As to whether USM will be able to achieve the expected ranking range that the government has arbitrarily set up remains to be seen, but what is a forgone conclusion is that any university that is given huge financial support and the freedom to chart its own future is going to do well. All nine that vied for this status are quite capable of producing good results if given the opportunity and their eagerness to be selected as the APEX university shows that they desired to be set free from the shackles of bureaucratic control. The thorough evaluation that was made on “each university’s state of readiness, transformation plan and preparedness for change” was what supposedly made the difference, though one could safely assume that all the universities had the necessary tools and qualification, and the decision was made on distinctions of very small degrees.
In giving USM the much coveted title of APEX university, the government has been successful in doing one thing: it has demoralized others. It has only proven that the decision was based on the ability of a university to sell itself on paper well, no doubt based on facts and real achievements. However, most, if not all, the others have equally impressive accomplishments to their name. The Minister of Higher Education said that the exercise was not about ranking, though most universities will read it as that, and the statement that “we are identifying one that can go leaps and bounds into excellence with government help” will not soothe any wounded egos, since all are striving to do the same.
The whole exercise of selecting an APEX university is also one that shows desperation: we want to get into the “good books” of education at all cost—without any serious deliberation over the matter—without fixing the problems that exists today which have contributed to the deterioration of tertiary education in the country or finding out why we have not been doing well. We cannot fault the government in wanting our universities to be amongst the best in the world. (Though the term Ivy League is synonymous with excellence, it is usually misunderstood since it does not include all the best universities in the
The decision to make one university the best in the country by overlooking the strengths of others is downright insulting and shortsighted. The government should give all universities autonomy and give them equal opportunity to compete. Not equal opportunity to compete for labels, but funds, a much needed commodity to get things done. None should be disadvantaged by the government they serve. The answer does not lie in bringing in foreigners to run our universities, to give them administrative posts, under the assumption that the failure of leadership in local universities is the absence of qualified local candidates, especially when blame should be assigned to the political process of appointment. A selection done through a search will yield amazing results.
The present decision will give USM an unfair advantage over all universities in
Sayyid Al-Aiderus
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