‘Fuck the Algorithm’: How A-Level Students Have Shown the Future of Protest

When digital economy and Big Data empower our lives and increase inequalities of the UK’s education system, student protests turn out to be powerful very quickly. The article of James Meadway we publish explains why this method of algorithmic working was bound to fail and our hypothesis is that “Fuck the algorithm” could become a worldwide slogan!

Blog editorial team

Protesting students and a national outcry have forced a U-turn over A-level marking in Scotland, and subsequently Wales, England and Northern Ireland in quick succession, despite the UK government’s public belligerence at the prospect of revising students’ algorithmically-moderated grades. The modelling that had been applied will now be scrapped in favour of teachers’ assessments for both A-level and GSCE students. It’s a major victory for the thousands of students who have protested.

The anger has been completely justified. The model that had been applied appears to have been designed to produce results that, on the headline measures, looked ‘fair’ (in that the averages could look about right) whilst forgetting that the distribution of overall marks was itself the product of many thousands of individual results. Throw in the fact that searching for an average based on historic performance inevitably tends to favour those who have historically done well – which, in the British case, has privileged the private sector – and the stage was set for a spectacular government failure. It’s now clear that education secretary Gavin Williamson, “promoted beyond his competence”, needs to go.

Beyond the specific government failures here, however, such as the lack of oversight and review – including attempting to silence competent professionals – the fiasco and the protests indicate a trend for the future.

Since the Covid-19 outbreak erupted, fundamentally (and permanently) disrupting how we live and work, the presence of data and statistical modelling in all our lives has accelerated markedly. From working-from-home on one side to increased biosecurity surveillance on the other (itself ranging from contact-tracing apps to temperature monitoring to “pandemic drones”) – the weight of data in our everyday lives has dramatically increased.

We’ve all become very familiar with this ghostly digital presence in the decade since the Great Financial Crisis, as (mainly US) Big Data companies have exercised their extraordinary capacities to gather, store and analyse our data, resulting in immense gains for them and an increasingly data-saturated world for the rest of us.

One way or another, the fact of algorithmic prediction has become an accepted part of how we live, most obviously online in the form of recommendation algorithms. One set of consequences – surveillance capitalism’s insatiable greed for the data we produce – is becoming better-known. The hunger is driven by the raw economics of the digital economy: each dataset that can be obtained is worth more if it can be compared with another dataset, so the value of a data company is always maximised by grabbing as much data as it can.

Usually, we don’t notice the algorithms that are used to do this. The entire purpose of those used for behavioural analysis is to forecast, as far as possible, the actions of individuals on the basis of past data. Increasingly, they are also intended to shape the behaviour of individuals in particular ways – to guide us to specific YouTube videos or Facebook advertisers or whatever. They might also be used to shape our political beliefs and preferences, as we have seen.

The critical issue with exam results is that this method of algorithmic working was bound to fail. On average, the algorithm may be more or less correct, but the ‘average student’ does not really exist – it’s a statistical fiction, generated from data which describes many thousands of individuals, none of whom are the ‘average’. Specifically for exams, moreover, there are individual people who we expect to be judged against the criteria of both their own performance and some objective standard – not against the performance of the average, either today or historically. In situations like marking exams we have specific expectations of individual autonomy and the recognition of individual merit which statistical techniques tend to override.

So what we can tolerate for, say, targeted advertising, we find intolerable for exams, which have precisely the worst possible combination – from the point of view of algorithmic processing – of four factors: being applied en masse, in public, where specific individualised results are required, and where the results for an individual are supposed to say something about their merit or worth in a particular dimension with meaningful consequences.

(Obviously, exam results aren’t the only dimension we might judge people on, and mercifully, we tend not to filter any of the others through any sort of marking scheme – although, inevitably, one UK government advisor is at least interested in China-style social credit systems.)

Environmental instability

The combination of the first three factors – mass processing, public display, individualised results – makes the case for protests clear, and the last – that the results should bear some relationship to true merit – makes it desirable. Most algorithmic processing will have only one or two of these four factors: the fact that Facebook is choosing to display some adverts to you on the basis of the statistical assumptions it makes about you is certainly individualised, but it is also not something intended for wider social comparison. Most algorithmic processing will not result in protests; as it becomes ubiquitous, we may be largely unaware it is even happening, and we may not care too much.

But one thing we have learned from this pandemic is that environmental instability – of which Covid-19 is a profound example – brings with it a deeper and deeper dependency on data. The semblance of accounting and control that Big Data provides, built-in to the business models of our data economy and increasingly factored into the functioning of government, becomes more – not less – appealing in unstable conditions.

The social structures we currently use to manage our glut of digital information – principally the giant tech companies – have every incentive to maximise their reach across social life, given the blunt economics of data: more data means more value, so grab more data. And governments, confronted by conditions over which they have increasingly little control or sway, facing populations whose cynicism about government itself remains at historically high levels, have every incentive to try to utilise mass data techniques themselves. The (relatively unsophisticated) A-level results modelling was introduced, for instance, precisely because the pandemic had resulted in the cancellation of the actual exams: it was an attempt to cope with contingency on the basis of a forecasting model.

Put these two elements together – the raw economics of Big Data that drive its expansion, and the desire of governments to try to assert some control in situations of instability – and the likelihood is that algorithmic management becomes more common as part of how government operates, not less. And of course to the extent that government data is immensely valuable, like the treasure trove of NHS data, Big Data will be more than happy to assist governments in making use of it. Michael Gove’s recent speech on the future of government, for example, explicitly highlighted the need to “open up” government data in this fashion. The direction of travel is clear, and – under current circumstances – instability will accelerate us along it.

Politicisation

But as the techniques of modelling and forecasting become a more significant part of government, they become politicised. Alongside our belief in the autonomy of individuals and the belief that they ought to be assessed according to their own merits is a belief that government should be fair and transparent.

We have built entire systems of governance and rule around roughly those ideas: the legal system depends on this principle – that the assessments it produces are fair because they are delivered on the basis of evidence that is seen, and made on the basis of the individual standing trial or settling a dispute. We elect governments in a process that hides our personal choice, but which is intended to provide scrutiny and transparency of whatever government then emerges. Both systems may fail, but they fail relative to that approximate (and widely-held) ideal.

Statistical modelling, particularly as it becomes more sophisticated, does not work like this.

It is hard for us to understand even a relatively simple model, such as that used for the A-level results. (The Royal Statistical Society’s letter to the Office for Statistics Regulation is a good guide to the problems, however.) By the time very large datasets are being used, particularly in machine learning, the results that are produced may become literally indecipherable – they are, in the jargon, not ‘interpretable’. It is not possible to see why a large statistical model produces a result, and nor is it possible for the computer – unlike a judge or a politician, say – to explain why it reached a particular conclusion. Increasingly sophisticated machine learning means that algorithms are getting better at accounting for individual nuance. But if what they are going on is past behaviour, they still start to hem in future choices and can produce radically unfair outcomes.

Again, we might tolerate this in much of our online life. The fact a particular shop is being advertised to you in particular probably doesn’t matter too much. But if the decision-making process starts to intrude on questions of underlying value, or where the outcome has profound consequences on your life, it matters a great deal. And if it is the government making those decisions, the clash between our expectations of fairness and the actual results produced by government may become profound. This is the moment of politicisation: once a procedure is moved from the realm of the mundane, or from where a market can be blamed for an outcome, and into the realm of what we think of as government, it is open to political protest.

(I’m reminded somewhat of the politicisation of the labour market that took place in the West during the post-war boom. Once governments broke with liberal capitalism and accepted some responsibility for the management of labour, it politicised the question of how labour was managed. The early years of neoliberalism in the West were, in part, an attempt to break out of this problem by having states refuse to accept this responsibility. For the regimes in the East, the problem was chronic: the attempt by government to set the conditions in every market, including labour, meant everything was always the government’s problem. Every strike suddenly took on a political character.)

We have already seen multiplying protests during the pandemic, from Black Lives Matter to an uptick in strikes. We have also seen legal objections being raised, successfully, to the use of automated facial recognition, and we should expect further legal challenges to the encroachment of algorithmic methods in future. But what the A-level protests point towards are the opening rounds of a new form of protest, against a new style of government: one that appeals directly to our faith in fair, transparent, and human-centred processes, on one side, and against the opacity and unfairness of statistically-determined outcomes on the other.

Or, as the protestors put it, more succinctly: “fuck the algorithm”.

 

First Published 17 August 2020 on: NOVARA MEDIA

Posts les plus consultés de ce blog

Météo des Luttes octobre-novembre 2020

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Météo des Luttes – Octobre-Novembre 2020 –

Barometer of struggles – October-November 2020 –

Streikwetterdienst – Oktober-November 2020 –

Barómetro de las luchas – Octubre-Noviembre de 2020 –

Meteo delle lotte – Ottobre-Novembre 2020 –

Clima das lutas – Outubro-Novembro de 2020 –

Aux quatre coins de la planète, des étudiants, des universitaires, des chercheurs, mais aussi des lycéens ou des enseignants, se mobilisent pour s’opposer aux politiques néolibérales et conquérir de nouveaux droits. Et la plupart du temps, nous n’en savons rien ou si peu…
Nous nous proposons donc de tenir sur ce blog une « météo des luttes », organisée sous la forme de textes courts, de « brèves », suivis de liens à consulter ou de documents à télécharger.
Dans ce bulletin météo, nous vous signalons quelques-uns de ces combats, locaux et universels...

All over the world, students, academics, researchers, as well as high school students and teachers are mobilizing to oppose neoliberal policies and conquer new rights. But most of the time, we hear little or no wind of it...
We therefore propose to keep on this blog a “barometer of struggles” organized in the form of news in brief, followed by links to consult or documents to download.
In this weathercast, we signal to you a few of these recent fights, local and universal…

Überall auf der Welt kämpfen Studierende, Lehrende und Forschende, aber auch SchülerInnen oder gar Eltern, gegen neoliberale Politik und für neue Rechte. Davon erfahren wir in der Regel nur wenig…
Auf dieser Seite verzeichnen wir also einen wissenschaftlichen Streikwetterdienst aus kurzen Texten und Meldungen mit Links und Dokumenten zum Herunterladen.
In diesem Bericht stellen wir Euch einige dieser lokalen und allgemeinen Kämpfe vor.

En todas partes del mundo, estudiantes, académicos, investigadores, pero también estudiantes y profesores de secundaria se movilizan para oponerse a las políticas neoliberales y conquistar nuevos derechos. Pero la mayor parte del tiempo, no sabemos nada o muy poco....
Por lo tanto, proponemos mantener en este blog un "barómetro de las luchas", organizado en forma de resúmenes, seguidos de enlaces para consultar o documentos para descargar.
En este reporte meteorológico, señalamos algunas de estas luchas, locales y universales…

In tutto il mondo, studenti, accademici, ricercatori, ma anche studenti delle scuole superiori e insegnanti si stanno mobilitando per contrastare le politiche neoliberali e conquistare nuovi diritti. E il più delle volte non ne sappiamo nulla, o molto poco...
Proponiamo quindi di tenere su questo blog un "meteo delle lotte", organizzato in forma di brevi testi, seguiti da link da consultare o documenti da scaricare.
In questo bollettino meteorologico, diamo notizia di alcune lotte, locali e universali…

Em todo o mundo, estudantes, acadêmicos, pesquisadores, mas também estudantes do ensino médio e professores estão se mobilizando para se opor às políticas neoliberais e conquistar novos direitos. E, na maioria das vezes, não sabemos nada ou tão pouco acerca disso...
Propomos portanto manter neste blog um "clima das lutas", composto por textos curtos, "resumos", seguidos de links para consulta ou documentos para download.
Neste boletim meteorológico, relatamos algumas dessas batalhas, locais e universais…

  1. Amérique du Sud
    • Colombia
      Una campaña para denunciar las amenazas de muerte contra líderes sindicalistas está en marcha como lo subraya la federación mundial de los sindicatos, Internacional de la Educación.
      En efecto, en una nueva publicación de FECODE y la Escuela Nacional Sindical se registran 6.119 violaciones del derecho a la vida, la integridad física y la libertad de los y las docentes sindicalistas en Colombia entre 1986 y 2016. Entre ellas figuran 990 asesinatos, 78 desapariciones forzadas y 49 atentados contra la vida, además de más de 3.000 amenazas y más de 1.500 desplazamientos forzados.
  2. Asie
    • Thailand
      Pro-democracy student protesters aim for ambitious political change. Fighting for three demands (resignation of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, changes to a constitution drafted under military rule; and, reforms to the constitutional monarchy), they won’t back down until the government agrees the three demands, says one of the more senior protest organizer.
      Voranai Vanijaka, a political analyst at Bangkok’s Thammasat University, said tech-savvy youths in both territories, Hong Kong and Thailand have “shared cultural values, the love for freedom and the courage to fight for change”.
  3. Europe
    • France
      © Natacha Thiéry
      Une nouvelle étape dans la lutte contre la Loi de programmation de la recherche (LPR). Malgré le confinement, un rassemblement autorisé a réuni plus de 1200 personnes, place de la Sorbonne le 17 novembre 2020 où devait être votée en deuxième lecture la LPR. Cette loi liberticide, qui a finalement été votée, aggrave non seulement le démantèlement du statut de fonctionnaire et la précarisation du personnel et des étudiantes et étudiants, mais elle instaure aussi depuis son passage au Sénat un délit de désordre au sein de l’enceinte universitaire passible de 7 500 euros d’amende et un an d’emprisonnement.
    • Hongrie
      "Free country, free university”, chanted thousands of students as they marched through the streets of Budapest on 23 October on the anniversary of the 1956 Hungarian revolution. They supported the 300 students who have been occupying their university of Theatre and Film Arts (SZFE in Hungarian) since the end of the summer.). SZFE’s previous senate and leadership announced their resignation on Aug. 31, saying the foundation that took over the university on Sept. 1 under a government decree had deprived them of “all essential powers”.
      The students were forced to stop the blockade due to new Coronavirus restrictions on November 9 but the fight for university’s freedom and independence in the Hungary of Orban will go on.

Universidad de la Tierra : autonomía, saberes y rebeldías

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Universidad de la Tierra : autonomía, saberes y rebeldías

La idea generalizada que tenemos de la Universidad es la de un lugar en el que estudiar durante un tiempo y acabar consiguiendo un título que certifica el supuesto aprendizaje obtenido. La continua mercantilización de la enseñanza promovida por el sistema capitalista también nos lleva a pensar en la Universidad como un lugar excesivamente caro, al que solo algunos tienen la posibilidad de ingresar y en el que, finalmente, recibes un título que ya no te sirve para trabajar (y que, a veces, tampoco refleja los conocimientos adquiridos). Si pensamos en alguna facultad concreta acabamos pensando en un edificio grande, de hormigón gris, quizás adornado con un césped y formado por las últimas tecnologías (en lo que sea). A veces también pensamos en facultades que se caen a pedazos y aulas masificadas. Esto es exactamente lo que no quería el Doctor Raymundo Sánchez Barraza. El Centro Indígena de Capacitación Integral – Universidad de la Tierra (CIDECI-UniTierra) se plantea como todo lo contrario a esa concepción capitalista del aprendizaje que tan asumida tenemos. Por eso es imposible acercarse al proyecto (hoy realidad tangible) sin que se derrumben los esquemas aprehendidos. No se concibe entender el Sistema Indígena Intercultural de Aprendizaje sin la destrucción de lo establecido. Este proyecto comienza a andar en 1983, sin embargo, no es hasta 1989 que se define como autónomo. En ese año es auspiciado por el obispo de San Cristóbal de las Casas, Samuel Ruiz, conocido por su labor indigenista y de apoyo a los pueblos originarios del Estado de Chiapas. Y por ser obispo de la ciudad durante más de 40 años (hasta que el poder consiguió alejarlo de allí para que dejara de provocar fallas en el sistema). Coordinado en todo momento por Raymundo Sánchez Barraza, quién también regala su vida a la causa indigenista. En 1994 los ideales zapatistas se entroncan con los del CIDECI y no se entiende su filosofía sin ellos. Según su coordinador (quien suelta una carcajada al momento de dirigirnos a él como Rector) la denominación de Universidad es un acto de rebeldía, una respuesta a las burlas del sistema al referirse a ellos y al no considerar la capacitación que allí se recibe como un aprendizaje real. Y es que UniTierra ni es oficial ni busca el reconocimiento oficial, sino el de los pueblos y las comunidades indígenas. Indudablemente, ese ya lo tiene. Entonces “¿por qué no podemos tener el prestigio de las universidades?”, se pregunta Raymundo Sánchez.

Estructura y organización

Niños y niñas venidos de comunidades indígenas, a partir de los 12 años y con independencia de que sepan leer o escribir o de que conozcan el idioma castellano. Este es el perfil de los y las alumnas que ingresan al centro. No hay un número fijo de estudiantes en cada momento, ya que si lo normal es que se tomen cursos de (más o menos) 9 meses, jóvenes van y vienen según su disponibilidad. Pueden tomar 15 días de curso, un mes o varios años. Dependiendo de la distancia entre su comunidad y el centro, quienes allí estudian estarán internos o externos. Esto es, quienes vienen de comunidades más lejanas serán internos y harán uso de los albergues con los que cuenta el centro mientras que quienes residan en comunidades circundantes estarán externos, yendo y viniendo a sus cursos a diario. Así como el número de alumnos es variable en cada momento, lo que si se mantiene es la proporción de hombres y mujeres. Sobresalen los chicos sobre las chicas. En número, claro. También son constantes los y las estudiantes que desconocen el castellano al llegar a sus cursos. Las lenguas que predominan son el tzotsil, el tzeltal y el ch’ol; aunque son muchas más las que se cruzan en los talleres del CIDECI. Los profesores conocen esas lenguas, aunque no siempre hablan a los y las alumnas en su lengua materna, “porque si no nunca aprendemos” como dice uno de los chicos que allí desarrolla su actividad.

Los saberes que se imparten van desde cursos de tortillería y panadería (con los que se abastece el comedor en el que colaboran los y las estudiantes) hasta cursos de herrería, electricidad, carpintería y alfarería. Es gracias a la aplicación de estos aprendizajes que el centro es lo que es hoy en día, ya que ha sido totalmente construido por quienes allí estudian. Igual que la mantención del mismo. Un ejemplo, las cortinas se hacen en el taller de telares, y luego se cosen y preparan para su uso en el taller de corte y confección y luego, en el caso de que queramos que las cortinas lleven algún motivo dibujado este se hará en el taller de pintura. Así cualquier cosa que veamos en el vasto terreno del CIDECI habrá sido construida gracias a los saberes que allí se han transmitido. Todo esto sin dejar a un lado la música, mecanografía o computación, donde además se practica el arte de arreglar con las manos todos los instrumentos necesarios para estas actividades. Junto con estos saberes hay unas cuantas áreas de estudios como son: Derecho Autónomo, Arquitectura Vernácula, Agroecología, Hidrotopografía, Administración de Iniciativas y Proyectos comunitarios, Interculturalidad o Análisis de los Sistemas – Mundo. Al terminar su estancia en la UniTierra, los y las alumnas reciben apoyo en un proyecto para aplicar sus conocimientos en la comunidad de la que provienen. Así se les surte de conocimientos, asistencia y las herramientas necesarias para echar a andar sus ideas en sus comunidades. Unas ideas que luego repercutirán en sus compañeros más cercanos facilitándole o mejorándole sus vidas en comunidad ¿Cómo no considerarla Universidad, cuando quizás sea la más digna de todas?

Instalaciones y autonomía

La autonomía se respira en el aire de la Universidad de la Tierra. En el taller de zapatería se hacen los zapatos para los y las alumnas, el huerto ofrece las verduras que se cocinarán en el comedor, pero también las que sirven de alimento a los animales de la granja (conejos, borregos, ocas, cerdos, gallinas y pavos). Trabajar en el mantenimiento de estas instalaciones es la reciprocidad que ofrecen quienes allí estudian a cambio de la gratuidad lugar. Y a su vez, todo lo producido sirve para abastecer a las personas que allí residen. ¿Y la luz y el agua? Evidentemente, no vienen por parte del gobierno o de alguna institución oficial ya que lo único que se ha recibido por parte de estos ha sido un cruel hostigamiento. La CFE (Comisión Federal de Electricidad) ha merodeado por la zona de manera amenazante en busca de pagos. Eso se supera gracias a la instalación de generadores de electricidad. El agua que abastece a todos y que corre por el sistema de riego que hay instalado proviene de un profundo pozo cavado en sus terrenos. Autonomía total.


NewImageCada jueves los y las estudiantes se reúnen aquí para tratar temas de actualidad, movimientos sociales o problemas que se planteen en sus comunidades.

Lejos de tener carencias, la Universidad de la Tierra se muestra como un paraíso. Las instalaciones y su integración en la naturaleza distan mucho de lo que podemos pensar de esta universidad sin zapatos, como se autodenomina. Además de las decenas de talleres (entendidos como lugar físico), del comedor y de las construcciones que guardan los generadores; son varias las salas para seminarios y aulas que se prestan a otros movimientos sociales. Una colorida capilla se presta a la realización del culto y un enorme auditorio se abre a grandes celebraciones y tiene siempre las puertas abiertas al EZLN, quien celebró en dicho auditorio la Clausura del Primer Festival de las Resistencias y las Rebeldías Contra el Capitalismo este pasado mes de enero.

Filosofía e inspiración

Además de inspirarse en el EZLN y el obispo Samuel Ruiz, este centro por y para indígenas se asienta sobre los principios de Imanuel Wallerstein y de Iván Illich. Del primero agarran su análisis sobre el capitalismo basado en conceptos como Sistema – Mundo. Es de Iván Illich de quien beben sus concepciones acerca de la enseñanza, el aprendizaje y la desescolarización. Se olvidan del tipo de enseñanza impuesto por el capitalismo al que hacíamos referencia al comienzo de este texto y priman el aprendizaje en relación con las personas. Cómo diría Illich en La sociedad desescolarizada:

  • Los profesores de habilidades se hacen escasos por la creencia en el valor de los títulos. La certificación es una manera de manipular el mercado y es concebible sólo para una mente escolarizada. La mayoría de los profesores de artes y oficios son menos diestros, tiene menor inventiva y son menos comunicativos que los mejores artesanos y maestros.
  • La instrucción libre y rutinaria es una blasfemia subversiva para el educador ortodoxo. Ella desliga la adquisición de destrezas de la educación ‘humana’, que la escuela empaca conjuntamente, y fomenta así el aprendizaje sin título o permiso no menos que la enseñanza sin título para fines imprevisibles.

Dos citas muy prácticas para entender la filosofía del CIDECI que se basa en tres principios inquebrantables: “aprender haciendo”, “aprender a aprender” y “aprender a ser más”. Estos principios ejercen de guía principal a la vez que sirven de bola de demolición contra lo ya impuesto en materia de educación por el sistema actual. Una red entretejida por y para los indígenas de la mano del “Doc” Raymundo. “Seguir haciendo, seguir formando sin perder de vista las directrices del EZLN y de los pueblos originarios”. Porque la Universidad de la Tierra es por y para ellos.

Publicado en el blog
https://silviadistopia.wordpress.com/2015/03/05/autonomia-y-aprendizaje-en-cideci-unitierra/,
5 de marzo de 2015.

Para más información sobre los seminarios organizados por la Universidad de la
Tierra consulta las transmisiónes en vivo en el sitio:

http://seminarioscideci.org/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRzTfaieltA

Météo des Luttes – mars-avril 2019 –

World

fr-FR en-EN de-DE es-ES it-IT pt-PT

Météo des Luttes – mars-avril 2019 –

Barometer of struggles – March-April 2019 –

Streikwetterdienst – März / April 2019 –

Barómetro de las luchas – marzo-abril de 2019 –

Meteo delle lotte – marzo-aprile 2019 –

Clima das lutas – Março-Abril de 2019 –

Aux quatre coins de la planète, des étudiants, des universitaires, des chercheurs, mais aussi des lycéens ou des enseignants, se mobilisent pour s’opposer aux politiques néolibérales et conquérir de nouveaux droits. Et la plupart du temps, nous n’en savons rien ou si peu…
Nous nous proposons donc de tenir sur ce blog une « météo des luttes », organisée sous la forme de textes courts, de « brèves », suivis de liens à consulter ou de documents à télécharger.
Dans ce bulletin météo, nous vous signalons quelques-uns de ces combats, locaux et universels...

All over the world, students, academics, researchers, as well as high school students and teachers are mobilizing to oppose neoliberal policies and conquer new rights. But most of the time, we hear little or no wind of it...
We therefore propose to keep on this blog a “barometer of struggles” organized in the form of news in brief, followed by links to consult or documents to download.
In this weathercast, we signal to you a few of these recent fights, local and universal…

Überall auf der Welt kämpfen Studierende, Lehrende und Forschende, aber auch SchülerInnen oder gar Eltern, gegen neoliberale Politik und für neue Rechte. Davon erfahren wir in der Regel nur wenig…
Auf dieser Seite verzeichnen wir also einen wissenschaftlichen Streikwetterdienst aus kurzen Texten und Meldungen mit Links und Dokumenten zum Herunterladen.
In diesem Bericht stellen wir Euch einige dieser lokalen und allgemeinen Kämpfe vor.

En todas partes del mundo, estudiantes, académicos, investigadores, pero también estudiantes y profesores de secundaria se movilizan para oponerse a las políticas neoliberales y conquistar nuevos derechos. Pero la mayor parte del tiempo, no sabemos nada o muy poco....
Por lo tanto, proponemos mantener en este blog un "barómetro de las luchas", organizado en forma de resúmenes, seguidos de enlaces para consultar o documentos para descargar.
En este reporte meteorológico, señalamos algunas de estas luchas, locales y universales…

In tutto il mondo, studenti, accademici, ricercatori, ma anche studenti delle scuole superiori e insegnanti si stanno mobilitando per contrastare le politiche neoliberali e conquistare nuovi diritti. E il più delle volte non ne sappiamo nulla, o molto poco...
Proponiamo quindi di tenere su questo blog un "meteo delle lotte", organizzato in forma di brevi testi, seguiti da link da consultare o documenti da scaricare.
In questo bollettino meteorologico, diamo notizia di alcune lotte, locali e universali…

Em todo o mundo, estudantes, acadêmicos, pesquisadores, mas também estudantes do ensino médio e professores estão se mobilizando para se opor às políticas neoliberais e conquistar novos direitos. E, na maioria das vezes, não sabemos nada ou tão pouco acerca disso...
Propomos portanto manter neste blog um "clima das lutas", composto por textos curtos, "resumos", seguidos de links para consulta ou documentos para download.
Neste boletim meteorológico, relatamos algumas dessas batalhas, locais e universais…

  1. Monde

    La lutte des jeunes pour le climat est devenue mondiale

    Alors que dans le bulletin météo de janvier-février, nous annoncions le lancement des jeudis verts des lycéens en Europe et en Australie, le mouvement a très vite pris un caractère mondial comme le montre la planisphère réalisée par Fridays for future.org. Le 15 mars, la grève mondiale des jeunes a réuni près de 1,5 million d’élèves et d’étudiants dans plus de 70 pays.

  2. Afrique
    • Afrique du Sud
      NewImageStudents clashed with police in Johannesburg’s University of the Witwatersrand (WITS) on February 7. The protests come after the tertiary’s Student Representative Council (SRC) called for a national shutdown of all tertiary campuses, as they demand that homeless fellow students should be provided with adequate accommodation and students who have historical debts be allowed to register at the university.
    • Algérie
      NewImageSuite à la mobilisation massive des étudiants pour le retrait de la candidature du président Bouteflika à un 5ème mandat, la police a tenté d’évacuer des milliers d’entre eux qui protestaient pacifiquement contre la nomination, le mardi 9 avril, d’Abdelkader Bensalah en tant que président de l’Algérie par intérim. Face la répression policière, les étudiants ont promis de marcher tous les jours.
    • Côte d’Ivoire
      NewImagePartout dans le monde, l'application du néo-libéralisme à l'Enseignement Supérieur et à la Recherche entraîne une multiplication des fraudes. On en trouvera un exemple en Côte d'Ivoire, via le combat du collectif des enseignants-chercheurs et chercheurs de l’Université Félix Houphouët-Boigny d’Abidjan Cocody (Codec). Ce collectif est monté au créneau pour tenter de désamorcer le conflit qui les oppose au président de l'Université. Dans une déclaration faite à la presse, Dr Oumar Yéo et ses camarades démontent la gestion du Pr. Abou Karamoko et lui font des propositions de sortie de crise.
    • Kenya

      Student riots happened in Laikipia University after cultural festival week reduced to one day in Nyahururu.
      The students were protesting over the shortening of this year’s cultural week from five to one day. “We have been holding a cultural week in every academic year. This year’s event was set to start yesterday (Monday 25 March) up to Friday. But yesterday, we were notified by the university’s administration that we will only hold the event on Friday”, said the student who sought anonymity. Another student said that the university management cited lack of funds for the changes. “Why is the university citing lack of funds for shortening the period of the cultural event yet the money had been factored in the fees?”, posed another student.

    • Mali

      Grève des enseignants : les négociations se poursuivent entre les syndicats et le gouvernement. La grève des huit syndicats de l’éducation signataires du 15 octobre 2016, déclenchée le lundi 11 mars 2019, est prévue pour durer jusqu’au 5 avril prochain. Ce débrayage paralyse les écoles du pays depuis plusieurs mois.

    • Maroc
      NewImageDes affrontements ont eu lieu à Rabat lors de la manifestation du 20 février alors que le problème des enseignants contractuels reste sans issue. Libération parle de panne de courant entre le ministère et les syndicats. « Le gouvernement s’attache à recruter par contrat, tout en introduisant 14 amendements au statut des fonctionnaires des académies », y lit-on. 

      Police clashed with demonstrators in Rabat on Wednesday February 20 during a strike called by labour unions and workers to protest against lacking reforms.
    • Niger
      NewImageComme nous le signalions déjà dans la météo des luttes de janvier-février, les universités sont toujours paralysées par un mois de grève des enseignants qui réclament une amélioration de leurs conditions de vie et de travail.
    • Ouganda

      Kyambogo university student loses hand in protest against new tuition policy. However, students have vowed not to stop until the policy is revised.

    • Sénégal
      NewImageZiguinchor : le système éducatif paralysé à 65% par une grève régionale des enseignants et une marche nationale des élèves des Eaux et Forêts.
    • Tunisie
      TunisDes affrontements entre des étudiants affiliés à l’Union Générale des étudiants de Tunisie (UGET) et la police ont eu lieu le mercredi 10 avril 2019, devant le ministère de l’Enseignement Supérieur ainsi que devant de nombreuses institutions universitaires relevant de l’université de Sousse. Des étudiants, revendiquant l’organisation du concours d’aptitude au professorat de l’enseignement secondaire (CAPES), ont fermé la route et ont lancé des pierres contre les forces de l’ordre, se réfugiant dans les rues avoisinantes par la suite.
    • Zambie
      Zambian education authorities Friday April 5 shut the country’s second largest public university, the Copperbelt University (CBU), following riots. The government said the riots were caused by students who were barred from sitting examinations because they had not made the cut in continuous assessment tests but, in fact, confusion erupted at the Copperbelt University in Kitwe on Monday April 1, after Management told first year students to go back home as government can no longer provide bursaries for them.
  3. Amérique du Nord
    • Canada
      • Ontario
        Ontarion student protestThousands of students across Ontario walked out of their classes Thursday, April 4, and with their teachers and parents Saturday, April 6, to protest the cuts to public education budgets being imposed by the province’s right-wing Progressive Conservative government. The initiative was organized independently by students themselves, using the #StudentsSayNo hashtag on social media. In the little more than a week since high school student Natalie Moore called for the protest, students from more than 700 schools from all parts of the province signed up to take part.
        OPSEU First Vice-President / Treasurer Eduardo (Eddy) Almeida said the budget contains deep new cuts to a variety of ministries, including social services and post-secondary education. "They’re giving corporations billions in tax cuts, but it seemed like every second word out of the Finance Minister’s mouth was debt or deficit," said Almeida. "Even the Ontario Chamber of Commerce has been crying foul about all the financial scare-mongering this government has been doing."
    • États-Unis
      • Californie
        CalifornieAfter Oakland in march, nearly 3,000 teachers and support staff conducted a one-day strike, Thursday April 11, in Sacramento, California. The Sacramento City Teachers Association (SCTA) called the limited walkout after 92 percent of its members voted last month to authorize strike action in the state capital. "I want them to see me fight for what's right. I want my students to know that they're important enough to me that I'll fight for them and I'll say what needs to be said as best I can," said a seventh-grade teacher.
      • Illinois
        NewImageAfter two weeks on the picket line and more than a year at the bargaining table, teaching and graduate assistants at the University of Illinois at Chicago have made a deal that will put more than 1,500 employees back to work, union leaders said Friday.
        But despite agreeing to terms for a new contract late Thursday, the union continued its strike which began March 19 because the terms of ending the walkout — such as how workers could recoup lost pay — weren’t final, the union said.
      • Kentucky
        NewImageMore than 60 University of Kentucky students joined a hunger strike by the end of March meant to pressure school leaders to take specific steps to reduce food and housing insecurity among the student body. Research conducted at University of Kentucky in fall 2017 showed that 43 percent of the students who were surveyed had experienced some degree of food insecurity in the past year, while 8 percent indicated they had experienced some form of housing insecurity during that time period, according to a September 2018 workgroup presentation.
        The protest paid off, and the hunger strikers resumed eating on Tuesday, April 2. With a national spotlight on low-income and vulnerable students, the protest at Kentucky is the latest sign that colleges are being forced to do more to provide for their basic living needs.
      • Mississippi

        Anger is rippling through Mississippi, with educators threatening their first walkout in that Deep Southern state in more than 38 years.
        On March 28, the state legislature passed an insulting $1,500 pay raise for teachers and assistant teachers after decades of deep and sustained cuts to public education. The measure, passed near the conclusion of the recent legislative session, was promptly followed by a $2 million boondoggle for a school privatization program.

      • Pennsylvanie
        Philadelphia Community CollegeStrike, voted on Wednesday March 27, averted at Community College of Philadelphia, but bigger funding battle continues. Community colleges typically spend less per student than other public institutions of higher learning, even when accounting for the fact that many four-year schools dedicate money to research.
  4. Amérique du Sud
    • Colombie
      BogotaEl centro de Bogota es, de nuevo, escenario de un fuerte enfrentamiento entre el Escuadrón Movíl Antidisturbios (Esmad) y algunos estudiantes de la Universidad Distrital, sede Macarena.
      Varios estudiantes han afirmado que con la protesta se buscaba mostrar inconformidad por la actuación del gobierno de Duque frente a la reunión con la minga indígena en el Cauca, ya que el presidente se fue sin reunirse con esta comunidad y no estuvo en plaza pública con los indígenas, argumentando problemas de seguridad.
    • Honduras
      TegucigalpaMovimientos independientes de estudiantes protestaron en contra de los masivos despidos que se anunciaron para los empleados del Instituto Nacional de Formación Profesional (Infop). Las autoridades del gobierno confirmaron el despido de unos 660 empleados de la institución de formación por problemas de presupuesto.
  5. Europe
    • France
      Ils étaient des milliers à battre le pavé dans toute la France. Les enseignants étaient en grève le jeudi 4 avril et manifestaient contre les réformes du ministre Jean-Michel Blanquer.
      Alors que le décret qui instaure des droits d’inscription pour les étudiants de licence et de master hors Union européenne vient d’être publié, la contestation se poursuit, avec un élargissement du combat en faveur d'enseignement supérieur public, gratuit et émancipateur pour toutes et tous.

      La réforme du lycée est-elle un moyen de supprimer 12 000 postes et va-t-elle, une nouvelle fois, renforcer la sélection à l’université ?
      L’émission Au combat du MediaTV permet de faire le point.

      Par ailleurs la contestation des Stylos rouges se poursuit, à Rennes, Vatan, Amiens... Dans une lettre adressée au ministre de l’Éducation, mais aussi à Emmanuel Macron et Édouard Philippe, les Stylos rouges réclament l’ouverture du dialogue à propos des réformes en cours.
    • Germany

      Fruitful negotiations between public authorities and public service trade unions, including education unions affiliated to Education International, have led to salary increase of 8 % for public workers.

    • Grèce
      NewImageStudents, police clash in Athens over teacher appointments in the public school system on mid-January 2019. "I’m a full-time teacher but we stand together (with part-time staff) as this law affects (everyone)", Venetia Reppa, a teacher hit in the back by a police stun grenade, told reporters outside parliament. The education ministry is preparing to push through parliament a hiring law which teacher unions say does not sufficiently take prior experience into account.
      Greece’s public schools have suffered from spending cuts imposed as a condition of bailout agreements to end its debt crisis.
    • Pologne
      Pologne enseignants en grèveDans le cadre de la rébellion internationale d'enseignants, le lundi 8 avril, plus de 80% des 400.000 enseignants polonais ont rejoint une grève nationale illimitée. Il s'agit de la première grève nationale des enseignants dans le pays depuis 25 ans et l'une des plus grandes grèves en Pologne au cours des dernières décennies.
  6. Océanie
    • Australie
      • Tasmanie
        Tasmanian teachers begun strike action on April 2, following stoppages in November. The strike reflected pent-up anger over the stagnant wages and destruction of conditions imposed by successive Labor and Liberal state governments. In Hobart, the teachers joined hundreds of public sector workers, including nurses, firefighters and parks and wildlife officers, at a stop-work rally that packed City Hall.