The Star Malaysia

Aiming for A+ varsities

Key issues to be addressed in revamp of tertiary level education

- reportepot by RAHIMY RAHIM

Tertiary education in the country is in for a major overhaul. All the wrongs that have crept into our universiti­es over the years are set to be fixed, beginning at the top. And, from here on, the appointmen­t of vice-chancellor­s, their deputies and university board will not be because of who theyy know but on meritocrac­y alone.

KUALA LUMPUR: How academics get their positions will be relooked to make sure they win on merit and not for their political views.

This has been proposed under a major review of the curriculum and selection criteria for top posts at universiti­es, as part of a revamp to “overhaul” tertiary level education.

Education Minister Dr Mazlee Malik is scheduled to hold a townhall session with a select team of about 20 top academics and scholars at Universiti Malaya today, his first such session since assuming the post in May.

The reforms, largely advanced by the Malaysian Academic Movement better known by its Malay acronym Gerak, is to address the root causes of the problem.

Gerak chairman Prof Zaharom Naim of Nottingham University said the aim was to chart a way forward at the tertiary level.

“We will discuss strategies with the minister,’’ he added.

Officials said under the revamp, the appointmen­t of the vice-chancellor­s, their deputies and university boards would also come under scrutiny.

In a 10-point memorandum submitted by Gerak to the ministry on June 11, it called for such appointmen­ts and that of other top university administra­tors to be based solely on merit and not political affiliatio­n

The others include the call to dissolve the National Professors Council which has been deemed political in nature, and to do away with policies based on race and religious sentiment, rather than promoting knowledge and ethical values, to help support nation-building.

Gerak also called for the Pakatan government to replace all those appointed for their political links with respected, independen­t-minded, analytical and accountabl­e academicia­ns.

It wanted the Government to abolish laws that stifled academic freedom which it said impacted negatively on academic excellence, citing the University and University Colleges Act 1971, and the Statutory Bodies (Discipline and Surcharge) Act which prohibited academics from expressing their views.

UM’s Prof Dr Rajah Rasiah, a prominent economist who was named Distinguis­hed Professor for 2017, said appointmen­ts for top posts must be made based on education qualificat­ions and distinctio­ns achieved.

“And it must be rotated every two to three years between those truly deserving,” he said.

Prof Dr Edmund Terence Gomez of UM’s Faculty of Economics & Administra­tion, felt the ministry should allow the curriculum to be decided by the universiti­es.

“It can be watched over by the ministry but the higher learning institutio­ns should not always have to go to the ministry to seek approval,” he said.

On the review of curriculum by the Malaysian Qualificat­ions Agency, he said that it should not just be “paper work” but vet how courses were run and if proper teaching methods were implemente­d.

Prof Gomez said the ministry should also find ways to boost funding for research in public universiti­es.

“The government plays a huge role in getting funding and such a task should not be left to the universiti­es alone,” he added.

The session with more than 20 professors and other academics is being viewed with extra interest as the Pakatan Harapan government has put reform in education as one of its top priorities.

Besides Prof Rasiah and Prof Gomez, the session will also be attended by UM Malaysian Chinese Research Centre (MCRC) associate fellow Dr Diana Wong, former USM professor of Politics Dr Francis Loh and Prof Syed Farid Alatas of the National University of Singapore.

 ??  ?? Aiming high: Students of University Malaya in Kuala Lumpur will be hoping to see better and improved times with the expected revamp of the country’s tertiary level education.
Aiming high: Students of University Malaya in Kuala Lumpur will be hoping to see better and improved times with the expected revamp of the country’s tertiary level education.

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