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	<title>Higher Education in Transition</title> 
	<subtitle>An Agenda for Discussion</subtitle> 
	<availability status="free">Copyright 1999 Electronic Journal of Sociology</availability>
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 <author>
	<name>
	 <first>Roberto Rodriguez</first>
	 <last>Gomez</last>
	</name>
	<address>
	 <email>roberto@servidor:unam.mx</email>
	 <organisation>Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México</organisation>
	 <division>Centro de Estudios Sobre la Universidad Coordinación de Humanidades</division>
	</address>
</author>
 <author>
	<name>
	 <first>Mike</first>
	 <last>Sosteric</last>
	</name>
	<address>
	 <email>mikes@athabascau.ca</email>
	 <organisation>Athabasca University</organisation>
	 <division>Department of Global and Social Analysis</division>
	</address>
</author>

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	<idno type="issn">1198 3655</idno>
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	<name><full>Athabasca University</full></name>
	<address><street>1 University Drive</street><city>Athabasca</city>
	 <province>Alberta</province><postalcode>SOG OWO</postalcode>
	 <email>mikes@athabascau.ca</email>
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<h2>Introduction</h2>

<p>Following the Second World War, higher education in Mexico 
began a process of modernisation and diversification that when 
completed had fundamentally altered the profile of the 
traditional university. The end result was a system of education 
in Mexico that was much more sophisticated (administratively, 
managerially, and academically), complex and diversified, and 
that offered significantly more options for education and 
training than the system prior to WWII. Significantly, this gave 
new social groups access to higher education for the first time 
thereby redefining the social profile of the student body (De 
Ibarrola, 1982; Rodríguez, 1996). However in recent years these 
early progressive developments have been threatened by shifts in 
the ideological, political, and social spheres. New 
contingencies, including reduced government funding and a shift 
in program emphasis, bring new challenges that must be 
acknowledged and discussed in Mexico is to continue to build on 
its past successes.</p>

<p>Prior to such a discussion, however, it is necessary to review 
the history and development of higher education in Mexico. It is 
possible to discern two basic stages in the development of a 
modern system of education in Mexico from the postwar period to 
the present (Fuentes, 1983; Ibarrola, 1986; Kent, 1992; Padua, 
1994; Villaseñor, 1994; and Varela, 1996). The first phase began 
in the 1950s, continued until the end of the '80s, and coincided 
roughly with post WWII president Miguel Aleman's massive public 
works investments (Smith and Skidmore, 1992). Aleman's intent had 
been to foster economic development and industrialisation. In 
addition to the development of the basic infrastructure of Mexico 
following WWII (roads, dams, communications, etc.), significant 
investment was directed into expanding Mexico's educational and 
intellectual infrastructure. This desire to modernise Mexico's 
infrastructure and expand economic development continued in 1952 
with the appointment of Aleman's successor, Ruiz Cortines (1952-
1958) and López Mateos (1958-1964).</p>

<p>The numbers reflect the infrastructure expansion. During the 
'50s, the number of public universities doubled. Before 1950 
there were twelve institutions ranked as universities in Mexico, 
<endnotenumber>1</endnotenumber>  including the National 
Polytechnical Institute. <endnotenumber>2</endnotenumber>  
Between 1950 and 1960, 13 additional public universities were 
established throughout the country  
<endnotenumber>3</endnotenumber>  and in 1953 the National 
Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)  
<endnotenumber>4</endnotenumber> inaugurated its university city 
campus. In these early years, the conditions for advanced 
scientific research were also established and the role of 
"professional academic worker" (researchers and 
professors) was defined. Prior to this expansion, the 
"academic worker" was primarily a part-time hourly 
wage worker. This arrangement was not conducive to ongoing 
scientific discovery and development. Post 1950 however, full-
time jobs were created for professors and researchers thereby de-
proleterianizing the research establishment. This was an 
essential step towards creating a vibrant intellectual 
infrastructure in Mexico.</p>

<p>The degree of expansion can be more fully grasped by 
considering that in 1950, the student population in Mexico at the 
undergraduate level was under 30,000. This figure represented, at 
that time, 1.3 percent of the eligible student population between 
20 to 24 years of age. Only six years later, enrolment had 
doubled! This is a dramatic expansion in services. By 1960 there 
were more than 80,000 students at the undergraduate level
<inline><graphic>table1.jpg</graphic><anchor>(see table one).</anchor><caption>Table One: Enrollment</caption></inline></p>

<p>As can be seen from the above table, during the '60s the 
rapid expansion of the university infrastructure in Mexico 
continued. Over the two decades between 1950 and the end of the 
'60s, there was a high annual growth rate of 9.7 percent. Four 
more universities were founded in that period  
<endnotenumber>5</endnotenumber>  and despite the fact that 
universities where being established outside Mexico City to meet 
regional demand (a significant increase in educational access), 
more than half of university enrolment at the end of the 1960s 
remained in the capital city. During this time, universities in 
Mexico were further reformed and the gaze of academics turned 
outward. At that time, various changes were initiated that both 
consolidated the strength of academic institutions and began an 
internationalisation of Mexican education that has continued to 
this day.</p>

<p>The internationalisation of Mexican higher education had two 
components. First, during the 60s the National University (UNAM) 
provided an integrating function for many institutions in Central 
and South America. Students from all over the region came to the 
National University seeking graduate degrees. And though many 
countries, particularly in the Southern Cone (Argentina, Brazil, 
Chile, Uruguay) had solid Higher Educational Systems, many others 
benefited directly as UNAM graduates took their knowledge and 
expertise back to their own countries (primarily Central America 
and Columbia, Peru and Venezuela). In this way, educational 
standards set by UNAM were spread throughout the region.</p>

<p>Education in Mexico internationalised in another sense. Since 
the early 60s, the Mexican higher educational system has become 
more sensitive to significant international trends. A number of 
factors contributed to this growing sensitivity. On the one hand, 
curricula expansion and the strengthening of graduate studies 
turned the attention of scholars to developments in other 
countries. This made students and their instructors sensitive to 
international trends and allowed development in other countries 
to percolate through the institutional structure in Mexico. 
Another significant factor was the development of faculty 
training and study programs that allowed, and even encouraged, 
international scholarship or student exchange. In short, Mexican 
universities participated in wider social and political shifts 
that attempted to leverage infrastructure development that 
occurred in the '50s towards greater participation in the global 
process of development and industrialisation (Urquidi and Lajous, 
1967; King et al., 1972; Castrejón, 1996; Fuentes, 1983). This is 
not to say that local concerns were ignored. The 
internationalisation of Mexican education occurred within the 
guiding framework that research should contribute to Mexican 
economic, social and cultural development.</p>

<p>One of the more interesting aspects of the '60s expansion and 
internationalisation of higher education in Mexico was the 
general willingness to innovate and experiment that emerged among 
academics and students. The expansion of student enrolment, the 
strength of the student left, and a willingness to explore the 
contours of social change manifested itself in a flowering of 
critical pedagogy in late '60s and early '70s. For example, a 
trend towards critical or radical pedagogy emerged that found 
inspiration in a number of intellectual currents including the 
work of French Structuralists like Bourdieu. Probably the most 
famous example of the theory in action is the work of Paulo 
Freire (Freire, 1994; Freire, 1993; Gadotti, 1994). Freire's 
pedagogy was a highly efficient literacy method that did away 
with the class hierarchy and authoritarianism implicit in what he 
called the "banking" method of education. By doing 
away with these structures of oppression, Freire was able to 
capture the heart of those involved in the pedagogical process. 
This created an environment highly conducive to learning. As 
Gadotti (1994: 18) notes :</p>
<blockquote>The participation of the learning subject 
in the process of the construction of knowledge is not 
just more democratic, but it proves to be more 
efficient. Different from the traditional conception of 
the school, which is based on methods centered on the 
teacher's authority, Paulo Freire shows that new 
methods, in which teachers and pupils learn together, 
are more efficient.</blockquote>
<p>The problem with these new pedagogies, as Freire learned after 
he was exiled from Brazil, was they were highly political and 
highly successful politically. Their success depended on teachers 
immersing themselves in the life world of the student and using 
issues and concerns relevant to the students as grist for the 
educational mill. Freire's approach effectively politicized 
students. As a result of the effectiveness of these methods, 
significant change in pedagogical strategy was resisted and 
pedagogical technologies remained conservative and based on 
"banking methods" like lectures, regurgitation of 
facts, attainment of objectives, and so on.</p>

<p>The 1970s continued the cycle of expansion. This decade was 
characterised by generalised growth of the educational system and 
an unprecedented expansion in the number of students, professors, 
support workers and facilities. This rapid expansion posed, not 
surprisingly, significant challenges for universities. In fact, 
changes were so profound that institutions were forced to rethink 
their policies and practices. This renewal, which also included 
significant expansion in institutional services and institutional 
employment in professional, administrative and support roles, 
contributed to further synergistic expansion.  
<endnotenumber>6</endnotenumber> The administrative response to 
the challenge of managing a burgeoning educational system was 
through the implementation of standardised formulas for the 
performance of academic and administrative activities, and the 
adoption of a general standards framework to be applied to all 
Mexican institutions.</p>

<p>The expansion of higher education in Mexico, initiated after 
WWII, began to draw to a close in the early '80s (Villaseñor, 
1994; Padua, 1994; Arredondo, 1995; Kent, 1995; Rodríguez Gómez, 
1995). From that point on things have changed significantly. 
Universities have, for example, experimented with different 
modalities of delivery. This has meant an attempt to open more 
avenues of access to university education - a so called 
"open university." This open university corresponds 
roughly to the distance-ed model familiar elsewhere and consists 
basically of self-paced instruction, coupled with tutorial 
services and administrative monitoring of the learning 
process.</p>

<p>In addition to experimentation with different modalities, the 
vocational orientation of the school population has changed. 
Compared to strictly academic disciplines, the technical side of 
higher education in Mexico has enjoyed a much higher rate of 
growth. In addition, while the enrolment distribution in most 
major areas of knowledge has remained stable, there has emerged 
new disciplinary focuses in fields of applied sciences, 
technology and computer science. In addition, new academic majors 
and graduate programs were created which focused mostly on 
"marketable" disciplines. This echoes the neo-liberal 
changes to the education system that has been initiated in all 
developed countries since the shift to the right began in the 
early '80s (Sosteric, Ratkovic and Gismondi, 1998; Roberts, 
1998). At the same time the demand for the traditional applied 
disciplines like law, accounting, administration, medicine and 
civil engineering, became stronger. The shift in educational 
preferences towards marketable disciplines, as opposed to the 
liberal arts and sciences, is clear.</p>

<p>Another significant trend since the late '70s has been the 
shift in the balance between the public and private systems of 
education in Mexico. During this period, for example, the number 
of new private institutions expanded rapidly. This is a 
significant trend and it is important to keep a close eye on the 
development of alternatives outside the public sector for at 
least two reasons. First, this expansion of private sector 
educational facilities suggests that the private sector is 
gearing up to replace (or at least supplement significantly) the 
traditional education system in Mexico. While many might not see 
this as a threat, preferring instead to focus on the fact that 
this reduces the public cost of education, still it is important 
to note that shifts in the balance might have a significant 
impact on both the form and content of the higher education 
system in Mexico.</p>

<p>What might this impact be? It is certainly to soon to tell. 
However arguably, there is a potential to significantly alter the 
availability of certain types of education in Mexico. Typically, 
private institutions are limited both in terms of course 
offerings, and also in terms of the provision of facilities and 
human resources. Private institutions, operated on the profit 
model, tend to provide "practical" courses geared 
towards the requirements of the labour market and capital. There 
is less concern with liberal arts, philosophy, and basic 
research. Also, as some have pointed out, the shift to short-term 
market orientated education could potentially undermine the long 
term competitiveness of a countries scientific infrastructure 
(Sosteric, Ratkovic and Gismondi, 1998) by removing incentives to 
engage in critical basic research.</p>

<p>During this period there were also shifts in the way 
universities were administered. The dynamism and pedagogical and 
administrative creativity characteristic of the previous decade 
had evaporated from institutional reform in Mexico by the mid 
eighties. Universities shifted from long-term planning to short 
term administrative goals that could be achieved quickly and 
monitored easily with superficial ex-post facto evaluation 
formulas and productivity incentives. During the expansion phase 
(1950s to 1980s), as already noted, Mexican education grew in 
almost every respect. The main administrative challenge during 
this period was controlling this growth. This involved regulation 
and planning to ensure the sensible maturation of the educational 
system. Beginning in the 1980s, however, the system went into 
financial crises and the focus of the administration became 
dealing with the constriction of resources. Attempts to deal with 
the new contingencies meant evolving various control, evaluation 
and selective promotion strategies.</p>

<p>These then are the broad changes that the institution of 
higher education in Mexico has undergone since WWII. Following a 
thirty year period of rapid expansion in facilities and access, 
the educational system then began a process of constriction and 
change in the 1980s. There is no simple explanation for the 
direction of these changes. Many factors are involved. In order 
to get a clear picture of the reasons behind these shifts, we 
have to examine the politics of education in Mexico. To be 
specific, we need to include in our analysis an examination of 
the interests of a) the state; b) the general population; c) 
faculty members, students and workers within the institutions; 
and d) the international community. It is only by understanding 
the confluence of these influences and the needs of each of these 
sectors that administrators can hope to develop a comprehensive 
response to current shifts in the system.</p>

<h2>The Political Economy of Higher Education</h2>

<p>As noted above, one of the primary reasons for the expansion 
of the educational system following WWII was the undeniable 
priority that the Mexican government gave to infrastructure 
development and educational reform. During that period there was 
a great desire among the political elite to see Mexico modernise 
and develop and it was felt, correctly, that one of the principle 
infrastructure components for fostering modernisation was a 
healthy education system.</p>

<p>However besides the general interest in expansion of the 
educational system, other factors conspired to push the agenda 
for educational reform. For example, the middle class 
constituency of Mexico, which had been created as a result of 
prior urbanisation and expansion, had a strong desire to see 
avenues of upward mobility expanded. Of course, one of the 
principle avenues for upward mobility is an open and advanced 
education system. So, as the new middle class grew in power, they 
increasingly threw their weight behind educational reform. As a 
class, the middle classes principally favoured the growth of 
basic and secondary education. However, as the numbers attending 
school gradually expanded, the supply of students who were 
capable of, and interested in, getting a university education 
also grew. Ultimately this growing demand put pressure on the 
government to expand provision higher education.</p>

<p>The ability of the educational system to provide avenues for 
upward mobility was also used to good effect for political 
purposes. Following the 1968 crises when President Díaz Ordaz 
sent troops to campus to quell a student uprising, the executive 
branch needed to reestablish its authority and political prestige 
among the middle class and intellectuals (Zermeño, 1981; 
Bartolucci and Rodríguez Gómez, 1983; Varela, 1996). They did 
this in the typical fashion by promoting the assimilation of 
dissident groups through co-optation into the state sector. The 
government did this by providing educational opportunities but 
also, and perhaps more importantly, by providing expanded 
employment opportunities in the public administration. In this 
way dissident intellectuals were removed from active political 
opposition. While not totally silenced, at least when they were 
working for the government they could be more easily monitored 
and controlled.</p>

<p>Government initiatives towards the expansion of higher 
education also fell in line with the then extant international 
consensus regarding the need to expand the social and technical 
infrastructure to encourage development. This broad international 
consensus translated into financing for educational projects from 
international agencies like the World Bank, the Interamerican 
Development Bank and private foundations such as Ford, 
Rockefeller and Mellon. As Rocío Llarena (1991: 57) notes:</p>
<blockquote>The orchestration of this strategy (support 
for educational programs) was carried out by 
international agencies such as the Interamerican 
Development Bank, the International Bank for 
Reconstruction and Development, and the Agency for 
International Development. To this end, large amounts 
of funds for education were transferred in the form of 
loans, grants, scholar ships, etc. In this matter 
between 1965 and 1975, 451.9 million dollars were 
transferred to educational systems in Latin American 
countries.</blockquote>
<p>As the educational system expanded, internal pressure for 
expansion also grew. Inside the academy, an openness and 
willingness to experiment with creative administrative and 
pedagogical solutions paralleled the expansionary phase. This 
willingness was in part spurred by the perception of those inside 
the academy that there was a need for reform. It has already been 
noted that pedagogical experimentation was a feature of these 
reforms. Here it is worthwhile pointing out that reform also 
meant curriculum reform. This meant that educators were updating 
old programs and developing new programs. The growing 
availability of education "potential" put pressure on 
administrators and the government for expanded educational 
infrastructure to realise that potential.</p>

<p>The question at this point is, if there was such broad based 
support for educational expansion (from the public sector, from 
the middle classes, from the intelligentsia, and from the 
international monetary and development community), why was there 
an abrupt about face initiated in 1982. It is impossible to 
understand this shift without also understanding shifting 
politics and ideologies. To put it simply, the change in focus 
was directly related to broader ideological shifts (i.e., towards 
neoliberalism). In nations like the U.S.A. and Canada this 
ideological move was spurred by the general crises of 
accumulation that occurred in the mid 70s and early 80s. In fact, 
the economic and political conditions radically changed. Support 
for the Keynesian welfare state, and for forms of redistributive 
justice, disappeared in elite circles by the end of the 1970s. 
This was because the energy crises, internationalisation of 
capital, declining national growth and international competition 
made it difficult to sustain liberal democracy (Teeple, 1995) As 
Teeple (1995: 1) notes:</p>
<blockquote>The 1980s was a watershed decade, a turning 
point in the history of capitalism. It was a period 
that witnessed the beginning of the end of a vast 
system of collective or state property in the so-called 
socialist countries, the establishment of computer-
aided modes of production and distribution, the arrival 
of the global economy, and the adoption around the 
world of neo-liberal policies whose principle was the 
unrestrained economic power of private property. The 
decade signified the beginning of what has been called 
the triumph of capitalism (Teeple, 1995: 
1)</blockquote>
<p>In Mexico, the shift was catalysed by an economic crisis in 
the early 80s under the administration of president Miguel de la 
Madrid´s. As in other nations, Mexico attempted to deal with the 
accumulation crises by adopting a conservative financial and 
fiscal policy. As elsewhere (Canada, U.S.A., New Zealand, 
Britain, Australia, and countries in Latin America), these 
policies emphasised the reduction of public administration, 
reduction of public spending, privatisation of government 
services and the streamlining of institutions and bureaucracies. 
The extent of the crises is apparent from the fact that in 1982, 
when Miguel de la Madrid became president, the public sector was 
going through an unprecedented budget deficit equivalent to 18% 
of GDP. The Central Banks reserves were virtually exhausted and 
public and private investment reached an almost total halt 
(INEGI, 1994: 745...).</p>

<p>In this context of crises and fiscal restraint, funding for 
education changed dramatically. The percentage of the national 
budget assigned to education was severely cut back. Whereas in 
the 1970s the percentage of the government budget devoted to 
education oscillated between 30-40%, during the 1980s this 
percentage fell to 20% (INEGI, 1994). In addition to this fiscal 
restraint, the way the money was spent changed. Public investment 
was shifted to concentrate primarily on making up for the 
deficiencies in elementary education, and to a lesser degree, on 
developing increasing the technological focus on secondary 
education. Development of a publicly supported higher educational 
system became a secondary priority for government.</p>

<p>A critical component of the government response to the cash 
and accumulation crises was an attempt to shift the way the 
labour force was trained. Rather than providing occupational 
training for high level services and technology jobs through 
university education (as was the standard in the past), the goal 
was now to create an educational system that could turn students 
out into the workforce with the appropriate technical skills but 
without having to send them to universities. Basically, primary 
and secondary education were to be reformed to take into account 
the new requirements of capital and the labour market.</p>

<p>This is significant and perhaps marks a shift in the way the 
elite conceptualises the role of the educational system. It is 
well understood that with the advance of technology, capital has 
required an ever more expanded pool of skills. In the past, 
universities have been primarily responsible for providing 
training in these higher skills. However, university education is 
an expensive way to provide skills and as more and more 
individuals seek to acquire these skills, the cost to capital 
(through taxation) becomes prohibitive (especially in the context 
of global competition). A reasonable solution therefore would be 
to attempt to reduce the cost of providing skills to the 
workforce by restricting access to universities (through funding 
cuts) and by expanding basic technological education. This basic 
tech-ed would be much less costly because it would not come with 
the liberal arts and basic scientific skills that universities 
have attempt to transfer in the past (and which cost dearly in 
terms of additional hours of study).</p>

<p>These formulas for change in Mexico are congruent with the 
change of priorities evident in the policy shift of international 
organisations such as UNESCO, the IDB and the World Bank. These 
institutions recommended, not surprisingly, that funds be 
channelled to basic and technological education. As noted above, 
the goal of the shift in the education system has, at its centre, 
the efficient provision of a technologically literate work force. 
It is much like the way primary education was used during the 
industrial revolution to transfer basic skills to the workforce. 
The difference now is that the basic skill set needed by the 
average worker has changed. Rather than see the scarce resources 
of higher education utilised for the provision of basic skills, 
government and capital want to "refit" the primary 
and secondary education system to be more in line with current 
labour market requirements. It makes perfect sense.</p>

<p>This thinking and strategy is particularly evident in the 
creation of a private educational system servicing the labour 
market requirements of capital. For example, during the 1980s in 
Mexico, the number of private educational institutions - which 
provided a basic technological skill set without the 
"frills" of a university education - expanded 
rapidly. During the decade, almost 50 private institutions have 
been inagurated. In this period the public sector added only one 
new university (in the state of Quintana Roo), a dozen higher 
education technological institutes, and about 30 universidades 
tecnológicas (that offer an intermediate degree after 3 years of 
education). Note that what public sector expansion has occurred 
has been, significantly, in the provision of technological 
education.</p>

<p>The creation of new schools in the private sector, and the 
consolidation and expansion of those created during the previous 
decade has shifted the balance between public and private 
entities significantly. The proportion of students registered in 
public schools, a figure that remained unchanged during the 80s, 
fell to 80.9% in 1992. In 1995, just 3 years latter, the 
percentage had dropped even further to 78%. 
<endnotenumber>7</endnotenumber></p>

<p>The shift in strategies is also apparent in the ongoing shift 
in disciplinary areas. Since the middle of the 1980s, there has 
been a drop in enrolment in the fields of agricultural sciences, 
the natural and exact sciences, and the health sciences. In 1989, 
agricultural sciences had an enrolment of 65,000 students, or 
6.2% of the total enrolment. This had dropped to less than 3% by 
1994. Declines in enrolment have been a featured part of the 
experience of the natural and exact sciences, though at a slower 
pace. In 1989 these fields accounted for 2.7% of total enrolment. 
The figure was only 1.9% in 1994. A similar trend is observed in 
health sciences. Between 1989 and 1994 its participation rates 
dropped from 11% to 9.5%. It is worth noting that in all three 
fields, total enrolment in 1994 was less than in 1989.</p>

<p>The administrative and management-related fields have 
maintained their growth tendencies. During the 1990s, slightly 
more than 50% of all students were enrolled in degree programs in 
these areas. An analysis based on specific academic disciplines 
shows that this expansion is due to increased demand in 
accounting, administrative and computer related fields.  
<endnotenumber>8</endnotenumber> In the areas of engineering and 
technological education, there has also been a slight increase in 
recent years. The average annual growth rate has been 3.5%. This 
is due to the enormous demand for professional development in 
computer science related disciplines.</p>

<h2>An Agenda for Discussion</h2>

<p>In the international debate  <endnotenumber>9</endnotenumber> 
over the desirable innovations for universities, there is a 
notorious consensus regarding the fundamental problems - 
coverage, quality, and the "relevance" of education. 
Here relevance is a code word that refers to how well the system 
is meeting the labour market requirement of capitalism. In the 
new ideological environment, education reform that makes the 
system more "relevant" is taken to be a solution to 
economic crisis and a key step towards achieving autonomous 
technological development. Presumably, creating workers who fit 
into the niches provided them by the system will enable the 
system to run as smoothly and efficiently as possible.</p>

<p>These shifts are hardly unique to Mexico. Most other nations 
have engaged in educational reform. And like most other nations, 
there has been very little critical discussion about the long 
term implications of these fundamental educational reforms. That 
is, there has not been any significant degree of critical 
discussion on whether or not these trends are an improvement, or 
whether current trends should be shaped in new, or modified 
directions. It is the task of this paper now to raise some 
questions regarding the long term efficacy of current educational 
trends and perhaps engage a larger international discussion on 
the more profound implications of educational reform.</p>

<p>Most of the discussion that should be taking place, but is 
not, revolves around the form and content of educational 
expansion. It should be obvious from the above that even the 
elite are not concerned with reducing educational opportunities. 
The expansion of private alternatives and the growth of technical 
education in the public sector is an indication of this. Thus it 
can be said that there is general agreement that education needs 
to be expanded. What is not agreed on is how that educational 
expansion should occur. Up until now, it has been the agenda of 
the governing elites (primarily in the developed nations like 
U.S.) which have set the agenda for educational reform.</p>

<p>Now it is time to question that agenda. We need to ask about 
the nature and scope of educational expansion. Numerous questions 
present themselves - all of which need critical attention. If 
universities are to continue to grow in Mexico and elsewhere, 
under what conditions should this growth take place? Will 
pedagogy need to change to meet 21th century conditions? And if 
so, how? Whose responsibility is the financing of the expansion 
and modernisation of universities? Can quality be assured despite 
the gradual privatisation of educational offerings? Does the 
shift away from liberal education and basic research undermine 
the long term ability of innovate? Addressing these questions 
immediately is an absolutely essential step if Mexico is to 
successfully realise progressive educational reform. In the final 
pages of this paper, we will point to some of the challenges that 
face the institution of Mexican higher education as we approach 
the 21th century.</p>

<p>Coverage and quality. The dynamics of change over the past 
decade created a bewildering variety and combinations of academic 
institutions. Differences in size and quality, ranging from large 
institutions with satisfactory levels of quality to very small 
entities with questionable standards, and any number of 
combinations between these extremes, are evident. In the past the 
discourse on educational policy placed coverage and quality as 
alternatives to each other. In the new environments it is 
imperative that both these objectives be reaffirmed otherwise we 
risk abandoning educational standards in favour of meeting the 
short term labour market requirements of capital. This has 
potentially negative long term implications, especially for 
countries like Mexico which compete with the industrial might of 
the U.S and Canada. Forsaking quality education may mean 
undermining our ability to innovate and reinvigorating a legacy 
of technological dependence.</p>

<p>In the context of coverage and quality it is also important to 
consider whether or not these twin objectives are attainable in 
the context of declining educational funding. Efficient 
educational systems and creative administrative reform can go 
only so far in adapting to changed funding environments. 
Therefore it is imperative that we examine the funding limits 
beyond which quality education cannot advance without critical 
deterioration.</p>

<p>Equality, equity and quality. The objective of equality refers 
to the capacity of the higher education system to offer 
opportunities for advanced education to all those persons who 
meet the necessary academic qualifications, regardless of their 
social status, sex, age, or any other social or cultural 
condition. The ability to offer equal opportunities to all 
requires that supply be tuned to demand. This is a difficult task 
to achieve given the many pressures exerted by demographic 
shifts, educational policy at the elementary and middle school 
levels, and the shifting demands of capital and the labour 
market.</p>

<p>In Mexico, despite decades of expansion, there is still 
significant untapped demand. Less than 15% of eligible young 
people have access to higher education. Creating an equitable 
education system obviously means expanding demand and access. 
However despite recent expansion in the educational system (for 
example dramatic expansion of private provision of education), 
access to education continues to be stratified. Now however the 
stratification is more subtle. Some class groupings, while they 
have some expanded access to higher education, only have access 
to poor quality education outside of universities and outside of 
governmental regulations and standards. Thus, the neoliberal 
policy of allowing the unregulated expansion of private 
alternatives has created a two-tiered educational system. The key 
questions to be discussed here include discussions of not only 
the morality of a two tiered system but also the loss of human 
potential that arises as a result of streaming otherwise 
qualified individuals out of the upper tier of the education 
system.</p>

<p>Mexico, like most other countries, cannot afford to waste 
human talent and potential. Especially in the context of 
globalisation and increased competition, tapping the full 
potential of Mexico's human resource is critical for economic and 
social transformation and survival. Curtailing the development of 
higher levels of expertise potentially leaves Mexico dependent on 
external knowledge and unable to compete with industrial 
juggernauts. Therefore it is important to question whether or not 
the creation of a two tiered system adequately addresses the 
needs of all sectors in Mexico.</p>

<p>One possible solution out of the current difficulties that 
would leave space for private involvement at the same time that 
it reduces the potential negative outcomes of a two tiered system 
would involve significantly strengthening the accreditation 
bodies and procedures that authorise institutions to operate. By 
requiring all educational institutions to adhere to a basic set 
of guidelines and standards, the most pernicious consequences of 
a two tiered system might be mitigated. Up till now, policy in 
this area has been largely ad hoc. However the topic of 
accreditation and the question of who will accredit (government 
agencies, university governing bodies, or NGOs such as discipline 
specific entities and alumni associations) is worthy of further 
discussion for the reasons outlined above.</p>

<p>Regional Development. There can be no doubt that the higher 
education institutions modify the environment in which they are 
established. The creation of educational entities affects the 
surrounding land value by providing urban infrastructure, 
cultural activities and employment opportunities. Therefore, 
besides being the focus of attraction for an increased demand for 
education, they also represent a magnet for regional development. 
There is an opportunity here to use institutional expansion and 
diversification to target regions in Mexico that would benefit 
the most from the development of regional educational systems. In 
addition to having an economic impact, this would also help 
decentralize the professional population of Mexico and perhaps 
help siphon expertise away from the major urban centres into 
areas where it is needed the most. Questions have to be raised 
about how best to leverage the expansion of education in Mexico 
to support regional development and whether or not current 
developments will hinder or encourage regional development.</p>

<p>Financing. The access to better standards and the expansion of 
capacity to meet demand have as a condition the extension of the 
financial base of operations. This is an absolute requirement and 
no amount of creative reorganisation will eliminate the need to 
fund initiatives. Lack of adequate funding leads inevitably to 
declining standards and declining ability to meet the substantive 
demands of the system. In the context of the economic recession, 
additional funding is problematic. The suggestion has been to 
link universities with the private sectors in order to recuperate 
the cost of education through loans and, perhaps more 
significantly, through the development and sale of university 
products and services such as hospitals and clinics, tutorial and 
consulting services, system management and technological designs 
and patents. This trend has been powerful and successful in as 
much as creating links between universities and the private 
sector is now considered standard practice in plans to reform 
universities. However it is important to question whether or not 
these shifts undermine the autonomy of the university and, in the 
long run, hamstring the ability of the universities to maintain 
an innovative and competitive atmosphere (Sosteric, Gismondi, 
Ratkovic, 1998).</p>

<p>Evaluation and Innovation. The evaluation of yield and 
productivity has been established in universities as an essential 
component of the academic process. Evaluation has been related, 
specifically, to supervision and control of routine tasks, to 
selective incentives and in some cases to budget and spending 
accountability. However little critical attention has been paid 
to the efficacy of current evaluations strategies and whether or 
not they do promote the outcomes they are intended to promote. 
That is, the nexus between evaluation and innovation has not been 
established. It is important that we pay attention to the links 
between evaluation technologies and outcomes in order to 
determine whether or not current evaluation strategies are 
suitable and do not have unintended outcomes. The threat here is 
that evaluation will become more about disciplining academic 
workers and less about encouraging innovation.</p>

<p>Governability. University governability  
<endnotenumber>10</endnotenumber>  is understood as the group of 
"internal" political relations (between University 
authorities and all actors of academic life) and 
"external" political relations (between the 
university, the public sector and society). It is evident that 
the long standing pre-eminence of the state-university axis in 
the definition of such relations is no longer leading the way to 
establish the priorities and strategies that promote change. In 
its place a more complex scheme of relations is taking place, one 
in which the traditional actors of university policy interact 
with a number of newly emerging elements (political parties and 
groups, non-governmental organisations business leaders, 
professional associations, religious organisations, social 
movements, etc.). The university´s capacity to articulate stable 
and productive links that respond to the new demands and 
responsibilities of today's society constitute a key factor in 
the dynamics of the institution transformation. The seemingly 
paradoxical equation of greater autonomy and greater 
rapprochement  <endnotenumber>11</endnotenumber>  forces 
universities to design new instruments with which to satisfy the 
demands of society and of the state as the new century 
approaches. It is imperative that the design of these new 
instruments be critically assessed. Like other changes, leaving 
the development of the system to unseen forces will not 
necessarily lead to useful change.</p>

<p>Social Relevance. Although institutions cannot guarantee 
employment to their graduates, it is the responsibility of a 
university education to contribute to the formation of a more 
flexible professional labour market. A problem in the past has 
been that graduates have been orientated towards life in the 
public sector after graduation. However a shrinking public sector 
requires a reorientation of graduating students. This 
reorientation involves not only shifting the expectations of 
graduates about their future role in the labour market, but also 
improving the quality and applicability of their education. This 
does not mean that universities should become extensions of 
private sector interests and simply transfer skill sets that 
"the market" is thought to require. While it is true 
that institutions cannot remain aloof from their wider social 
responsibilities, it is also true that the market only provides 
short term guidance. University administrators cannot relinquish 
wider responsibilities to the long term development of the 
country at a social and economic level. A balance must be sought. 
</p>

<p>Globalization. Finally, as noted above, one of the underlying 
assumptions of the whole process of reform has been that reform 
is necessary to create in Mexico the ability to compete in a 
global marketplace. Whether or not this is possible, desirable, 
or even necessary remain largely unanswered questions. In other 
words it is an assumption to think that the changes that have 
occurred will necessarily lead to greater global economy. 
Evaluating the potential here will involve much more than simply 
accepting the doctrine of international organisations. Mexico's 
history of economic dependency, its colonial legacy, and numerous 
other factors must be taken into account before an adequate 
assessment can be made of these claims. Still, despite the 
uncertainty here, access to education and the expansion of 
educational resources are important sources of both individual 
and societal advancement. Gains achieved in the past should not 
be allowed to be uncritically dismantled. Mexico needs to develop 
an education policy suitable for meeting its own needs for 
technological, scientific and social development. Anything else 
is unacceptable.</p>
</body>
<endnotes>
<endnotetext><num>1</num><p>The Universidad Nacional Autónoma de 
México (1910), the Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo (1917), 
the Autónoma de Sinaloa (1918), the Autónoma de Yucatán (1922), 
the Autónoma de San Luis Potosí (1923), the Universidad de 
Guadalajara (1925), the Autónoma de Nuevo León (1933), the 
Autónoma de Puebla (1937), the Instituto Politécnico Nacional 
(1937) and the universities of Colima (1940), Sonora (1942), 
Veracruz (1943) and Guanajuato (1945).</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>2</num><p>The National Polytechnical Institute 
was founded in 1937.</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>3</num><p>The Universidad Autónoma of Morelos 
(1953), the Autónoma of Chihuahua (1954), the Instituto 
Tecnológico of Sonora (1955), the Universidad Autónoma Benito 
Juárez of Oaxaca (1955), the Autónoma of Estado de México (1956), 
the Autónoma ofTamaulipas (1956), the Autónoma of Coahuila 
(1957), the Universidad Juárez of Durango (1957), the Autónoma of 
Baja California (1957), the Autónoma of Zacatecas (1958), the 
Universidad Juárez Autónoma of Tabasco (1958), the Autónoma of 
Querétaro (1959) and the Autónoma of Guerrero 
(1960).</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>4</num><p>The student body at the Nacional 
University´s Ciudad Universitaria, totaled 25,000. This figure 
doubled in less than 10 years.</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>5</num><p>The Universidad Autónoma of Hidalgo 
(1961), the Autónoma del Carmen (1965), the Autónoma of Campeche 
(1965) and the Autónoma of Nayarit (1969).</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>6</num><p>Guillermo Villaseñor Concurs in this 
regard when he says: "The group of such strong mutations 
that have taken place in universities over the last 20 years, has 
been both the cause and effect of said expansion" 
(Villaseñor, 1994: 14).</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>7</num><p>Information provided by ANUIES and 
Sistema de Información Estadística 1995 (SINIES-1995). 
</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>8</num><p>The status of the "social 
sciences" is difficult to determine because the Mexican 
taxonomy joins social sciences with administrative sciences. As a 
result it is difficult to separate them in analysis such as 
this.</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>9</num><p>During the 90s, the debate regarding 
the crises, processes and alternatives for change for 
universities has undoubtedly been a priority in the study of 
higher education systems worldwide. In the Latin American 
context, there is an abundance of literature referring to these 
problems; however it is worth reviewing, among others, the texts 
from CEPAL (1982), World Bank (1994), UNESCO (1995), as well as 
compilations by Malo and Morley (1996) and Kent 
(1996).</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>10</num><p>The Orlando Albornoz article 
"La reinvención de la Universidad los conflictos y dilemas 
de la gobernabilidad en América Latina y el Caribe" in Malo 
and Morley eds. (1996).</p></endnotetext>
<endnotetext><num>11</num><p>See in this regard the CEPAL (1992) 
document.</p></endnotetext>
</endnotes>
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