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Dreams of Malaysian higher education reform falter

Civil service hostility, legislative complexity and political naivety keep restructure in the slow lane

Published on
December 18, 2019
Last updated
December 18, 2019
Ooi Kee Beng

Malaysians鈥 hopes for a rapid overhaul of their browbeaten higher education system are unrealistic, according to an expert.

Political historian Ooi Kee Beng said the reform process 鈥 aimed at boosting universities鈥 performance by restoring their autonomy 鈥 was being thwarted by civil service hostility and the educational establishment鈥檚 innate conservatism.

Dr Ooi, who runs the Penang Institute thinktank, said the government was peppered with activists who had never held office before last year鈥檚 election overturned six decades of authoritarian rule. They needed time to get up to speed and find advisers they could trust.

鈥淭heir enemies are everywhere, and they鈥檝e never been in government,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ne year is way too short to make a proper judgment on their performance.鈥

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Chang Da Wan, of the National Higher Education Research Institute at Universiti Sains Malaysia, said three to five years were needed to reform the sector. He criticised 鈥渦nrealistic expectations鈥 鈥 not only among the public but also top Ministry of Education officials 鈥 that meaningful improvements could be achieved in months.

He said universities needed new structures that allowed them to self-govern and the education minister needed to relinquish powers in conflict with institutional autonomy. The government would have to stop 鈥渞unning the universities by proxy鈥 and assume a regulatory and policymaking role. 鈥淎ll this takes time,鈥 he said.

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Dr Wan said the government鈥檚 pledge to jettison the reviled Universities and University Colleges Act, on the pretext that it violated academic freedom and autonomy, had been misconceived because the act afforded legal authority to most public universities鈥 existence.

Moreover, the Private Higher Education Institutions Act contained identical provisions. 鈥淓ven if we get rid of the UUCA, the half of the student population in the private sector is still controlled by a supposedly draconian law,鈥 he said.

Dr Wan said that while the UUCA had deprived public universities of their autonomy, another law 鈥 known as Act 605 鈥 was a bigger threat to academic freedom because of restrictions it placed on staff of statutory bodies, including universities.

鈥淭he challenge with 605 is that this legislation is not under the purview of the Ministry of Education but in a centralised agency,鈥 Dr Wan said. He said that reform plans included exempting public universities from the act.

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Lee Hwok Aun, of the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, pointed to 鈥減ositive and constructive鈥 signs of resurgent university autonomy. He聽聽that a vice-chancellor selection committee, established under decade-old UUCA amendments, was now acting with 鈥済reater resolve, independence and rigour鈥 and had set 鈥減recedents for appointment based on merit鈥.

But Murray Hunter, a former associate professor at Universiti Malaysia Perlis, said such a suggestion was undermined by education minister Maszlee Malik鈥檚 frequent hiring and firing of university governors.

鈥淢aszlee promised much more university autonomy, especially in regards to university boards,鈥 Mr Hunter wrote in the聽. 鈥淯niversity boards seem just as politicised as before.鈥

Dr Maszlee鈥檚 acceptance of the presidency of the International Islamic University Malaysia, where he previously worked 鈥 a move apparently motivated by frustration at the pace of change, but at odds with his autonomy reforms 鈥 drew criticism over perceptions of payback against former colleagues. He later relinquished the position.

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Dr Ooi said the minister was a 鈥済ood man鈥 but lacked political experience. 鈥淢aszlee is trying his best, but the press is against him. And when the press is against you, you鈥檙e in big trouble.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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