Speech before
the Los Angeles World Affairs Council on March 15, 2001:
His Excellency Claude Allègre
Former Minister of National Education, Research
And Technology, France
“Educational Reform in the U.S. and Europe”
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen. I
just want to give you a few ideas about the comparative problems we have in
Europe, in general, and France, in particular, and maybe slightly in the United
States. Of course, on the last
point I will be more cautious for obvious reasons but one of them is for
diplomatic reasons since I understand there’s a big discussion today going on
about reform and I don’t want tobe interfering with a foreign country’s
policy.
I just want first to [discuss] probably, some of the prejudices you have.
When I travel in the United States everybody says, “Oh, the beautiful
education system you have in Europe. Oh,
so poor our education system we have here.
Oh, if we could only imitate that.”
I think the situation is not like that today.
The situation of European education has been falling down continuously
for the last twenty years. This is
simple. We have an evaluation for
the world now every year on the principal subjects, mathematics, physics, etc.
and if you look at the position on those evaluations, Europeans, not only
France, are falling down. For example, France used to be very good in
mathematics; now we are number seven. The
tope [countries] are Korea, Singapore and India now.
Everybody believes we will be safe because we have a high education.
That’s not true anymore. First
point. If we don’t make our education a big boom then we will be
in big trouble, because we represent, for France, one percent of the world’s
population. If we don’t do as we
have done in the past, an exceptionally good education, then we will lose many
of our positions in the world. So
this is the first point.
The second point is, you said American schools are bad. I also wish to challenge this point. First of all, and maybe
Americans don’t appreciate it enough, you have by far the best universities in
the world. By far—which means
there’s no comparison, except maybe one or two in Europe on the quality of the
American universities. The
university, to me, in the United States, is the basis of the prosperity of the
United States. A couple of years
ago, you read in the newspapers that the Japanese are going to take over in
electronics, computers, everything. Today,
nobody speaks anymore about the competition of the Japanese. Why? Because
people, some students at Stanford, some others at MIT, have developed a new
system, new technology, new inventions and know that everything that is Silicon
Valley is a product of Stanford. The
Route 128 is a pure product of MIT and Harvard.
So, the universities in this country are really at heart extremely
important.
Those universities have several characteristics. First of
all, to select the student, each of them with different criteria.
That means if you’re good maybe you will not fit at Harvard, but maybe
you will fit at MIT. This is a big
diversity. Cal Tech doesn’t admit the same people as Stanford, and so forth.
So, this is the base of diversity. You
drive in the best place, the best people whatsoever, their specialty.
This is a very important point.
In Europe, we have a tendency to believe, especially in
France, that you are the true, and this is absurd, of course, he’s not the
true, and you decide to select for mathematics or some other on a path from
Latin, and nothing else. But you
have some people who are as good in natural science as in mathematics and they
are as valuable. But in the French
system, they have a very hard time to do it.
So diversity is a very important point.
But
linked with that, because your secondary schools are not, I would say, on
average terrific, you have one advantage—your children don’t get that tired.
In fact, when they get out of the secondary schools they are still very
fresh. Our students get tired by overcrowding, by too many hours,
too many programs, and so forth. Your
people come into the university and they are eager to learn and so they have a
lot of energy. Your program, for
example, in the universities is remarkable.
It’s more diverse. Many
times in Europe, we say that the Americans are specialized. By far they are less
specialized than in Europe. In
France, you choose at entrance to a university philosophy, and you do only
philosophy, or you do mathematics. Here
you are obliged to take six or seven different things.
In fact, many science students take some literature in their freshman
year. So, this is the basis of your
education and I think you don’t have to worry until you spend enough money
because you pay for it. You have to
realize that you pay on average per capita 3.5 times more than we pay in Europe
on the university. So you put an
enormous amount of money on the university, and comparably you pay for less in
the high schools than we pay in Europe. Those
things have to be known. Your
system is based on that.
Why
do we have a problem in Europe? The
problem in Europe can be said in numbers very easily. In a French university these are the numbers: between 1953
and today, the number of students has increased from 100,000 to two million.
The number of people teaching in universities was something like 5,000;
there are now 1000,000. So this is
the [biggest] increase you can imagine. Comparatively,
in a secondary school you have also a fantastic growth, which means that in the
past the French system was conceived as an elite system—you have a selection
and only a small percentage of people are in the secondary schools and then
fewer in the universities. Now
it’s becoming a broad-based education and, of course, you cannot pass from one
system to another if you don’t change the structure.
We have not changed the structure. The
teachers, for example, still believe they are in an elite education system.
They are no longer in an elite education system.
They have to take care of everybody who comes, and so this creates an
enormous problem and this is a basis for tension.
In Europe, you know, we have this tension.
France, Germany have reacted quicker than the others, but the result is
that we don’t have any more real top universities, neither in France or in
Germany. We have good universities,
but we have nothing compared to Harvard or to Berkeley, or MIT. The UK has been resistant, but now they are in the flow.
They are in the flow because fifteen years ago they had 12 percent of an
age generation in the universities. France
and Germany are 50 percent, now even more-and U.S. is 60 percent-and now, you
know, the people in the UK are going to 35 percent.
So we’re obliged to create those polytechnic institutes to eventually
now become two universities and so forth.
Some
other results which are disaster for Europe is research, because a university is
not just a place where you teach. A
modern university, an American university, is a place where you do research,
where you get the student on the latest research so they can be productive
immediately, and now it is the place where you create startup and new companies
and new little things. This is what
a university is, and if you have not research linked with education and linked
with the creation of business, you have a real problem.
So in Europe this is our lack, because what happens is we have too many
researchers. We have, for example,
2.5 more researchers in France and Germany than in the United States.
So, the result is, that each researcher doesn’t have enough money to do
his [work]. So the people, the
researcher, complains he has not enough money.
It’s true, but it is because there are too many.
And so in Europe, now, we are incapable, absolutely incapable—except
the UK still, but for how long I don’t know—and in Holland to speak about
“centers of excellence”. The recent European Commissioner said we have to do
centers of excellence in Europe. I
said, “Yes. How do you do
that?” If immediately you’d
said, “We will do a center of excellence in Bordeaux,” immediately
Marseilles or Toulouse, everybody would say, “Well , I am the center of
excellence.” And even so, if you
do that you have some people who would say, “Why do you care about excellence?
We should be equal to everybody.”
So this is a situation which is extremely bad, and I don’t know how we
can reverse this trend.
The point [about] secondary school education is that the
secondary schools have not been reformed enough.
We are getting people aware of science.
We have a drop in people coming out of the secondary schools over the
last five years: 32 percent are not doing science.
So we have a drop in the science students, because they were educated,
they don’t like science, and that the end of that.
We have a huge increase in the university of the number of people in
psychology, sociology and physical education, gymnastics.
This is a big increase, and the fact that our national team won the
soccer championship was a disaster of this issue.
Everybody wants to go into this field.
So we have to reform the secondary schools, but it’s very difficult
because the teachers don’t want to move.
The second point is that the secondary schools and the
primary schools—but less the primary schools—are managed by the central
operation. In other words, when I was Minister of Education, I had under
me 1.2 million people, and I tried to decentralize as much as possible.
In fact, I was reading the debate in the American newspaper today, and I
think you are exactly on opposite side as we are.
You have decentralized system for management, which is good, because for
management you should be decentralized. But
you also decentralized everything. Therefore,
you don’t have any national standards. I
think the equilibrium is to have decentralized management and national
standards. I am not too worried
about U.S. education, frankly speaking, because I believe that your people are
taking the problem seriously. If
they make some national standard, not very strong, if they educate the people
with the same wisdom that has been in
the past, I think they can do well. You
just have to pay a little more to secondary school teachers, who are underpaid,
in my opinion, in this country, but if they do that it would be okay.
In Europe, I am not so optimistic.
Of course, our education, basically the primary schools, is still good,
and they create the basis of the secondary schools that are not bad.
I said they are degrading, but they are not bad.
So I think we will maintain the problem for a while, but we will not
improve and we have to improve to maintain our position.
I believe that in all of those systems the key word is excellence.
There was an article a couple of weeks ago in Times magazine which
I support completely. They were
saying that the best golf player is Tiger Woods, and the two best players are
two American-Africans, and this girl, Oprah Winfrey who is very successful, [all
these things] are going to drive this community more than many [other] plans.
I believe this is true for everything.
In fact, in France the energy is in the suburbs.
But those people, what they make to become a musician or they become
professional soccer players, all of the big stars came from there.
If we can drag them a little to do business or to do science, they will
be as successful, except we have not to do a uniform education.
So my point is decentralization, diversity, and, at the same
time national standards. Meaning
what? Meaning for certain numbers
of things we have to have national standards but, on the lower lever, we have to
let the professor and the teacher to do it their way to reach the national
standard…not [push] them away. I
feel that, after all, many of the children have many talents.
More than you believe. But
those talents sometimes are appreciated at one age, some at other ages, some in
music, some in mathematics. The
goal of the teacher is to discover in each child what his talent is.
But if you impose on the teacher a program which is extremely tied up he
will not do that. He will not have time to do that.
I think we share two facts.
In the U.S., as well as in France, the nursery schools are beautiful.
They are the best by far. In fact,
I had one of my kids in a nursery school her as well as in France and my mother
was one of the directors of the nursery school who made the French reform forty
years ago. So I say they’re good.
The primary schools are not that bad in the U.S., unlike what you read in
the newspaper. In France, I think,
they are sill solid. But we have, from our point of view, to make big progress in
the universities, but we must now be able to raise the center of excellence, and
I don’t know how to do this, really. This
is a very difficult thing.
Here, you
probably have to deal with a national standard. But again, don’t lose the diversity and don’t lose the
initiative. If we don’t do that,
I am very attached personally to what wins in public service.
We pay taxes, and those taxes should go somewhere.
Some people say they go to the army.
I don’t think the army is the only place where the taxes should go.
So the state should provide to its citizens a certain number of things.
An education is one of the things that the state has to provide, because
education in the end is the most important thing in life.
If you give equal opportunity to the kids then you make a nation, not
only because [morally] it’s better to give equal opportunity and justice and
so forth, but also because if you draft all of the good people the nation will
be even stronger. So education is
important. But if the public
service is not capable to do that, then I’m sure private initiative is going
to take the education service.
I
will give you a number you won’t believe.
Probably you don’t know. In the U.S. you have only 15 percent of
private schools for higher education; in France we already have 25 percent.
You have a system, and we have a system in Europe—we go from Germany
with four percent, U.K is with seven percent—to Holland with 75 percent of
private schools in exactly the system I understand you President wants to
propagate. In other words, they are
private schools, but the children come with a check given by the government.
So they are private schools but paid by the state, more or less.
Only the rich people have the money; the others are directly paid by the
government. I’m afraid this
system is going to spread if the public service is not capable of doing that.
I
will end with a question mar. If
we’re going this way then it would be a change in a French republic.
It will be a completely different regime.
Because this is one of the bases of our republic, which was built after
the Revolution. Yes, the state provides a certain number of things—the
judges, the police, the education, and the army.
If we start having private things—now we have too much, the state was
owning a car company and so forth. This
was very crazy in my view, but this is going on. But education, I think, if you go in a private sector there
is a big danger then that equal opportunity will go, and then if the state
doesn’t give equal opportunity, it would be different regime. I am not going to judge what it will be, but it will be a
serious question. This is why I
have been very deeply concerned by this reform.
Unfortunately, I get in trouble with the secondary school teachers, but
okay, somebody else will do it.