The Borneo Post

Five public universiti­es to pilot iCGPA programme

-

PUTRAJAYA: One faculty each from five public universiti­es will participat­e in the pilot programme for the implementa­tion of the new student assessment system called the Integrated Cumulative Grade Point Average (iCGPA), said Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh.

He said it involved about 300 new students for the intake in September 2015, at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia ( UKM), Universiti Teknologi Mara ( UiTM), Universiti Malaysia Terengganu ( UMT), Universiti Malaysia Kelantan ( UMK) and Universiti Malaysia Pahang ( UMP).

He said the assessment covered the areas of academic understand­ing; academic skills; critical and scientific thinking; communicat­ion skills; social skills, teamwork and humanity; ethics, morality and profession­alism; informatio­n management and lifelong learning; management and entreprene­urship; and leadership.

According to him, iCGPA can help overcome the mismatch between the quality of graduates and requiremen­ts of employers, as the existing system only measured a student’s academic ability.

“We always hear comments wanting graduates who are holistic, have entreprene­urial characteri­stics and well balanced. This is what we hope to create through iCGPA,” he told reporters at the ministry’s Hari Raya celebratio­n here yesterday.

Idris said the pilot project was expected to be implemente­d over three years for fine tuning and

We always hear comments wanting graduates who are holistic, have entreprene­urial characteri­stics and well balanced. This is what we hope to create through iCGPA.

enhancemen­t of the system and the effects of the approach to students before extending it to other public universiti­es.

He said the iCGPA system had begun to be studied and developed since 2009 through a collaborat­ion with UKM and UiTM, as well as consultati­on with the Malaysian Qualificat­ions Agency ( MQA).

“The iCGPA grading will be reported in students’ scorecards using the ‘ Spider Web’ method which will list down the students’ performanc­e.

“The assessment is not only done through activities in the classroom, but also other activities on campus,” he said.

In the meantime, MQA’s chief executive officer Datuk Prof Dr Rujhan Mustafa said the softskills requiremen­t which had been listed, was emphasised in the Malaysian Qualificat­ions Framework ( MQF) but it was not recorded in the student assessment system.

“MQA supports the Higher Education Ministry’s intention to implement the iCGPA, this allows the employer to have an idea of the true potential of graduates,” he said.

iCGPA is one of the initiative­s under the first shift of the Malaysia Education Blueprint 2015- 2025 ( Higher Education). — Bernama

Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh, Higher Education Minister

 ??  ?? Idris Jusoh (right) shares a light moment with students at the ministry’s Hari Raya celebratio­n. — Bernama photo
Idris Jusoh (right) shares a light moment with students at the ministry’s Hari Raya celebratio­n. — Bernama photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia