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Education in developing countries: the view from Mount Olympus

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Abstract

In a recent issue ofProspects we published a review of the World Bank's recent publication,Education Sector Working Paper. This publication represents a major policy statement by the Bank on the subject of education and significant (not to say radical) departure from previous policies. It is a document all the more important in view of the enormous funding power of the World Bank and the undeniable influence of its policies on national governments and even on international organizations.

TheEducation Sector Working Paper, which has been generally welcomed in international circles, is certainly not without its critics both in the developing countries and in the industrialized world. We feel that at a time when there is a push for examining educational policies and concepts on an international level, we can contribute to the debate by publishing some criticism and rejoinder centring around the World Bank publication, much as we did in 1973 and 1974 on the subject ofLearning to Be, the report of the International Commission on the Development of Education.

In this issue, therefore, we open the discussion with an article by Peter Williams, originally written for a one-day review meeting to consider the World Bank publication, held on 19 May 1975, at the University of London Institute of Education, and which he revised forProspects. The institute hopes to publish a report of its meeting, together with the papers, before the end of this year.

Peter Williams' critique seems to us to be particularly interesting because it is based on the author's disagreement with the prevailing pessimism in the world, reflected by the World Bank, on the state of education in the developing nations. As always, our readers are warmly invited to contribute their reactions in any form they choose.

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References

  1. The review, by André Magnen of Unesco, appeared inProspects, Vol. V, No. 2, 1975; theEducation Sector Working Paper was published by the World Bank in December 1974.

  2. The page numbers in parentheses throughout this article refer to the relevant page ofEducation Sector Working Paper, Washington, D.C., World Bank, December 1974.

  3. For example in his paper presented to the Kericho Conference in Kenya in 1966, ‘The Generation of Employment in Newly Developing Countries’, in: J. R. Sheffield (ed.),Education Employment and Rural Development, Nairobi, East African Publishing House, 1967.

  4. The list, established by the World Bank, is based onper capita GNP, and is not the same as the list of the twenty-five least-developed countries established by the United Nations and based on a combination of indicators. SeeProspects, Vol. V, No. 1, 1975, p. 46 et seq.—Ed.

  5. Philip H. Coombs,The World Educational Crisis: A Systems Analysis, London, Oxford University Press, 1968.

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  6. E. Faure et al.,Learning to Be. Report of the International Commission on the Development of Education Paris, Unesco, 1972.

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  7. Julius Nyerere,Education for Self-reliance, p. 14 and 24, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, Government Printer, 1967.

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  8. Bernard Shaw,Major Barbara, p. 77, Harmondsworth, Middx, Penguin Plays, Penguin Books, 1974. Acknowledgement: The Society of Authors on behalf of the Bernard Shaw Estate.

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Served for six years in an advisory capacity to the ministries of education in Kenya and Ghana, and served on the secretariat at Unesco of the International Commission on the Development of Education.

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Williams, P. Education in developing countries: the view from Mount Olympus. Prospects 5, 457–478 (1975). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02220086

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02220086

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