From: HuffPost
by Alan Singer
A financial analysis for 2012 of the British-based
publishing giant Pearson is available online at
4-traders.com. It tells a very interesting, if frightening
story that needs to be more widely circulated in the United
States, especially among parents, teachers, and educational
policy makers. Something consistently missing in a report
that emphasizes growth and profit is students and whether
Pearson's high tech snake oil actually promotes student
learning. Pearson is a money making machine, but is this
education?
The headline summarizes the multi-page post. "Pearson
accelerates global education strategy: Restructuring and
investment in digital, services and emerging markets for
faster growth, larger market opportunity and greater impact
on learning outcomes."
It is followed by "Financial highlights." Sales were up
5 percent in 2012 to £6.1 billion or $9.21 billion, with
"digital and services businesses contributing 50% of sales."
Operating profit in 2012 was £936 million or $1.4 billion.
But there are business problems that Pearson is moving
rapidly to address. According to the report, "Market
conditions generally weak in developed world and for print
publishing businesses; generally strong in emerging
economies and for digital and services businesses." However,
there is "Considerable growth opportunity in education
driven by rapidly-growing global middle class, adoption of
learning technologies, the connection between education and
career prospects and increasing consumer spend, especially
in emerging economies."
As a result of this repositioning, Pearson's "North
American Education revenues" were "up 2% in a year when US
School and Higher Education publishing revenues declined by
10% for the industry as a whole," while "International
Education revenues up 13% with emerging market revenues up
25%." Pearson plans further restructuring and investment in
"fast-growing education markets" that by 2015 should
"produce faster growth, improving margins and stronger cash
generation."
Pearson hopes to "capture the once-in-a-generation
opportunity that comes with being the world's leading
learning company... Over the past 15 years, through a major
programme of organic investment and acquisitions, Pearson
has become the leading education company in the world, with
unique geographic reach, product breadth and professional
depth. More recently, we have achieved particularly rapid
growth in digital products and in education services
businesses, which together now account for half our sales...
We are therefore planning significantly to accelerate our
push into digital learning, education services and emerging
markets."
To achieve its business goals, Pearson promises that its
"products and services deliver demonstrable learning
outcomes to the student or the institution. We have
therefore developed the Pearson efficacy framework: a
unique, rigorous and scalable quality assurance system that
checks that the necessary conditions are in place for an
education programme to deliver intended learning outcomes.
We now require that all Pearson acquisitions and all product
investments over $3m go through the Pearson efficacy
framework and set out a plan to implement its
recommendations before approval."
Pearson is targeting higher education as well as K-12
schools, but many of these profit-making innovations can be
transferred to elementary and secondary levels. According to
the report, "Student registrations at eCollege grew 3% to
8.7 million," which includes "new online enterprise learning
contracts with California State University and Rutgers
University" and continued partnership with Arizona State
University. Students register for online courses through
eCollege at their own institutions, but Pearson provides the
technological house or platform for the operation. In a
budget saving move, the California state legislature is
considering requiring California State colleges to accept
online classes offered by other institutions if their own
classes are oversubscribed, a potential bonanza for Pearson
and similar companies..
Pearson is also making money with "MyLab" digital
learning, which provides students with homework help and
preparation for standardized assessment, assessments which
are often designed and marketed by -- guess who? -- Pearson.
Pearson's "OpenClass," currently offered to institutions
without charge, is used by 1,300 U.S. K-12 schools and
colleges.
Curiously, revenues were flat in Pearson's "Assessment
and Information business." The report complained, "State
funding pressures and the transition to Common Core
assessments continued to make market conditions tough for
our state assessment and teacher testing businesses." But
there is a rainbow hidden in the clouds. "The Partnership
for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC),
a consortium of 23 states, awarded Pearson and Educational
Testing Service (ETS) the contract to develop test items
that will be part of the new English and mathematics
assessments to be administered from the 2014-2015 school
year." Pearson also won "new state contracts in Colorado and
Missouri and a new contract with the College Board to
deliver ReadiStep, a middle school assessment that measures
and tracks college readiness skills" and five Race To The
Top (RTTT) state deals in Kentucky, Florida, Colorado, North
Carolina and New York).
Pearson has been able to extract these profitable deals
through a systematic campaign of buying good will from state
and local officials and educational institutions. Pearson's not-for-profit foundation
has paid for local and state educational commissioners whose
schools do business with the for-profit Pearson corporation
to attend international conferences in Rio De Janeiro,
London, Singapore, and Helsinki where they meet with Pearson
executives. Pearson is a major funder of the American
Educational Research Association and the Association for
Supervision and Curriculum Development, sponsoring sessions
at their annual conferences, advertising and marketing in
their exhibition hall, and giving away corporate labeled
"swag" to participants. The foundation hosted the welcoming
party at the 2013 South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference on emerging
education technologies in Austin, Texas, at the same time
that Pearson is trying to dominate the digital technology
educational market. The foundation paired with the Gates Foundation to develop digital
learning material for state Common Core standards at the
same time that the company was marketing common core
instructional material and assessments. Pearson is
developing a new national teacher certification system with
Stanford University, and is
contracting with states to administer the program.
Money, money, money, money, money. Profit, profit,
profit, profit. No discussion of educational philosophy,
educational achievement, or student needs in the entire
report. Is this the company cities and states in the United
States should trust with the education of our children?
Oh, you would think that with all of these profits made
from the public purse, Pearson would be paying a heavy tax
bill and pouring money back into the public coffers. But you
would be wrong. Pearson was able to take advantage of a
Hurricane Sandy tax deferral to significantly lower its 2012
United States tax bill.
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