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Dato’ Dr. Syed
Ahmad Hussein |
Its functions
expand, but its core business, and its dreams, remains the same:
to quality assure Malaysia’s higher education to inspire the
confidence of stakeholders in it, and to push the boundaries of
quality enhancement to make Malaysia’s higher education comparable
with the best in the world
The MQA is the
guardian of the Malaysian Qualifications Framework (MQF). The MQF
is Malaysia’s declaration of its higher education qualifications
and their quality. It classifies qualifications based on a set of
nationally agreed and internationally benchmarked criteria that
clarifies academic levels, learning outcomes and learner academic
load. It integrates all national qualifications and provides
pathways that link them systematically.
With increasing
cost and global access and competitiveness, students, parents,
employers and funders demand to be assured of the quality outcomes
of higher education. Indeed the demand has gone beyond fulfilling
threshold minimum requirements but to exceed them. It is critical
for institutions of higher learning to embrace the language of
quality and to make quality and standards as institutionalised and routinised
components of their provision. Ignore quality and we will be
ignored
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Malaysia’s National Accreditation Board (LAN in its
Malay acronym) was established in 1997 in the midst of the
country’s dramatic policy shift towards massification of higher
education. It was responsiblefor governing the standard and quality of private
higher education.
Quality in the public universities was the responsibility of the
Quality Assurance Division (QAD) of the Ministry of Higher
Education.
But this duality
was meant to be temporary. LAN was an experiment in preparation
for a unified quality system of national higher education
credentials: a single interconnected qualifications architecture
framed around and premised upon competency standards, which brings
into a common platform academic, professional, vocational,
technical and skills qualifications, private and public. In
November 2007, the Malaysian Qualifications Agency, MQA was
launched to take up the responsibility.
The MQA succeeds
LAN, not replace it. The migration from LAN to MQA represents a
movement into “the next phase” - a maturing process, if you like -
in the evolution of quality assurance of Malaysian higher
education, in tandem with domestic and international developments.
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