Huffington Post.jpg

 

 

Pearson Targets India to Profit from the Poor

 

 

Alan Singer, Huffington Post, USA, 28 July 2016

 

With its North American textbook and testing market shrinking, with profits
and stock prices in decline, and with its African and Philippine ventures
drawing the attention of critics, Pearson (Mis)Education hopes to restore
profit at the expense of millions of poor people in India. Once
"innovations" are in place, there is nothing to stop the Pearson virus from
infecting schools in United States communities.

 

A new study by Dr. Sangeeta Kamat of the University of Massachusetts, Dr.
Carol Anne Spreen of New York University, and Indivar Jonnalagadda of the
Hyderabad Urban Lab, for Education International documents how Pearson, with
collaboration from Indian government officials, is undermining public
education in Hyderabad, a city of about 4 million people and the capital of
the central Indian states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.

 

The study charges "Private for-profit multinational corporations are making
billions of dollars by charging poor families around the world to go to
school. Governments are diverting significant funds and attention to what
global corporations have posited as 'the solutions' to the crisis in
education, loosening regulations or outright ignoring the many violations of
laws and standards by multinational companies."

 

Market

 

Worldwide spending on education currently exceeds $4 trillion, but this
figure is expected to rise sharply. In India, the mobile education market
should expand dramatically if rural areas and urban slums receive reliable
Internet service. According to some estimates, their use in schools could
make the annual global market for electronic devices like I-Pads and tablets
alone worth more than $32 billion by 2020.

 

Multinational technology giants, education programming companies, and
curriculum providers are poised to exploit these opportunities even if there
are negative impacts on families, communities, and nations. In Hyderabad,
Pearson has been at the "forefront' of a network of multinational
corporations, private foundations, consultants, non-government organizations
and local entrepreneurs are building what they call an "educational
ecosystem" to support the commercialization and profit-making capacity of
all aspects of education.

 

They are active in other parts of India as well. In Andhra Pradesh, the
state government is in the process of out-sourcing education to Bridge
International Academies, a Pearson partner, which plans to operate 4,000
"low-fee" private schools there. In violation of local and national laws,
these for-profit academies employ "unqualified teachers" and operate from
residential buildings rather than equipped schools. Pearson has also
developed MyPedia, marketed as an "integrated learning solution for Grades
1-5" designed to "transform education delivery in school classrooms across
India." To diversify and profit as much as possible, it has ties to
edu-corporations operating a Delhi-based coaching institute, testing
services, and a network of pre-K schools.

 

PALF

 

In 2012, Pearson established the Pearson Affordable Learning Fund (PALF) to
promote private equity investment in for-profit education companies that
provide 'affordable' education services in developing countries. PALF
originally invested largely in sub-Sahara Africa. But according to the
report, Katelyn Donnelly, PALF CEO, sees India as a "test market" for
Pearson before it expands its operations to other developing countries.

 

This means Pearson will be marketing hope to make money off of some of the
world's poorest people. Two-third of India's population earns less than $2 a
day and over 40%earn less than $1.25 a day. India, families must spend at
least one-fifth of their monthly income per child to enroll them in these
for-profit schools. This usually means sending only one child, usually a
boy, to school.

 

Meanwhile governments trying to do more with less are complicit. The authors
accuse local, state, and national authorities of permitting "exemptions or
loopholes for private providers" while failing to fund or enforce the Indian
Right to Education (RTE) Act.

 

In India, education budgets are around 3.8% of the national gross national
product. This underfunding is considerably short of the 6% recommended by
the United Nations and constitutes a crime against the Third World poor, a
crime facilitated by Pearson (Mis) Education.

 

 

From:
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/pearson-targets-india-to_b_112362
26.html>
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/pearson-targets-india-to_b_1123622
6.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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