Lees hier het originele artikel dat is verschenen op de website van de International Students Movement.
What is the “International Students Movement”?
The “International Students Movement” is a platform used by groups and activists around the world struggling against the commercialisation and privatisation of education to network and co-ordinate protests together.
The platform is independent from any political parties, unions or other institutions. It is dominated by grassroots movements and generally open to everyone [students, pupils, teachers, parents, workers,…]. The forces pushing for the commercialisation of education [unleashed by global competition] – just like the commercialisation of every other aspect of life – are located on the global level. To effectively counter this development groups struggling for free and emancipatory public education need to unite internationally and globally.
The “International Students Movement” makes use of the following tools:
* the forums on this website
* a mailing list [~3-4 mails per week]
* regular international online chats [1-2 times a month; details are communicated via the mailing list]
What is next?
After the “International Day of Action against the Commercialization of Education” [05/11/2008] and the “Reclaim your Education – Global Week of Action” [20 – 29/04/2009] activists from various countries agreed to propose a time frame for a new Global Week of Action later this year: Nov. 5th 2009 [“Warm-up” Day of united Action] + Nov.9th – 17th 2009
All groups are asked to discuss this time frame within their local network(s) and we will finalize it during the next chat on July 5th!
Why this time frame? Last year on Nov.5th this platform called for the “International Day of Action against the Commercialization of Education”. To have some sort of continuation we agreed during the chat, that Nov.5th should be “Warm-up day of action”. Nov.17th marks the “International Students’ Day”. Groups on the Philippines are already planning protests against the commercialisation of education on that day.
What is this struggle about?
Students, teachers, workers and parents around the world ask themselves: Is the public education system actually still serving the interests of the public, or is the focus shifting to implement education systems that primarily serve private and business interests? Tuition fees are — once introduced — sky-rocketing, universities and schools are turned into businesses, student debt keeps increasing and education budgets cut. Institutions of higher education become highly dependant on their ability to attract sponsorships (usually from economic actors). Consequently only those institutions and departments are able to survive, that are deemed valuable by sponsors.
Public education systems, from kindergarten to university, must prioritize emancipating aspects, be free and accessible to all. A democracy only exists, if society consists of emancipated and self-determined individuals, that are able to critically reflect their (social) environment, developments and power structures. Any system, that doesn’t fulfill these criteria is not a democracy.
The fact, that groups in more than 20 countries on 5 continents joined the international day of action in November and the Global Week of Action in April this year shows how international this struggle is.
It is up to each group how and for how many days they want to express their protest during the week of action. It can be a smaller or bigger action. But it is important that we co-ordinate this together.
Therefore please leave a message inside this forum or send a mail to:
united.for.education[at]gmail.com
if you have any questions or decide to unite in protest against the commercialisation of public education with groups and activists around the world.
Let’s get organized and unite in our struggle!