Recently, Prime Minister Tony Abbott mooted the idea that Australia could follow the American model of schools partnering with major companies. He had just visited the Pathways in Technology Early College High School in New York, which in partnership with IBM enables students to graduate with a high school diploma and an associate's degree.
The idea of corporate engagement with public schools in Australia is not new. It has been on government agendas and practised by individual schools for some time. But a few cautionary tales from the last 20 years are worth noting.
A 2012 report by the Productivity Commission on the Schools Workforce identified the need to develop strategies to enhance engagement between schools and the business community.
“In particular”, suggested the Commission, “equipping teachers and principals with appropriate skills and giving them the scope and incentive to employ those skills, will go a considerable way to meeting the engagement goals enunciated in the recent report by the Business–School Connections Roundtable”.
Established by Julia Gillard, the Business-School Connections Roundtable included representatives such as the Australian Business and Community Network, IBM, Microsoft, Rio Tinto, Principals Australia and Woolworths.
The Roundtable identified opportunities for business to "contribute to the education reform agenda" as a partner with education at a strategic level by ‘adding value’ to the implementation of the Australian Curriculum, through trade cadetships and trade training centres, work experience, and via new pathways into teaching by ‘adding value’ to Teach for Australia and Teach Next.
Teach Next, a Commonwealth funded program intended to bring the expertise of non-teaching professions into the schoolroom, was notable for attracting more than 500 applicants, but reportedly managing to recruit only 14 new teachers during a two-year period.
At the school level, there are numerous examples of school-business connections. Mitsubishi has sponsored schools in Sydney. In Victoria, Coles Supermarkets ran a promotion in conjunction with Apple in which students who amassed a certain amount in purchases from Coles were eligible for a “free” Macintosh computer.
The National Australia Bank’s Schools First program attempted to recognise school-community partnerships that deliver improved educational outcomes for students. Arguably, the very act of rewarding public schools and teachers (who seldom get national recognition) is a good thing and the level of investment was substantial.
Perhaps the most ambitious initiative has been the $47m-per-year Schools Business Community Partnership Brokers programme – which acts as an intermediary to foster links between schools and business.
An evaluation of the programme by Social Ventures Australia (SVA) identified a range of benefits. Schools could, for example, take advantage of external skills and resources to free up existing school resources. They could also broaden professional networks to provide career opportunities for students.
But some efforts to forge school-business partnerships have led to dubious practices.
During the 1990s McDonald’s restaurants sponsored sports activities in schools across New South Wales.
The restaurant displayed its logos at sports events and schools were encouraged to establish personal relations with local store representatives by inviting them to speech nights and fairs.
Students, school staff and parents were encouraged to eat at certain outlets during “McHappy hours” as 10 per cent of earnings were returned to the school.
Time Magazine reported that a hoax letter was allegedly sent around schools advising principals that all school names would have the prefix “Mc” and teachers would henceforth be referred to as “crew members”.
Other cautionary tales of business involvement in schools include Whittle Communications, which provided resources to US public schools such as TV and satellite dish sets through corporate advertising.
In return, over 90 per cent of the nearly eight million students attending these schools were required to watch a news program each day that included advertising by Snickers and Burger King. Reportedly earning $630,000 a day, this advertising was, by contract, required viewing.
Around the same time during the 1990s, Burger King Academies - quasi-private and fully accredited high schools - operated in at least 14 cities of the US.
Companies, such as Education Alternatives, also ran pubic schools for profit. The corporation’s president observed that “it’s open season on marketing”.
Critics at the time rightly asked: what is more dangerous, the products advertised or the brand of attitude that is espoused?
On the other hand, another benefit of partnerships identified by the SVA evaluation cited above was that partnerships could align school activities with industry needs.
This claim echoes concerns by the International Labour Organisation of a global mismatch between skills and jobs. Education systems are seen to be failing to adequately prepare students for changing job markets.
But the question arises as to whether an emphasis on skills-alignment to industry could risk schools becoming too focused on meeting market demand.
Schooling should be about the development of well-rounded individuals capable of critical thinking, but focusing too much on labour-force readiness might reduce education exclusively to “training”.
There is also a question of whether business strategic plans can be aligned to the long-term goals of schooling. Imagine, for example, if car manufacturers Ford or Mitsubishi had established such a program in South Australia?
Another challenge is to ensure that equity is maintained where there isn’t a market incentive to do so.
That said, there is a wealth of expertise that business can offer schools. In my own research, I have found that students want opportunities for hands-on learning. Businesses can provide these - for both students and teachers.
Whittle Communications has ceased doing business. The final Schools First awards were given last year. And following last month’s budget, funding of the School Business Community Partnership Brokers programme will expire in December.
Business involvement in public schooling is in a nascent stage of development. If the Prime Minister is seriously considering corporate involvement in public schools, he should be mindful of these cautionary tales, and more importantly, of the public purposes of schooling in Australia.
* Associate Professor Lucas Walsh is Associate Dean (Berwick) in The Faculty of Education at Monash University.
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cardinal fang
Posted Friday, July 4, 2014 - 20:42
Julia Gillard was enraptured by the New York education system. Was it George Klein? If the schools aren't up to scratch then sack them. Yes there wa a fantastic improvement, but wait, no there wasn't . They simply lowered the bar and their scores improved.
Let's have Big Mac elementary high. Woolworths technical college. We can't have industrial based schools because we are fast losing our industrial base.
how about riot into school of the air. Gina's food and catering college. PUP institute of palaeontology . The list is endless.
EarnestLee
Posted Friday, July 4, 2014 - 23:51
" Education systems are seen to be failing to adequately prepare students for changing job markets."
This is not the point of an "Education System" It should be preparing students for life, no matter what the job market.
Corporates can certainly help with today's practices and technologies. But more importantly they could explain the evolution and outlook for technologies.
Those chads denying Gore a Presidency. That was certainly a stuff up with technology. So an explanation of the limitations of technology is also required.
EarnestLee
Posted Friday, July 4, 2014 - 23:53
" Education systems are seen to be failing to adequately prepare students for changing job markets."
This is not the point of an "Education System" It should be preparing students for life, no matter what the job market.
Corporates can certainly help with today's practices and technologies. But more importantly they could explain the evolution and outlook for technologies.
Those chads denying Gore a Presidency. That was certainly a stuff up with technology. So an explanation of the limitations of technology is also required.
bhftghrt
Posted Saturday, July 5, 2014 - 16:36
le patron n'a même pas regarder le lancel soldes nombre de nos 10 personnes , trois cents à quatre cents s'appelle numérique directe et collecter de l'argent . apprendre maintenant à conduire a été populaire , et nous ne pouvons pas pas facile . ne pas apprendre à conduire comme avant , ou est conçu comme un taxi de carrière , ou est public. chaque personne n'est pas facile . si l' électronique nécessaire pour poster sur le bon, le problème est que nous donner de sac lancel pas cher l'argent peut avoir un entraîneur peut envoyer de l'argent directement dans la commande , de sorte que vous appuyez sur lecture . nous ne faisons que 10 deux ou trois élèves peuvent être formés un peu. maintenant l'assaut exerce route tueur tellement , jamais sac lancel solde l'école de conduite pas responsable . 3 . les risques potentiels que la conduite de véhicules scolaires de la même . conduire le risque est énorme . juste face à ce mal de tête de la police de la circulation est un gros problème . police de la circulation et de l'administration lancel du véhicule penser exactement la même , aussi longtemps que le lecteur a une eau peuvent être la pêche , ne sachant pas beaucoup de soins à temps , nous ne sommes pas facile . gratté touché le problème , plus vous rencontrez un problème et correcte . ecchymoses problème plus grave que tuer. nous savons tous que la famille de collier de blanc est très fragile , la maladie et les accidents sac lancel soldes peuvent être immédiatement détruites pour faire sortir la famille . accidents pour inclure les prétendus accidents , ne parle pas seulement leur propre victimisation , mais vous frappez quelqu'un d'autre et parfois ne peuvent pas être de votre faute , le suivi jusqu'à des questions sans fin .
http://soldes.eshop-lancel.fr/
adamant
Posted Sunday, July 6, 2014 - 10:50
I'd rather see schools with involvment of corporations directed through professional bodies such as the Institue of Engineers or the Royal Australian Chemical Institute for moderation of their commercial bent.
Sinibaldi
Posted Sunday, July 6, 2014 - 22:11
A land of dreams.
There's a magical
land where a
whisper of life
becomes the
beginning to
discover the light
that appears in
the youth.
Francesco Sinibaldi
This user is a New Matilda supporter. DrGideonPolya
Posted Monday, July 7, 2014 - 09:46
Excellent article. Lovely poem by Francesco Sinibaldi.
As a 4-decade teacher in the tertiary sector with a first degree, honours, PhD and teaching qualification, I offer my informed opinion that our children and indeed all people should have access to education can and should be free (see "Accredited Remote Learning": http://accreditedremotelearning.blogspot.com.au/ ) .
Unfortunately, Australia has an Educational Apartheid system in which the 2/3 of Australian kids attending under-funded Government schools are disproportionately excluded from university, from top universities and from top courses such as Law and Medicine (see “Educational Apartheid”: https://sites.google.com/site/educationalapartheid/polya-gideon ) .
However the 1/3 of children attending fee-charging, taxpayer-subsidized, religious private schools are variously subject to child intellectual abuse through the foisting egregious falsehood on children e.g. gender discrimination, sexism, homophobia, misogyny, sexual guilt, unsafe sex, racism, jingoism, creationism, intelligent design, other religious clap-trap (virgin birth etc), racism, genocidal racism, and the right to invade, devastate and ethnically cleanse other countries.
Indeed organized religion is tax-free Big Business in Australian receiving taxpayer subsidies of $31 billion each year to spread BS and commit child intellectual abuse and worse (as partly glimpsed by the current Royal Commission (Gideon Polya, “Australian Coalition Government Sacrifices Key Industries While Committing Hundreds Of Billions Of Dollars To Carbon Pollution & War”, Countercurrents, 10 February, 2014: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya100214.htm
There are many low-cost things that can be done to enhance education of our children before we start corporatizing schools and brainwashing children with neoliberal BS in addition to religious BS (Gideon Polya, “37 Ways Of Tackling Australian Educational Apartheid And Social Inequity”, Countercurrents, 22 May, 2013: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya220513.htm ).
Indeed the fundamental prohibition on teachers is not to mal-instruct (deceive, misinform, lie by omission or commission to) students. However one supposes that spin-driven “corporate sponsors” will not tolerate children being told the Awful Truths e.g.
(1) that we live in a carbon burning-based economy and climate criminal Big Business (notably excepting renewable energy companies) are inextricably linked to terracidal carbon burning;
(2) that in Australia this Gadarene pollution of the one common atmosphere and ocean of all countries with 2 billion tonnes CO2-e of pollution each year yields – at an expert advocated Carbon Price of $150 per tonne CO2-e and a climate criminal de facto Carbon Price of $0 per tonne CO2-e – an additional Carbon Debt of $300 billion each year for our children and future generations;
(3) that the One Percenters (including Big Business) own about 50% of the wealth of the world and this huge inequality is associated with 17 million avoidable deaths from deprivation each year, half being children (see Gideon Polya, “Key Book Review: “Capital In The Twenty-First Century” By Thomas Piketty”, Countercurrents, 1 July 2014: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya010714.htm ; Gideon Polya, “4 % annual Global Wealth Tax to stop the 17 Million deaths annually”, Countercurrents, 27 June, 2014: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya270614.htm ; Gideon Polya, “Body Count. Global avoidable mortality since 1950” that includes an avoidable mortality-related history of every country since Neolithic times and is now available for free perusal on the web: http://globalbodycount.blogspot.com/ ).
Would we want our children to be mal-instructed by terrracidal climate criminals and neoliberal corporatists linked to a global avoidable mortality holocaust and eventual destruction of much of Humanity and the Biosphere?
However there is certainly room for association of professional bodies e.g. the RACI, the AMA etc with schools. Thus, for example, a high school in Hungary with an inspiring medical theme is named after my grandfather Professor Jeno Polya (1876-1944), a very famous Hungarian surgeon murdered by the Nazis in 1944.
CloverEvie
Posted Wednesday, July 9, 2014 - 19:51
Corporate partnerships help the students to avail better education and facilities.
Dissertation proposal writing Services
Sinibaldi
Posted Saturday, July 19, 2014 - 22:44
Radiante sueño.
En la dulzura
de un paseo,
en el claro
sonido que
recuerda el
color de la
mágica noche.
Francesco Sinibaldi