I was talking with a teacher about problems with the
education system in Uganda, comparing them with education issues in the United
States. He gave some interesting insights that I figure I would share. I am
clearly not an expert on the topic and only know how to talk about these issues
skin-deep. Someone who has more expertise on Ugandan education than me or
anyone else who disagrees can feel free to critique. I am mostly summarizing
points made by a teacher. A little context, the teacher teaches at the
secondary school here. There are three schools on Cornerstone’s property here:
a primary, a secondary, and then advanced leadership school (advanced means the
last two years of secondary, see my other blog post on Uganda’s education
system). I teach at the leadership school. I don’t feel like I understand the
education system here in Uganda enough to talk about it freely, but I wanted to
say something, so I am summarizing points made by someone else.
What he
said was that university scholarships and admissions are based purely off of
one’s scores on national exams. In the U.S. we don’t have national exams in the
same way they do. We have the non-required (but basically are if one wants to
go to college) SATS or ACTS. These are important for college admissions but not
the only thing that is looked at. GPA, extracurriculars, etc. are also
important. In Uganda, the national exams are standardized tests that function
more like finals – as summations of the classes they are taking – and they are
basically the only qualification that university admissions look at.
Someone
else said that this is not exactly true. There are some exceptions where they
consider other thing. The government introduced the Quarter System in
university admissions. This selects quotas from different regions in Uganda to
ensure equal admissions access for different regions and tribes. I think the
U.S. equivalent would be race-based scholarships and/or affirmative action,
which is not as regionally/geographically-orientated (maybe I am wrong but this
seems correct). This it seems is more a reflection of the fact that different
groups in the U.S. are primarily not divided into different areas of the United
States (maybe into different parts of a city but not different parts of the
U.S.). There are also some scholarships given to the physically-disabled and
some athletic scholarships. I was told the athletic scholarships are very
small, nothing like they are in the U.S. admissions.
What he said was that the rich
are the only ones who can afford to go to good schools. Poorer people are
either forced to drop out and work or go to much cheaper government schools.
The rich can afford to pay for better quality, private schools. At these
schools they are able to learn enough to be able to do well on their exams,
something that the usually under-funded public schools can’t provide (discussed
in more detail in the previous blog about the Ugandan school system). Thus
government scholarships for the universities, which remember are based on
national exam scores, are heavily biased towards the rich, private-schooled
children. Quite literally the government has a certain number of scholarships
it will award and gives them to the best exam scores. No scholarship means no
university, which prevents access to many “high class” jobs. This is sort of
true in the U.S., except that a significant number of the middle class go to
universities without financial aid (very few have all their expenses paid and
seem to have them partially paid, with the rest of the cost paid by loans),
something that I am unsure anyone, except maybe the very rich, can afford to do
here. People who get accepted to universities without scholarships often try to
work to pay, but people in this situation usually drop out. (The common age for
a college student, based on my observations, that is by asking the college
students I met their ages or when people attended universities, is around 26.
This is because many have to work for a while first.) This produces a cycle of
inequality, as education is strongly correlated with income and university
education is becoming increasingly necessary for many jobs. That is the topic
of my next paragraph.
Jobs are
few and hard to find, and competition for them is driving the amount of
education needed to get them, from secondary, to undergraduate, and now to
graduate degrees, an issue in the U.S. as well. This was something I noticed in
Kampala: I stayed at my organization’s headquarters where there were many
Ugandans in their twenties who were college educated (or finishing their
universities) who were looking for jobs and/or being pushed into further
studies. One friend in particular reminds me of this. He was in his late
twenties or thirty (I can’t remember) and had been in what I call school-work
for ten years. He first went to university but found his field no longer open
and had to go back, but before he could do that he had to work for a few years.
He then had a similar issue with graduate school.
The next
issue he discussed was that educated Ugandans are opposed to doing physical
work. They expect to do white collar jobs. One of his goals as a teacher is to
help his students have a more realistic attitude about blue collar jobs. This
reminds me of the teachers I met in Kamwenge last year, as they expressed the
same concern and goal. This expectation of non-physical work among the educated
is also present in the U.S., but it seems significantly different here. I don’t
know enough to know the details of this attitude here but know enough that is
it different and it seems more extreme in intensity. The teacher said that many
college-educated people would rather beg on the streets of Kampala than do blue
collar jobs. I think one significant difference is that in the U.S., by and
large, most jobs actually are white collar. Blue collar jobs have been
declining for years, for better or worse (a little bit of an oversimplification
I know). The decline or outsourcing of the manufacturing sector to actually
make the materials we consume is the best example of that. In Uganda, most jobs
are blue collar. The economy is primarily based on agriculture (he supplied the
percent of Uganda’s GDP is agriculture, the figure I now forget, but is more
than half). It may be apparent that the differences between the two countries
reflect other more complicated macro-level forces, that I won’t get into, not
only because they are off-topic but because they are far too complicated for me
to understand enough to discuss intelligently. But an economy so focused on
physical, particularly farming, jobs with rather competitive, white collar
employment prospects, and educated groups expecting to get these jobs create
tensions.
I think you are right in your observation that college grads in the U.S. can accept a wide variety of work. But they rarely accept true "blue collar" jobs. The decline in manufacturing jobs in the US has been (somewhat) offset by service industry jobs (such as at restaurants, hospitals, retail, coffee shops, etc). Many college grads (Even recent PhD grads according to one recent story) are forced to accept these relatively low-paying jobs in order to work at all. And there is not a lot of social stigma if they do so. One consequence though is that they don't earn enough ot be independent of their parents, so they live at home. This problem of underemployment is worldwide-- mitigated by the wealth of the U.S. which can afford the services (in fact, the historian in me tells me that we've recycled the 19th century Servant class of displaced farm workers into the 21st Century Starbucks class of displaced industrial worker, but this is your blog so I won't push that too far).
ReplyDeleteI realized something similar when I remembered that the main blue collar jobs I could think of were waiters/waitresses. I agree with your servant class analysis. The other thing it's replaced with is an international working class in the Global South. This is particularly evident with manufacturing. E.g. we get most of our clothes from China or South East Asia. The production and gathering of raw materials are increasingly occurring elsewhere. Again with clothes, cotton for our clothes last I heard is primarily grown in China.
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