Sadly enough, sacrosanct principles of the autonomy, self-regulation and pluralism of the academic world are now being undermined in Pakistan by certain endogenous practices. As some renowned academics point out, there is erosion of integrity in academia. What invests this unease with urgency is the creeping disenchantment with the principal institution charged with the maintenance of high standards and norms, namely, the Higher education Commission (HEC).
Some academics are already talking of the need to limit the HEC’s role to more or less the same as once belonged to the old fashioned University Grants Commission and supplant it by a higher statutory body for the direction and oversight of higher education. An increase in regulatory mechanisms would inevitably be intrusive, rules-driven and restrictive of space for academic freedom. But just as a nose dive in law and order has led to ever increasing arbitrary powers for the coercive apparatus of the state, the academic world may well have to pay this price.
Several things have gone wrong after the planners woke up to the yawning gap between the ‘output’ of our universities and that of the other middle order nations. Apart from dilution of quality during indiscriminate expansion, there is a conspicuous lack of intellectual probity and honesty. As head of the largest think-tank in Islamabad for three years, I was dismayed by the demise of the culture of book reading, heavy desk-bound reliance on material instantly accessible from Google and, even more depressingly, recourse to plagiarism amongst researchers otherwise selected on merit. When challenged, their usual alibi was their ‘training’ at premier universities under teachers who had no issue with these ingrained habits. This is a clear abdication of academic responsibility rooted in the compulsion of university departments, and in turn of the universities themselves, to produce impressive statistics that get translated into grants and appropriations. In our larger social and political milieu, the dominant trend is trivialisation of norms and the academic community is not doing enough to immune itself from it.
Several academics are struggling hard and in the process generating a sharp debate with the HEC, to save the idea of a university and preserve at least minimum standards of research in sciences and social sciences. Universities represent the apex of a nation’s spiritual, cultural and intellectual life. They transmit and create knowledge. They are the main instruments of planned and orderly change that enables communities to keep pace with time. Modern societies are heavily dependent on excellence and achievement in higher education, particularly in science and technology. It is, therefore, natural that its practical functions receive special emphasis. But higher education is equally vital for objectives and purposes which are not directly related to economic progress but which are good in themselves and which lead to enrichment of life, be it individual or collective.
The choice today is stark: we can demand a much higher quality of performance from the existing HEC, or think of more watchdogs. Prudence requires that the government sets up a special commission to make recommendations on remedial measures after an intensive investigation of the state of higher education. Needless to say, academic leaders should have a key, though not exclusive, role in this process.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 2nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (10)
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The writer recommends that academic leaders should have a key role in investigating the state of higher education . It may sound paradoxical to many that an overwhelming majority of our university men have little to say anything coherent or insightful about the problems that beset our higher education . They in fact are the major problem . I believe education is too serious a matter to be left to the educationists .I have suffered being part of many comittees of academicians to suggest ways and means to infuse life into intellectual wastelands that our universities are. Invariably , they reached one conclusion only : increase our salaries and privileges and all problems will be solved ! They never had anything else to contribute .
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We need: less bureacracy, more knowledge- less top-down dreams, more bottom-up diligence- less central control, more freedom- More true academics, less stifling clerks. In short everything which HEC is not!
Pakistani has wasted many opportunities in the past, one among the most notable is Dr Abdus Salam's offer of creating a Theoretical Physics institute based in Pakistan, which the government refused on the strong opposition from 'mullahs'. He later opened this in Trieste,Italy producing over 50,000 highly educated graduates in Physics having opportunities to use the best resources available. We destroyed the culture for academic freedom due to our religious bias and prejudicial outlook. We know everything before we take on the 'inquiry process'. Salam was one of the biggest names in Theoretical Physics of the last century. The country is ruled by notion of mediocrity and ignorance, and the politicians are least interested to change it. Freedom of thought and promotion of liberal values in acquiring education lack in our society, without these there is no future for good education.
@Falcon
Agree with you completely, just substitute 'Universities' with 'Madrassas'; you will get all the spiritual,cultural and intellectual nourishment you will ever need.
The North American type curriculum gives fairly good freedom to students who are serious in pursuit of knowledge.For M.Phil levels we have good teachers but need good books.Our students need greater skills for both language and management, The emphasis should be on skills.CSS exams should test candidates in language and management skills rather than a generalized body of knowledge which has no relevance to jobs. That would pull our education towards more realistic disciplines.
This article deals with a very important subject matter and I thank the author for putting it on the table. By all accounts it merits a broader and very serious discussion that must include the role of the religious right in muzzling the spirit of free academic inquiry. The military rulers have done their part and now the mullah has taken over.
Thank you Mr. Khan for showing your true colurs. You are old enough to know what led to this political party in Karachi coming into existance. You are also old enough to know the sacrifices made by this community not in creating pakistan but also sustaining pakistan. Nehru was not wrong to say that within six months Pakistani leaders will come back crawling on thier knees to take them back. Had it been not the donation by Nizam of hyderabad and this particular community's dedication and hard work for earlier civil services of Pakistan Nefru's prediction would have come true.
Pretty much sums it up all...: "Universities represent the apex of a nation’s spiritual, cultural and intellectual life"
Quality of our education today will determine the future of our nation tomorrow.