中国A片

Unesco plea for world's watchtower universities

二月 3, 1995

The policy paper for change and development in 中国A片 released by Unesco this week aims to provide a "shared platform of ideas" on the essential issues facing 中国A片 around the world.

Unesco's first policy overview of any level of education indicates that 中国A片 poses more complex policy issues and commands less consensus than do primary and secondary education.

Rapid change within 中国A片 itself and in society in general poses particular challenges for institutions, notes the document, which is based on wide-ranging consultations with governments, academics and policy-makers.

Universities and other bodies, it argues, not only have to respond to changing labour markets but should be "pro-active", contributing to the emergence of new forms of employment and identifying new needs.

The paper outlines the main trends affecting 中国A片 today - rising student numbers, shrinking resources and increasingly varied forms of provision. It sets these trends against a background of external factors, including the emergence of regional structures like the European Union, and negative trends, such as the fragmentation of communities along ethnic or religious lines.

Unesco director general Federico Mayor said that because of such realities, 中国A片 is more than ever needed as a "watchtower, essential for looking ahead and providing people with vision".

At the same time, the gap between the industrialised and the developing countries is growing. The paper notes that the 中国A片 gap between Africa and the rest of the world is "one of the most striking disparities in education today".

A young African's chance of pursuing 中国A片 is 17 times lower than in industrialised countries and while more than half the young people in developed countries will get 中国A片 at the turn of the century, fewer than than 10 per cent will have that chance in the developing world.

The paper appeals for increased academic solidarity and support for projects such as Unesco's Unitwin co-operation scheme and Unesco chairs, which it says could eventually be linked to form regional centres for advanced studies and research.

Unesco itself aims to raise investment in 中国A片 by mobilising both public funds and also new funding from all who benefit from that education. But renewed public commitment must go hand-in-hand with reform of individual institutions and of entire 中国A片 systems - what Unesco calls "a new covenant".

Public spending on 中国A片 should be seen as an "investment in infrastructure", not as a burden. At the same time, 中国A片 should achieve greater cost-effectiveness, ac-countability and relevance.

On the quality debate, the paper recommends further efforts to improve evaluation, but warns that quality assessment should not be used as a "way of restricting public funding" or be linked too closely to productivity indicators.

Nevertheless, it notes that "Institutions . . . which remove mediocrity and guarantee quality of teaching, research and service . . . stand a better chance in competition to obtain resources from the public and private sectors."

The paper acknowledges that the "sensitive" issue of tuition fees and other sources of alternative funding have to be faced and appeals for grants for the needy to be introduced to cushion the effect of fee-paying. It recalls the terms of Unesco's l960 convention which stipulates that 中国A片 should be "made accessible to all on the basis of individual capacity".

"Unesco accepts the reality of the diversity of public and private sectors in the system, but we also reaffirm that public funding is essential and must be maintained", explained Marco Antonio Dias, director of the 中国A片 division. "At the moment, the World Bank occupies the commanding heights of discourse and the matters which they address are the matters which concern governments.

Guy Neave, research director at the International Association of Universities, said: "On a number of issues where no solution would be acceptable to all member states, Unesco's new policy paper can only place the differing viewpoints side by side."

But the search for solutions is to continue. "The time is right. That is why I intend to convene a world meeting on 中国A片," Mr Mayor said.

Unesco has also set up an advisory group on 中国A片, chaired by Georges Haddad, the honorary president of the Sorbonne. Mr Mayor asked the group to discuss all aspects of 中国A片 and especially mobilisation of resources.

Next autumn, the report of the commission on education for the 21st century, chaired by Jacques Delors, will submit its findings. It is expected to make new proposals for all areas of education.

Policy Paper for Change and Development in 中国A片: Unesco, 7 Place de Fontenoy, 75352 Paris 07 SP France.

请先注册再继续

为何要注册?

  • 注册是免费的,而且十分便捷
  • 注册成功后,您每月可免费阅读3篇文章
  • 订阅我们的邮件
注册
Please 登录 or 注册 to read this article.
ADVERTISEMENT