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July 4, and the glass art shown on pages 812-816,
remind us that freedom is fragile. Through their
governments, citizens of democracies have traditionally made strong
commitments to education on grounds that without it
individuals would not be able to act responsibly and to make
wise decisions in voting booths and public meetings. All
citizens have a stake in everyone's education, because a
better-educated citizenry benefits all of society. In this country such a
commitment has produced a system of public schools and
public universities that offers opportunities to many who
otherwise could not afford a level of education commensurate with
their talents. But there are signs that this commitment to
public education is flagging.
Many students, teachers, and administrators view
education as merely a way to enhance personal prosperity.
How often have you heard the statistic that a college
education pays for itself through increased earning power, even if it
costs $20,000-30,000 per year? Investing in education pays off
just as investing in the stock market does, provided you wait
long enough. Attending a better school gets you a better job
and a better income. In other words, a certified level of
education is a commodity--something that is useful and can
be turned to commercial advantage.
Viewing education as a commodity has several
consequences. First, if education is a means to better
employment rather than better citizenship, why should anyone pay for
it other than the person who benefits? Why should I pay
taxes to help someone else get a better job when I could be
spending the money for my own benefit? Education as a
commodity makes such attitudes reasonable, though not
commendable, and the result is lessened support for public education.
Second, those who supply education as an
economic good should be rewarded, and those who are much better
at educating should be rewarded much more. Hence the
fear of Arthur Levine, president of Teachers College,
Columbia University (1), that a commercial firm will hire the best
faculty from the most prestigious universities and offer an
"all-star degree over the Internet". The Internet might do for
education what television did for sports: eliminate a lot of
minor-league players and make billionaires out of those at
the very top of the profession.
Third, education as a commodity implies that
faculty and/or institutions might be able to turn a profit by
selling their wares in national and world markets
(2). A Harvard law professor, for example, sells videotapes of his lectures
to an online law school. Columbia, Stanford,
Carnegie-Mellon, the London School of Economics and Political Science,
and the University of Chicago form an academic partnership
with UNext.com (3). As part of their normal duties,
business-school faculty members contribute online courses and
lessons, the academic-partner universities reap the benefits,
and then the institutions compensate faculty accordingly. In
the first example the individual owns the commodity and in
the second the institution does, with faculty providing works
for hire. At many colleges and universities a somewhat
unseemly scramble is going on to define who has the rights to what.
Some think that education is a sufficiently valuable
commodity to serve as a marketing come-on
(4). For example, notHarvard.com (5) develops Web-based courses that are
offered free by other Web sites that want to attract
customers. According to its founder, Michael Rosenfelt, "Education
has always been at the basis of commerce. Sellers need to
teach and buyers want to learn." In February of this
year, Metrowerks, which markets software tools for
programmers, began offering notHarvard.com courses on its
CodeWarriorU site (6). One course requires purchase of Metrowerks
Code Warrior software, which is the subject of the course. By
the end of February the courses had attracted enrollment of
more than 2000, though one student noted that the
CodeWarriorU course carried no academic credit and would probably not
be accepted by traditional colleges or universities.
If education is good, is free education better? If
online education is perceived as a marketing tool, rather than
an attempt to enable students to develop their own skills,
expertise, perceptions, and philosophies, will that reduce
the value of any kind of education? Is requiring my students
to purchase a textbook written by myself or a friend less
reprehensible than requiring them to view advertising or
purchase a product to participate in a course? Will universities
develop business plans to exploit their intellectual resources? Will
they forfeit the education game to a knowledge industry and
move in the direction of becoming research institutes?
These and many similar questions are being resolved
by a flurry of activity involving business, government,
venture capitalists, the Internet, educational institutions, and
individual teachers. In the next few years there may be
profound changes in how students are educated in this country
and throughout the world. Only if we teachers commit
ourselves to supporting the best possible education and to
encouraging our students, colleagues, and administrators to do
the same, are those changes likely to be in the best
long-term interest of our society and ourselves. Education is
extremely valuable, but it is much more than a commodity and
certainly not a come-on. It is crucial that we renew our
commitment to the ideal that education itself, not concomitant
financial gain, rewards both individuals and our entire culture.
Literature Cited
- Levine, A. New York
Times, March 13, 2000, p A25.
- Heterick, R.;
Twigg, C. The Learning Marketspace, March 1, 2000
(http://www.center.rpi.edu/LForum/LdfLM.html; accessed May 2000).
- http://Unext.com/unext-index.jsp
(accessed May 2000)
- Guernsey, L. New York Times, March 16, 2000, pD1.
- http://notHarvard.com
(accessed May 2000)
- http://www.codewarrioru.com
(accessed May 2000)
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