The Great Brain Race
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The Great Brain Race

How Global Universities Are Reshaping the World

Ben Wildavsky

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eBook - ePub

The Great Brain Race

How Global Universities Are Reshaping the World

Ben Wildavsky

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How global competition for the brightest minds is changing higher education In The Great Brain Race, former U.S. News & World Report education editor Ben Wildavsky presents the first popular account of how international competition for the brightest minds is transforming the world of higher education--and why this revolution should be welcomed, not feared. Every year, nearly three million international students study outside of their home countries, a 40 percent increase since 1999. Newly created or expanded universities in China, India, and Saudi Arabia are competing with the likes of Harvard and Oxford for faculty, students, and research preeminence. Satellite campuses of Western universities are springing up from Abu Dhabi and Singapore to South Africa. Wildavsky shows that as international universities strive to become world-class, the new global education marketplace is providing more opportunities to more people than ever before.Drawing on extensive reporting in China, India, the United States, Europe, and the Middle East, Wildavsky chronicles the unprecedented international mobility of students and faculty, the rapid spread of branch campuses, the growth of for-profit universities, and the remarkable international expansion of college rankings. Some university and government officials see the rise of worldwide academic competition as a threat, going so far as to limit student mobility or thwart cross-border university expansion. But Wildavsky argues that this scholarly marketplace is creating a new global meritocracy, one in which the spread of knowledge benefits everyone--both educationally and economically. In a new preface, Wildavsky discusses some of the notable developments in global higher education since the book was first published.

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Información

Año
2012
ISBN
9781400842001
Categoría
Pedagogía

Chapter One

The Worldwide Race for Talent

When Claire Booyjzsen finished her master’s degree at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, the world was her oyster. Intent on pursuing a PhD in chemistry, she consulted global rankings of universities to identify some of the strongest. Then she conducted more research, corresponding with professors and students to narrow down her list. She ultimately applied to eleven institutions. After the acceptance letters came in, she traveled to Coventry, England, where she is now a third-year doctoral student at the University of Warwick, an institution where one in five students comes from overseas. “It’s really multicultural here,” says Booyjzsen, who works as a tutor in a student dormitory. “I’ve met people from all over the world.”1
A relatively young university—it was founded in 1964—Warwick has become one of Great Britain’s most sought-after institutions. It is also regarded as one of the nation’s most entrepreneurial universities—and one of the most international as well. Warwick has systematically recruited students around the globe. In some instances, such as Booyjzsen’s, its purpose is to search for talent; her studies are supported by a graduate fellowship funded by the university. In others, the search for international intellectual ability comes with a significant financial incentive (though the two are not mutually exclusive, of course). Almost all undergraduate and professional-school students from nations outside the European Union (EU) have “full pay” status. That means they don’t enjoy the huge tuition subsidies received by British and other EU students—and thus represent a significant source of tuition revenues for Warwick and other universities that face declining state funding.
Warwick has attracted its international study body, at least in part, by establishing a network of recruiting offices around the world. Headed in almost every case by Warwick alumni, these outposts can be found in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, New Delhi, Singapore, and many other cities.2 Warwick’s vice chancellor, Nigel Thrift, notes that the university now attracts students not just from major “sender” countries such as India and China but from a total of 120 nations. He downplays the budget-balancing aspect of his university’s recruiting efforts, highlighting instead how the large number of overseas students exposes British students not only to intellectual firepower but also to global diversity. “It’s just an enormous asset to the way the university is,” Thrift says. “It makes it into kind of a little world city. I love that.”3
As Warwick goes, so goes the world: students like Booyjzsen have plenty of company. In recent years, international student mobility has been enormous—and consequential. Nearly 4 million students now study outside their home countries, a number that has risen steeply in a short period. From 2000 to 2009 alone, the number of globally mobile students increased by 85 percent, to 3.7 million, according to the OECD’s annual Education at a Glance report.4 Methods of counting foreign students are imperfect and vary from country to country, but the magnitude of the trend is indisputable. Indeed, the OECD figures (which draw in part on data collected by UNESCO—the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization) understate the amount of foreign study because they include only students who go abroad for more than one year.5
Where are all these students going? Above all, to the United States—by far the world’s biggest magnet for international students. The United States began to assume that role after World War II,6 and consolidated it with the flood of foreign students who came in the 1970s and 1980s to study at research universities that had become the best in the world.7 Today, the U.S. market share of those 3.7 million mobile students worldwide stands at 18 percent, according to Education at a Glance. While that’s a decline—from 23 percent in 2000—it still puts the United States far ahead of its closest competitors, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Germany, which in 2009 played host, respectively, to 10 percent, 7 percent, and 7 percent of those students.8
For international graduate study, U.S. universities are a particularly powerful draw. In certain fields, more than half the PhD students at American universities come from overseas: the percentages are 65 percent in computer science, 65 percent in economics, 64 percent in engineering, 56 percent in physics, and 55 percent in mathematics,9 to cite the best-known examples. Indeed, a recent survey found that China’s Tsinghua and Peking universities surpassed Berkeley as the top sources of students who go on to earn American PhDs.10 One professor of astronomy at a top-ranked U.S. university describes having to resort to “affirmative action for Americans” in order to ensure that his program enrolls more than a token number of native-born doctoral students.
Where do all these international students come from? Of the 572,509 foreign nationals who studied in the United States in 2004, more than half came from Asia; the top five countries of origin were India, China, South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan.11 China and India are the top source countries among Great Britain’s overseas students, making up a combined 69,000 of the 318,390 foreign students who studied in the U.K. in 2005.12 Similarly, India and China are the largest “sender” countries to Australia, which has become a major force in global higher education. It recruits students through an organization known as IDP Education, which has a network of over seventy-five offices in twenty-nine countries that hold education fairs and the like.
France and Germany, while relatively popular, are both considered secondary higher education destinations, and tend to attract students based on their own historical and cultural ties. A large majority of the 265,000 international students enrolled in French universities in 2006 came from Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia.13 Germany, which enrolled nearly 190,000 foreign students in 2008, up 82 percent over the previous decade, attracts Chinese students more than any other nationality. After that, Germany is primarily a destination for Europeans from nations such as Bulgaria, Poland, and Russia.14 It has also attracted substantial numbers of Turkish students.

A GRAND TRADITION

Students of global higher education are unanimous in their view that more students move to more universities around the world today than ever before in world history. “The notion that students can move great distances today, going from nation to nation with great ease, is certainly unprecedented,” says higher education scholar Daniel Fallon, an emeritus professor at the University of Maryland at College Park. “Going back only two hundred years, you had to have passports and visas to go, within a country, from one town to another. What we do today is ridiculously simple compared to that.”15 Nevertheless, while academe has never before seen such widespread movement of students and professors around the world, the history of Western universities has long been marked by student migration. “In the beginning was the Road,” writes French historian Joseph Bédier, describing how the flow of ideas and knowledge in the Middle Ages was made possible by the roads linking ancient cities, which had become the sites of cathedrals and thus centers of learning.16
The first Western universities were located in Paris and Bologna, which began to flourish during what has been called the Renaissance of the twelfth century. Early universities began as scholastic guilds, typically attached to cathedrals, and were called studia generale. Eventually, they came to be referred to as universitas.17 And it did not take long for a version of internationalization to follow. Just as contemporary students’ journeys around the world have been vastly eased by the Internet and cheap airline travel, so too did their predecessors benefit from their own periods’ versions of better transportation and communication networks.
The best early evidence for quite extensive student mobility can be seen in the formation of “student nations” in the early 1220s, in which university students from different parts of Europe joined together for “mutual protection and help according to their home countries or provinces.”18 Birthplace and mother tongue determined a student’s membership in a nation.19 At the University of Paris were four such nations—the French, the Normans, the Picards, and the English.20 Still more diverse was the University of Bologna, which was home to nineteen nations, with students hailing from such disparate areas as Hungary, Poland, Spain, and Germany.21
What accounted for such early significant patterns of mobility at a time when this was far from the norm? Most prosaically, of course, students in areas without universities—Scandinavia, Ireland, and Eastern Europe, for instance22—had no choice but to travel if they wanted to pursue higher studies. “If you were interested in anything scholarly, you took off,” says Fallon. Another incentive to travel in search of learning lies in a set of privileges awarded to traveling scholars in 1158 by Frederick Barbarossa, the Holy Roman Emperor. Known as the authentica Habita, these rules protected individuals traveling to foreign lands to study.23 More broadly, churches and kings across Europe provided foreign students with financial assistance—call it the earliest version of today’s scholarships—in the form of outright aid or inexpensive food and lodging. There was a catch, to be sure—in return for this assistance, students were expected to work for either the state or the Church.24
Then, too, world events had a role to play. Just as wars and revolutions in the past century have led to mass migrations of people and scholars, so the patterns of student movement in the Middle Ages were influenced by the happenings of the day. In 1229, for instance, students in Paris, enmeshed in disputes with local citizens, rioted violently (plus ça change, one is tempted to observe). The result? The king of France dissolved the university for six years, resulting in what one academic termed “The Great Dispersion” of French scholars.25 The king of England, Henry III, like university leaders today who are constantly on the lookout for fresh talent, apparently saw the French contretemps as a recruiting opportunity—he welcomed the exiles from Paris into British universities.
In a similar parallel, just as various modern nations have fretted about brain drain, tried to keep more students at home, and, in some cases, erected barriers to their free movement across borders, so too did their counterparts in the Middle Ages. By the late fourteenth century, student mobility had declined, in part because countries devoted considerable resources to promoting local or regional educational opportunities. In addition, some countries passed laws that excluded from public office any students who had attended foreign universities.26
Still, as the sixteenth century dawned, academic mobility was once again on the rise. This new era of movement across national boundaries and exchange of ideas is personified by the travels of Desiderius Erasmus, the Dutch Renaissance scholar and Catholic theologian. Something of an itinerant student and academic, Erasmus studied at the University of Paris and the University of Cambridge. He also spent time at universities in Italy, Germany, Belgium, and Switzerland.27 So renowned was his contribution to international academic exchange that some 450 years after his death, the EU initiated the Erasmus program, which is intended to facilitate such exchange between students and teaching staff in European universities.
For all the circulation of students and ideas that characterized the first six centuries of Western research universities, it wasn’t until the nineteenth century that foreign students began to flock in large numbers to the country that would become the birthplace of the modern research university: Germany. The nation hadn’t previously been a big draw for foreign students. On the outbound side, it sent several thousand students to Bologna and Paris from the thirteenth to fifteenth centuries.28 But Charles IV significantly stemmed the flow of German students abroad by founding the University of Prague in 1347. (The new university was also an early instrument of meritocracy: “From this time on,” writes historian Helene Wieruszowski, “education became a social leveler with the slogan ‘career open to merit.’ ”) By the beginning of the fifteenth century, the University of Prague was a distinctly cosmopolitan institution, attracting some 2,000 foreign students to its community of about 4,000 scholars.29
German universities became particularly attractive to foreigners—not only as a study destination but also as a model for replication—with the founding of the University of Berlin (later Humboldt University) in 1820. The father of the German university is widely considered to be Prussian education reformer Wilhelm von Humboldt, who was committed to the proposition that a university should be a place that encouraged scholars to conduct research without government interference.30 As a result of their emphasis on advancing research while also promoting technical and vocational education, the universities in Berlin and other German cities emerged as major destinations for international students by the end of the nineteenth century.31
The numbers are not large by today’s standards, but they made up a not-insignificant share of enrollment. In 1900, for instance, 1,750 foreign students were enrolled at German universities, accounting for 7.6 percent of all tertiary enrollment in the country. A few years later, those numbers had grown considerably, with particularly heavy enrollment from Europe. In 1910, 4,646 Europeans were studying in Germany. Half were natives of Russia, while others came from Austria-Hungary, Switzerland, Bulgaria, and Romania. German universities even drew students from parts of Africa and Asia.32
While many of the students initially drawn to Germany were European, Americans, too, soon became a significant source of foreign enrollment. In 1911, American students made up 4.6 percent of overseas enrollment at German universities. At the most popular institut...

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