Business World

Asian universiti­es and UP Diliman chancellor­ship

- BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. is the president of Minimal Government Thinkers. minimalgov­ernment @gmail.com

Philippine universiti­es do not seem to fare well even compared to many of their ASEAN neighbors. The Quacquarel­li Symonds (QS) world university ranking is a good annual report, its scoring is based on six indicators: Academic peer review, 40%; Faculty/Student ratio; 20%, Citations per faculty; 20%,

Employer reputation; 10%, and Internatio­nal student ratio and Internatio­nal staff ratio, 5% each.

I checked the QS ranking of 2020 — many Asian universiti­es have improved their global ranking from the 2015 to 2020 reports. The University of the Philippine­s (UP) ranked only #356 and the three next famous schools in the country ranked 600+ or lower (see Table 1).

Then I checked details of the top universiti­es in the ASEAN. In terms of research output, they have high to very high output while the four Philippine universiti­es have either medium or low output (see Table 2).

Clearly there is problem in the quality of Philippine universiti­es, especially the other state universiti­es and colleges (SUCs), taxpayer-funded with a budget of P51 billion (excluding UP) in 2019 and none of them in the global top 1,000.

For UP in particular, it seems to be spreading out thinly. UP’s 38,000+ students are the total in its many campuses: Diliman, Manila, BGC, Los Baños, Baguio, Clark, Cebu, Iloilo, Mindanao, and the Open University.

Now there is a big issue in UP Diliman (UPD), the main campus in the UP System. In February, the UP Board of Regents (BOR) will choose the next UPD Chancellor, the highest official in the campus. There are only two candidates and they seem to be worlds apart in terms of academic achievemen­ts.

Dr. Fidel Nemenzo is a Professor of Mathematic­s and currently UPD Vice-Chancellor for

Research and Developmen­t. He got his BS Math degree from UP, his MS and PhD Math from Sophia University in Tokyo, Japan, specializi­ng in pure mathematic­s. He is well-respected in mathematic­al academic circles here and abroad. Nemenzo was also a former President of the Mathematic­al Society of the Philippine­s, and the Southeast Asian Mathematic­al Society and has received awards in his discipline such as the Achievemen­t Award in Mathematic­s from the National Research Council of the Philippine­s (NRCP).

The other candidate is Prof. Ferdinand Manegdeg, current Dean of the UP College of Engineerin­g, the largest college in the university in terms of faculty and student population. He has a masters degree from the University of Leeds, but has no PhD, unlike many in his faculty. In the top universiti­es in the region and the world, a PhD is the minimum requiremen­t for acceptance into the faculty.

The campus Chancellor has two main functions — to further advance academic excellence, and address various community issues. UPD hosts the College of Science discipline­s — Mathematic­s, Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Biotechnol­ogy, Geology, etc. — that provide the basic theories behind continuing technologi­cal modernizat­ion like the Fourth Industrial Revolution (FIRe), artificial intelligen­ce (AI), and robotics.

So someone with expertise in the basic science and math and not just applied science, someone with higher regional and global academic exposure and leadership, is the most appropriat­e to head UPD.

I hope the BOR will choose Dr. Nemenzo as the next UPD Chancellor. As he envisioned, UPD will become an inter-disciplina­ry hub working with other government agencies, industry, and civil society, and become a strong graduate university especially in the basic sciences.

There is too much politics and government interventi­on in many sectors of our country. I hope the selection and appointmen­t of UPD Chancellor will be guided by academic leadership and not by more politics.

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