糖心Vlog

Don鈥檛 open the floodgates, says head of Uruguay鈥檚 new university

Restrictions on access maintain high quality bar, says rector of Latin American Center for Human Economics

Published on
July 29, 2018
Last updated
July 31, 2018
A flag passes over the crowd in Uruguay
Source: Getty
Under one flag: qualifications are awarded not by the universities but rather by the Ministry of Education and Culture

Persuading the Uruguayan government to break with convention and allow the creation of a new university was, to put it bluntly, 鈥渄ifficult鈥, according to Andr茅s Lalanne. But the rector of the Latin American Center for Human Economics (CLAEH) was justifiably proud聽last year when, 60 years after its creation, the institution was formally recognised by the state.

This may sound small fry from a global perspective, but CLAEH, a private institution situated in the capital,聽Montevideo, is special in that it is the first new university to聽win official recognition聽in Uruguay for 10 years, and only the country鈥檚 seventh overall. As such,聽Dr Lalanne has been described by his contemporaries as something of an entrepreneur for education and research.

鈥淢any people thought we would fail,鈥 he told 糖心Vlog. 鈥淚t was an ambitious project and their main concern was sustainability, because there is no public funding for this kind of institution.鈥

Thanks to support from the international community, CLAEH is now an established research and teaching institution, as well as one of Uruguay鈥檚 most respected thinktanks. The university boasts three faculties聽鈥 in medicine, law and culture聽鈥 and the rector hopes to expand further in the years to come,聽notwithstanding the聽huge challenge involved, he explained.

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Despite having gained institutional autonomy in the early 1990s, CLAEH聽鈥 like all private universities in Uruguay 鈥 is subject to strict governmental control, a hangover from the country鈥檚 12-year military dictatorship, which ended in 1985.

鈥淚t makes innovation difficult, because we have to communicate any change in the curricula, ideas for new projects, things like that,鈥 Dr Lalanne said. 鈥淏ut at the same time, I聽am sure we are making a good contribution to the public system, so it makes no sense [for ministers] not to support us.鈥

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A chemical engineer by trade,聽Dr Lalanne聽assumed the leadership in 2011, and with it he adopted the vision of CLAEH鈥檚 founding members to 鈥渞ehumanise鈥 healthcare in the region.

CLAEH鈥檚 first undergraduate school, the Faculty of Medicine, was launched in 2006 as only the second medical school in the country. The project was risky, but it ultimately paid off, something that Dr Lalanne attributes to a humanist approach聽that 鈥渃hallenged traditions and reinforced kindness in medical care鈥.

Traditional healthcare, the medical school鈥檚 mission statement boldly claims, has become 鈥渃old, mediated and impoverished鈥. It is聽Dr Lalanne鈥檚 belief that by teaching 鈥渒indness and patience鈥 through the medical curriculum, social mobility can be improved for the whole of the country.

As is the case in many Latin American countries, public universities are both free to attend and have no cap on numbers, resulting in a student population聽that is 鈥渕illions too many鈥. Through scholarship schemes,聽Dr Lalanne said, CLAEH can help to ease that burden, although progress is slow when every decision must be agreed by the state.

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In spite of these challenges, the rector insisted that there was a 鈥済ood reason鈥 for keeping such a heavily regulated system. 鈥淎 lot of universities in Latin America聽that were created in the past decade have become business models, without any care for quality of teaching,鈥 he explained. 鈥淚n order not to repeat that pattern here, we have made it very difficult to become a university.鈥

Education leaders in many countries economically similar聽to Uruguay chastise their governments for allowing an influx of private companies that dole out degrees of questionable quality. Uruguay, however, has a model that differs from most in that there is no separate accreditation system for degrees. Everything is centralised and every qualification is awarded not聽by the universities themselves but rather by the Ministry of Education and Culture.

In a way,聽Dr Lalanne said, this governmental oversight of degrees not only encourages institutions to provide a high quality of teaching, but it also聽relieves them of a certain amount of bureaucracy, allowing them to concentrate on聽other concerns, such as research.

Increasing interest from international organisations 鈥 the likes of which helped CLAEH聽in its foundation 60 years ago 鈥 will help to give the institute the financial stability it cannot聽secure from tuition fees alone. Ultimately, however, Dr Lalanne must play a patient game in聽winning trust from a government聽that remains wary.

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But he and the university have decades of experience of聽slowly and steadily advancing on their goals. The rector is in no rush. 鈥淭he important thing is not to grow too much too soon, but to retain positive results. This is how we will prove we are committed to human development for all the right reasons,鈥 he concluded.

rachael.pells@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: State controls help steady Uruguayan sector, says rector

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