CU Summer School #2, Part 3.
See the last clause (16): "Mandates the EI Executive Board to develop a
global response strategy and to launch a global campaign."
This is what we are waiting for.
  _____  


 

 


 



 

The 7th Education International (EI) World Congress

in Ottawa, Canada, from 22nd to 26th July 2015

 

Resolution 1.1

 

Privatisation and commercialisation in and of education

 

Proposed by the Executive Board

 

Original language: English

 

 

1. Reaffirming that education is a fundamental human right and a public
good, and that its provision is the principal responsibility of governments,
including the duties of the State to define the goals and objectives of
education systems of quality and to adequately finance them;

 

2. Noting that privatisation in and of education, in its many forms and
arrangements, is a fast-growing global trend with various, and often
negative, consequences for teachers, education support personnel, students
and society as a whole.

 

3. Noting with concern the increased engagement and promotion of private
actors in education governance (provision, funding, management and
policy-making), coupled with major challenges in terms of educational
access, equity and quality, and the lack of political commitment to the
provision and financing of public education systems in many low- and
middle-income countries;

 

4. Deploring the fact that in many countries, governments have abrogated
their core responsibility to ensure the right to education for all through a
fully accountable free quality public education system, and are increasingly
turning to, or partnering with, or subsidising private actors to deliver
education;

 

5. Regretting that international and national organisations, corporations,
think tanks, NGOs, other private actors and governments alike, are
promoting, proselytising and introducing different forms of privatisation
and commercial provision of education services;

 

6. Observing that education privatisation and commercialisation, has created
and exacerbated, inequalities in access to, and in the quality of,
education, particularly for the socio-economically disadvantaged; and that
wealth, gender, ethnic and geographical inequalities are deepened by
privatisation in and of education, further marginalising and excluding
groups from access to and participation in education;

 

7. Observing that market-based reforms may force schools to compete with
each other instead of collaborating, and lead to stratification, segregation
and further inequality within education systems;

 

8. Considering that private schools and forms of Public-Private Partnerships
may divert funding and support for public schools, thus weakening public
school systems, particularly in contexts where government spending on
education is already low;

 

9. Acknowledging that 'cost-efficient' measures in education may result in
increased class sizes; a reduction in services provided for children; the
use of unqualified teachers; the casualisation of teachers' terms and
conditions of employment, which are detrimental to children and teachers;

 

10. Noting that low-fee private schools, and other private providers, and
some forms of Public- Private Partnerships, frequently employ personnel who
lack training and/or qualifications, or pay them much lower salaries than
those earned by teachers employed in public schools, or deny them freedom of
association and collective bargaining rights;

 

11. Observing that new public management methods, such as performance-based
pay schemes, often part of privatisation policies, alter teachers' working
conditions and undermine their professional status and rights;

 

12. Affirming that teachers' and education support personnel's rights to
decent working conditions, high quality training, fair recruitment and
employment, and quality professional development must be guaranteed;

 

13. Affirming that education unions, as representatives of education
workers, are critically important in ensuring that the potentially negative
effects of privatisation and commercialisation in and of education are
exposed and addressed;

 

14. Referring to the EI Policy Paper on Education adopted by the 6th World
Congress in 2011, and the Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships in Education
Protocol, based on recommendations from the EI Taskforce on Public-Private
Partnerships in Education, adopted by 34th EI Executive Board meeting in
2009;

 

15. The 7th World Congress:

a.      Urges governments to consider education as fundamental for social
development and justice, and, therefore, protect the public education sector
from privatisation and commercialisation;

b.      Calls for a concerted effort from EI and its member organisations to
advocate for the full realisation of the right to free quality public
education and for equitable employment rights for teachers in the private
and the public sector;

c.       Requests EI member organisations to closely monitor emerging
education privatisation policies and the effects of privatisation and
commercialisation on education systems, as well as their impact on students,
teachers, educators and education support personnel, and to advocate and
mobilise against attempts to privatise and commercialise public education;

d.      Urges EI member organisations to organise and defend the rights of
teachers and education support personnel in the private and the public
sector.

 

16. Mandates the EI Executive Board:

a.      To collect, publish and disseminate with the support of member
organisations, evidence on the activities of private actors in the promotion
and implementation of privatisation and commercialisation policies and
practices and the outcomes of their activities;

b.      To develop a global response strategy to ensure governments fulfil
their obligation to free, quality public education and counter the influence
of private actors in education, especially where their activities in
education have a negative impact on access and exacerbates inequities within
education systems;

c.       To launch a global campaign that engages EI affiliates and allies
to respond to the growing outsourcing to, and involvement of, private actors
in education-related activities and services that negatively impact on
teaching and learning;

d.      To provide tools and resources which strengthen the capacity of
affiliates to mobilise effective campaigns to make all policy-makers,
international organisations and other actors fully aware of the detrimental
consequences of different forms of education privatisation and to advocate
for the protection of public education against marketisation and
commodification;

e.      To establish an EI Task Force on Privatisation and Commercialisation
of Education in order to guide, inform and monitor this work and to continue
to develop EI's policy on the privatisation and commercialisation of
education;

f.        To encourage all EI member organisations to engage and mobilise
their memberships, and allies in communities and civil society, in a
pro-active campaign to defend public education and against attempts to
privatise and commercialise education.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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