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1,300 universities, one shared fear: the commodification of education

IAU study identifies threats and opportunities of internationalisation

Published on
April 5, 2014
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Universities across the world fear the 鈥渃ommodification and commercialisation of education鈥, according to a new survey.

The International Association of Universities has polled 1,336 institutions across 131 countries to gauge their views on the internationalisation of higher education 鈥 through placements abroad, research collaboration and overseas students.

鈥淭hey express concern about equal access to international opportunities for all students and about the commodification and commercialisation of education,鈥 the IAU鈥檚 report says.

Universities 鈥渁re also preoccupied that more competition among higher education institutions will arise as a result of internationalization,鈥 it adds.

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Concerns were also raised about 鈥済aps in quality and/or prestige among institutions in a given country.鈥

Just over half of the respondents said that their university had a policy or strategy for internationalisation, and another 22 per cent said they were preparing one.

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Yet fewer than one in six universities said that internationalisation 鈥渇orms part of the overall institutional strategy鈥.

The growth of international dual, double or joint degrees, 鈥渕ay be losing momentum鈥, according to the report Internationalization of Higher Education: Growing expectations, fundamental values.

The results also show that universities in different regions hope to gain different things from international engagement.

In the Asia Pacific region and North America the top ranked benefit was increasing students鈥 international awareness, while in Europe and the Middle East, institutions hoped to improve the quality of their teaching and learning.

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david.matthews@tsleducation.com

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