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The Role of Higher Education in Promoting Stability in Afghanistan Joseph B. Berger Center for International Education (CIE) University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Introduction Most empirical and conceptual work has focused on the relationship between fragility and primary/basic education In order to improve the positive impact of education on fragility “focus on primary/basic education is not sufficient” (INEE, 2010, p. 13) Little emphasis on the entire sector including post-basic education sub-sectors in secondary, vocational and tertiary education.
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Recommendations for Education Research, Policy, Planning and Programming (adapted from INEE WGFE, 2010) Higher Education is more than service delivery, it is: – a stabilizing factor – a potential source for contributing to fragility; and – a potential means to mitigate fragility, contribute to state- building and build more resilient societies. Higher Education must be considered from a quality as well as access framework Analysis of higher education’s role(s) in fragility is indispensable to ensure that higher education does not exacerbate fragility Taking a holistic perspective of the education system is essential in conflict-affected and fragile contexts
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Purpose Therefore, the purpose of this presentation is to examine the relationship between fragility and Higher Education by: – Applying concepts from emerging studies that examine fragility and basic education; – Examining Afghanistan as an example case; and – Exploring how to adapt the Progressive Framework to higher education.
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Adapted Stages of Fragility Five stages (adapted from OECD/DAC, 2008) – Arrested Development (AD) – Deterioration (D) – Crisis (C) – Post-crisis Transition (PT) – Early Capacity (EC) C D ADEC PT
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Challenges for Higher Education Access vs. Quality Social Inequities – Gender, Rural, and Ethnic International Standards vs. Local Capacity/Demand Centralization vs. De-centralization Infrastructure – Facilities, Curriculum, Staff Financing Relation to Entire Education Sector and Other Sectors Social Charter & Fulfilling Expectations
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Initial “Progress” Development of a national Strategic Plan Increased numbers of universities outside of Kabul Improving capacity Increased access (particularly for women) Re-introduction of graduate education in key applied fields Reverse “brain drain”
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Promise of Higher Education in Response to Fragility Public/Collective Good – Building Institutional Capacity – Nation Building – Citizen Development – Leader Development – Workforce/Economic Development Private/Individual Good – Credentials – Material, Political and Symbolic Return on Investment
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The Case of Afghanistan Afghanistan remains somewhere between crisis and post-crisis transition Dramatic deterioration of tertiary education over time 1990 - 24,333 (total student population) 1995 - 17,370 2001 - 7,881 Less than 2 percent of the population over 25 years of age has any tertiary education (Afghanistan NHESP, 2010)
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The Case of Afghanistan Rapid growth in post-secondary education 2003 - 34,000 students 2009 - 62,000 students By 2010 - 100,000 high school graduates By 2014 - 600,000 high school graduates 2009 - Total budget for the 22 universities was $35 million, averaging about $1.6 million per institution. Highly centralized system Rapidly emerging unregulated private sector
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Adapting the Progressive Framework to Higher Education (FTI, 2008) Sector Planning & Coordination Resource Mobilization Service Delivery Student Flows Stabilization and Fragility Reduction
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Adapting the Progressive Framework to Higher Education: (Sub)Sector Planning & Coordination – Improve capacity to implement National Strategic Plan – Harmonize efforts with the entire education sub- sector – Improve relationships & coordination with/among donors – Improve management information systems – Coordinate public and private higher education in terms of access and quality assurance
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Adapting the Progressive Framework to Higher Education: Resource Mobilization -Continue to expand revenue base in alignment with other educational priorities -Enhance budgeting and accounting capacity -Examine alternative funding structures -De-centralize some financial decision-making to campuses -Implement mechanisms that enable campus to generate and manage resources
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Adapting the Progressive Framework to Higher Education: Service Delivery – Implement quality assurance frameworks that address faculty roles and rewards – Continue to develop material infrastructure of university campuses – Improve MoHE and campus-based administrative and academic leadership capacity – Focus on professional fields that have multiplier effects in other domains (e.g. teacher training, public health, public administration)
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Adapting the Progressive Framework to Higher Education: Student Flows – Expand access in public and private universities in ways that align with expanding secondary enrollment – Develop community colleges and enhanced vocational education opportunities – Increase opportunities for women – Expand efforts to minimize “Kabul-centric” delivery of services
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Adapting the Progressive Framework to Higher Education: Stabilization and Fragility Reduction -Focus on safety and security on campuses -Improve living conditions for students -Increase transparency in decision-making at all levels -Increase capacity and opportunities for participation in decision-making and shared governance -Incorporate traditional values into organizational development activities -Link HE opportunities to individual and collective economic development
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