Is Malaysia the regional leader in international higher education?


(The Guardian, UK) – In response to the costs of sending students abroad, the Malay government developed a strategy to improve its HE sector, transforming it into regional hub for international universities

While restructuring its educational policies in the 1990s, the Malaysian government realised it would not be able to provide higher education to a significant proportion of its population through its own public institutions. In 1995, the Malaysian government was faced with a situation where 20% of Malaysian students studied abroad. This cost the country an estimated $800 million USD, nearly 12% of Malaysia‘s current account deficit. Malaysia became one of the top countries sending its own students to study abroad.

Faced with such a predicament the Malaysian government embarked on a program to turn Malaysia into a fully developed knowledge based economy. To that end, the Malaysian government sought to partner with foreign higher educational institutions to offer more educational opportunities for Malaysians on their own soil. The ultimate aim was to make Malaysia a regional hub of higher education in south-east Asia.

These new policies were soon translated into regulatory frameworks to provide quality education in the private sector coupled with support from international institutions of higher education. The Malaysian government realised this would ease the pressure on currency outflow but to put such a policy into effect was by no means an easy task.

Previous regulations had barred the private sector and foreign universities from conferring degrees. In the 1980s private providers of higher education in Malaysia started inviting foreign universities to offer innovative training programs and open franchises to offer diplomas, certificates and qualifications up to bachelor’s level. However, the Educational Act of 1996 opened the door much wider for foreign institutions.

In addition to 11 Malaysian private universities, there are five branches of foreign universities, six university colleges, one virtual and one Open University in Malaysia. By 1999 at least 70 institutions of higher education from UK had some kind of collaborative arrangement with Malaysian private institutions. The number of foreign students enrolled in Malaysia increased from 1997 to 2003 with the overall higher education industry experiencing a 36.8 % growth during that period.

The foundation for modern higher education in south-east and south Asian countries was laid down by the British. These British colonies at that period were intended to serve the economic, political and administrative interest of the British to consolidate and maintain their dominance in these colonies. Emphasis was laid on language and humanities studies rather than science and technology. Even today the fundamental ethos and the administration of HEIs in SE and southern Asian countries is based on the British universities.

The policy of internationalisation in higher education in Malaysia has evolved due to necessity in keeping with the demands of changing market economies. To transform from a production based economy to a knowledge based economy requires a highly skilled and knowledgeable workforce. Increase in foreign student’s enrollment in Malaysia has made the country one of the strongest emergent contenders in the international market of foreign students. The process of becoming a ‘regional hub’ in education has also attracted its own critical perspective from fellow contenders.

The private institutions are criticised for not being able to secure ranks in the top 100 universities in the world. While there has been a large inflow of foreign students, the nation has also experienced a growing concern among a number of unemployed graduates in Malaysia (see this report by Anantha Arokiasamy). The Malaysian government is also concerned about the vocational focus of private education which may not prepare graduates with appropriate moral and ethical values needed for a multicultural and multiethnic Malaysia.

Read more at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/higher-education-network/blog/2012/jul/02/higher-education-in-malaysia

 



Comments
Loading...