South Korea
education war heats up
By Aidan Foster-Carter
June 16, '14, Asia
Times
South Korea is famously good at education. In the latest
Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) rankings for 2012,
published last December, Korea once again led the 34 industrialized democracies
in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, ranking first in
both reading and mathematics - just as it had in 2006 and 2009.
In a
more regional context, be it said, South Korean performance was matched or even
bettered by some other East Asian countries: China (Shanghai only), Taiwan, Hong
Kong and Singapore.
This success has earned praise from United States
President
Barack Obama. Yet here is a paradox. on the
ground, local perceptions differ sharply from those outside. In South Korea,
education is regarded as being in crisis. None of the stakeholders - be it
parents, pupils, teachers, employers, or government - are happy with the status
quo. I reviewed the causes of this discontent in two articles for
Asia Times online four years ago, and unfortunately most of the issues still
remain the same as then.
Success, at a
price
Topping the PISA
charts comes at a price. Senior high schools charge fees, and most parents spend
heavily on hagwon (crammers) to gain an edge in the crucial university
entrance exam. In 2013 South Koreans forked out US$18 billion for private
education: again, the most in OECD.
For pupils, school plus
hagwon means a double day. Studying from 8am till 11pm is common. Large
classes and rote learning are the norm; some teachers still hit pupils. This
dull, harsh, hothouse regime robs children of their childhood. Bullying and
suicide are growing concerns.
All this got little attention outside
Korea till recently. The 2012 PISA results prompted some to probe deeper,
finding that high performance entailed high stress - a pressure cooker, even.
But still overlooked is how Koreans are challenging all this. Belying
stereotypes of Confucian passivity, after decades of mainly military
dictatorship South Korea since 1987 has become a vibrant democracy. Both
legacies are incarnate in its first female President, Park Geun-hye: the freely
elected daughter of the general and coup-maker Park Chung-hee (ruled 1961-79).
South Korean politics remains hard-fought, and this spills into the
classroom. As in the UK, my own country, where the current education minister
Michael Gove's boundless enthusiasm for right-wing reforms polarizes opinion,
schooling in South Korea is a political battlefield where not only pedagogical
debates but also broader world-views clash and are fought out.
Many of
the issues are familiar, because they are universal: selectivity, elitism,
testing, free school meals, syllabus content, corporal punishment. All these
matters are fiercely divisive. The conservative educational and political
establishment is challenged from several quarters.
A
militant union
As in nearby Japan,
the struggle has long been spearheaded by a radical teachers' trade union -
though unlike in Japan, most South Korean teachers belong to another,
conservative union. But whereas Japan's Nikkyoso now cooperates with the
authorities, the Korea Teachers and Education Workers' Union (KTU) remains in
fighting mode. Originally illegal, it risked such a fate again last October when
the government deregistered it for allowing dismissed teachers to remain
members. In November, a court stayed that order; a final determination is
pending.
On May 15, the KTU weighed in on the tragic sinking of the
ferry Sewol. Most of the 304 who drowned in the sinking in April were
teenagers from a single school and 11th-grade year-group, on a field trip.
While blaming President Park and "neo-liberalism", union head Kim
Jung-hoon also held teachers responsible: "We are sorry we did not teach you to
question and disobey suspicious orders." (The crew nearly all escaped, after
telling their passengers to stay put. Most did and died, triggering an anguished
debate about cultural conformism as one factor in the disaster.)
The
government threatens to punish the KTU, and 43 teachers who posted a call for
Park to resign on the Blue House (presidential) website. However, on June 3 the
International Labour Organization criticized South Korea's ban on teachers
expressing political opinions.
Electing the
educators
Education's politicization has sharpened
since 2006, when a liberal administration extended local democracy - itself only
introduced in 1995 - to hold elections not only for councilors and mayors but
also, unusually, the education superintendents of provinces and major cities.
This has proved a mixed blessing. Despite famed enthusiasm for
education, turnout at the first ad hoc elections was poor. It improved in 2010
when the education vote was made part of the main local elections held every
four years - most recently on June 4.
Corruption is another problem. In
the capital, Seoul, both the conservative who won the first education election
and the liberal who succeeded him wound up in jail. Kong Jeong-taek took
kickbacks for promoting officials, while Kwak No-hyun bribed a rival not to run
against him.
Before his disgrace Kwak scored a wider victory. His policy
of free school lunches for all so angered Seoul's then conservative mayor, Oh
Se-hoon, that Oh called a referendum on it in 2011. That proved inquorate and Oh
resigned. The center-left won the ensuing by-election and have ruled the capital
ever since - even though 2012's by-election for Kwak's job was won by a
conservative, Moon Yonglin.
Overall South Korea hitherto mostly voted
conservative on education. In 2010 right-wingers took 10 of the 16
superintendent posts, while the left got only six. But June 4's local elections
produced a shock. Though Park's ruling conservative Saenuri (New Frontier) Party
won most of the 3,952 local seats and posts, as well as eight of the now 17 big
cities and provinces - the new one is Sejong City, which I've also written about
for Asia Times online - on education voters swung the other way. Thirteen of the 17
new schools' supremos are progressives, who will clash with the education
ministry. Eight have KTU connections, so one battle will be over the militant
union's fate.
Elites and
beatings
What else will they fight over? All
the issues cited above remain hot potatoes. Top of the list are selective
autonomous private high schools, introduced by Park's predecessor Lee Myung-bak.
With fees up to three times higher than other schools, but a better record in
getting pupils into top-ranked universities, these are anathema to the left
which has vowed to abolish them.
On corporal punishment, the Korean
debate appears dated by today's Western norms, if less so in an Asian context.
The left abhors it, and has banned it where they hold sway. But the right howls
that if teachers can't hit pupils, then pupils will hit teachers and chaos will
reign.
Modern history is another battlefield. There is no consensus on
evaluating dictators like Park Chung-hee - or North Korea. Surprisingly, most
school textbooks lean left: they are tougher on Park than the ghastly North.
Last year a "new right" text was widely boycotted for daring to find any
positives in Japan's pre-1945 occupation of Korea, still a highly sensitive
subject.
No mandate
Why have South Koreans,
otherwise conservative, suddenly swung left on education? In fact they haven't.
This election result reflects two specific factors. one is the Sewol
effect. Voters punished the authorities for letting lax safety and regulatory
lapses kill so many children.
Also, South Korea, like the UK, has a
first-past-the-post system. With no official party labels, many conservatives
competed for education posts and thus split the vote. Progressives, more
disciplined for once, mostly united behind a single candidate in each area - who
thereby won.
Seoul, the capital, also saw a third factor: social media,
highly influential in the world's most wired society. The incumbent Moon
Yong-lin, a former education minister, was challenged by a fellow-conservative,
Koh Seung-duk. A lawyer and former MP, Koh is famous in Korea for his rare feat
of passing three tough exams: for the bar, and for the civil and diplomatic
services.
Koh was ahead in opinion polls, until his own daughter from
his first marriage publicly accused him on Facebook of taking no part in her or
her brother's education. That sank him. Cho Hi-yeon, a liberal sociologist who
was trailing in third place - and whose own, more filial sons posted winsome
online pleas to "please vote for our daddy" - emerged as the surprise victor.
Does education in Seoul face a revolution? Cho swiftly stressed his
moderation. No, he had never said abolish all private schools. At least, not the
specialist ones for science and foreign languages - which his own sons attend.
But overall, as the newly elected radicals huddled to plot their
strategy, there is no doubt South Korea's education wars are about to heat up.
With the life-experience and futures of millions of young people at stake, one
would hope their elders could discuss and resolve the issues in a less heated
and non-partisan manner. Alas, that is not often the Korean way.
Aidan Foster-Carter is Honorary Senior Research Fellow in
Sociology and Modern Korea at Leeds University, and a freelance writer,
broadcaster and consultant on contemporary South and North Korean issues. He has
been a regular visitor to South Korea ever since 1982.
(Copyright
2014 Aidan Foster-Carter)
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