International Higher Education, Winter 2005

World Class Universities: American Lessons

Charles M. Vest
Charles M. Vest is president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and author of Pursuing the Endless Frontier: Essays on MIT and the role of Research Universities (MIT Press).


In its new ranking of the world’s 200 best universities, The Times Higher found the top three to be U.S. institutions—Harvard University, the University of California, Berkeley, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

There are good reasons why U.S. universities fare well in competitive rankings, and other nations could profitably consider the structural and policy factors that help them achieve such heights.

But collaboration may be even more profoundly important than competition in determining the future of higher education. Indeed informal global cooperation is already beginning to create the meta-university that will see the best scholarship and teaching shared worldwide.

The factors I believe contribute the most to the excellence and competitive success of U.S. higher education include:

Such factors could be integrated into the cultural and political contexts of other nations and perhaps be improved on.

The enormous success and impact of the Indian Institutes of Technology, established in the 1960s, demonstrate that great universities based on this research-intensive models can rise rapidly anywhere in the world.

Indeed, the situation is far from static. Germany is working to better integrate the powerful free-standing Max Planck Research Institutes with German universities to capture the dynamism that comes from interweaving teaching and research.

In the UK, issues of access, affordability and top-up fees are subjects of intense debate, and visionary activities such as the Cambridge-MIT Institute seek to better couple the stellar intellectual power of British universities to national competitiveness, productivity and entrepreneurship.

China has committed to transforming several of its universities into world-class research intensive institutions, as have Singapore, Mexico and many other nations. The next 50 years should produce healthy competition and progress in advanced learning and research. But cooperation is very important too.

The internet and worldwide web will make possible global research collaboration, sharing of knowledge and collective creation of educational materials.

Local universities will not be displaced or replaced. Rather, teaching and the creation of knowledge at each university will be elevated by the Linux-like efforts of a multitude of individuals and groups all over the world. The tectonic shift can be thought of as the emergence of the meta-university.

Of course, scholars and teachers have always advanced their work collectively through conferences, seminars, and correspondence. But the scale of participation speed of propagation and sophistication of access and presentation that we will see in the coming years are unprecedented.

One catalyst for this new dimension of global cooperation is MIT’s OpenCourseWare initiative, which is making the basic teaching materials for virtually all our subjects available on the internet at no charge to all teachers and learners.

The residential university will continue to be the best venue for bright young men and women to live and learn among dedicated scholars and teachers. Institutional quality will be raised through competition and adaptation of elements of the US model.

But the meta-university—the electronically enabled global collaboration of teachers and researchers—will rapidly advance and improve higher education everywhere.

(Reprinted, with permission, from the Times Higher Education Supplement, November 5, 2004).


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