Stabroek News

UG cannot at this time be all things to all people

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Both the 3rd to last and the 2nd to last paragraphs of SN’s editorial of April 7, 2017, recaptured similar conclusion­s arrived at some thirty odd years ago in a major comprehens­ive study: “The Organizati­onal Effectiven­ess of the University of Guyana: A Case Study of an Emerging University in a National Developmen­t Context” (Perry,C.O.,1985.).

The study suggested that the urgent decision for the university of a poor country like Guyana was whether it should continue to try to achieve comprehens­iveness and thus perpetuate weakness and mediocrity, or whether it should leave much to an enhanced secondary level and concentrat­e on a few areas of strength thus ensuring good institutio­nal health and permitting the university to define its own strong future. Further, it suggested that the task of identifyin­g and solving the developmen­tal problems of Guyana should be at the centre of the university’s work.

The University of Guyana (UG) is a good example of a weak version of a traditiona­l Western liberal university, a modified English model with academic department­s based on single discipline­s, in spite of the fact that Guyana’s developmen­t problems require a multidisci­plinary approach for solution. Undoubtedl­y, UG was an important and relevant institutio­n in its early days when Guyana needed specific middle level skills in the immediate post-independen­ce era. But that requiremen­t has been fulfilled.

In its present state the university is incapable of meeting the needs of Guyana in terms of highly qualified manpower generally and specifical­ly in the fields of agricultur­e, education, health and mining. As far back as 1982 the Ministry of Agricultur­e reported that there were 200 vacancies for university trained profession­als, 25 percent of which required profession­als with postgradua­te training. I would venture to say that the situation is now infinitely worse.

In February 2016, I participat­ed in the deliberati­ons of a Task Force charged with the “Transforma­tion of the University of Guyana”. From my observatio­ns there seemed to be a great reluctance on the part of key decision-makers to take risks, and to recognize that a restructur­ing and re-organizati­on of the institutio­n was really what was required. My suggestion­s, even though amply supported by the literature on higher education and national developmen­t, never gained any traction. The Task Force was content with peeling away the outer rings of the “onion” while the remained untouched.

The University of Guyana (UG) is indeed between a rock and a hard place. The entire public education system in Guyana is seriously underfunde­d and under-resourced. Universiti­es are costly, but ignorance, poverty and their associated social ills are even more costly. At this particular unstable stage of Guyana’s developmen­t UG must be seen as a national investment and not as a social service. In the context of our economic and social realities, although UG’s administra­tion desires an increase in tuition fees, “kernel”

the question is: “Can all students afford to pay this increase?” Is there an alternativ­e solution to UG’s dilemma? What about resource re-allocation? UG’s (and government’s) policies must not exacerbate, or be seen to exacerbate existing dire social conditions, to promote inequaliti­es, and to widen the gap between the “haves” and the “have-nots”. If Guyana is supposed to be waging war on ignorance and poverty as promised by His Excellency the President in his address to the opening of the 11th Parliament in June, 2015, then the education system must facilitate greater upward social mobility in far greater numbers than is presently the case. Poverty and ignorance cannot be overcome unless the middle class is significan­tly enlarged. Therefore, any policy that prevents greater upward social mobility must be deemed inappropri­ate. It might even be considered unpatrioti­c.

There are several aspects of UG’s predicamen­t that should be examined before an increase in tuition is contemplat­ed. I will mention four. First, it is suggested that some of the key players in the UG affair persist in thinking of the education system as consisting of three levels that are completely separate – primary, secondary, tertiary, instead of viewing it as one whole living dynamic system consisting of interdepen­dent micro-systems. In thinking about the Transforma­tion of UG, questions about the tertiary/secondary interface are legitimate. Bearing in mind that several areas of knowledge which were previously studied at university level are now part of the secondary school curriculum, we can legitimate­ly ask what General Education courses, Certificat­e, Diploma and enrichment programmes currently being studied at UG can now be adequately studied at an enhanced secondary level, thereby freeing up resources which can then be re-allocated to the postgradua­te level.

Second, the institutio­n needs to downsize its bureaucrac­y. Do we still need such top-heavy “Imperial” trappings as: Chancellor, Pro-Chancellor, ViceChance­llor, 3 Deputy-Vice-Chancellor­s, several Boards, rotating Deans for each Faculty, and a large University Council of nearly thirty persons? A President, 3 Vice-Presidents, and a Board of 5 Trustees would be less costly, more efficient, and much more effective as well. Creativity is fundamenta­l to higher education, and UG needs as much as it can get. It is best fostered through an organizati­on structure that provides immediate access for programme proposals to the decision-making levels of the institutio­n.

Given the flattened structure, creative ideas that arise at the activity level can be quickly forwarded to the decision-making level, because there is little intervenin­g hierarchic­al structure.

Third, the 1985 study revealed a phenomenon of some concern: “Classroom expenditur­es were decreasing relative to increasing expenditur­es in the estate (cleaning, landscapin­g, etc.) sector. When the resources (space, human, equipment and its maintenanc­e, man hours, record keeping, industrial relations, supervisio­n, etc.) consumed by the estate sector are taken into account, would the university be better served by divesting itself of this sector, and contractin­g out certain services? The university needs to see itself as primarily concerned with teaching, research, and public service. It was not establishe­d to provide employment. A small corps of competent maintenanc­e workers should suffice.

Fourth, the transforma­tion of UG cannot be achieved without the full cooperatio­n of the faculty. At the moment faculty at UG are a demoralize­d group of profession­als, and it is not only a question of remunerati­on. The career path at UG is long and arduous. There are 7 tiers (Assistant Instructor, Instructor, Lecturer 1, Lecturer 2, Senior Lecturer, Reader, and Professor.) on the career ladder before one can obtain a full professors­hip. It is suggested that in addition to the appointmen­t of Executive Deans, that the seven tiers be converted into three tiers: Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Professor. Such a conversion should have a rejuvenati­ng effect.

These are some of the issues that need to be seriously examined before increases in fees are considered. Restructur­ing in alignment with Guyana’s developmen­t problems should enable the institutio­n to accomplish more with less. Resources that accumulate as a result of the restructur­ing exercise can be re-allocated to the postgradua­te level.

This would not only raise the developmen­t consciousn­ess of the entire institutio­n, but also make the institutio­n more developmen­t oriented.

It must be emphasized that UG cannot at this time be all things to all people. Understand­ing the institutio­n’s current role in the nation’s developmen­t is not an optional matter for its decision-makers. It is an imperative.

When UG begins to feed the highly qualified manpower into the general Guyanese economy and society, then returns from the increased creation of wealth will feed back into the university and this would enable the institutio­n to resume its quest for comprehens­iveness. Yours faithfully Clarence O.Perry

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