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Commonwealth of letters: the ACU helped universities across the British empire to stay connected in the post-colonial era
Ahead of the Association of Commonwealth Universities鈥 centenary at the University of London next week, a new book celebrates the history and continuing relevance of 鈥渢he oldest higher education network in modern history鈥.
Issued by Sage Publications, Universities for a New World: Making a Global Network in International Higher Education, 1913-2013 looks back to the first meeting of the body, originally known as the Universities Bureau of the British Empire. Its membership 鈥渃omprised universities of Britain and those of the dominions and colonies, many constructed along the lines of the 鈥榤other country鈥欌.
The organisation had to change radically to adapt to the growth of post- war 鈥渘ew universities鈥 and the decline of empire, changing its name to the ACU in 1963.
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The book鈥檚 editor, Deryck M. Schreuder, now visiting professor in the University of Sydney鈥檚 Faculty of Education and Social Work, has served as vice-chancellor of two Australian universities. In the preface, he recalls how his own life has been shaped by the Commonwealth university system. Even as a child 鈥渁ttending a very modest government school in the small and nondescript frontier town of Ndola, situated in deep central Africa鈥, he followed a curriculum 鈥渟et in England by the overseas extension board鈥stablished by London University鈥.
His African university 鈥渙wed its origins to the expansion of the 鈥楲ondon model鈥欌, while scholarships later took him to a number of major Commonwealth universities and a career spanning four continents.
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Today, he writes, 鈥渢he Commonwealth university story provides a vantage point for viewing鈥ider global changes鈥 to the sector.
Contributors to the book explore the ACU鈥檚 history; the impact of e- learning and greater student mobility; the challenges facing Commonwealth nations in Africa, Asia, Australia and the Caribbean; and the prospects for the future.
Peter Williams, honorary secretary of the Commonwealth Consortium for Education, proposes a new 鈥淐ommonwealth higher education agenda for the twenty-first century鈥.
From the late 1970s, he recalls, 鈥渉igher education slipped down the agenda of many bilateral and international agencies鈥. It might have disappeared from Commonwealth thinking if the decision by the British Conservative government in 1980 to introduce full-cost fees for overseas students had not had such a 鈥渇ar-reaching鈥 impact.
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The United Nations鈥 Millennium Development Goals鈥 welcome stress on primary schooling and gender in education also led to the comparative neglect of the academy. Progress in these areas has now opened up opportunities for Commonwealth agencies. While they could do little to improve standards in dozens of small primary schools operating in indigenous languages, Professor Williams believes they have more to contribute in higher education, where institutions often use English and use transnational curricula.
If education is at the heart of Commonwealth links, he concludes, it is at the tertiary level that agencies are well positioned to promote 鈥渢he reinvigoration of Commonwealth relationships and connections鈥.
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