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DISABILITY-RESEARCH  August 2008

DISABILITY-RESEARCH August 2008

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Subject:

Re: Canada/US Special Ed. [+ global info-lives]

From:

miles <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

miles <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 25 Aug 2008 01:51:28 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (216 lines)

.
[Reconnecting Alex Lubet's comments on 18 August to the original Canada / 
US Special Ed thread (17 Aug), by a stray whisker, then taking off at  fresh 
tangents...]

The picture of N.American academia and its rating of various products looks 
fairly similar to what I understand of the game in England and Wales up to 
recently.  (Scotland has always had some differences, possibly stemming 
from factors such as a deeper-seated traditional public respect 
for 'education', and a longer tradition of facilitating the participation in higher 
education by people from economically poor / culturally not-poor families 
[Scottish readers, feel free to disagree!]  There are also much greater 
differences across Western Europe).   Actually achieving and maintaining a 
broad understanding of the British academic game became more difficult 
recently, as its major house journal or chronicle, the Times Higher Education 
Supplement, gave up the long struggle to reflect complexity and seriousness, 
and finally dumbed down to 'colour magazine' format, publishing less, and 
simpler, textual material, shorter articles and reviews, with increasing use of 
pictures (often stereotypical) to fill the spaces.

[I'm not sure how far that deterioration reflects a real loss of guts in the Brit 
academic game itself, or merely economic factors, or an individual quirk of 
the owners. It was a jolt to lose the old THES, and a further kick on the shins 
to see its pathetic replacement. It might possibly reflect something to do with 
the further expansion of Higher Ed, with fuller integration of the old 
Polytechnics into the University system -- they used to do a different 
educational job, sometimes rather well, at a less formally 'academic' level, 
with more practical applications and less research; but were given the 
chance to rename as 'University', and bump staff up from 'lecturer' to more 
prestigious titles, as part of an ideology that notionally wishes to offer 'equal 
opportunities' to all (younger) people, and then (when that proved difficult) to 
enforce an illusory appearance of 'equality of outcomes', while 
simultaneously cutting per capita funding and raising various real and 
imaginary hurdles for researchers, teachers, students, and other participants; 
among which the introduction of student fees is likely to be an increasingly 
significant barrier to many of the people whose participation some of the 
other moves were intended to encourage.  (In this series of mutually 
contradictory moves, later historians will try to discern rational patterns that 
probably never existed). The majority of academics must be well aware that 
they are caught in a system that is evolving rapidly in contradictory directions, 
with the money flowing to the strong and the trendy, and freshly-greased 
poles to be climbed every month. One can feel some pity for the ill-meshed 
cogs and pole-clingers who struggle on with it;  also for those who are 
struggling to obtain qualifications to join a system that will certainly reject 
most of them, and can only disappoint and embitter most of those who 
succeed in jumping the entry hurdles.]

Much of the change in UK could perhaps be put down as much to the 
population's continuing, deep, and apparently ineradicable social divisions, 
as to the structural stupidity of successive governments and the long English 
traditions of anti-intellectualism. Yet looking at the broader picture, these 
minor dramas of British universities are being played against vast changes 
in the global availability of information, and a number of complex factors 
accompanying it. A major problem with the information 'explosion' is that the 
outcome is mostly 'debris', a vast amount of it is not so much 'knowledge' as 
a multitudinous and omni-lingual  'primal scream of humanity',  mutually 
unintelligible across the world's divisions, yet having some deep resonance 
as an expression of 'something'  from the gut of the human species.

Astonishingly, the IT developments not only made this swelling cry or howl 
audible and viewable to a substantial proportion of humanity, but also 
facilitated the development of fairly intelligent search engines to do each day 
what even a million human indexers could not accomplish by the joint efforts 
of a lifetime. The rise and differentiation of Google, separating text, images 
and other media and branches, listing 'Google scholar' separately as 
an 'open' version of what ISI and Scopus do more rigorously within the 
academic enclave  -  is a remarkable phenomenon, not devised by the 
academic community, but responding to an odd combination of opportunity, 
curiosity, new technology, gamblers' itch, and other factors.  (Incidentally, I 
have been made to understand, by private mail, that an earlier posted 
remark,   "...and in a desperate moment I even tried Google; {aigh - needed 
a strong drink after that experience}",    to which I reacted with some 
puzzlement and incredulity, was in the nature of a pleasantry, rather than the 
assertion of cloistered arrogance for which it might be mistaken).

When one looks at what 'went through' as doctoral theses 20 or 30 years ago 
(and what continues to be submitted in some European and Asian 
countries), there is some evidence that research methodologies in many 
social science fields have now become a good deal more rigorous:  the bar 
has been raised, for what is accepted in most British universities as 'soundly 
based and significant' research outcomes; yet at the same time there has 
been a considerable increase in the number of sub-disciplines and inter-
disciplinary studies, and a proliferation of journals kitted out with international 
editorial boards, that publish academic materials of widely varying quality -- 
some of it soundly research based, some of it perhaps interesting but with a 
weaker base. In the newer sub-disciplines and inter-disciplinary studies, this 
may be inevitable --  working near the indistinct edges of somewhat fuzzy 
knowledge, with new and sometimes surprising light being cast on one side 
by a discipline on another side, it takes some time for a consensus to 
emerge on what can be 'well-founded' knowledge -- that is precisely the 
issue, but participants 'at the edge' often have a strong personal investment, 
which seldom co-exists with the ability to maintain a balanced critical 
judgement and sceptical scrutiny of one's own output, or that of people who 
may be competitors for funding, or for journal slots, or promotion, etc.

In the UK, some of the newer (ex-Poly) universities have been, or are 
becoming, useful bases for innovative research, partly because they carry 
less historical baggage, and can tolerate 'unlikely' inter-disciplinary efforts, 
some of which do open up valid new fields -- having little or no prestige to 
lose, they can take more risks and accept a higher rate of failures, provided 
that some of the gambles pay off.  (I believe something similar was noticed in 
France 20 years ago, in their younger universities). One of the less 
publicised hazards is that students studying for postgraduate qualifications in 
some of these 'new' fields may discover, too late, that they have been 
unwitting participants in one of the gambles that turns out to have a rather 
short shelf-life.  So, for example, some kind of  'Disability and X'  study 
courses may yet turn out to be a few aces short of a winning hand. Some 
varieties of disability-related 'therapy' courses are destined to end up not 
being formally recognised or endorsed by professional organisations, or not 
until 20 years too late for those who take them now. Obviously, people who 
get their fingers trapped in some of these slammed doors, or who lose their 
digits as the cutting edge of research takes an unexpected swing past them 
before disappearing into someone else's research enclave, will be unhappy. 
Histories of the development of human knowledge are full of the sorrows of 
those who gave it a useful shove -- into the arms of others who were better 
placed to collect the kudos and more tangible rewards.

On the larger scale, it looks inevitable that the tsunamis passing through the 
information ocean will end up causing much greater changes in tertiary 
education. On the one fingerless hand -- ever more desperate (and 
unsuccessful) efforts by governments to get outputs controlled, measured, 
graded, predicted (and also bent to serve the prevailing ideologies); while 
multinational businesses compete more ferociously to capture and 
monopolise or at least curtain off huge areas for commercial exploitation, 
against the growing 'global commons' trend with its open online archives of 
refereed publications, in the health and social sciences. On the other hand -- 
the means are already available, and experiments under way, for 'Open Web 
Universities' using (for example) the world's 20 most commonly used 
languages, purveying cumulative instruction in pretty well all fields of 
knowledge, incidentally doing so in formats accessible to people with most 
of the major impairment categories. (It will be difficult to cater for people with 
significant learning difficulties, or intellectual or cognitive disabilities, as 
things are presently understood).

It's quite possible that Open Web schools, colleges and universities will not 
get much beyond modest experiments in the present half-century -- there is 
too much professional investment in the existing infrastructures (shambolic 
though they are), and the barriers may be even more rigid in most developing 
countries. Yet the serious innovations may come from countries such as 
China, which has adopted new IT and the web at breakneck speed, and is 
capable of shedding some blood and tears to break traditional strangle-
holds. (China reports 90% adult literacy, and 99% literacy in the 15-24 group. 
That would hardly have been achievable using the old method of writing, 
which had served for centuries and was heavily entrenched - yet it was 
broken open and simplified; with the drawback of heavily reducing the 
access of subsequent generations to the previous 4000 years of its written 
culture and history). China certainly has the capacity to extend tertiary 
education to the masses over 30 years using the net, to produce several 
hundred million people with advanced training in new technical skills, who 
would continue to work in modestly paid occupations, while becoming richer 
in knowledge that can be applied for the common good, such as adaptation 
to climate change, (or maybe to extending civilisation to the ignorant masses 
of South Asia, Europe and Africa). Whether it will go that way remains 
uncertain. 

The world's disabled people, or maybe 50% of them, could be significant 
beneficiaries, though probably not in ways that would look attractive to very 
many at present. The idea of having a 'proper job', with good salary, long 
term security, a career structure, an extendable network of social contacts 
and affiliations, etc, looks increasingly chimerical. But to get rich in a different 
way, feasting daily or nightly on knowledge and understanding, on the world's 
music and art, while sustaining physical needs on a standardised 'basic 
needs' income, and meeting social needs on the successors of today's 
virtual social networks, is perhaps a more credible possibility. (A majority of 
the western world's people with significant disabilities are already over 60, 
and may have the leisure to make the most of the free educational feast. 
Many economically weaker populations are also greying, but at a slower rate 
and perhaps still have more younger than older disabled people).

[The speculations above are open to plenty of disagreement. They are not 
offered with any strong conviction...] 

miles

*****
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 20:51:26 -0500, Alex Lubet <[log in to unmask]> 
wrote:

>Hi miles et al,
>
>My response to miles somehow died yesterday and a couple of you wanted
>to know what I said, so here's a synopsis:
>
>To make a long story a
> > tad shorter, your perceptions of North American academia are correct.
> > Chapters in books, edited volumes, articles in guest edited fora of
> > journals, and even entire books may be held in lower regard than
> > peer-reviewed journals. The precise nuances of ranking vary from field
> > to field, with those that claim to be sciences, like psychology and
> > political science (which I think you call something else that's more
> > accurate) leaning most heavily on peer reviewed journal articles.
> > Another category likely to get chopped is anything that might be
> > regarded as interdisciplinary, like disability studies. At my
> > university, there are all kinds of incentives for interdisciplinary
> > work, but I think they're just to lure us out in the open. The begin
> > decisions on things like tenure and salaries are made by traditional
> > disciplinary departments that regard their own orthodox journals (and
> > sometimes books) most highly. At my last review, all my publications
> > were basically blown off as "interdisciplinary," as I refuse even to
> > consider music journals.  The field of my training is just too
>ableist to be my audience of choice.
> >
> > Thanks, miles,  for your posts. I save them for future reference and
>have cited
> > your work on several occasions.
>

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