Which is the Malaysian premier
university? Nobody knows and this is a big shame as it is caused not by
competition by universities to be the best but to avoid the bigger plunge in
international rankings! ________________________
Speech at DAP Petaling Jaya Dinner
by Lim Kit Siang
___________________________
(Petaling
Jaya,
Tuesday):
Which is the Malaysian premier
university? Nobody knows and this is a big shame as it is caused not by
competition by universities to be the best but to avoid the bigger plunge
in international rankings.
Is it University of Malaya?
Until two years ago, there was no dispute if University of Malaya claimed
to be the nation’s premier university – a position it had occupied
unchallenged for over three decades.
It was also internationally recognized as the premier university in
Malaysia as reflected by the 2004 and 2005 Times Higher Education
Supplement (THES) World Universities Rankings for Top 200 Universities,
being positioned No. 89 and 169th slots respectively.
However, it was toppled from the pedestal by Universiti Kebangsaan
Malaysia (UKM) when UKM beat University of Malaya in the 2006 THES
ranking, placed No. 185 as compared to the 192nd position for University
of Malaya.
Is it UKM then?
UKM’s placing on the top of the university pole in the country lasted one
short year as in the 2007 THES Top 200 Universities ranking, UKM plunged a
shocking 124 places from No. 185 to No. 309, not only behind University of
Malaya’s No. 246 but also Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) which is placed
No. 307.
Furthermore, in the recent government ranking for public universities,
both UKM and University of Malaya was ranked behind USM, the sole
university to be placed on the five-star Outstanding Category, with no
university rated for the top-rung Excellent Category.
Is it then USM, to lay claim to be the nation’s best university?
Not so, although in the 2004 THES ranking, USM was rated among the Top 200
Universities when placed No. 111, but it plunged 215 places to No. 326
ranking in 2005, 277 in 2006 and 307 in 2007.
With no single university currently able to lay claim as the nation’s
premier university, this sad state of affairs is a reflection of the very
troubled public university sector.
May be this confusion awaits resolution when a private higher education
institution establishes its claim as the nation’s premier university,
better than anyone of the public universities – especially as the Chinese
government has recognized 43 private universities and colleges as compared
to only seven for public universities.
One aspect which had been overlooked in the latest THES Top 200
Universities ranking is that Malaysia is losing out badly in the
international competition for excellence, not only to universities of
developed nations but even those of developing nations.
Thailand, for instance, has established its superiority in university
excellence to Malaysia when for three consecutive years, Chulalongkorn
University of Thailand beat Malaysian universities in the THES ranking –
121 in 2005, 161 in 2006 and 223 in 2007 as compared to Malaysia’s best of
169 in 2005 (University of Malaya), 185 in 2006 (UKM) and 246 in 2007
(University of Malaya).
Also for the first time in the THES Top Universities Ranking, Malaysia has
lost out to three other third-world nations, viz.
Brazil
University of Sao Paulo - No. 175
University of Campinas - No. 177
Mexico
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico - No. 192
South Africa
University of Cape Town - No. 200
The only way to restore Malaysia’s pre-eminence in university excellence
is to end the policy of mediocrity and its replacement by a policy of
meritocracy, with the recruitment of the best students and lecturers for
each university coupled with an affirmative policy not based on race but
on socio-economic needs.
Otherwise, Malaysian universities will continue to be left more and more
behind other countries, including from third-world countries, in the
global race for university excellence.
(20/11/2007)
* Lim
Kit Siang, Parliamentary
Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic
Planning Commission Chairman |