By Sam Rany
1.
There is a jump in
higher education in Cambodia, what do you see from this development?
Actually, I observe that the rapid development of Cambodian higher education
institutions has provided both advantages and disadvantage for its current
educational system. Remarkably, these higher learning institutions have played
a significant role to develop human resources to serve in our labor markets as
well as to compete with other country members in ASEAN’s labor market, and they
have responded with the proportion of increasing numbers of high school
students who want to enroll in their institutions.
However, this expanding may lead the confrontation of educational
quality and the large number of educated graduates may not be equally matched
with market demands. Presently, there are 91 Cambodian higher education
institutions, comprised of 34 public and 57 private universities, in 19
provinces and in Phnom Penh, the capital. According to a report of the Ministry
of Education, Youth and Sport, the total annual registration rate has increased
dramatically more than four times from 57,828 to 246,069 between 2003 and 2012,
with approximately 91 percent of students paying fees in the public and private
HEIs. In particular, in the academic year 2011-2012, there were 1006 doctoral
students, 14,127 master students, 207,666 undergraduate students, and 23,123
associate students.
2.
Are you seeing the
emergence of a new professional class? Skilled, educated or professional people
in Kingdom?
Yes, I am interested in the emergence of our new development of the
professional classes. I highly appreciate to the government that established
new academic status for professional people in higher education, for example,
assistant professor, associate professor, and professor. It really encourages
people to fulfil their career with high quality and professional ethics. To compare with academic salaries in some
countries, Cambodian academic monthly salary together with basic salary,
functional, and subsidiary allowances (risk allowance, regional allowance,
health risk allowance, pedagogic allowance, and family allowance) for a
fulltime university lecturer can be as low as Riel 55, 0000 (approximately USD
$130), which is insufficient to meet the daily expenses of a family (RGC,
2010), whereas overall academic average monthly salaries of some Asian
countries are much higher: they range from USD 1,182 in China, USD 1,547 in
India, USD 2,568 in Australia, USD 3,107 in Malaysia, to USD 4,112 in Japan
(Rumbley, 2008). So far, we have seen a new professional status in health and
agricultural sectors, but educational sector is under draft paper. Ultimately, the
offering of these academic statuses should be considered whether they have
transparency or not to meet the criteria of regional and international standards.
3.
What do you think of
quality standards of higher education in Cambodia? How can they be improved?
As a researcher, I think that the quality standards of Cambodian higher education are under well-developed. Even thought our higher education is not yet ranking in top 500 world class universities like other five countries in ASEAN including Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and Philippine, our undergraduate and graduate students are accepted to enroll in their postgraduate programs in developed countries as well as in world class universities. Why? Because our Cambodian students have succeeded in their postgraduate studies, they have enough foundation knowledge to compete with the native English speaker or foreign students. For instance, hundred Cambodian students have accepted to enroll in postgraduate programs through the international development scholarship including Fulbright scholarship, Australian Development Scholarship, New Zealand Development Scholarship, Japan Development Scholarship, ASEAN’s Scholarship, European Scholarship...etc..
To improve our educational quality standards, the government should
take measures as following:
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The government should pay more attention on HEIs which expand public financial support for their academic functioning, and increase sufficient salaries and incentives; the government should effectively audit their expenditures with transparency and accountability.
-
The government should put
more effort to encourage higher education for reforming their institutional
policies such as admission requirements, curriculum and extra-curricular
activities, teaching methodologies, research methods, and practical skills that
are demanded by labor markets.
-
The government should
allocate some national budgets to support unpopular courses and programs for
the profits of the country.
-
The government should
provide adequate training courses related to educational planning and
management, strategic management, and higher education administration for
universities’ staffs and faculty members.
-
The government should transform public higher education institutions to be the PAIs in order to make their own decisions in academic and non academic activities. Finally, the government should provide academic freedom for students, professors, and lecturers in accordance with the Cambodian constitution both inside and outside university campuses.
4.
Are people studying the
fields where the jobs will be?
Currently, most Cambodian students prefer to study in social science
and business studies that mismatch with the actual social needs of the country.
According to the report of UNDP, Cambodia still
has an unbalanced disciplinary structure to link with market demands.
Approximately 70 percent of students are studying in the social sciences, business
administration, economics or law, whilst fewer students are studying in agriculture,
natural science, and technical and professional occupations. Furthermore, some
research finding pointed out that most universities offered only business studies
and social science rather than natural science and technology because of their
own commercial profits. They don’t want to spend budgets for laboratories, experiential
activities, and other facilities.
5.
What are the deficits in
Cambodia? Does government concern on quality of higher education? More spending
budget on it?
Our current educational system is seen an educational crisis to be urgent
reform to integrate in ASEAN community. There are several crucial problems could
be considered as the deficits need to be urgently addressed that could impact
on the quality of education in Cambodia HEIs.
-
The first problem is the
constraints on higher education financing, which is limited by the government’s
budget. The overall education expenditure accounted for only 1.6 percent of
Cambodia’ gross domestic product and public higher education expenditure was
only 0.05 percent of GDP (WB, 2012). Because of these shortages of annual
budgets, Cambodian higher education institutions cannot implement their
institutional policies to equip modern and adequate facilities to effectively
support the academic and non academic services for student academic successes
such as libraries, workshop, accommodation, laboratories, and classrooms.
Corruption and non transparency of public expenditures in HEIs are also
considered as serious problems. The government has not yet created regulations
or policies on public financial management within public and private higher
education institutions. They should be required to broadcast their annual financial
statements for the public. Controversially, some universities are actively
involved in selling diplomas, and bribes are paid for degrees, academic
assignments, and thesis writing (Shane, 2012).
-
The second problem is lack
of admission requirements. Most Cambodian higher education institutions are not
setting the specific admission policies and criteria to recruit qualified
students to attend in their institutions, and they mainly depend on the results
of higher school examinations. Consequently, they have competed in attracting
the numbers of enrolments for the purpose of their commercial benefits.
Especially, English or other foreign languages are not required by most public
universities as entrance requirements.
-
The third problem is lacking
human resources, teaching qualities, and research capacity. There are few full
time academicians who hold PhD’s degree in Cambodian universities because of
insufficient salaries and incentives; especially, educational experts and
policy makers who have qualified experienced and skills to restore Cambodian
educational system to meet the requirements of world class universities. On the
other hands, the Accreditation Committee of Cambodia has not enough qualified
assessors and experts to evaluate the training activities and to assure the
education quality of higher education institutions. In addition, Cambodia is
still not policy on academic profession ranking so that it is not encouraging
people to work in academic careers. Similarly, most universities have problems
with research capacity. For instance, a study of five prestigious Cambodian
universities had found that only 6 percent of university lecturers hold PhD’s
degree and about 85 percent have never published any academic papers (Chen,
2007).
-
The fourth problem is
academic relevance. The Cambodian government has not yet policy on curriculum
and extra-curricular activities to linkage with the labour markets. Presently,
the high rates of unemployment among the university graduates are due to their
lack of professional skills to respond to the demands of labour markets. For
example, most of Cambodian higher education institutions are providing most
disciplines in business studies, economics, and IT, whereas current Cambodian
labour markets are demanding in natural science, engineering, mathematics,
agriculture, and health (Noch, 2009).
-
The last problem is autonomy
and academic freedom within the public universities. The government has
policies to provide HEIs a legal status as quasi-government institutions or
public administration institutions (PAIs), but the implementation is inactive
because of political motivations and pressures. Currently, there are twelve
specialized ministries and agencies to supervise and to provide higher
education services in Cambodia (Sam, 2012). As a result, political parties and
parent ministries have rights to interfere in making decisions of higher
education institutions as well as in nominating high academic ranking officers
based on political interests rather than academic qualifications. Furthermore,
academic freedom is so strict in Cambodian democratic society; for example, the
freedom of expression related to politics, human rights, democracy, corruption,
transparency, good governance, and social justice debate are prohibited by governments
within the HEIs.
In fact, the government is really concerned over the quality of
higher education through adopting many educational policies and regulation. For
example, the Cambodian government and higher educational institutions have
strived to establish numerous policies, strategies, regulations, institutions
and academic support services for promoting the education quality. The
government has also implemented three main national strategies including the
Rectangular Strategy for Growth, Employment, Equity and Efficiency, the
National Strategic Development Plan Update 2009-2013, and the Educational
Strategic Plan (Education for All) 2006-2013. Especially, the Privatization
Policy has permitted private sectors to invest in tertiary education. As a result,
the numbers of Higher Education Institutions have been dramatically expanded to
more than three times from 28 to 91 between 1997 and 2012.
Beside these strategies, the government has cooperated with
development partners and country donors to create various projects and plans
for the enhancement of higher education quality including the Master Plan for
Research in Education Sector 2011-2015, the Higher Education Quality and
Capacity Improvement 2010-2015, and the Development Grants for Cambodian Higher
Education Institutions. In addition, three prominent institutions have been
established to facilitate these strategies and policies and to assure the educational
quality that comprised of the Accreditation Committee of Cambodia, the Supreme
National Council of Education, and the Directorate Department of Higher
Education.
As I mentioned, Cambodian HEIs need more financial support from the
government to facilitate their academic programmes. For example, they need to
spend much more budgets for engineering and science majors’ laboratory
experiments, and salaries.
6.
How do you see the
future of human resource in Cambodia?
I think that our human resources will increase dramatically in term
of quantities and qualities in the near future because of the rapidly increasing
of high school students and higher education institutions every year. For
example, in the academic year 2011-2012, there are 11, 0000 students will take the
high school examination, and then they will enrol in higher learning
institutions. Nevertheless, our concern is the educational quality of Cambodian
graduates to compete with other country members in common markets of ASEAN
community in 2015. Compared with neighbouring countries in the Southeast Asian
region, Cambodia ranks 139th of the 187 countries, in the area of human capital,
with Singapore at 26th, Brunei at 33th, Malaysia at 61st, Thailand at 103th,
Indonesia at 124th, Vietnam at 128th, Laos at 138th, and Myanmar at 149th
respectively (UNDP, 2011). Thus, we need
potential human capitals who have qualified experts and professional ethics to
serve in our public and private sectors.
7.
How can students be sure
they are getting good value for money- a good education?
As long as they have a good education, they can get well paid
salaries. Hence, students need to improve their personal capacity of
professional skills (disciplines), additional skills, languages, and
Information Technology. Students should be clearly aware of their educational
quality and career prospective to participate in competitive markets since they
had studied in high school. In this regards, teachers, parents, and mass- media
should be actively involved in spreading these messages to all students.
8.
Is the education system
giving students the skills they need to be competitive? Especially after 2015
(ASEAN community)?
I think that our current educational system is on the right way to
equip Cambodian students with the skills that could be competed in the regional
and international levels. Many policies and projects are initiated by government
and country donors to enhance the educational quality of HEIs. For
example, the World Bank has provided five years granted project namely the
Higher Education Quality and Capacity Improvement 2010-2015, and the
Development Grants for Cambodian Higher Education Institutions. I, personally, have
an optimistic that Cambodian students will have enough capacity to compete with
other ASEAN’s country members after the year of 2015.
9.
Is the accreditation
in Cambodia strong enough? What should be done?
I found that Cambodia accreditation is not strong enough
because of its infancy and resources. Especially, the Accreditation Committee of
Cambodia (ACC) is an independent institution that supervised by the Council of
Ministers, and it has been functioning as an external quality assurance body to
evaluate the educational quality of all HEIs throughout the country. It is so
difficult to fulfil its mandatory duties in assuring and monitoring the quality
of higher education instructions; it has faced some obstacles to carry out its
effective tasks because of human resource and financial support constrains. The
ACC’s budget is only supported by donor countries and international development
organization.
Therefore, ACC should be reformed as follows:
-
ACC should be employed more PhD
or expert staffs who have high qualified experiences to assure and monitor the
educational quality of Cambodian higher learning institutions.
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ACC should be granted enough
financial supports to facilitate its effective functions.
-
ACC should be working closely
with other regional and international accreditation bodies to be the
internationally recognized Cambodian HEIs.
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ACC should be cooperating
closely with relevant ministries that provide higher education services.
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ACC should be an independent professional body
as an external quality assurance and it could be avoided conflict of interests
with public HEIs in particular.
-
ACC should be clearly aware
of suitable skills in responding to social needs and labour market demands, and
it can advise higher learning institutions to modify their curriculum and
extra-curriculum
-
ACC should encourage HEIs to
be integrated into their institutional policies to become the world class
university
3 comments:
Are these ideas yours or you copied from others'work without putting reference to them?
Answered by SAM Rany:
This article is belong to me! One Magazine, The Economy Today, email questions to me, and then I answer them. That why I posted it on my blog!
Dear blogger, I want to ask that, Do you think higher education in Cambodia can be reduce poverty in rural area, why or why not?
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