Undergraduate Research Experience for Building World Class Universities
World Class Universities and World Class Education
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Transcript of World Class Universities and World Class Education
World Class Universities and World Class Education
Prof. Les TrustrumVice Chancellor, Asia Pacific University
of Technology and Innovation (APU)Part of the APIIT Education Group
List of Topics
1. World Class Universities and World Class Higher Education (HE)
2. A Case study of Developing World Class Higher Education: Asia Pacific University (APU) and Staffordshire University (SU) in Malaysia- International HE at Asia Pacific University (APU)- International Academic Collaboration: Dual degrees
3. Challenges in World Class HE collaboration
World Class Universities
1. “everyone wants one, no one knows what it is, and no one knows how to get one” (Altbach 2004). Quoted from Education - The Challenge of Establishing World-Class Universities web.worldbank.org
2. “In the past decade the term ‘world- class university’ has become a catch phrase to describe research universities at the pinnacle of the tertiary education hierarchy” : Constructing World Class Universities conference, Hong Kong August 2013
3. “ World-Class Universities, commonly defined as the most prestigious research universities…” 5th International Conference on World-Class Universities www.shanghairanking.com/wcu/
4. A Russell Group paper titled World Class Higher Education mentions the topic 5 times and mentions World Class Universities 27 times Staying on Top: The challenge of sustaining world class higher education in the UK Russell Group Papers – Issue 2, 2010
World Class Universities
“ Although world-class institutions are commonly equated with top research universities, there are also world-class tertiary education institutions that are neither research focused nor operate as universities in the strictest interpretation of the term”. World Bank Report
World Class Universities and World Class Higher Education
Is there a difference?
Teaching v Research
• “Top universities are so focused on research they are neglecting teaching…”
• “Older universities are in danger of "resting on their laurels" while younger institutions storm ahead….”
Phil Baty, editor of the Times Higher Education (THE) magazineSource: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/06/19/times-university-rankings
2013_n_3466142.html
UK Institutions ranked by overall satisfactionUniversity Guardian rank NSS RankCambridge 1 10
LSE 3 132
Imperial 9 46
Warwick 10 28
Glasgow 21 15
Newcastle 27 32
Nottingham 28 33
Manchester 31 129
Kings College 32 71
Sheffield 38 21
Birmingham 61 38
Liverpool 54 47
Bristol 23 56
Leeds 34 59
Source: http://www.theguardian.com/education/table/2013/jun/03/university-league-table-2014 Higher Education Funding Council for England; National Students Survey
25% lower score than
the top ranked
University
World University Rankings
THE claims to judge world class universities across all of their core missions:• teaching, • research, • knowledge transfer and• international outlookQS World University Rankings uses: • Academic reputation (40%) • Employer reputation (10%)• Faculty/student ratio (20%)• Citations per faculty (20%)• Proportion of international students (5%)• Proportion if international faculty (5%)
Source: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/ and http://www.iu.qs.com/university-rankings/world-university-rankings/
World Class Education
• Does world class refer to “cosmopolitan ideals; of an education that was more open minded about, and open to, learning that engaged ‐with world issues, ideas and concerns.
• Or, what if the idea of world class education was totally ‐ engaged by questions of the quality of learning experiences for learners all over the world. Here global excellence is simultaneously a benchmark and a right for all citizens.
• Yet, …….. world class education carries a highly instrumental reading of what it involves, how to get there, and who seems to be the main actors, and beneficiaries.
• No where is this more evident than in the global rankings of ‐universities…”
Source: Robertson, S.L. (2011) World Class Higher Education (for Whom?), published by the Centre for Globalisation, Education and Societies, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1JA, UK at: http://susanleerobertson.com/publications/
•Public budget resources•Endowment revenues•Tuition fees•Research grants
Graduates
•Students•Teaching staff•Researchers
•Internationalisation
•Supportive regulatory framework•Autonomy•Academic Freedom•Leadership team•Strategic vision•Culture of excellence
Research output
Technology transfer
World Class
University
Concentration of talentF
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Characteristics of a World
Class University (World Bank)
World Class Universities versusWorld Class Higher Education
• Characteristics of World Class Universities*– High in ranking lists– Employment recognition– Research: creating and disseminating knowledge– Scale of the University
• Characteristics of World Class Higher Education– International recognition, benchmarking and partnering– Long term Graduate employability– Excellence in Teaching, Learning and Assessment (TLA)– International performance standards – Scholarly activity to support TLA
* Synthesised from presentations at 17th Malaysian Education Summit: Moving Towards a World Class Education System: Building and Sustaining World Class Universities ASLI June 2013
A Case study of Developing World Class Education
• Education at Asia Pacific University of Technology and Innovation
• Collaboration between Staffordshire University and Asia Pacific University: a case study of international collaboration
• The role of dual degrees in developing world class education
Rapid Development & Internationalisation at Asia Pacific University (APU)
• From 4 degrees and less than 2,000 students in 2005 to over 70 degrees and over 10,000 students in 2013
• From few international students in KL to around 60% foreign students from over 100 countries.
• Two overseas campuses• Student employability over 98% by graduation• From franchises to home grown degrees including
innovations such as:– BSc (Hons) in Technopreneurship– BA (Hons) in Media Marketing– Euro Asia MBA – And many others at Programme and module level
Dimensions of Internationalisation at APU
• Students: over 100 countries• Academic staff from Malaysia, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, UK, USA,
New Zealand, Iran, Yemen, Philippines, and Iraq. • Quality partner from UK• External Examiners: UK, France, Egypt, Pakistan, Germany, Malaysia &
Malawi.• Programme Learning Outcomes and curriculum• Module focus• International benchmarking• Credit transfer arrangements to UK, Australia, New Zealand and
Netherlands• International student recruitment team• International social events• Overseas campuses• Dual degrees with SU
What are Dual Degrees?
Defined by the Quality Assurance Agency (UK) as:• “Dual/double or multiple awards (are) arrangements
where two or more awarding bodies together provide a single jointly delivered programme (or programmes) leading to separate awards (and separate certification) being granted by both or all of them”
• “Joint awards….provide a programme leading to a single award made by…all participants. A single certificate. attests to the successful completion…”
Source: UK Quality Code for Higher Education, Chapter B10
Dual Degree
Joint Degree
APU Dual Degree Programmes
Why this model?
1.To provide an international experience for students2.To provide a globally accepted award3.To benchmark international standards4.To support marketing activity5.To provide education that is world class in relation to standards and content
Long Term or Short Term Strategy?
Short term• To help a new University by providing brand identity
and assurance
Longer Term1. To provide globally recognised education2. To provide a qualification valued by international
employers and multinationals3. To enable a range of collaborative developments
between the partners
Dual degrees Collaboration Activities
• Programme development• Module development• Staff recruitment and development• Resource specification• Research and library materials• T and L materials• Assessments• Quality assurance• Exam boards• Student recruitment
Challenges in World Class Collaborations (1)
• Differing approaches/perceptions to:– Nomenclature– Teaching and learning approaches– Expectations of staff, staffing cultures, insular mindsets
• Multiple QA Frameworks and Agencies with sometimes conflicting requirements
• Changes in partner culture & regulations:e.g. option choices, size of modules
• Academic Regulations– Compliance with dual regulatory practices and regulations– Harmonisation of final degree award from each partner– Balancing Standardisation vs Localisation (Glocalisation)– CGPA versus weighted GPA
Challenges in World Class Collaborations (2)
• Currency and applicability of curriculum, LOs and T, L & A materials• Time differences:
– Assessments– Exam boards– Academic year dates
• Logistics of support: – IT and Face to face interaction– Security of assessments
• Costs of collaboration in financial and staff time
World Class Higher Education
• International partnerships of (usually) international equals• International benchmarks and standards for all aspects of
programme development and delivery• International outlook• Enhanced international quality assurance processes• Enhanced international student job prospects• Access to international research and programme development• Access to international developments in teaching, learning and
assessment strategies• International staff development opportunities
• World Class, benchmarked education
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Thank you