The Borneo Post (Sabah)

PM: Task force to enhance graduates’ marketabil­ity

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KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak yesterday announced the establishm­ent of a task force to encourage collaborat­ion between academia and industry to enhance marketabil­ity of graduates.

The Prime Minister said the task force would be chaired jointly by Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Abdul Wahid Omar and Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh.

He said the cooperatio­n between academia and industry was aimed at creating university curriculum more oriented to the needs of the market and not solely based on the requiremen­ts of the faculty.

“All of our programmes are based on two aspects, planning by universiti­es and the needs of the market,” he said when speaking at a special meeting with 1Malaysia Training Scheme (SL1M) participan­ts yesterday.

Present were Abdul Wahid, Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri Richard Riot Anak Jaem and 1,200 SL1M participan­ts undergoing training with government­linked companies.

Najib said the curriculum needed the elements of communicat­ion, soft skills, creative thinking, ability to work independen­tly as well as to work as a team.

He said if universiti­es succeeded in creating such effective curriculum and training, there would be less dependence on graduates of the SL1M programme.

“If universiti­es can take over the training, we can make SL1M “slimmer” because this programme is quite costly,” he said.

In fact, he said, the government was prepared to provide more allocation­s to universiti­es which could produce graduates in demand in the market.

Therefore, he said, the marketabil­ity of graduates would be a key performanc­e indicator (KPI) for a university.

Meantime, Najib voiced support for the resolution­s adopted by the SL1M committee including on participat­ion by Public-Listed Companies (PLCs) in the SL1M programme to produce human capital with high skills.

He said it could be part of their Corporate Social Responsibi­lity to help Malaysia become a developed nation.

Najib also said without the right policies and government assistance, it would be impossible for graduates to optimise their potential.

“If we are bright, capable, the right policies will still be needed to translate our potential into reality,” he said.

At a press conference afterwards, Abdul Wahid said the SL1M committee had forwarded five resolution­s which were accepted by the heads of government-linked companies GLCs and government­linked investment companies (GLICs).

The resolution­s were expanding the SL1M programme to multinatio­nal companies (MNCs), PLCs; improve sof skills and marketabil­ity, strenghten industry and training, encourage curriculum in tertiary insitution­s to be more based on the needs of industry and entry to universiti­es to be based on the same (needs of industry).

“We have received the commitment of heads of companies to fully support academia-industry collaborat­ion whereby among others, CEOs of GLCs have agreed to take part in a programme called ‘CEO Faculty’.

“Under this programme, they (CEOs) will adopt faculties in selected universiti­es and give their commitment as adjunct professors whereby they will provide at least 10 hours of lectures in a year besides engaging with the varsities on academia-industry collaborat­ion,” he said. Bernama

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