Digital Diploma Mills
Digital Diploma Mills: The Automation of Higher Education
David F. Noble, October 1997
Recent events at two large North
American universities signal dramatically that we have entered a new era
in higher education, one which is rapidly drawing the halls of academe
into the age of automation. In mid-summer the UCLA administration launched
its historic "Instructional Enhancement Initiative" requiring
computer web sites for all of its arts and sciences courses by the start
of the Fall term, the first time that a major university has made mandatory
the use of computer telecommunications technology in the delivery of higher
education. In partnership with several private corporations (including
the Times Mirror Company, parent of the Los Angeles Times), moreover, UCLA
has spawned its own for-profit company, headed by a former UCLA vice chancellor,
to peddle online education (the Home Education Network).
This past spring in Toronto, meanwhile, the full-time faculty of York University,
Canada's third largest, ended an historic two-month strike having secured
for the first time anywhere formal contractual protection against precisely
the kind of administrative action being taken by UCLA. The unprecedented
faculty job action, the longest university strike in English Canadian history,
was taken partly in response to unilateral administrative initiatives in
the implementation of instructional technology, the most egregious example
of which was an official solicitation to private corporations inviting
them to permanently place their logo on a university online course in return
for a $10,000 contribution to courseware development. As at UCLA, the York
University administration has spawned its own subsidiary (Cultech), directed
by the vice president for research and several deans and dedicated, in
collaboration with a consortium of private sector firms, to the commercial
development and exploitation of online education.
Significantly, at both UCLA and York, the presumably cyber-happy students
have given clear indication that they are not exactly enthusiastic about
the prospect of a high-tech academic future, recommending against the Initiative
at UCLA and at York lending their support to striking faculty and launching
their own independent investigation of the commercial, pedagogical, and
ethical implications of online educational technology. This Fall the student
handbook distributed annually to all students by the York Federation of
Students contained a warning about the dangers of online education.
Thus, at the very outset of this new age of higher education, the lines
have already been drawn in the struggle which will ultimately determine
its shape. On the one side university administrators and their myriad commercial
partners, on the other those who constitute the core relation of education:
students and teachers. (The chief slogan of the York faculty during the
strike was "the classroom vs the boardroom"). It is no accident,
then, that the high-tech transformation of higher education is being initiated
and implemented from the top down, either without any student and faculty
involvement in the decision-making or despite it. At UCLA the administration
launched their Initiative during the summer when many faculty are away
and there was little possibility of faculty oversight or governance; faculty
were thus left out of the loop and kept in the dark about the new web requirement
until the last moment. And UCLA administrators also went ahead with its
Initiative, which is funded by a new compulsory student fee, despite the
formal student recommendation against it. Similarly the initiatives of
the York administration in the deployment of computer technology in education
were taken without faculty oversight and deliberation much less student
involvement.
What is driving this headlong rush to implement new technology with so
little regard for deliberation of the pedagogical and economic costs and
at the risk of student and faculty alienation and opposition? A short answer
might be the fear of getting left behind, the incessant pressures of "progress".
But there is more to it. For the universities are not simply undergoing
a technological transformation. Beneath that change, and camouflaged by
it, lies another: the commercialization of higher education. For here as
elsewhere technology is but a vehicle and a disarming disguise.
The major change to befall the universities over the last two decades has
been the identification of the campus as a significant site of capital
accumulation, a change in social perception which has resulted in the systematic
conversion of intellectual activity into intellectual capital and, hence,
intellectual property. There have been two general phases of this transformation.
The first, which began twenty years ago and is still underway, entailed
the commoditization of the research function of the university, transforming
scientific and engineering knowledge into commercially viable proprietary
products that could be owned and bought and sold in the market. The second,
which we are now witnessing, entails the commoditization of the educational
function of the university, transforming courses into courseware, the activity
of instruction itself into commercially viable proprietary products that
can be owned and bought and sold in the market. In the first phase the
universities became the site of production and sale of patents and exclusive
licenses. In the second, they are becoming the site of production of -
as well as the chief market for - copyrighted videos, courseware, CD-ROMs,
and Web sites.
The first phase began in the mid-1970's when, in the wake of the oil crisis
and intensifying international competition, corporate and political leaders
of the major industrialized countries of the world recognized that they
were losing their monopoly over the world's heavy industries and that,
in the future, their supremacy would depend upon their monopoly over the
knowledge which had become the lifeblood of the new so-called "knowledge-based"
industries (space, electronics, computers, materials, telecommunications,
and bioengineering). This focus upon "intellectual capital" turned
their attention to the universities as its chief source, implicating the
universities as never before in the economic machinery. In the view of
capital, the universities had become too important to be left to the universities.
Within a decade there was a proliferation of industrial partnerships and
new proprietary arrangements, as industrialists and their campus counterparts
invented ways to socialize the risks and costs of creating this knowledge
while privatizing the benefits. This unprecedented collaboration gave rise
to an elaborate web of interlocking directorates between corporate and
academic boardrooms and the foundation of joint lobbying efforts epitomized
by the work of the Business-Higher Education Forum. The chief accomplishment
of the combined effort, in addition to a relaxation of anti-trust regulations
and greater tax incentives for corporate funding of university research,
was the 1980 reform of the patent law which for the first time gave the
universities automatic ownership of patents resulting from federal government
grants. Laboratory knowledge now became patents, that is Intellectual capital
and intellectual property. As patent holding companies, the universities
set about at once to codify their intellectual property policies, develop
the infrastructure for the conduct of commercially-viable research, cultivate
their corporate ties, and create the mechanisms for marketing their new
commodity, exclusive licenses to their patents. The result of this first
phase of university commoditization was a wholesale reallocation of university
resources toward its research function at the expense of its educational
function. Class sizes swelled, teaching staffs and instructional resources
were reduced, salaries were frozen, and curricular offerings were cut to
the bone. At the same time, tuition soared to subsidize the creation and
maintenance of the commercial infrastructure (and correspondingly bloated
administration) that has never really paid off. In the end students were
paying more for their education and getting less, and the campuses were
in crisis.*
The second phase of the commercialization of academia, the commoditization
of instruction, is touted as the solution to the crisis engendered by the
first. Ignoring the true sources of the financial debacle - an expensive
and low-yielding commercial infrastructure and greatly expanded administrative
costs - the champions of computer-based instruction focus their attention
rather upon increasing the efficiencies of already overextended teachers.
And they ignore as well the fact that their high-tech remedies are bound
only to compound the problem, increasing further, rather then reducing,
the costs of higher education. (Experience to date demonstrates clearly
that computer-based teaching, with its limitless demands upon instructor
time and vastly expanded overhead requirements - equipment, upgrades, maintenance,
and technical and administrative support staff - costs more not less than
traditional education, whatever the reductions in direct labor, hence the
need for outside funding and student technology fees). Little wonder, then,
that teachers and students are reluctant to embrace this new panacea. Their
hesitation reflects not fear but wisdom.**
But this second transformation of higher education is not the work of teachers
or students, the presumed beneficiaries of improved education, because
it is not really about education at all. That's just the name of the market.
The foremost promoters of this transformation are rather the vendors of
the network hardware, software, and "content" - Apple, IBM, Bell,
the cable companies, Microsoft, and the edutainment and publishing companies
Disney, Simon and Schuster, Prentice-Hall, et al - who view education as
a market for their wares, a market estimated by the Lehman Brothers investment
firm potentially to be worth several hundred billion dollars. "Investment
opportunity in the education industry has never been better," one
of their reports proclaimed, indicating that this will be "the focus
industry" for lucrative investment in the future, replacing the healthcare
industry. (The report also forecasts that the educational market will eventually
become dominated by EMO's - education maintenance organizations - just
like HMO's in the healthcare market). It is important to emphasize that,
for all the democratic rhetoric about extending educational access to those
unable to get to the campus, the campus remains the real market for these
products, where students outnumber their distance learning counterparts
six-to-one.
In addition to the vendors, corporate training advocates view online education
as yet another way of bringing their problem-solving, information- processing,
"just-in-time" educated employees up to profit- making speed.
Beyond their ambitious in-house training programs, which have incorporated
computer-based instructional methods pioneered by the military, they envision
the transformation of the delivery of higher education as a means of supplying
their properly-prepared personnel at public expense .
The third major promoters of this transformation are the university administrators,
who see it as a way of giving their institutions a fashionably forward-looking
image. More importantly, they view computer-based instruction as a means
of reducing their direct labor and plant maintenance costs - fewer teachers
and classrooms - while at the same time undermining the autonomy and independence
of faculty. At the same time, they are hoping to get a piece of the commercial
action for their institutions or themselves, as vendors in their own right
of software and content. University administrators are supported in this
enterprise by a number of private foundations, trade associations, and
academic-corporate consortia which are promoting the use of the new technologies
with increasing intensity. Among these are the Sloan, Mellon, Pew, and
Culpeper Foundations, the American Council on Education, and, above all,
Educom, a consortium representing the management of 600 colleges and universities
and a hundred private corporations.
Last but not least, behind this effort are the ubiquitous technozealots
who simply view computers as the panacea for everything, because they like
to play with them. With the avid encouragement of their private sector
and university patrons, they forge ahead, without support for their pedagogical
claims about the alleged enhancement of education, without any real evidence
of productivity improvement, and without any effective demand from either
students or teachers.
In addition to York and UCLA, universities throughout North America are
rapidly being overtaken by this second phase of commercialization. There
are the stand-alone virtual institutions like University of Phoenix, the
wired private institutions like the New School for Social Research, the
campuses of state universities like the University of Maryland and the
new Gulf-Coast campus of the University of Florida (which boasts no tenure).
On the state level, the states of Arizona and California have initiated
their own state-wide virtual university projects, while a consortia of
western "Smart States" have launched their own ambitious effort
to wire all of their campuses into an online educational network. In Canada,
a national effort has been undertaken, spearheaded by the Telelearning
Research Network centered at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, to bring
most of the nation's higher education institutions into a "Virtual
U" network.
The overriding commercial intent and market orientation behind these initiatives
is explicit, as is illustrated by the most ambitious U.S. effort to date,
the Western Governors' Virtual University Project, whose stated goals are
to "expand the marketplace for instructional materials, courseware,
and programs utilizing advanced technology," "expand the marketplace
for demonstrated competence," and "identify and remove barriers
to the free functioning of these markets, particularly barriers posed by
statutes, policies, and administrative rules and regulations."
"In the future," Utah governor Mike Leavitt proclaimed, "an
institution of higher education will become a little like a local television
station." Start up funds for the project come from the private sector,
specifically from Educational Management Group , the educational arm of
the world's largest educational publisher Simon and Schuster and the proprietary
impulse behind their largesse is made clear by Simon and Schuster CEO Jonathan
Newcomb: "The use of interactive technology is causing a fundamental
shift away from the physical classroom toward anytime, anywhere learning
- the model for post secondary education in the twenty-first century."
This transformation is being made possible by "advances in digital
technology, coupled with the protection of copyright in cyberspace."
Similarly, the national effort to develop the "Virtual U" customized
educational software platform in Canada is directed by an industrial consortium
which includes Kodak, IBM, Microsoft, McGraw-Hill, Prentice-Hall, Rogers
Cablesystems, Unitel, Novasys, Nortel, Bell Canada, and MPR Teltech, a
research subsidiary of GTE. The commercial thrust behind the project is
explicit here too. Predicting a potential fifty billion dollar Canadian
market, the project proposal emphasizes the adoption of "an intellectual
property policy that will encourage researchers and industry to commercialize
their innovations" and anticipates the development of "a number
of commercially marketable hardware and software products and services,"
including "courseware and other learning products." The two directors
of the project, Simon Fraser University professors, have formed their own
company to peddle these products in collaboration with the university.
At the same time, the nearby University of British Columbia has recently
spun off the private WEB-CT company to peddle its owneducational website
software, WEB-CT, the software designed by one of its computer science
professors and now being used by UCLA. In recent months, WEB-CT has entered
into production and distribution relationships with Silicon Graphics and
Prentice-Hall and is fast becoming a major player in the American as well
as Canadian higher education market. As of the beginning of the Fall term,
WEB CT licensees now include, in addition to UCLA and California State
University, the Universities of Georgia, Minnesota, Illinois, North Carolina,
and Indiana, as well as such private institutions as Syracuse, Brandeis,
and Duquesne.
The implications of the commoditization of university instruction are two-fold
in nature, those relating to the university as a site of the production
of the commodities and those relating to the university as a market for
them. The first raises for the faculty traditional labor issues about the
introduction of new technologies of production. The second raises for students
major questions about costs, coercion, privacy, equity, and the quality
of education.
With the commoditization of instruction, teachers as labor are drawn into
a production process designed for the efficient creation of instructional
commodities, and hence become subject to all the pressures that have befallen
production workers in other industries undergoing rapid technological transformation
from above. In this context faculty have much more in common with the historic
plight of other skilled workers than they care to acknowledge. Like these
others, their activity is being restructured, via the technology, in order
to reduce their autonomy, independence, and control over their work and
to place workplace knowledge and control as much as possible into the hands
of the administration. As in other industries, the technology is being
deployed by management primarily to discipline, deskill, and displace labor.
Once faculty and courses go online, administrators gain much greater direct
control over faculty performance and course content than ever before and
the potential for administrative scrutiny, supervision, regimentation,
discipline and even censorship increase dramatically. At the same time,
the use of the technology entails an inevitable extension of working time
and an intensification of work as faculty struggle at all hours of the
day and night to stay on top of the technology and respond, via chat rooms,
virtual office hours, and e-mail, to both students and administrators to
whom they have now become instantly and continuously accessible. The technology
also allows for much more careful administrative monitoring of faculty
availability, activities, and responsiveness.
Once faculty put their course material
online, moreover, the knowledge and course design skill embodied in that
material is taken out of their possession, transferred to the machinery
and placed in the hands of the administration. The administration is now
in a position to hire less skilled, and hence cheaper, workers to deliver
the technologically prepackaged course. It also allows the administration,
which claims ownership of this commodity, to peddle the course elsewhere
without the original designer's involvement or even knowledge, much less
financial interest. The buyers of this packaged commodity, meanwhile, other
academic institutions, are able thereby to contract out, and hence outsource,
the work of their own employees and thus reduce their reliance upon their
in-house teaching staff.
Most important, once the faculty converts its courses to courseware, their
services are in the long run no longer required. They become redundant,
and when they leave, their work remains behind. In Kurt Vonnegut's classic
novel Player Piano the ace machinist Rudy Hertz is flattered by the automation
engineers who tell him his genius will be immortalized. They buy him a
beer. They capture his skills on tape. Then they fire him. Today faculty
are falling for the same tired line, that their brilliance will be broadcast
online to millions. Perhaps, but without their further participation. Some
skeptical faculty insist that what they do cannot possibly be automated,
and they are right. But it will be automated anyway, whatever the loss
in educational quality. Because education, again, is not what all this
is about; it's about making money. In short, the new technology of education,
like the automation of other industries, robs faculty of their knowledge
and skills, their control over their working lives, the product of their
labor, and, ultimately, their means of livelihood.
None of this is speculation. This Fall the UCLA faculty, at administration
request, have dutifully or grudgingly (it doesn't really matter which)
placed their course work - ranging from just syllabi and assignments to
the entire body of course lectures and notes - at the disposal of their
administration, to be used online, without asking who will own it much
less how it will eventually be used and with what consequences. At York
university, untenured faculty have been required to put their courses on
video, CD-ROM or the Internet or lose their job. They have then been hired
to teach their own now automated course at a fraction of their former compensation.
The New School in New York now routinely hires outside contractors from
around the country, mostly unemployed PhDs, to design online courses. The
designers are not hired as employees but are simply paid a modest flat
fee and are required to surrender to the university all rights to their
course. The New School then offers the course without having to employ
anyone. And this is just the beginning.
Educom, the academic-corporate consortium, has recently established their
Learning Infrastructure Initiative which includes the detailed study of
what professors do, breaking the faculty job down in classic Tayloristic
fashion into discrete tasks, and determining what parts can be automated
or outsourced. Educom believes that course design, lectures, and even evaluation
can all be standardized, mechanized, and consigned to outside commercial
vendors. "Today you're looking at a highly personal human-mediated
environment," Educom president Robert Heterich observed. "The
potential to remove the human mediation in some areas and replace it with
automation - smart, computer-based, network-based systems - is tremendous.
It's gotta happen."
Toward this end, university administrators are coercing or enticing faculty
into compliance, placing the greatest pressures on the most vulnerable
- untenured and part-time faculty, and entry-level and prospective employees.
They are using the academic incentive and promotion structure to reward
cooperation and discourage dissent. At the same time they are mounting
an intensifying propaganda campaign to portray faculty as incompetent,
hide-bound, recalcitrant, inefficient, ineffective, and expensive - in
short, in need of improvement or replacement through instructional technologies.
Faculty are portrayed above all as obstructionist, as standing in the way
of progress and forestalling the panacea of virtual education allegedly
demanded by students, their parents, and the public.
The York University faculty had heard it all. Yet still they fought vigorously
and ultimately successfully to preserve quality education and protect themselves
from administrative assault. During their long strike they countered such
administration propaganda with the truth about what was happening to higher
education and eventually won the support of students, the media, and the
public. Most important, they secured a new contract containing unique and
unprecedented provisions which, if effectively enforced, give faculty members
direct and unambiguous control over all decisions relating to the automation
of instruction, including veto power. According to the contract, all decisions
regarding the use of technology as a supplement to classroom instruction
or as a means of alternative delivery (including the use of video, CD-ROM's,
Internet websites, computer-mediated conferencing, etc.) "shall be
consistent with the pedagogic and academic judgements and principles of
the faculty member employee as to the appropriateness of the use of technology
in the circumstances." The contract also guarantees that "a faculty
member will not be required to convert a course without his or her agreement."
Thus, the York faculty will be able to ensure that the new technology,
if and when used, will contribute to a genuine enhancement rather than
a degradation of the quality of education, while at the same time preserving
their positions, their autonomy, and their academic freedom. The battle
is far from won, but it is a start.
The second set of implications stemming from the commoditization of instruction
involve the transformation of the university into a market for the commodities
being produced. Administrative propaganda routinely alludes to an alleged
student demand for the new instructional products. At UCLA officials are
betting that their high-tech agenda will be "student driven",
as students insist that faculty make fuller use of the web site technology
in their courses. To date, however, there has been no such demand on the
part of students, no serious study of it, and no evidence for it. Indeed,
the few times students have been given a voice, they have rejected the
initiatives hands down, especially when they were required to pay for it
(the definition of effective demand, i.e. a market). At UCLA, students
recommended against the Instructional Enhancement Initiative. At the University
of British Columbia, home of the WEB-CT software being used at UCLA, students
voted in a referendum four-to-one against a similar initiative, despite
a lengthy administration campaign promising them a more secure place in
the high tech future. Administrators at both institutions have tended to
dismiss, ignore, or explain away these negative student decisions, but
there is a message here: students want the genuine face-to- face education
they paid for not a cybercounterfeit. Nevertheless, administrators at both
UCLA and UBC decided to proceed with the their agenda anyway, desperate
to create a market and secure some return on their investment in the information
technology infrastructure. Thus, they are creating a market by fiat, compelling
students (and faculty) to become users and hence consumers of the hardware,
software, and content products as a condition of getting an education,
whatever their interest or ability to pay. Can all students equally afford
this capital-intensive education?
Another key ethical issue relates to the use of student online activities.
Few students realize that their computer-based courses are often thinly-veiled
field trials for product and market development, that while they are studying
their courses, their courses are studying them. In Canada, for example,
universities have been given royalty-free licenses to Virtual U software
in return for providing data on its use to the vendors. Thus, all online
activity including communications between students and professors and among
students are monitored, automatically logged and archived by the system
for use by the vendor. Students enrolled in courses using Virtual U software
are in fact formally designated "experimental subjects." Because
federal monies were used to develop the software and underwrite the field
trials, vendors were compelled to comply with ethical guidelines on the
experimental use of human subjects. Thus, all students once enrolled are
required to sign forms releasing ownership and control of their online
activities to the vendors. The form states "as a student using Virtual
U in a course, I give my permission to have the computer-generated usage
data, conference transcript data, and virtual artifacts data collected
by the Virtual U software. . . used for research, development, and demonstration
purposes. "
According to UCLA's Home Education Network president John Korbara, all
of their distance learning courses are likewise monitored and archived
for use by company officials. On the UCLA campus, according to Harlan Lebo
of the Provost's office, student use of the course websites will be routinely
audited and evaluated by the administration. Marvin Goldberg, designer
of the UCLA WEB-CT software acknowledges that the system allows for "lurking"
and automatic storage and retrieval of all online activities. How this
capability will be used and by whom is not altogether clear, especially
since websites are typically being constructed by peopleother than the
instructors. What third parties (besides students and faculty in the course)
will have access to the student's communications? Who will own student
online contributions? What rights, if any, do students have to privacy
and proprietary control of their work? Are they given prior notification
as to the ultimate status of their online activities, so that they might
be in a position to give, or withhold, their informed consent? If students
are taking courses which are just experiments, and hence of unproven pedagogical
value, should students be paying full tuition for them? And if students
are being used as guinea pigs in product trials masquerading as courses,
should they be paying for these courses or be paid to take them? More to
the point, should students be content with a degraded, shadow cybereducation?
In Canada student organizations have begun to confront these issues head
on, and there are some signs of similar student concern emerging also in
the U.S.
In his classic 1959 study of diploma mills for the American Council on
Education, Robert Reid described the typical diploma mill as having the
following characteristics: "no classrooms," "faculties are
often untrained or nonexistent," and "the officers are unethical
self-seekers whose qualifications are no better than their offerings."
It is an apt description of the digital diploma mills now in the making.
Quality higher education will not disappear entirely, but it will soon
become the exclusive preserve of the privileged, available only to children
of the rich and the powerful. For the rest of us a dismal new era of higher
education has dawned. In ten years, we will look upon the wired remains
of our once great democratic higher education system and wonder how we
let it happen. That is, unless we decide now not to let it happen.
(Historian David Noble , co-founder of the National Coalition for Universities in the Public Interest, teaches at York University. His latest book is The Religion of Technology . He is currently writing a book on this subject entitled Digital Diploma Mills).
Notes:
*Tuition began to outpace inflation in the early 1980's, at precisely the moment when changes in the patent system enabled the universities to become major vendors of patent licenses. According to data compiled by the National Center for Educational Statistics, between 1976 and 1994 expenditures on research increased 21.7% at public research universities while expenditure on instruction decreased 9.5%. Faculty salaries, which had peaked in 1972, fell precipitously during the next decade and have since recovered only half the loss.
** Recent surveys of the instructional use of information technology in higher education clearly indicate that there have been no significant gains in either productivity improvement or pedagogical enhancement. Kenneth C. Green , Director of the Campus Computing Project, which conducts annual surveys of information technology use in higher education, noted that "the campus experience over the past decade reveals that the dollars can be daunting, the return on investment highly uncertain." "We have yet to hear of an instance where the total costs (including all realistically amortized capital investments and development expenses, plus reasonable estimates for faculty and support staff time) associated with teaching some unit to some group of students actually decline while maintaining the quality of learning," Green wrote. On the matter of pedagogical effectiveness, Green noted that "the research literature offers, at best, a mixed review of often inconclusive results, at least when searching for traditional measures of statistical significance in learning outcomes."
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