Huff Post Education.png

 

 

South Africa Teachers Union Denounces Pearson

 

 

Alan Singer, Huffington Post Education Blog, USA, 3 September 2015

 

In an August 13, 2015
<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/comment/demand-for-better-skills
-makes-education-the-right-investment-10452935.html> op-ed in the British
newspaper The Economist, Pearson CEO John Fallon declared the company's goal
was "Putting technology to work for the millions of students around the
world unable to access classrooms could be hugely positive for societies
both rich and poor." According to Fallon, "I've travelled all over the world
in my career, and parents everywhere say the same thing - they want to see
greater investment in education so that their children can gain skills, get
better jobs, and succeed in their lives. It's the story of human progress.
This burning desire is what powers better education - and is what Pearson is
now entirely focused on."

 

Well everyone does not agree with Fallon that Pearson's burning desire is
"better education." In fact many around the world suspect the company's
burning desire is to maximize profits with little regard for its impact on
the world's poor.

 

In an  <http://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/ltr_pearson_042315.pdf> open
letter co-signed by educators from around the world,
<http://www.ei-ie.org/en/executive_boards/bio/mugwena_maluleke> Mugwena
Maluleke, General Secretary of the South African Democratic Teachers Union
(SADTU), and a former math teacher and Principal of Tshwane's Rodney Mokoena
Junior Secondary School, accused Pearson of "turning its back on free public
education for all" in its efforts to "commercialise and privatise education
at all levels." According to Maluleke, "Pearson's efforts in the global
south to make education a commodity to be bought and sold is a serious
threat to democracy and will ultimately increase segregation and
marginalisation."

Earlier in August, The Economist
<http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21660063-where-governments-are-faili
ng-provide-youngsters-decent-education-private-sector> touted the rapid
expansion of low-cost private schools in the Third World, especially in
sub-Sahara Africa. The article estimated that private schools education
about 20 percent of the students attending elementary school in these
countries. According to The Economist and the World Bank, "Given the choice
between a free state school where little teaching happens and a private
school where their children might actually learn something, parents who can
scrape together the fees will plump for the latter." The
<http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21660063-where-governments-are-faili
ng-provide-youngsters-decent-education-private-sector> article called for
unleashing "market" forces because "competition" would "over time improve
quality for all." It cited a Chilean voucher system set up under a brutal
dictatorship during the 1980s as its education model.

 

In
<https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/the-problems-with-low-fee-schools?can_i
d=28ad5115d77074e1b2f5276f558dd425&source=email-tell-the-economist-to-correc
t-the-record&email_referrer=tell-the-economist-to-correct-the-record___15607
> response, Maluleke argues that these private for-profit "schools can take
advantage of families who just want what's best for their kids. And they
don't just charge burdensome fees to local families, they also undermine the
education system as a public good. Education is a human right, and a
high-quality education should be free to every child." 

 

The South African Democratic Teachers Union is "fighting for a free system,
accessible for every child, so that families don't have to worry about which
child they can afford to send to a Pearson-backed school. That's what
happens too often with these 'low-fee' schools: A family can only afford to
send one child. No parent should have to choose which child can go to
school."

 

Maluleke and the South African Democratic Teachers Union are supported by
the American Federation of Teachers. The AFT posted an
<https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/the-problems-with-low-fee-schools?can_i
d=28ad5115d77074e1b2f5276f558dd425&source=email-tell-the-economist-to-correc
t-the-record&email_referrer=tell-the-economist-to-correct-the-record___15607
> online petition addressed to The Economist and Pearson.

 

 

From:
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/south-africa-teachers-uni_b_80817
12.html>
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/south-africa-teachers-uni_b_808171
2.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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