Among the rankings used nowadays are the Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) world university rankings and the Times Higher Education World University Rankings. The former used peer reviews by 33,744 academics in 2011 and these took citations per faculty member from Scopus (40 per cent). It also counted the faculty-to-student ratio (20 per cent) and the presence of international students and faculty on the campus (five per cent) plus taking certain other things into consideration. The gist of all this is that universities are ranked mostly for research as if all of them were research universities. My contention is that some universities should be ranked in this manner and should be called ‘research universities’. Others should be ranked for quality teaching and should be called ‘teaching universities’ while still others should be ranked separately, again for teaching, and be called ‘university colleges’. While the research universities should be completely autonomous, the teaching universities should be controlled by some office for quality control and the university colleges should have stricter control and even have their courses controlled by some central body. In Pakistan this may be the HEC.
So, my major criticism against ranking is that all universities should not be ranked according to the same criteria. More specifically, the ranking criteria used at present is questionable. This time there are 60 marks for Quality Assurance and Enhancement (QA) and 40 for research. In the first criteria, there are 18 marks for implementation of QA criteria laid out by the HEC and 42 for teaching quality. The problem is that the HEC gives marks to universities for implementing its policies. The policies in themselves are good because they are against plagiarism (6 marks), eligibility of appointment of faculty (4 marks) and criteria for M.Phil and PhD programmes (4 marks). There are also four marks for creating a QA cell. That this takes away the autonomy of universities, does not seem to be a problem for anyone any longer. Even so, I would have accepted the first two conditions but there is no need for forcing everyone to follow the American model of teaching courses at the research degree level, nor should all universities have to have a QA cell.
Let us now come to teaching quality. I agree with all points except that the PhD output should have nine marks. The fact is that, most of our Ph.Ds are substandard and by producing them we are risking our academic future for half-a-century. Instead of sending eligible students to good universities to get their doctorates, we are promoting mediocrity here. This is a wrong policy, and the sooner the HEC changes it, the better. Moreover, if we do agree that student evaluations matter then why are there no marks for those faculty members who get high marks in these evaluation reports consistently over time? There should be marks for this, as well as for evaluation by the peer group (as in seminars).
And now let us look at the criteria for research. The marks for HEC-approved supervisors (five in all) need not be there at all. First, it is wrong in principle and degrading for university professors to be approved by the HEC. All a supervisor needs is to be approved by the university’s own academic bodies. Secondly, this power with the HEC degrades academics by making them run to the HEC for favours. Similarly, the criterion of having indigenous scholars studying in the university (four marks) is questionable because research degrees are themselves the weak point of our universities as mentioned above. I also do not see why HEC research grants and travel grants should carry two points each. If one publishes research and reads out papers in conferences without burdening the poor people of Pakistan, is it not better? Moreover, perhaps out of self-respect, maybe some people do not even apply for HEC funds. If they do travel and publish despite this handicap are they to be commended or deprived of marks — and is their university to be punished for their sensitiveness, self-respect, scrupulousness or delicacy.
The number of journals published by a university is also misleading. Most of them are of very uneven quality so, instead of encouraging quantity, should we not encourage quality, i.e., journals which are cited though they may be very few. I am appalled that publication in impact factor journals should carry only five marks. And I am also surprised that top-level journals not on the ISI index have not been mentioned. Most surprising is that there is no mention of citations at all. Publication is less important than citation and I am sure this is well-known even to the HEC. So, what kind of marks are we giving to research if we give no marks for citations? Citations for social scientists are available at google.scholar.com.
My view is that there should be two criteria: teaching and research. Under teaching we should include student-teacher ratio, ratio of foreign PhD faculty to total faculty, admission of students after a GRE type of test; number of computers, library facilities, laboratory facilities and evaluation by students and peers (if allowed by the faculty). Under research we should count the number of publications (articles in journals, books, chapters in books, entries in reference books) and citations. Papers read out in conferences should carry some weight but only if one is paid by the hosts of the conference only. Last, but definitely the most important point is that two-room shacks simply need not be given the status of a university college, let alone a university, to begin with. This should not be a matter of marks; it should be a minimum requirement. Marks may be given for infrastructure after the minimum standards are complied with. To conclude, for research universities the marks for research should be 70 and teaching only 30 while for teaching universities, they should be the opposite i.e for teaching 70 and research 30. For university colleges teaching should carry 90 marks and research only 10. These varying criteria should be more realistic and fair than the ones used by the HEC at the moment.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 6th, 2012.
COMMENTS (12)
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Travelling grant, research grant, number of conferences organised. No way to rank a university. Further how do you measure student/ teacher ratio. You have Permanent faculty, visiting faculty, regular students, weekend students. They are areas where one has to find right answer. Ranking University as Research University and Teaching University is a logical approach. Further Education is Just not Teaching and Research. What about spiritual aspect, physical aspect, emotional and cultural aspect. Can our graduates take stress?. Lets have ranking criteria for these attributes also.
@Imran Ali: Not unless the standard of 'indigenous PhDs" rise to the level of "foreign PhDs"
The fact is very different than merely Ranking! I can recall top notch universities having low quality of education, Alas. I wish, we could force for better edcuation than fighting on ranking.
Dear Sir
Its strange how conveniently you have separated the teaching from research. A university should be the hub of education and education needs to be ' taught' first and then 'researched'. I have been in academia for the last few years and its really sickening to see the Pakistanis new found love for the distorted concept of the word 'Research' . The ICT R&D fund is distributing money crazily but did anyone actually ask the question what materiel and most importantly how well are we teaching and covering in our universities? In my opinion there can absolutely be NO shortcuts to the success. To 'Re-search' something, you need to 'Search' it first. Its a bottom-up approach and not the other way around. We are doing a terrible mistake of producing graduates who feel proud to do clerical work of copy-pasting/stealing someone else's ideas and approach from internet in the name of research.
Very logical!
Dr. Tariq,
I think you missed out the most important point for the ranking, number of graduates employed and the position of the employment. Because by the end of the day, Universities job is to educate students, so they can get good employment opportunties.
Will this trend of favouring "Foreign PhDs" over Indigenous PhDs ever going to change?
This article reminds me of the following: " the reason academic fights are so brutal is that the stakes are so low". Henry Kisinger.
I personally believe that most of our Ph. Ds are really, really substandard. Somebody really needs to wake our students, teachers and scholars out of this stupor of incompetence.
Valid!
"Top Ten Ivory Towers of Pakistan" list. All the quality enhancement cells are nothing but piles and piles of meaningless paperwork, every day of every semester. Any quality arises through the most ancient of methods: substance, diligence, hardwork, talent, and creativity of few individuals, and to make sure a befitting outcome for every buck spent, with a bottom-up approach. Top-down approaches with central planning is going to do what it is already doing: ever multiplying bureacracy to keep pace with endless consumption of stationery. Some offices to maintain the lists of the kind "best of ...", others to maintain the list of these offices, and still other to house the committees overlooking all these, and more, ... From ten yers since now, I expect us stil discussing the arcane details of quality criteria, without having anything improved.
Tariq Sahib is there anything good going on in the Pakistani UNiversities??