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Fauziah Md Taib and Chan Huan Chiang

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The process of technocracy must also translate into a more robust and wholesome ... Technocracy alone Rich people but locked doors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fauziah Md Taib and Chan Huan Chiang


1
Human Capital Development
Role and Contributions of Private Higher
Education Institutions
  • Fauziah Md Taib and Chan Huan Chiang

2
Background
  • Growing importance of human capital in knowledge
    economy
  • Drastic Demand for Higher Education HE
  • To improve access and equality
  • Massification of Higher Education
  • Private Higher Education PvHE absorbs the
    excess demand from Public Universities
  • Globalization Effect
  • Malaysia as Hub of Educational Excellence
  • Growing number of foreign students
  • Internationalization agenda

3
What is Human Capital Development?
  • Ultimate objective of economic development
  • Enriching human lives
  • Not just about material enrichment but to
    increase the capabilities of people to lead full,
    productive, satisfying lives.
  • Source Griffin and McKinley (1992)

4
Human Capital Development Indicators
  • Lead a long life (life expectancy at birth)
  • Enjoy Good Health (Morbidity Rate)
  • Access to accumulated stock of knowledge
    (enrolment and literacy rates)
  • Sufficient income to buy food, clothing, shelter
    and
  • To participate in decisions that directly affect
    their lives and community
  • Live in peace and harmony (crime rate)
  • People with soul

5
Role of Tertiary Education
  • Two competing roles
  • Job Sieving Model (Technocracy)
  • Positive Externality (Society and Culture, Values)

6
Job Sieving Model (Technocracy)
  • Building up skills to secure job (main objective)
  • Employers use paper qualifications to sieve job
    applicants, those without would not be
    considered.
  • A person is equipped with skills and knowledge to
    produce goods services for oneself
  • Counted as an aggregate becomes the sum of the
    nations production (GDP)
  • Private gain
  • 100 individual returns
  • Private Investment
  • Low investment result in low technocracy, vice
    versa
  • Encourages Locked Door syndromes

7
Positive Externality (Society,Culture,Values)
  • HE as a means to get
  • Behavioural change in desired direction
    Behaviourist
  • Develop capacity and skills to learn better
    Congnitivist
  • Become self actualised, autonomous Humanist
  • Model new roles and behaviour Social Learning
  • Construct Knowledge Constructivist
  • Wholesome Society materialism spiritualism
    New Sciences
  • Source Ashworth, Brennan, Egan, Hamilton and
    Saenz (2008)
  • Returns to Society
  • Public Investment

8
Social Choice
  • HE delivery system in any economy is the balance
    between job sieving (p) and societal benefit role
    (1-p).
  • A choice along the continuum is more appropriate
    NOT a pure p or 1-p.
  • The ratio is effectively social choice
  • Who should make the choice?
  • Elected representatives on behalf of the society

9
A Tough Choice
  • The process of technocracy must also translate
    into a more robust and wholesome society (people
    with soul).
  • A society should not just become
  • progressive in technocratic sense but also
  • progressive in societal sense (necessary and
    sufficient condition)
  • Achievement of only one aspect would cripple the
    society
  • Technocracy alone Rich people but locked doors
  • Scholarship alone Society loving folks but not
    much technocracy learning

10
Social Choice Examples
  • The US model though seen as the epitome of
    development is a very locked door community
  • Some examples of countries that have overcome
    locked door society
  • Germany, Norway, Sweden and Finland
  • High income levels, small population with
    philosophy and culture play a big role in
    schooling curriculum
  • Singapore American model but with high state
    control

11
Current Delivery Systems
  • In Malaysia, currently there are dual systems of
    delivery
  • 20 public universities
  • Over 500 private universities
  • Public universities are publicly financed
  • Private universities are self financed
  • Are they playing the same role?
  • Should they be playing the same role?

12
Contribution of Private HE (thus far)
  • Since the suite of acts passed in 1996-1997
  • New Education Act of 1996
  • Private Higher Education Institutions Act 1996
  • Private HE has become increasingly significant in
    serving to complement Msia HE system,
    particularly in terms of
  • Improving access to tertiary education
  • Contributing to foreign exchange earnings
    Malaysia as a hub of educational excellence

13
Contribution Vs Role
14
Role of Private Higher Education
  • Essentially, What is the expected contribution
    by the Private HE?
  • Should not be different than that of public HE.
  • Goal is the same but the routes may be different
  • Objective is to achieve wholesome society
    (technocracy and people with soul)
  • Recap- Not just about material enrichment but to
    increase the capabilities of people to lead full,
    productive, satisfying lives.

15
Common Complaints
  • Poor race relation
  • Poor soft skills
  • Alarming crime rate
  • Moral issues (Lack of Adab)
  • Attitude problems
  • Unethical people, compromised independence
    Subprime Crisis, Enron, Fraudulent/ creative
    Accounting
  • What is the source of the problem?

16
Source of the Problem
  • Old Science (Newtonian and Cartesian) Man is
    machine, parts of a whole, etc.
  • The New Science Quantum Mechanics, Relativity
    and Complexity Theories tell us that there are
    no parts at all, that the world is all of a
    piece, holistic.
  • Everything is interrelated, equilibrium is
    elusive and fleeting. Small and even trivial
    causes can have massive effects. (inseparable web
    of relationships).

17
Wholesome Society HE Role
  • How to achieve it?
  • Curriculum
  • Teaching technocracy or skills Vs teaching
    philosophy
  • How much of Private HE contents concurs with
    philosophy?

18
How Do We Produce Wholesome Society?
  • Is the present curriculum wrong?
  • Should it contain more philosophy, values based
    contents?
  • Are we not doing it now?
  • What else are still lacking?
  • Present Problem
  • Doing it just for the sake of LAN/MQA compliance?
  • Implementation problems
  • The heart does not present

19
Proposed Solutions
  • Elected representatives must make the choice on
    behalf of society.
  • Once the social choice is decided (how much
    component of technocracy and philosophy, soft
    skills should be),
  • this would also determine the share of public
    financing of the individuals higher education

20
Financing of Societal Role
  • Government should be funding the component for
    societal role (philosophy and soft skills, 1-p).
  • Why?
  • Students only want to pay for technocracy (p) so
    that they can enter the job sieving market
  • Private HE providers reluctant to offer as it
    adds to delivery costs
  • Force it!
  • It becomes compliance issue students and PvHE
    providers just go through the motion with little
    emphasis and resources!

21
Proposed Solutions
  • Government uses tax money to pay for the teaching
    of societal role (1-p) type courses in PvHE
  • The investment in societal benefits is NOT
    subsidy but is viewed as buying the social
    order
  • To live peacefully, everyone must pay
  • Philosophy, soft skills type of courses are NOT
    SUPPLEMENTARY But
  • CORE MATERIALS
  • Aim To become and Intellectual Society NOT
    Intelligent Society

22
Proposed Solutions (cont)
  • Any revamp must be on the basis of wholeness as
    demonstrated by the new science paradigm
    everything is interconnected.
  • Cannot treat technocracy and inculcation of the
    fundamentals of philosophy in isolation.
  • Man is not machine (Le Mettrie, 1748)
  • Not necessary additional budget but more through
    reallocation of government public expenditures.

23
Challenges
  • Implementation
  • The paradigm has to shift. Business not as
    usual..
  • 40,000 heart neuron has to accompany the
    23,000,000 brain neuron to make an impact
  • Awareness for values, scholarship, ethics,
    principles must be inculcated.
  • Demand must be created. Government to play the
    marketing role too.

24
How to Implement?
Approach
Objective
Suggestion
25
Summary
  • Human capital development strategy is a long hard
    thinking process.
  • It starts with a strong foundation and holistic
    perspective.
  • Short cuts, corner-cutting measures would not
    result in a sustainable and successful
    development.
  • Both public and private HE has to play the same
    role in producing wholesome society together with
    people with soul human with ADAB!
  • Government has to make the social choice (ratio
    between technocracy and societal benefits) and
    finance the latter part.
  • The societal benefits courses should become part
    of the core curriculum NOT supplementary

26
Thank You !
  • QA
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