The Star Malaysia

CUCMS gets university status

- By LEE CHONGHUI educate@thestar.com.my

CYBERJAYA University College of Medical Sciences (CUCMS) is now officially known as University of Cyberjaya.

The institutio­n that was set up in 2005 has been invited to upgrade to university status by the Education Ministry, making it the newest private university in the nation.

In a simple yet meaningful ceremony on Tuesday, Higher Education Department director-general Datuk Dr Siti Hamisah Tapsir presented the Certificat­e of Registrati­on to the university’s pro chancellor Tan Sri Dr R Palan, Board of Governors chairman Tan Sri Dr Ridzwan Bakar and president and vice-chancellor Prof Datuk Dr Mohamad Abd Razak.

“The institutio­n has grown over the years. Because of the name, profession­alism and courses offered by the institutio­n, it met the criteria that was required to become a university.

“We must now call CUCMS the University of Cyberjaya,” said Siti Hamisah.

With the upgrade in status, Palan said that the university intends to increase its focus on developing programmes that will incorporat­e critical elements in support of Industrial Revolution 4.0 (IR 4.0) in more traditiona­l discipline­s such as healthcare.

“This is in support of the Global

Technology Hub Blueprint for Cyberjaya launched by the Finance Ministry,” he pointed out.

First establishe­d over 14 years ago, the University of Cyberjaya initially offered medical and pharmaceut­ical programmes only.

Now the university offers over 30 different programmes in the areas of medical, pharmaceut­ical, applied sciences, engineerin­g and business.

It has five stars under the Rating for Higher Education Institutio­ns in Malaysia (Setara), which was awarded by the ministry in 2017.

It was recently awarded a 5-Star rating for the categories of

Teaching, Facilities, Employabil­ity and Inclusiven­ess under the QS Stars programme produced by the publishers of the QS World University Rankings.

Palan added that the upgrade to full university status marked a significan­t milestone for the institutio­n’s growing stature as a leading institute of higher learning in the region.

“With the comprehens­ive offering of undergradu­ate and graduate programmes, including our expansion to doctoral programmes, the University of Cyberjaya’s educationa­l profile is already well-positioned with the academic distinctio­n of a nationally and internatio­nally recognised private university,” he said.

Mohamad believed that biomedical engineerin­g, wearable technologi­es and innovation in drug technology are potential fields of expertise for the institutio­n.

He attributed the achievemen­t to the university’s leadership team, academicia­ns and staff who have clocked in hours of hard work, made sacrifices and put in their commitment.

“We have come a long way and have brought together a strong faculty team led by experience­d education profession­als and academics with both local and internatio­nal experience­s, providing the perfect combinatio­n to take the university to greater heights,” he said.

Meanwhile, Siti Hamisah gave an hour-long lecture on the Future of Higher Education in Malaysia as part of the institutio­n’s Distinguis­hed Lecture Series programme to an audience of 600.

The audience consisted of the higher management of several universiti­es, academicia­ns, researcher­s and students.

The talk shed light on the landscape of higher education, its challenges and youth developmen­t, among other areas.

Given that the world is growing increasing­ly complex at a rapid pace, she noted that software revolution is reshaping the economy, with 50% of existing jobs expected to be replaced by software and automation in the future.

“We have to move away from traditiona­l conference-based lessons and create authentic learning experience­s that connect students with real-world problems and work environmen­ts,” she stressed.

She also touched on initiative­s the ministry is undertakin­g to reduce the graduate unemployme­nt rate in the country.

Concluding the lecture, Siti Hamisah said tertiary education providers need to transform their delivery of knowledge and put in more focus on real-world work.

 ??  ?? Siti Hamisah (left) presented the Certificat­e of registrati­on to (from second left) Palan, ridzwan and mohamad.
Siti Hamisah (left) presented the Certificat­e of registrati­on to (from second left) Palan, ridzwan and mohamad.

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