Brave New World (The Star)
31 october 2012
There is a growing obsession with form over substance and nowhere is this
more evident than in the unhealthy interest taken with university
rankings.
________________________________________________________
THIS month marks the 22nd year I have worked as an academic.
In that time, I have seen many changes in the university. There have been, of
course, some improvements since those early days.
For one thing, technology has transformed things for the better.
Let’s take a trip down memory lane.
The very first publication I wrote went through this rather painful
process.
First, I had to go to the library and find the relevant cases and journal
articles. Then having taken copious notes, I went back to my office where I
proceeded to write out my thoughts with an ancient device known as a pen.
Having completed this task, I would send my scratching to a lovely lady in
the general office downstairs whose job title was “steno”.
She would type out what I wrote, give it back to me to check and then I would
return it to her with any corrections. Finally, it would be placed into a pocket
made of paper known as a stamped envelope and posted to the publisher.
Now, all cases and statutes including many journals are online. I type my
work myself (with the computer checking my spelling and grammar) and when I am
done I e-mail the stuff to the publisher.
All in the comfort of my office where I can play Flight of the Hamsters in
between constructing sentences filled with gems of wisdom.
I will be the first to admit that I am quite old-fashioned in many ways, but
I can categorically say that I don’t miss the days before the Internet and
Word.
Progress, unfortunately, is not always positive. And it saddens me to say
that over these last two decades I have seen changes that in my opinion ring the
death knell for higher education.
In my opinion, the key problem is that those who decide the direction of our
universities have lost track of the values that have to underpin these
institutions in order for them to play a meaningful role in society.
There is a growing obsession with form over substance and nowhere is this
more evident than in the unhealthy interest taken with university rankings.
Politicians harp on about it, so the Government makes it a priority. Because
the Government wants higher rankings, the vice-chancellors start ranting about
it too.
Rankings have become the raison d’etre for universities.
The quick fix then becomes the holy grail, hence universities look to the
ranking criteria and they focus their efforts on doing all they can to meet
those criteria.
This blinkered modus operandi then leads to some seriously contorted
developments which ignore the principles that are necessary for the proper
foundations of truly good universities.
Academic autonomy is one of those principles.
A university is a complex organisation. It is unlike a factory where there is
by and large one goal and usually one method with which to achieve the said goal
with the best quality and efficiency.
Even in one faculty, there are many variations. Take, for example, the
Faculty of Arts – you have departments as diverse as English and Geography;
Urban Planning and Gender Studies; International Studies and Indian Studies; the
list goes on.
You can’t possibly be laying down a single criterion for quality for such a
diverse group. But that is what happened.
Nowadays, if you want to prove your quality, the only way you can do it,
which is embraced by universities, is if you publish in the journals recognised
by the ranking organisations.
It doesn’t matter if you are an English professor who publishes well-received
novels, or if you are a Gender Studies lecturer who uses your knowledge for
women’s activism.
What about the fine arts? Shouldn’t the creation of new ideas in dance and
theatre take precedence over an article in some obscure (but acknowledged by the
rankers) journal which only a handful of people will read?
Increasingly, the thinking of universities is it is our way or the
highway.
Such a top down approach cannot work because each academic unit in a
university has its own expertise and its own value system.
This has to be respected because they themselves should know how to advance
their discipline both in an academically and socially meaningful manner.
Autonomy brings with it the necessary flexibility for each department and
each academic to chart the necessary course which will improve themselves and
their own disciplines.
And who should know better what that course should be than those who have
trained in that discipline.
I am not against the publishing of works in reputable journals. I acknowledge
that they are important to the advancement of academic thought.
What I am saying is that the diversity of academia means that there are
numerous methods to determine quality. And the best way to achieve quality is by
having true academic autonomy so that those who know best are the ones who
determine the way to achieve the best.
Tuesday, 30 October 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
What are you complaining. Other universities can do it then why not here. If you're required to publish in reputable journal just work hard for it and don't give lame excuse of so many other ways. Each university face the same "so many other ways" issue juga. It's not unique and your argument is absolutely lame. It's a good thing to be benchmarked. You can still do it do many other ways. If its good commend and support it. Don't give lame excuses like you did here.
I just asked a former MCKK boy if he would hire any of his fellow alumni graduating today.
I asked myself the same question and couldn't answer yes.
Somehow along the way, our system got screwed up so badly and the priorities are skewed.
Is there still a path of redemption?
We need to have a ranking to know which fruit is the best. Are apples better than oranges, how abut bananas, rambutan, mango?
I am serious, we really need some ranking for us to know which are better. Won't that be nice to have such ranking? With such ranking, the government would know which industry to focus on, which farmers to give more funding, which farmers to give awards for producing better ranked fruits. Get it? All you people against ranking just don't get it, how you expert the fruit industry to work not knowing which fruits are better? how you expect the government to know which farmers are better. If you are against ranking, you are against productivity, you are against health, the heath of our next generation depends on us knowing which fruits are better, and let's not forget to get rid of all those rotten apples. Get it? Ranking is everything? Don't be such a anti-progressive people and always talk against ranking.
Now, all the smarty people please come up with a ranking system for fruits.
Damn, our durians sure lose out.
Post a Comment