State Agencies and the Space for Change
Thursday, February 11, 2010 at 2:30PM
Justin Bathon in Council on Postsecondary Education, Curtis Bonk, Governance, Justin Bathon, Teacher Rights, Technology & Internet, bureaucracy, digital, global, governance

Had the pleasure of filling in this morning at a meeting of the Council on Postsecondary Education in Frankfort. They had invited Curt Bonk down from IU to come talk to the Board and in a follow-up meeting with higher ed. faculty in the state. It was informative and I found myself taking a lot of notes (which is a sure sign that I'm learning something because I usually don't). 

What struck me though as CPE folks were talking, and inviting University folks to chat as well, is that state administrative agencies, such as CPE, are going to quickly be ahead of our universities in the mentality needed to meet the demands of the digital, global age. For instance, Dr. Bonk brought up Open Access Journals, and I suggested this is an area where CPE could become involved by recommending to universities that scholars publish their works in locations where the people of Kentucky can access them (i.e. not your traditional, academic publishing house journals that are only purchased by university libraries). The people of Kentucky paid for that work, they might as well be able to read it, right? Well, CPE seemed on board, the University reps ... not so much. And, therein lies a very difficult problem when the very people the state relies on for change and new ideas, are the ones that are innately resistant to that change. 

This level of innate resistance in universities, especially public universities, has been brought about by years and years of traditions, bureaucracy, and ethics. This innate resistance stops university folks from even considering the arguments in the first place. On the open access issue, for instance, I would challenge anyone to consider the arguments for and against with an open mind and conclude that traditional paper journals were the superior publishing outlet. But, it is not that university folks are stubborn in holding to the wrong side of the argument ... it's that they don't even consider the argument as an argument in the first place. 

Collectively, this is why we need state actors to force us to at least consider the arguments. Consider online teaching. Consider tenure and promotion changes. Consider integrating with K-12. Consider lifelong PD relationships. Consider it all, frankly. Nothing should be off the table in an environment where universities are struggling to survive anyway. And so, while it is necessary for grassroots movements to push universities from the bottom up, we also are going to need a good deal of top down momentum. The fact CPE would even consider bringing in Curt Bonk is encouraging. CPE gathering faculty together is another encouraging sign. So, I'm hopeful. But, I hope they also see the space they are creating within that environment and very carefully consider which voices are included - because the space created by those conversations has a direct correlate with those voices. 

After all, I was at that meeting by accident. I was just filling in for someone else. Had the composition of that room been different, without strong voices creating the space for change, I'm afraid a very different conversation would have ensued. 

Article originally appeared on The Edjurist - Information on School and Educational Law (http://edjurist.com/).
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