions.

What kind of problems (pressure or resistence) are you encountering?

The biggest problems we face are the difficulties in mobilizing youth. Repression is often present
in large cities and our demands are not small.

How can others network with you? (E-mail? Homepage?)

Our website: www.frontdeluttepourleducation.fr
Our email: front.education@gmail.com

N’solidaritet - Kosovo

What is “N’solidaritet”?

We are non formal student group and our aim is to create an educational system which is based in equality and liberty.

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

We are newly formed group of non formal student group of University of Prishtina – Prishtina/Kosova called N’Solidaritet. We work on the principals of equality and liberty(including our organizational system). We are implementing “free and emancipating” campaign in our university. Initiated by Antifascist Action of Prishtina, this campaign is free from any influence and does not work for any other interests but the student ones.
N’Solidaritet is autonomous non formal student group. We have spent a few months researching and trying to get access to the public archive documents.
During this process we have created work frame  and the organizational structure. Now we are in a faze of recruiting new members and gathering supporters for our cause. Our objective is to achieve legitimacy by gathering support from the majority of the university students (by signing of the petition or gathering on the massive protests) and by this to achieve our main goal of free and emancipating education.

How is the situation of the movement in your city/town currently?

We are gathering small but loud support. Although considering political situation in Kosova, its difficult to “penetrate through walls of judgment”. But we tend to create the image of student group that offers something new and not some old political party influenced movement.

What are the main aims/goals of your group?

We stand for an informative and objective education, which will give everybody knowledge and the opportunity of the free choice. Education should be independent from the state, economical and ideological influences and should be open for anyone regardless of their race, gender, religion, nationality, ethnicity and their social and economic status. We want our university to be of a cooperative and an equal nature. Our immediate goals are

   1. ... the removal of all tuition fees for all students.
   2. ... to remove the Bologna system and to replace it with an alternative and functional educational system.
   3. ... our university should be independent from the state, economical and ideological influences.
   4. ... direct and non bureaucratic involvement of professors and students in the dictions making processes.

What actions are planned for the future?

*Our struggle is focused on two “fronts”. One of them is through legislation and lobbying and other through public and civil pressure. The first one has to do with lobbying and finding “loop holes” in legislation, also gathering enough signatures to take the issue to the parliament. The second has to do with public pressure through protests, occupations, and any other kind of civil disobedience. So we are planning everything starting from local meetings to massive protests and occupations (although everything going step by step)

Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

Mainly students, friends and a small number of professors. As outside support we have individuals with (some of them with kind of influence such as musicians) and organizations like Antifa Pr, LGBT community, organization for people with disability etc. In general we are still small to get a general public reaction but we predict that well get a large number of support from the students.

What kind of problems (pressure or resistance) are you encountering?

Our WORST problem is financing. We always have to find ways of financing our campaigns, even if it means a small amount of money. We cannot find a donor because of a nature of our movement, although a from time to time we have donors ad hoc(most of them work through personal ties with the donor).

Also we are encountering a resistance from the university administration and rectorate on the one hand and student bodies and organizations (which are politically influenced)on the other.

How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

Our website is still under construction and will be published in a few weeks. Facebook page will be published in a couple of days.

Official e-mail : nsolidaritet@gmail.com
Phone no: +38649642492, +37744490292

Bangladesh Students' Union (BSU)

Can you give us a short historic overview of your group?

The Bangladesh Students' Union (BSU) is a national student organization.
It is a left-leaning student political organization in Bangaldesh
.
We can identify it as a mass student organization. It was established on 26 April 1952.
BSU functions as an independent secular students' organization for the student right as an interest group. During the Liberation War, BSU had its own guerrilla units. In 1 January 1973 Motiul and Kader two leaders of BSU martyred to show the anti-imperialist movement by a procession in Dhaka against the Vietnam aggression by government of the U.S.A.
Motiul and Kader are given the honor of National Heroes by Vietnam.
The Central Executive Body of BSU consists of 41 members. Current President is Manabendra Dev, General Secretary is Fardous Ahemed Uzzal and Organizing Secretary SM Suvo. Bangladesh Students` Union (BSU) was founded in 1952. This organization is one of the leading student organizations in Bangladesh. It is working for student and youth rights as a secular and progressive student organization in Bangladesh as well as all over the world as the member of several international student and youth organizations. Bangladesh Students' Union (BSU) is working as the most conscious, advanced and struggling progressive representative of the students in Bangladesh. It is independent, democratic, pluralistic, non-profit, non-governmental and a non-partisan student organization which would embrace, represent and defend the interests of students and their rights.
Since its foundation the organization is fighting against racial oppression, communal, imperialist conspiracy and neo-colonial oppression. It is also trying to establish a real democracy and the right to education for all. With a view to establish a stable society it is conducting an un-compromised struggle. In Bangladesh student organizations are directly involve with political parties except for the Bangladesh Students' Union (BSU).

How is the situation of the movement in your city/town/region currently?

Currently in Bangladesh the movement to protect public resources is the prime issue. This movement is directed against imperialism, it’s multi-national companies and their local partners. Historically in Bangladesh, students were always a striking force of all national movements.
The movement against the commercialization of education has been existing in Bangladesh since 1947. And still it is present on every campus. But the character of the movement changed and it integrated many national, economical and political issue.

What are the main aims/goals of your group?

Our main aim is socialism.

What actions are planned for the future?

Our national council (yearly congress) agreed what will be the next steps in the future. The program will be published later.

Who is supporting you? How is the general public reacting towards you?

The majority of people is always supporting us. All of our ideological friend organizations support us. The Communist Party of Bangladesh (CPB) helps us as a friend as well.

What kind of problems (pressure or resistence) are you encountering?

Many of our comrades sacrificed their life during the struggle. Still it is continuing.

How can others network with you? (e-mail? homepage?)

www.bsu1952.org

Thanks for all the responses!

I put them all together in a booklet and added some more interesting articles on education activist movements worldwide. It can be downloaded here. (a revised version is now also available for download here! - posted on Feb.2011)

I hope this helps to spread awareness of the global nature of this struggle.