As my students say:  "I feel a lecture coming on."    There are  three
comments and three points I want to make about this.    

 

Comment one:   I 've never heard more of a complaining bunch of folks than
civil servants and ex-civil servants here, in Canada and in England.    It
escapes me why so many of them here are conservatives who want to downsize
their own jobs.     Is it any wonder that with such viral toxicity, the rest
of us poor schmoos question the value in what civil servants do and so we
opt to stop funding their jobs considering them to be: "just throwing our
money away?"    For those of us who believe in the value of an efficient
public and private sector, this whole argument is disturbing to say the
least. 

 

Comment two:   Vocational Technology has been around since Taylor and the
positivists.     From the beginning they have been flying the Utilitarian
flag over education and completely missing the point of the value of the
Creative Arts and Liberal Arts.    They also haven't the foggiest idea about
the way a cultural system is put together, however they have never failed to
walk into successful systems, make a mess and then propose their solutions.
Sort of like the Doctor who infects his patients with cancer and then
proposes the cure that will make them cripples for the rest of their lives.
(example:  Indian Reservations and Classical Artists with economists and
social scientists as the "doctors." ).   It is no accident that
fundamentalist religions are happy to join your movement.   The faux history
of economics is of the same sort faux history on the internet, as their
version of history that eliminates the existence of the Catholic Church. 

 

Comment three:  The purpose of science is not technology.   Technology is a
product not a purpose.   The purpose of science in society is the arrival at
archival, generic knowledge that is trustworthy in building the society's
reality upon.   It has to be truly predictable or it isn't "real", "good"
etc.  i.e. science.    Art grows from a growing chaos and even mistakes
within the discipline of virtuosity and formal creativity but when the forms
become predictable and generic the art becomes mere craft and entertainment.
Art is not science although generic artistic formal theory is a variety of
science.     Vocational Tech schools are generic schools that teach craft,
not human growth or potential, they teach the generic modes of scientific
thought.   They are the final product of the scientific archive.
Predictable, ritualistic and almost "church like" as in the case of the
musical vo-tec schools that we call "conservatories"  (i.e. Phi Beta Kappa
lists Juilliard Conservatory as not eligible for a chapter because it is in
their vocational technology category of schools)  or we could use an "apple"
crystal cathedral as another example.   In computers, if you don't know the
"bible" you are a "sinner" or worse "stupid."    Apple techies are called
"geniuses" in the Apple church.

 

Point number one:   Students are always anxious. 

 

Point number two:   Today's sixty to a hundred thousand dollar educational
loan bills enslave people for life and make entrepreneurship impossible
except for the very wealthy.   It's no accident that so many of our CEOs
like Jobs, Gates, Gelb etc. did not accept high college tuition as a
"necessity" in establishing their dreams. i.e. Education IS a public good in
the long term. 

 

Point number three:    The  "Productivity Lag" that Ed and others are now
complaining about has been a long time coming after the New Deal but we are
now back to the 1870s and 80s with its grand theft by the Robber Barons and
the mass genocide based in their prejudicial social theories.    The root of
the military term "Captains" of Industry used for CEOs.    (War mongering
anyone?)    To that I say "no" to all of the economists on the list:
Wealth production is not "value" it is "a" value, one of many and may be
much less important in the long run than any of the "eternal verities" and
if Utilitarianism is anything more than a nasty piece of British cultural
chauvinism in history like Imperialism and missionary Christianity,  then
one has to admit that the idea of "practical use = happiness" is just plain
nuts.     It has the same kind of justifying impulse as any fanatical system
whose logic works but kills everyone it touches. 

 

CODA:   If you really want to see the end result of what Ed is advocating
you can come to NYCity and see the result of the specialty schools that are
tremendous Vo-tec high schools in every possible job.     Most of the time
they make advanced schooling unnecessary for the profession they teach.
(Not unlike the description of the old Soviet System we used to make fun of
for Cold War purposes.)      I prefer the old generalist Liberal Arts or at
least the imaginative Arts approach.   I believe the human instrument has to
be highly developed first before you specialize.    The beginning of that
development is the development of the senses, the physical body and the
cultural matrix. 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Saturday, April 28, 2012 12:10 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] What makes Quebec students 'distinct'?

 

Michael's observations and the Winnipeg Free Press notwithstanding, I still
think that being a student these days leaves one with rather limited choices
about the future.  Getting a good professional job now requires a graduate
degree and there are plenty of people out there with graduate degrees.  As
well, there really aren't that many good professional jobs and it looks as
though there will be fewer in future.  The public sector used to be a good
choice for many university graduates -- a good place to start and work your
way up.  Now it's the scene of extensive cut-backs.  Moreover, there aren't
the plethora of summer jobs out there anymore, so students have to borrow to
pay there way through.  It's now very different from back in the stone age
when I was a student.  I was able to earn enough during the summer to pay my
way through the following year.  Most of my friends could too.

 

So, no matter how the students who are marching in Quebec look at
themselves, I don't think it's all that wrong to see them reacting out of a
deep anxiety.  Will they be able to get good jobs when they graduate?  Will
they be able to pay their loans back?  And yes, it's correct to see them as
part of the Occupy movement, but then what drives the Occupy movement if not
a deep anxiety about the very uncertain future?

 

Ed

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: michael gurstein <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION'
<mailto:[email protected]>  

Sent: Saturday, April 28, 2012 10:09 AM

Subject: Re: [Futurework] What makes Quebec students 'distinct'?

 

This interprestation flies in the face of the students' own interpretation
of why they are demonstrating (as in the article I originally noted), the
global interpretation of why they are demonstrating as in
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/canada/quebec-student-fight-goes-internatio
nal-how-a-battle-over-1625-got-noticed-149349285.html and simple logic,
since the Quebec students who are demonstrating pay the lowest tuition in
Canada (and one of the lowest tuitions in the OECD countries where tuition
is paid) and the students in the rest of Canada are not demonstrating.

 

For better (or worse) the Quebec students seem to have decided that
education should be treated as a public good rather than a private one as
the neo-libs and the economics profession have been hammering away for a
couple of generations and are in this way making connections with the Occupy
Movement and with the broader energies towards redefining  political and
social directions.

 

M

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Arthur Cordell
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2012 6:50 PM
To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION'
Subject: Re: [Futurework] What makes Quebec students 'distinct'?

This makes sense.  

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2012 4:28 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION  
Subject: Re: [Futurework] What makes Quebec students 'distinct'?

 

I suspect that what is happening in Quebec will soon happen in the rest of
Canada and perhaps in the US as well.  In a previous posting, I suggested
that universities have become "holding tanks" for young people who probably
couldn't find the kind of work they're after if they were out in the labour
force and who therefore see universities not only as a safe haven but as a
place in which they can learn something that may be useful later on.
However, as students, they have to pay tuition and room and board, and much
of the money that keeps them going is borrowed. Given the uncertainties that
will beset them when they emerge from the hallowed halls, they want to pay
and borrow as little as possible.  Many, reading the world that is out
there, may have reached the point of being very uncertain about being able
to repay their debts when they graduate, so they march in an effort to keep
their costs down.

 

Universities, on the other hand, are expensive to operate.  One suggestion
aired on TVO's Agenda a couple of nights ago was that universities are too
diverse in what they teach.  They offer far too many subjects.  Perhaps they
could cut costs by specializing much more -- e.g. in a given geographic
area, University A could specialize in law, University B in health sciences,
and University C in the arts, social sciences and humanities.  Would this
work?  Perhaps though perhaps not.  The largest component of university
costs by far is professorial salaries.  You'd still have to pay these.  And
you might miss the cost advantages of having all of your infrastructure in
one place. 

 

Ed

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: "Ray Harrell" < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>

To: "'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION'" <
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>

Sent: Friday, April 27, 2012 1:41 PM

Subject: Re: [Futurework] What makes Quebec students 'distinct'?

 

> PS.   Canada really is becoming more Republican in the American sense.
That
> means you will have poorer health and the magnificent achievement of the
> Canada Council on the Arts will disappear except for the very wealthy as
it
> has here.    The battle is lost here but is raging full force in England
and
> in the old Iron Curtain countries.   The virus is now in Canada as well.
> Wealth as Aristocracy or wealth as private wealth.  If I had to choose
> either I would choose aristocracy.   At least they are a part of the
> government and have the paternalistic ideal of social responsibility for
> their serfs.   That's why we had so many educated and culturally
> sophisticated immigrants in the 19th century.    Even the house slave in
New
> Orleans were treated better than today's non-wealthy youths.   Rent or
own?
> Which do you like?   Personally what I like is irrelevant.   We lost the
> war.   But for the record I think both choices suck!
> 
> REH
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From:  <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected]
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of michael
gurstein
> Sent: Friday, April 27, 2012 10:02 AM
> To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION';
>  <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected]
> Subject: [Futurework] What makes Quebec students 'distinct'?
> 
>
<http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/story/2012/04/26/f-quebec-students-t
u>
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/story/2012/04/26/f-quebec-students-tu
> ition-debate.html?cmp=rss
> 
> 
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