Education from womb to tomb

21 November 2005

Cuba Si
The magazine of CSC
Cuba’s University of the Third Age is a shining example to us all, writes Steve Ludlam
Summer 2010
Noam Chomsky on Cuba-US relations - exclusive
Friends of Cuba Solidarity Campaign
Waste not, want not
Miami 5 updates
Spring 2010
Concert for Haiti
Cubans in Haiti
Remedios y sus Parrandas
The real war on terror
Auntumn 2009
Interview with families of the Five
Autumn 2009
Juan Almeida Bosque – hero of the revolution
Presidio Modelo, School of Revolutionaries
Summer 2009
From here to there - Interview with Omar Puente
Ken Gill ‘son of Cuba’
Talking to Aleida Guevara
Pride in Cuba
Cuba50 - 40,000 people join the celebrations
Spring 2009
A chance encounter with Operación Milagro
Confronting rhetoric with reality
Talking about a Revolution
Pushing for a change in UK policy
Winter 2008-9
Hasta La Victoria Siempre - Interview with Cuban poet who witnessed Revolution
The revolution that defies the laws of gravity
Feminising the Revolution
Autumn 2008
Families torn apart - Miami 5 interview
TUC Congress reports
Terror in Miami - Cuba's exile community
After the storm - Hurricane report
Summer 2008
AGM Report - CSC celebrates year’s successes
Havana rights
Changes in Cuba?
Miami Five – Ten years on
Spring 2008
Libraries at the heart of the community
Lessons for a greener world
Fidel stands down
Celebrating 50 years of progress
Cuba50 – Celebrating Cuban Culture
Winter 2007/08
“In every barrio, Revolution!” - CDR Museum opens
Fighting for the Five - Leonard Weinglass interview
The World of Work in a Changing Cuba
Campaign on Barclays and extraterritoriality continues…
Autumn 2007
The living legacy of Che
Interviewing Fidel
21st century medicine
Summer 2007
From Pakistan to Rotherham:
Farewell to Vilma:
Whose rules rule?
Spring 2007
Feeding the revolution
Stop the Hilton Hotels ban
Teaching citizenship the Cuban way
Winter 06/07
Exclusive: London's Mayor visits Cuba (inglés y espanol)
Rendezvous with lies
World Circuit Records celebrates 20 years
Autumn 2006
The landing of the Granma
America's favourite immigrants
Life without Fidel
Summer 2006
Teatro Miramar: a dream to be realised
From Cuba with love: Cuban doctors in Pakistan
Bush’s ‘secret’ plan for Cuba
Spring 2006
Exporting healthcare: Cuba and the real meaning of internationalism
Let there be Light
“Hombres not Nombres”
Winter 2005-6
Europe partakes in a recipe for disaster cooked up in Washington
We are stronger than ever
Confessions of an “independent” trade unionist
Autumn 2005
Education from womb to tomb
Brendan Barber pledges TUC support for Cuba
Five reasons why the people rule
Summer 2005
Participation is key to Cuba’s democracy
Bill and Joe’s Cuban cycle adventure
Poet of Guantanamo
Spring 2005
Justice delayed, justice denied
Is Venezuela next after Iraq?
Trip of a lifetime
Winter 2004/5
Cuba's Response to AIDS
Books: Bulwark against neo-liberalism
Guide to the `Report from the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba´
Autumn 2004
Book review: Cuba’s story
Autumn 2004
Heart strings
Speaking truth to power: Cuba at the UN
Summer 2004
A revolution in culture
Cuba saved my daughter
Salud International to back Cuban internationalist doctors
Spring 2004
Biotech for all
US occupation of Guantanamo Bay is illegal, says top lawyer
Miami Five: Hopeful of justice
Winter 2003/4
Charting women’s progress since 1959
The truth about Reporters Sans Frontières
Solar-powered education
Autumn 2003
Join the CSC bike ride to Cuba
How the US stole Guantanamo Bay
Does the FCO website betray a political bias against Cuba?
Summer 2003
Hands Off Cuba Campaign Launched
Monument to freedom
EU lines up with US
UK lawyer visits Havana
My secret mission to meet Fidel
Ibrahim Ferrer: a lesson in greatness
The Miami Five -an injustice too far
Spring 2003
Cuban student tours UK
Beyond the beach and sun:
CSC’s Father Geoff Bottoms visits one of the Five
Autumn 2002
Housing for the People
Moncada Day Cycle Challenge
British credit cards hit by US sanctions
Summer 2002
Evil Spirit
From May Day In Havana To The Cradle Of The Revolution
A dream for all times
How foreigners fuel US anti-Cuba policy
Spring 2002
African Roots
How the US planned to start a war with Cuba
Toys for Cuba
Welsh Education Minister meets Fidel
Education from womb to tombSince its foundation in 2000 by an alliance of the Cuban unions, pensioners and a teachers’ NGO, the growth of Cuba’s University of the Third Age (U3A) has been phenomenal. Its president, Professora Teresa Orosa Fraíz (Teresita) reports that since the first 42 students joined her first course in 2000, the U3A had registered around 30,000 students. This year alone 16,000 registered in 636 centres covering all 169 municipalities of the country. Next year there will be 20,000 new students. This May the U3A won Cuba’s most prestigious National Social Security Prize.

What explains this rapid progress? U3As elsewhere tend to be run exclusively by universities, or are private voluntary groups. Neither model has produced universal free access to higher education for third age citizens. Cuba has, by combining university status with voluntary activity. What have been the key elements?

Most obviously, Cuba’s revolution incorporates a strong commitment to realising human potential, and a belief that the revolution’s progress depends on a cultured and self-confident population. That population is ageing. Cubans can retire at 55 (women) and 60 (men). Life expectancy is 77. That is a lot of people with a lot of life left. By 2025, 25 percent of Cuba’s population is expected to be over 70.

Angel Luis Mena Kindelán (Mena), President of the retired workers movement, observes, ‘In the past the education ministries were responsible for children, youths and adults, but there was nothing for senior citizens. Now education starts in the womb and ends in the tomb!’

And the U3A is taken seriously as higher education, not as a pastime. When Havana University’s Rector inaugurated its Department of the Third Age, Teresita and her colleagues developed the basic curriculum. Taught over 42 weeks, it includes modules on study skills, human development, health education, general culture, social security and services, and managing free time. It is based on a theoretical perspective that emphasises that the third age offers not managed decline, but distinctive development possibilities.

Another crucial factor is the organising and mobilising role of the Cuban TUC’s (CTC) retired workers movement, which now has 312,000 members. Around seventy percent of U3A graduates come from its ranks. The CTC issued a ‘convocatoria’, a formal call to Cuban organisations to help the U3A, and allocated half a million pesos a year to U3A activities.
Mena explains that, as well as finding teachers, the unions secure teaching spaces, ‘Many institutions have lecture theatres, and they all have unions. So we go to the union leadership and arrange to borrow the lecture theatre. And we can go to the local authorities.’ The result, he proudly notes, is that the U3A has never had to turn away would-be students, anywhere in Cuba.

As provincial universities launched U3A Departments and local groups mushroomed, a national co-ordinating group was established, led by the founding organisations and backed by ministries, educational establishments, trade unions and other mass organisations. This network helped mobilise many of the U3A’s more than 7,000 teachers – all unpaid volunteers. More remarkably, many are also U3A graduates who have taken a specially developed university teaching diploma.

As Teresita concludes:

‘I think, in summary, that it’s a very particularly Cuban product: this ability to act very rapidly on a national level; to be able to do the teaching on a voluntary basis; in its objectives

“It’s not just aimed at one-off individual study and self-improvement, but at equipping people to continue to develop, to produce, interact, work, to continue feeling useful to society.

“The successful integration of so many totally diverse institutions, which is not easy, has been vital because our teaching modules have a wide variety of themes, so no specialist can teach all of them.”

The U3A’s effects have been manifold. The individual impact in terms of self-esteem and powers of communication has been inspiring, and recently-noticed beneficial health effects intriguing.
Further, as Rosita Fonseca Dorado of the CTC stresses, family relationships are transformed by the discovery that grandparents can continue to develop in their own right, and are not just a spare pair of hands passively awaiting their dotage! I met one blind graduate in her mid-70s, surrounded by admiring family and friends, and planning to do a continuation course in computing.

The incorporation of disabled students is another example: in Guantánamo there is now a class of 25 disabled students. Hundreds of continuation courses are running, all free, taught by volunteers, and supervised by university institutions. 5000 graduates, Mena says, have taken continuation computing courses alongside youngsters.

Social participation has blossomed. As Teresita explains, “I think one the greatest impacts up to now of this movement has been precisely continuing this socialisation of senior citizens … the observable, fundamental result is that they are able to continue developing. In social activity, in all the ongoing activities of their classes, in the retired workers sections of their unions, in schools with children, and in their families.”
I encountered several examples. There is a large spin-off programme of local and oral histories. U3A groups take responsibility for supporting thousands of Venezuelans in Cuba for health treatment. They have established their own Miami Five solidarity committee. In Santi Spiritus I met a group running events for visiting international delegations, organising the city’s ‘grandparent circles’, and helping union social programmes. And of course the participation of graduates in all the organisation and teaching tasks of the U3A has been crucial to its expansion.

Success creates opportunities and challenges. The basic curriculum is under review, continuation courses are being implemented in every locality, and there is a drive to embed the U3A in every sub-municipal Popular Council. Ever wider access is on the agenda: for the disabled, for more old people’s homes, and prisons. Another challenge is why comparatively few men are becoming students. Is it because they tend to stay at work longer; is Cuba’s macho culture a factor? Scientific research on the U3A is emerging, both by established academics and by U3A graduates. U3A leaders sit on new government commissions on third age issues.

The Association of Cuban Pedagogues, a teacher’s NGO, now has a third age section. The idea has been floated of a Latin American U3A institution, to exchange expertise and develop new U3As. Cuba’s ‘exported’ literacy and health programmes are an inspiration. Lots still to do, but, being Cuba, an impressive willingness to make the effort.

Meanwhile, as Teresita told its 5th anniversary meeting, Cuba’s U3A is ‘contributing to the improvement of the social image of old age … showing the way forward to the creation of a picture of a new type of third age citizen.’ Once again, Cuba has lit a bright beacon.

TOP Dr. Steve Ludlam, with thanks to the U3A and CTC in Cuba, and to the University of Sheffield and the Nuffield Foundation for their support. s.ludlam@shef.ac.uk
Bookmark and Share RSS