Higher Education in Pakistan and Globalization

(Aqsa Asghar, kasur)

Globalization is the process by which businesses or other organizations develop international influence or start operating on an international scale. It is also defined as a process through which industry has been able to derive and distribute its business inputs and outputs wherever it could get the maximum profit (Tarar, 2006). The liberal ideas of higher education characterized education as public-good which neither ends with use nor it is diminished by redistribution, like other sources of wealth like land or minerals (Tarar, 2006).

Acquiring of higher education has gained much importance in Pakistan especially in recent years. The neoliberal reforms i.e., the privatization are affecting in the restructuring of higher education in Pakistan. These reforms are also affecting the role of universities and policies underlying these reforms. This reformation process has increased the higher fees and privatization of education, while the quality of education also needs to be taken into account (Tarar, 2006).

The universities in the western world underwent a transformation after the extensive university changes of the late 1960s; which changed their role to producers of knowledge workers, from producers of knowledge. As important contributors to the knowledge economy, universities became not just trainers of young minds and creators of knowledge i.e., agents of acculturation – but major agents of economic growth that can help a nation to compete in the global economy and increase human capital (Tarar, 2006).

The revolution in information and communication technologies has basically affected higher education. Digital broadcasting i.e., the web, e-mail, and other fast and user-friendly information and communication technologies have produced a global market in the teaching and training of knowledge workers. Funds are being diverted towards professional and technological fields from traditional strengths like the humanities and social sciences (Tarar, 2006).

The globalization of higher education has opened up new challenges for the developing countries to compete in the global knowledge economy. Since a few countries dominate the global scientific systems, and the multinational corporations and academic institutions own new technologies based in the western countries, the developing countries are dependent on the academic superpowers. Given the inequalities in the international systems of higher education and the intense competitions between the universities worldwide, developing countries are at the losing end. They face a major problem in retaining their share of higher education personnel – students, teachers and professionals alike – not only in proportional terms but even in terms of absolute numbers (Tarar, 2006).

Most of the developing countries including Pakistan are facing a frightening situation in keeping up with international standards of higher education. Public expenditure on higher education is considered a luxury for most of the developing world. Higher education needs to be financed and developed through government intervention and financing, since it adds to the economic prosperity and well-being of society as a whole and raises skill levels. Whatever funds were available to the education sector in Pakistan were used for quantitative expansion and not for qualitative improvement. The planners have never been able to estimate the country’s needs; the institutions of higher education have had no guidance for defining goals (Tarar, 2006).

The current process of institutional reforms initiated in 2000 led to development of much larger body of academics, technocrats and management professionals called, the Higher Education Commission (HEC) in 2002. The critics of HEC have pointed out that improvements in the quality of higher education can only come about if all levels of university education are improved. The pre-university education system, which provides the basis for university education is outside the limits of the HEC. The ministry of education, which controls primary, secondary and post-secondary education in the provinces, works independently of the changes in the structure of university education. Unless there is an active collaboration between the HEC and the ministry, no long-term changes can occur in the higher education system in Pakistan (Tarar, 2006).

Aqsa Asghar
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