Inside the Higher Education Space: Governance, Quality Culture and Future Directions - A Malawi Perspective
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Inside the Higher Education Space - Malizani Jimu
Abbreviations
AAU Association of African Universities
AEF Accreditation and Evaluation Framework
AQRM Africa Quality Rating Mechanism
HAQAA Harmonization of African Higher Education, Quality assurance and Accreditation
HEI Higher Education Institutions
INQAAHE International Network of Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education
MANEB Malawi National Examinations Board
MIE Malawi Institute of Education
MSCE Malawi School Certificate of Education
MUST Malawi University of Science and Technology
NCHE National Council for Higher Education
NCST National Commission for Science and Technology
NESIP National Education Sector Investment Plan
NESP National Education Sector Plan
NGO Non-Governmental Organisations
NQF National Qualifications Framework
ODL Open Distance Learning
QA Quality Assurance
QAU Quality Assurance Units
SAQAN Southern Africa Quality Assurance Network
SARUA Southern Africa Regional Universities Association
SDG Sustainable Development Goals
TEVET Technical, Entrepreneurial and Vocational Educational and Training
Chapter 1
Inside the Higher Education Space
The scope of the higher education space is expansive. It encompasses a broad array of postsecondary education and training institutions whose core business combine teaching (education and training), generation through research and application of knowledge, innovations, skills and technics; adaptation of technology and innovation transfer, and community service.¹ These aspects represent the totality and mission of higher education. A unique feature of higher education institutions (HEIs) is that they educate and certify (warrant) learning. Hence, the term higher education as used in this book refers to institutions that manifest most of the features stated above, in particular, in terms of what they do as their core business, how they conduct their academic processes, the dynamic character of their stakeholdership and the governance and management arrangements.
The higher education process involves a diverse set of elements (curriculum, teaching and assessment) and actors (students; their teachers known variously as lecturers, professors, scholars; administrators; the state; alumni; the business sector; the general public etc.) that are engaged in complex ways. The implication is that the mission, the operationalization (management and governance) of higher education, let alone the outcomes and its quality, are not easy to define. In the specific case of quality, it lies on the perception of each beholder, but also assumes different meanings in different contexts (Cadena et al 2018). That is, perceptions of quality may differ for students, academics or faculty, policymakers, employers, the general public, local and international development partners, among others. It suffices therefore to state that in higher education, quality is multidimensional and contextual.
From the students’ or learners’ perspective quality may mean value for money; needs satisfaction; and alignment of learning to national or international benchmarks. The irony is, drawing on Peter Materu the author of Higher Education Quality Assurance in Sub-Saharan Africa, quality often implies a certain relative measure against a common standard; except that for much of tertiary education such a common standard does not exist. Hence, various concepts have evolved to suit different contexts ranging from quality as a measure for excellence to quality as perfection, quality as value for money, quality as customer satisfaction, quality as fitness for purpose, and quality as transformation of the learner (Materu 2007). Fitness for purpose (the extent to which the institution’s academic and support structures and embedded processes are aligned with their chosen mission statements and with those of the institution) or fitness of purpose (the extent to which there is conformity with national policy and framework, which include governance, planning, funding and resource allocation; connecting the processes, the products, and the relevance of the product and services.
The importance of higher education is not solely in the knowledge amassed by the learner but also in the skills, competences and capabilities gained, over above the spirit to learn cultivated in the learner. According to the Africa-America Institute (2015) higher education yields the following significant benefits for both young people and society: better employment opportunities and job prospects, improved quality of life, and greater economic growth. The attainment of knowledge, higher level skills and competences reflected above should benefit individuals who have access to higher education, their family, immediate community and society at large. The pursuit of learning at higher education level should lead to significant and transformative effects that transcend personal needs, social, territorial and political limits and jurisdictions.² Besides developing exploitable and exportable skills, higher education should empower by enabling citizens to understand and make sense of the social, economic and political realities they find themselves in. It should also serve as an important training ground for effective leadership and therefore a nursery for transformative governance agenda. Higher education should influence cultural appreciation and perceptions, challenge harmful traditional practices and taboos that hinder development to the extent that it compromise progressive thinking. The abundance of benefits would arise from the fact that the higher education institutions, comprising universities, colleges, institutes and centres of higher learning, are concerned with the pursuit of learning, research and consultancy, and preparation for service (Msiska 2008).
Generally, the extent to which individuals, societies or nations are able to reap the dividends depend to a large extent on the accessibility, inclusiveness and the quality of higher education availed to them; making inclusiveness and enhanced quality provisioning important pursuits in higher education policy, governance and management. In this view, the cardinal concern is training for high-level manpower requirements of the nation and for problem solving. The training offered and the governance process should be consistent with norms and acceptable conventions of higher education practice. Hence, higher education institutions must demonstrate respect for learning by upholding professional norms of integrity and honesty. It is evident that continuous engagement with quality issues is also critical to successful realization of both quality culture and effective governance. Quality culture implies consistence in the manner by which higher education institutions create new knowledge by research, transfer knowledge by teaching, and facilitate the dissemination and application of knowledge by their relationship with society (Cadena et al 2018). These have a significant impact on reputation and the extent to which higher education institutions are or will be known nationally and internationally.
Governance from a higher education perspective
The term governance is broad though it is used here narrowly to refer to the traditions, practices and institutions that determine how authority is exercised (Kaufmann et al 2000). In terms of origins, it can be traced back to 400 B.C but modern usage emphasises justice, ethics, the protection of the wealth and interests of the state and its subjects (Kaufmann and Kraay 2003).
Past and present experiences in higher education in Malawi suggest that form of ownership of higher education institutions can raise complex issues of governance and control. This is true for public higher education institutions established by the state under legislation or decree and have their own separate statutory or corporate identity other than that of a department in the civil service. Apparently, the answer to the question who owns such a public university or college invites the response that the university or college is owned by its governing body despite that the state might claim ownership of assets and exercise discreet control of its operations through appointments to the governing board, financing some or all operations, appointment of senior leadership, and other covert forms of control. Also, the higher education space has been an arena for the contestation of power and authority. The resistance to one party rule and the push for multiparty democracy by the student body in the early 1990s, the academic freedom saga at the then sole public university almost two decades later, and the contestation over equitable selection of students, which appeared to favour or disadvantage some ethno-regional and political constituents. The same can be observed in the private higher education space where proprietorship and leadership forms, and compliance or non-compliance with statutory requirements, suggest the need for governance and management models tailored to the realities of the sector, whether perceived from the structural or functional or business perspectives.
Writing about governance in higher education, Salmi observed that high-ranking universities owe their global standing to three connected factors: concentration of talent, abundant funding and appropriate governance (Salmi, 2009). The importance of the first two factors is uncontested if global rankings of higher education institutions are anything to go by.³ Globally, universities in every nation tend to enjoy an enviable concentration of highly learned and talented personnel. Retaining such talent and providing for an environment conducive for the exercise of high level intellectual and thought processes and ground-breaking research are resource intensive endeavours. Eventually, governance has become a key issue relative to the expansion of tertiary education systems globally, diversification of provision as a result of the rise of new institution types, multiplicity of programmes offerings and organisational units within institutions, private provision; new modes of delivery providing for more flexible ways of instruction such as distance learning and e-learning; more heterogeneous student bodies; increased female participation and more mature students enrolled; internationalisation of higher education; and overall recognition of the role that higher education plays in human capital development, research and innovation, which imply that such a sector cannot be devoid of acceptable regulatory norms and practices.
Higher education institutions are expected to adjust rapidly, efficiently and fairly to the expanding and changing demands of society and the labour market. Credible accreditation (a process of review and assessment of quality that result in a decision about whether or not to certify the academic standard of an institution) and quality assurance (a planned and systematic review process of an institution or program to determine whether or not acceptable standards of education, scholarship, and infrastructure are being met, maintained and enhanced) (Materu 2007) processes are needed to ensure that students receive quality higher education and that employers (both public and private, national and international) can have confidence in the quality of education provided to potential employees regardless of the differences in the form of ownership of institutions, where some are public and others private and for profit. The bottom line is better governance features are needed for higher education to remain relevant. There is a need for strong strategic vision, a philosophy of success and excellence and a culture of constant reflection, organisational learning and above all readiness to change and adapt to emerging situations. The pivotal position of governance and management is that increasing access and enhancing the quality and market relevance of education are in essence governance issues.
Higher education tier
Higher education institutions differ in terms of size and the level of financial and material investment committed by the proprietors. Besides differences in proprietorship, often size is linked to age, whereby older institutions tend to be well established and some of them exhibit state of the art infrastructure and more often offer a significantly diversified range of disciplines and programmes. There are also remarkable differences in the number of disciplinary fields in which they teach, conduct research and award qualifications. Some new institutions teach and award qualifications in one or two fields only. The differences stated above have implications on the nature of their inputs (students, qualified staff among others), their commitment to core values of higher education, but also the way they organise their production processes, measure output and success; and therefore their overall standing as centres of academic excellence.
In the Malawi context, higher education forms the top tier of the multi-tiered education system comprising basic, secondary and tertiary levels. Basic education includes early childhood development and primary education founded and still retaining a fundamental focus on reading, writing and arithmetic (3Rs); much to the same degree as it were in colonial or pre-independence Christian mission schools. Then, the primary outcome was functional literacy tailored to the mission of Christianizing the heathen native. To date, eight years of formal schooling are for primary education, followed by four years of secondary and two to four years or even more for tertiary and university training and education.⁴ The tertiary level, which includes higher education, represents a diverse set of institutions and qualification systems.
The categorization presented above is an oversimplification of a complex reality. The National Education Sector Plan (2008 – 2017) which served as the blueprint for education planning, practice and management for well over ten years depicted in detail the situation whereby basic education covers early childhood development (ECD), out-of-school youth, complementary basic education and adult literacy as non-formal education and primary education. Secondary education includes open and distance education and formal education attainable at conventional national, district and community day and open secondary schools, all of which lead to secondary school level qualifications and certification. Teacher training for basic and secondary education are considered separate tiers in the education ladder just as Technical, Entrepreneurial and Vocational Educational and Training (TEVET), which is further subcategorized into formal, village polytechnics and distant learning. Since 2014 the TEVET sector witnessed the birth of community technical colleges and community skills development centres (CSDC), which were later linked to the Skills Development Project (SDP) implemented with financial support from International Development Association (IDA) of the World Bank. The Technical, Entrepreneurial and Vocational and Training Authority (TEVETA) was set up by law to facilitate professional training, harmonization and recognition of TEVET system throughout Malawi. Its primary objective is therefore to ensure a sustainable workforce trained through the TEVET sector and thereby promoting the nation’s economic growth through skills development.⁵ Articulation of TEVET and higher education qualifications stands out as one of the unresolved issues. For higher education, the subcategories include private, public and open universities (Ministry of Education, Science and Technology 2008).
The analysis of the nature and form of learning taking place within each tier is beyond the scope of this book. Suffice to state that to date major qualifications systems in Malawi are:
a) Primary education, where the major shift to date is the introduction of free primary education (FPE) introduced following the transition to multiparty rule in the mid-1990s, ⁶
b) Junior Certificate of Education (JCE) and Malawi School Certificate of Education (MSCE) awarded at half-way and at the end of the four-year cycle of secondary education; ⁷
c) Post-secondary certificates of varying durations though the preferred and common options last 1 to 2 years of tertiary education and training;
d) Diplomas of varying durations ranging from 2 to 4 years of tertiary education;
e) Bachelor’s degree after 4 – 6 years post MSCE or 2-3 years post diploma;
f) Master’s degree after 2 years post bachelor’s degree; and
g)