Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia

It has been 62 years of nation building for Malaysia since 1957, and the tertiary education sector has been transformed tremendously. The legislative changes made in 1996 has changed the exclusiveness of public higher education delivery to their coexistence with the private higher education institut...

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Main Authors: Cheng, Sheila, Chiang, Jeffrey C.L
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2019
Online Access:http://ur.aeu.edu.my/792/1/Full%20paper%20ICNB%202019%20conference_sheila%26Jeffrey_submit.pdf
http://ur.aeu.edu.my/792/
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spelling my-aeu-eprints.7922020-09-10T01:39:24Z http://ur.aeu.edu.my/792/ Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia Cheng, Sheila Chiang, Jeffrey C.L It has been 62 years of nation building for Malaysia since 1957, and the tertiary education sector has been transformed tremendously. The legislative changes made in 1996 has changed the exclusiveness of public higher education delivery to their coexistence with the private higher education institutions. The higher education sector has been mushrooming into hundreds of public and private universities and colleges, operating together with approval of the Government. Over the last 40 years, this system has enabled a significant increase of Malaysians school graduates to have accessed to the tertiary education. The enrolment rates are approximately 44 per cent in comparison to 14 per cent in the 1970s and 1980s. Almost 1.3 million Malaysian youths are pursuing tertiary education now, of which 500,000 are enrolled in the 20 public universities and more than 600,000 are registered in PIHLs. The objective of this paper is to review and investigate the roles and contributions of private tertiary education to nation building in Malaysia, in the aspect of the human capital and economic development. This study adopts a qualitative approach with a focus on multiple cases of private institutes of higher learning (PIHL). The selected cases share a common characteristics in their alignment and compliance to the requirements as approved educational institutions in the country, and their pursuance to be sustainable and relevant to all stakeholders. The findings also show that PIHLs have contributed substantially to the nation's education sector, such as prudent spending in quality facility, offering specialized courses, reduce burden of the Government and collaborate well with reputable international universities. Further to that, graduates from the PIHLs are able to bridge the gap of the increasing global demand for higher education, and the needs for a highly skilled workforce for the knowledge economy. 2019 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed text en http://ur.aeu.edu.my/792/1/Full%20paper%20ICNB%202019%20conference_sheila%26Jeffrey_submit.pdf Cheng, Sheila and Chiang, Jeffrey C.L (2019) Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia. In: International Conference on Nation-Building 2019, November 26-27, 2019, The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
institution Asia e University
building AEU Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Asia e University
content_source AEU University Repository
url_provider http://ur.aeu.edu.my/
language English
description It has been 62 years of nation building for Malaysia since 1957, and the tertiary education sector has been transformed tremendously. The legislative changes made in 1996 has changed the exclusiveness of public higher education delivery to their coexistence with the private higher education institutions. The higher education sector has been mushrooming into hundreds of public and private universities and colleges, operating together with approval of the Government. Over the last 40 years, this system has enabled a significant increase of Malaysians school graduates to have accessed to the tertiary education. The enrolment rates are approximately 44 per cent in comparison to 14 per cent in the 1970s and 1980s. Almost 1.3 million Malaysian youths are pursuing tertiary education now, of which 500,000 are enrolled in the 20 public universities and more than 600,000 are registered in PIHLs. The objective of this paper is to review and investigate the roles and contributions of private tertiary education to nation building in Malaysia, in the aspect of the human capital and economic development. This study adopts a qualitative approach with a focus on multiple cases of private institutes of higher learning (PIHL). The selected cases share a common characteristics in their alignment and compliance to the requirements as approved educational institutions in the country, and their pursuance to be sustainable and relevant to all stakeholders. The findings also show that PIHLs have contributed substantially to the nation's education sector, such as prudent spending in quality facility, offering specialized courses, reduce burden of the Government and collaborate well with reputable international universities. Further to that, graduates from the PIHLs are able to bridge the gap of the increasing global demand for higher education, and the needs for a highly skilled workforce for the knowledge economy.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Cheng, Sheila
Chiang, Jeffrey C.L
spellingShingle Cheng, Sheila
Chiang, Jeffrey C.L
Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia
author_facet Cheng, Sheila
Chiang, Jeffrey C.L
author_sort Cheng, Sheila
title Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia
title_short Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia
title_full Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia
title_fullStr Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Roles and Contributions of Private Tertiary Education in Malaysia
title_sort roles and contributions of private tertiary education in malaysia
publishDate 2019
url http://ur.aeu.edu.my/792/1/Full%20paper%20ICNB%202019%20conference_sheila%26Jeffrey_submit.pdf
http://ur.aeu.edu.my/792/
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score 13.18916