KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 17 — A World Bank publication  has found that standards at Universiti Malaya have fallen and the  institution has been kept at a disadvantage because of race-based  admission quotas and political interference in university management. In contrast, Singapore’s decision to prioritise research,  keeping English as the medium of instruction and a merit-based  admissions policy have all contributed to the success of the National  University of Singapore’s success, according to “The Road to Academic  Excellence,” which studies what contributes to a world-class research  university.
The study also noted that Malaysian secondary school students are not well prepared for tertiary education.
It points out that the Malaysian education system promotes rote  learning, conformity and uniformity rather than fresh and creative  thinking. The study is led by two scholars — Philip Altbach and Jamil Salmi —  while various chapters see contributions from various academics.
According to the study, “at an early stage, the Singapore government  realised the universities’ role in sustaining economic growth. “In contrast, after 1970, UM’s institutional goals reflected the New  Economic Policy, an affirmative action plan for ethnic Malays and  indigenous groups, put in place in the wake of disastrous 1969 ethnic  riots that took the lives of hundreds of people on both sides of the  racial divide.,” the study found. The authors said that apart from the student quota system, the NEP  translated into more scholarships to Bumiputeras, special programmes to  facilitate their entry into higher education institutions, and the use  of the Malay language in place of English in the entire education system  by 1983.
“In UM and in government, the policy impact  spiralled upward so that Bumiputera staff members, over time, secured  almost all senior management, administrative, and academic positions. “As NUS kept pace with the demands of a growing economy that  sought to become competitive internationally, with English continuing as  the language of instruction and research, UM began to focus  inward as proficiency in English declined in favour of the national  language — Bahasa Malaysia — and the New Economic Policy’s social goals  took precedence.”
 
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