As the brouhaha over the Higher Education Commission’s (HEC) rankings of Pakistani universities continues, it may be worthwhile to keep in mind that the university one attends plays only a small part in his or her future. But, since rankings are now in vogue, at least they should be done right and that is where the HEC falters.
The biggest problem with the HEC’s rankings is that they seem less like an attempt to rank the best colleges in the country and more of a post-facto rationalisation of the commission’s misguided policies. For some reason, during the Musharraf era, the HEC decided that what the country desperately needed was lots of people getting doctorates — no matter how they were obtained — and a glut of research papers, no matter what their quality was. As with everything else during Musharraf’s era, this was a policy that seemed smart until you actually looked closely at it. The results were predictable. A rash of research papers that no one has ever read and that no one will ever cite were published in journals of disrepute. Fake PhDs and plagiarism proliferated. Now, the HEC has given a full 40 per cent of its ranking points to research, thereby giving a higher rating to those universities which played the HEC’s game during the 2000s.
If the HEC had not given such inordinate attention to research, its rankings would be severely limited. Upon studying the HEC’s rankings system more closely, there are many important factors that are missing. We do not learn, for instance, anything about the students at these universities, but rather, only about those who teach them. Knowing what percentage of students graduate from a university and how many of those graduates get employment should also be a part of the basic minimum criterion for university rankings. Equally useful would be information on how many students are enrolled at the university on a scholarship, since one of the prime functions of a university should be to facilitate social mobility. In the HEC’s defence, it is possible that such data is not collected by universities, but in that case, it should have held off publishing rankings that are at best misleading and at worst completely useless.
It was also disheartening to note that the chairperson of the HEC, Dr Javaid Laghari, in a column published in this paper titled “Ranking universities” (March 1), defended the HEC rankings, rubbishing the ‘pop culture’ — whatever that is — on campuses saying that, “organising musical evenings, marketing shows, career placements fairs, workshops, guest lectures, model UN, etc does not aid in the global ranking of a university.” A university, it should go without saying, is not just a graduate mill and the non-academic facilities it provides need to be a part of its reputation.
The truth is that there is no one set of rankings that would satisfy everyone. Rankings are inherently gimmicky and designed to spur argument rather than illumination. Why the regulator of higher education in the country would decide to enter the debate and that, too, in such a lacklustre manner, is a question that is about as inexplicable as the rankings themselves.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 9th, 2012.
COMMENTS (14)
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Whatever, we say about HEC we cannot deny one fact that this same institution has also been instrumental in supporting higher eduation in country. From sending poor students to foreign universities to upgrading salaries of university teachers, HEC has something to cheer about. We should see both sides of picture.
But, but yes i agree with critiques that there are some flaws in HEC rankings that must be removed in consultation with universities.
@Guest/Nas/mrk
"most of the scholars are returning back home" is not correct, HEC PhD Program started in 2005, between 2005 and 2007 about 2500 scholars went abroad. Out of 2500 scholars who are supposed to return by 2012 only 1000 has been returned.
@Nas: Yes, you are rigth. Its a problem, an Urdu medium student like me faces very often. Thanks, by the way!
Why has HEC been wasting 80 million from poor people of Pakistan to get PhD's that are already funded in U.S. in many European countries?
That's ironic isn't it? To illustrate, universities in US fund PhD's with tuition and a subsistance living allowance and it's a choice of a student whether they want to utilize it or use their own funding or external scholarships. Obviously a vast majority opt for the university funding.
What a policy when even the return of the candidates is not guaranteed.
@Guest not 80 million Do research Its 8-10 million the most.
AKU and LUMS are the two best academic institutions in Pakistan!
Very few people have the knowledge and the guts to say truth, nothing but the truth.Some of us ( I am a retired professor) are either least bothered because of the prevailing social, economic and security conditions or else our long innings in the field has convinced us that nothing can be changed in this part of the globe. The HEC has actually become a place where survival is the name of the game.Any institution like HEC which has opted to become another political arena for getting perks and privileges would survive for some times but would never get the confidence of those who believe in fair play.I am not surprised by the ranking of the universities.I would only add one thing. They should ask the principal author of any paper to explain ( in his words ) the objective of his/her research work and its impact on his"beloved country".Some of us would also like to know the answer from HEC as well.
@Ali: You are right, that most of the scholars are returning back home. But most of the scholars who abscond, do so for material gains. HEC should adopt a strict policy to deal with them. After all they are funded (about 80 million PKR for a PhD in europe) from the money of poor people and they should abide by their legal responsibility.
The rankings are a sham. The ranking of a medical school is always based on pathology and diversity of diseases and the experience that the students will gain. In addition, it should be based on where the medical graduates ended up and what they contributed to research globally. As such King Edward Medical University is the best ranked medical university in Pakistan and for Pakistan and to rank Ziauddin or Baqai before such a prestigious school is shameful. This should not be allowed and the HEC's rankings need to be reconsidered as it can damage the impression of the one medical school in Pakistan respected globally.
Many students are now studying abroad for PHDs at western universities of great repute. They are duty bound to return to Pakistan and work for three years and very few abscond (and if they do it is in many cases perfectly understandable like getting married etc) This policy in itself can help transform higher education.
Have the last 20 years of democracy done anything good for education in Pakistan? Can any PML-N or PPP fan quote one of their leaders education policies that even match this?
Ranking is useless if carried just to tell one useless entity from the other. One simple question: is it it (relatively) recent tradition of "ranking the universities" which created great ancient centres of learning in west, or vice versa?
First painstakingly build a great university brick by brick. Then other, and then other. If these are of any use, the global scientific community would be instantly forced to recognise their contributions. Othewise these will be just more of bureacratic gimmickry, no matter where they "rank" on lists created by clerks. If someone disagrees, just try to look into how Indian Institutes of Technology, and Israeli university in Tel Aviv were established during the lifetime of our country, and see where they stand today without having any bureacratic blessings of something analogous to HEC.
you have all valid suggestions...HEC should give your words a serious consideration...
But hey we r in pakistan nd considering ur facts nd figures this is a gift for us. Infact we should be thankful that we have such a body who ranks public as well private sector nd is accepted nationwide. However the points u r making r true nd we can just hope better frim HEC in the future. PEACE
Thanks for telling it's being published in tomorrow's newspaper :)
This year's university rankings are really surprising but it mustn't be! After all, we are living in Pakistan. I suppose there would be more surprises for us as long as we have this "supervisor" government that would never let any organization to work in an entirely independent environment.