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Higher Education and National Development: The Response of Higher Education Institutions in Malawi (2000-2010)Felix Benson Mwatani Editor Lombe January 2013 (has links)
<p>Theoretically, the role of higher education in national development has become clearer than before, while empirically the evidence is overwhelming. Elsewhere in the world, countries that have made tremendous strides in both social and economic development invested heavily and strategically in higher education. In Malawi, the role of higher education in national development has always been recognised by development policies since independence in 1964 <span style="mso-bidi-font-style:italic">However, with the exception of the first 15 years of independence, Malawi&rsquo / s development path has registered abysmal results both on the social and the economic fronts despite undergoing significant socio-economic and political reforms. Malawi remains one of the most underdeveloped countries whether judged by Gross National Product (GNP) per capita, the UNDP&rsquo / s Human Development Index (HDI) or the Human Poverty Index (HPI). One of the factors that is considered as having contributed to low levels of development is the performance of education systems (primary, secondary and higher education) (World Bank, 2009).</span>It is against this background that this study sought to examine how Malawi&rsquo / s higher education institutions (HEIs) have responded to their roles as prescribed by the national development policies with a focus on the period between 2000 and 2010. Four questions guided the study: i) what specific roles do national development policies define for HEIs to ensure that higher education contributes to national development? ii) To what extent are these roles performed by HEIs in Malawi? iii) What factors determine the performance of HEIs in their expected roles? iv) What pattern of response to their (HEIs&rsquo / ) expected roles can be identified? Theoretically and analytically, the study was informed by the two perspectives of the open systems theory, namely the resource-dependency approach and neo-institutional approach. These two approaches contend that actions by organisations are limited and influenced by various pressures and demands emanating from their internal and external environments and that organisations often respond accordingly in order to survive. Methodologically, the study employed a mixed-method design (of qualitative and quantitative) with a dominant usage of qualitative methods. A multiple case study approach was used in which data were collected through unstructured interviews, semi-structured interviews and documentary review. For qualitative data, the analysis was done using a text method while quantitative data were analysed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) and Microsoft Excel to provide simple descriptive analysis through charts, tables and graphs.<span style="mso-fareast-font-family:TimesNewRoman"> Overall, the study found that Malawi development policies expect HEIs to enhance access, equity, relevance, efficiency and quality of higher education as a way of ensuring that higher education contributes to the national development project. However, the study identified several patterns of response by HEIs (towards these expected roles) that tentatively explain the sub-optimal contribution of higher education in national development. These patterns of response include: inclination towards responding to the politically sensitive crises in the higher education system (for public HEIs) and profit-compatible roles (for private HEI) / use of sub-standard resources and methods antithetical to genuine teaching and learning / duplication by private HEIs of the &ldquo / soft&rdquo / roles being undertaken by public HEI / the abandonment of some of the HEIs&rsquo / original ideals and founding pledges, which are compatible with national development roles / and substitution of long-term coherent academic planning by short-term survival strategies. </span><span style="mso-bidi-font-size:18.0pt / mso-fareast-font-family:TimesNewRoman / mso-bidi-font-family:Arial / color:black / mso-fareast-language:EN-US / mso-bidi-font-weight:
bold">The study presents a number of implications, lessons and recommendations in the area of higher education and development. These include: the need for the government to recognise the importance and impact of intra-sectoral linkages in the entire education system on the performance of HEIs / the need to enforce the effective participation of private and public HEIs in national developmental project by establishing a proper regulatory framework / the need to enhance regional and internal collaboration among universities if they are to effectively respond to national roles / the need to reduce marginalisation of HEIs by maximising efforts that create linkages with the productive sector / the need to devise a robust public financing mechanism that broadly deals with issues of equity, relevance, quality and access of higher education / and the need to match education investment priorities and sequencing with development policies</span></p>
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Higher Education and National Development: The Response of Higher Education Institutions in Malawi (2000-2010)Felix Benson Mwatani Editor Lombe January 2013 (has links)
<p>Theoretically, the role of higher education in national development has become clearer than before, while empirically the evidence is overwhelming. Elsewhere in the world, countries that have made tremendous strides in both social and economic development invested heavily and strategically in higher education. In Malawi, the role of higher education in national development has always been recognised by development policies since independence in 1964 <span style="mso-bidi-font-style:italic">However, with the exception of the first 15 years of independence, Malawi&rsquo / s development path has registered abysmal results both on the social and the economic fronts despite undergoing significant socio-economic and political reforms. Malawi remains one of the most underdeveloped countries whether judged by Gross National Product (GNP) per capita, the UNDP&rsquo / s Human Development Index (HDI) or the Human Poverty Index (HPI). One of the factors that is considered as having contributed to low levels of development is the performance of education systems (primary, secondary and higher education) (World Bank, 2009).</span>It is against this background that this study sought to examine how Malawi&rsquo / s higher education institutions (HEIs) have responded to their roles as prescribed by the national development policies with a focus on the period between 2000 and 2010. Four questions guided the study: i) what specific roles do national development policies define for HEIs to ensure that higher education contributes to national development? ii) To what extent are these roles performed by HEIs in Malawi? iii) What factors determine the performance of HEIs in their expected roles? iv) What pattern of response to their (HEIs&rsquo / ) expected roles can be identified? Theoretically and analytically, the study was informed by the two perspectives of the open systems theory, namely the resource-dependency approach and neo-institutional approach. These two approaches contend that actions by organisations are limited and influenced by various pressures and demands emanating from their internal and external environments and that organisations often respond accordingly in order to survive. Methodologically, the study employed a mixed-method design (of qualitative and quantitative) with a dominant usage of qualitative methods. A multiple case study approach was used in which data were collected through unstructured interviews, semi-structured interviews and documentary review. For qualitative data, the analysis was done using a text method while quantitative data were analysed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) and Microsoft Excel to provide simple descriptive analysis through charts, tables and graphs.<span style="mso-fareast-font-family:TimesNewRoman"> Overall, the study found that Malawi development policies expect HEIs to enhance access, equity, relevance, efficiency and quality of higher education as a way of ensuring that higher education contributes to the national development project. However, the study identified several patterns of response by HEIs (towards these expected roles) that tentatively explain the sub-optimal contribution of higher education in national development. These patterns of response include: inclination towards responding to the politically sensitive crises in the higher education system (for public HEIs) and profit-compatible roles (for private HEI) / use of sub-standard resources and methods antithetical to genuine teaching and learning / duplication by private HEIs of the &ldquo / soft&rdquo / roles being undertaken by public HEI / the abandonment of some of the HEIs&rsquo / original ideals and founding pledges, which are compatible with national development roles / and substitution of long-term coherent academic planning by short-term survival strategies. </span><span style="mso-bidi-font-size:18.0pt / mso-fareast-font-family:TimesNewRoman / mso-bidi-font-family:Arial / color:black / mso-fareast-language:EN-US / mso-bidi-font-weight:
bold">The study presents a number of implications, lessons and recommendations in the area of higher education and development. These include: the need for the government to recognise the importance and impact of intra-sectoral linkages in the entire education system on the performance of HEIs / the need to enforce the effective participation of private and public HEIs in national developmental project by establishing a proper regulatory framework / the need to enhance regional and internal collaboration among universities if they are to effectively respond to national roles / the need to reduce marginalisation of HEIs by maximising efforts that create linkages with the productive sector / the need to devise a robust public financing mechanism that broadly deals with issues of equity, relevance, quality and access of higher education / and the need to match education investment priorities and sequencing with development policies</span></p>
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Higher education in Mauritius : an analysis of future financial sustainabilityMohadeb, Praveen January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Higher education and national development: the response of higher education institutions in Malawi (2000–2010)Lombe, Felix Benson Mwatani Editor January 2013 (has links)
Doctor Educationis / Theoretically, the role of higher education in national development has become clearer than before, while empirically the evidence is overwhelming. Elsewhere in the world, countries that have made tremendous strides in both social and economic development invested heavily and strategically in higher education. In Malawi, the role of higher education in national development has always been recognised by development policies since independence in 1964 However, with the exception of the first 15 years of independence, Malawi’s development path has registered abysmal results both on the social and the economic fronts despite undergoing significant socio-economic and political reforms. Malawi remains one of the most underdeveloped countries whether judged by Gross National Product (GNP) per capita, the UNDP’s Human Development Index (HDI) or the Human Poverty Index (HPI). One of the factors that is considered as having contributed to low levels of development is the performance of education systems (primary, secondary and higher education) (World Bank, 2009).
It is against this background that this study sought to examine how Malawi’s higher education institutions (HEIs) have responded to their roles as prescribed by the national development policies with a focus on the period between 2000 and 2010. Four questions guided the study: i) what specific roles do national development policies define for HEIs to ensure that higher education contributes to national development? ii) To what extent are these roles performed by HEIs in Malawi? iii) What factors determine the performance of HEIs in their expected roles? iv) What pattern of response to their (HEIs’) expected roles can be identified? Theoretically and analytically, the study was informed by the two perspectives of the open systems theory, namely the resource-dependency approach and neo-institutional approach. These two approaches contend that actions by organisations are limited and influenced bym various pressures and demands emanating from their internal and external environments and that organisations often respond accordingly in order to survive. Methodologically, the study employed a mixed-method design (of qualitative and quantitative) with a dominant usage of qualitative methods. A multiple case study approach was used in which data were collected through unstructured interviews, semi-structured interviews and documentary review. For qualitative data, the analysis was done using a text method while quantitative data were analysed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) and Microsoft Excel to provide
simple descriptive analysis through charts, tables and graphs. xx Overall, the study found that Malawi development policies expect HEIs to enhance access, equity, relevance, efficiency and quality of higher education as a way of ensuring that higher education contributes to the national development project. However, the study identified several patterns of response by HEIs (towards these expected roles) that tentatively explain the suboptimal contribution of higher education in national development. These patterns of response include: inclination towards responding to the politically sensitive crises in the higher education system (for public HEIs) and profit-compatible roles (for private HEI); use of sub-standard resources and methods antithetical to genuine teaching and learning; duplication by private HEIs of the “soft” roles being undertaken by public HEI; the abandonment of some of the HEIs’ original ideals and founding pledges, which are compatible with national development roles; and substitution of long-term coherent academic planning by short-term survival strategies.
The study presents a number of implications, lessons and recommendations in the area of higher education and development. These include: the need for the government to recognise the importance and impact of intra-sectoral linkages in the entire education system on the performance of HEIs; the need to enforce the effective participation of private and public HEIs in national developmental project by establishing a proper regulatory framework; the need to enhance regional and internal collaboration among universities if they are to effectively respond to national roles; the need to reduce marginalisation of HEIs by maximising efforts that create linkages with the productive sector; the need to devise a robust public financing mechanism that broadly deals with issues of equity, relevance, quality and access of higher education; and the need to match education investment priorities and sequencing with development policies.
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Building Bridges: A Policy Case Study of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) in IrelandAbreu Malla, Laura Sofia January 2024 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Christopher R. Glass / The rising demand for higher education after secondary education has led to the massification of higher education systems worldwide. However, there is a growing debate about whether students graduate from universities with the skills needed for successful labor market integration and lifelong career adaptation. This qualitative study delves into Ireland's evolving Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) system, examining its current role within the larger context of tertiary education in Ireland and how it interacts with different sectors in the system. Employing an in-depth case study design, this research identified the factors that stakeholders consider during TVET policy development, the processes involved, and lessons learned from implementation across Irish institutions. The findings depict Ireland's tertiary system as complex and dynamic: it is characterized by participatory policymaking and frequent policy shifts, often transitioning between centralized and decentralized approaches, binary and unified structures, and fluctuating priorities between TVET and higher education. Notably, the absence of formal evaluation mechanisms s means policy development is often influenced by political actors and considerations rather than rigorous assessment. This tendency, alongside the complexities of stakeholder roles, regionalization challenges, and chronic TVET underfunding, contributes to persistent obstacles in the Irish tertiary system.These findings offer valuable insights for tertiary education systems, emphasizing the importance of coherent and articulated TVET policies throughout design and implementation. The research also contributes to the understanding of factors influencing public policy decisions. By expanding on the challenges faced by countries developing cohesive tertiary systems, this study aims to contribute to building more inclusive, equitable, and just societies. / Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2024. / Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. / Discipline: Teaching, Curriculum, and Society.
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Efficient Provision Of Educational Services And Public Versus Private Universities: The Case Of TurkeyCahan, Ercument 01 August 2005 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis studies the relative efficiencies of public and private universities in Turkish higher education system in producing human capital output for the economy in 1998-2002 period, by aiming at to propose a resource allocation policy for the realm of higher education to be pursued by the government. For this purpose, it develops a model which is built on the academic quality and per student expenditure variables of the public and private universities in producing human capital output, and calibrates it with Turkish higher education data. The results of the calibrated model have revealed that the resources devoted to higher education were allocated inefficiently between the public and private universities in Turkish higher education system in the above mentioned period. It is shown that the implementation of the government policy, which is proposed by study, helps the higher education market approach to Pareto optimum allocation of higher educational resources between public and private universities.
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A expansão do sistema de educação superior no Brasil, na China e na Índia : uma análise comparadaMorche, Bruno January 2013 (has links)
Esta dissertação tem por tema o processo de expansão do sistema de educação superior na China, na Índia e no Brasil (três dos chamados BRICS), a partir do fim dos anos 1990. O objetivo central do estudo foi analisar o processo de ampliação das matrículas neste nível de ensino nestes países de maneira comparada. Utilizaram-se três categorias: a demanda, a própria expansão, e a questão do financiamento e discutiram-se, principalmente, duas hipóteses principais que orientaram a investigação: que a expansão da educação superior nestes países está associada ao crescimento ou existência de uma demanda potencial oriunda da educação secundária e que a expansão ocorreu, majoritariamente, por meio do crescimento de fontes de financiamento não estatais. / The theme of this dissertation is the process of expansion of the higher education system in China, India and Brazil (three so-called BRICS), from the late 1990s. The main objective of the study is to analyze the process of expanding enrollments at this level of education in these countries so compared. We used three categories: demand, the expansion itself, and the funding. This dissertation discussed two main hypotheses that guided the investigation: that the expansion of higher education in these countries is associated with growth or existence of a potential demand originated in secondary education and the expansion occurred through the growth of non-state funding sources.
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A expansão do sistema de educação superior no Brasil, na China e na Índia : uma análise comparadaMorche, Bruno January 2013 (has links)
Esta dissertação tem por tema o processo de expansão do sistema de educação superior na China, na Índia e no Brasil (três dos chamados BRICS), a partir do fim dos anos 1990. O objetivo central do estudo foi analisar o processo de ampliação das matrículas neste nível de ensino nestes países de maneira comparada. Utilizaram-se três categorias: a demanda, a própria expansão, e a questão do financiamento e discutiram-se, principalmente, duas hipóteses principais que orientaram a investigação: que a expansão da educação superior nestes países está associada ao crescimento ou existência de uma demanda potencial oriunda da educação secundária e que a expansão ocorreu, majoritariamente, por meio do crescimento de fontes de financiamento não estatais. / The theme of this dissertation is the process of expansion of the higher education system in China, India and Brazil (three so-called BRICS), from the late 1990s. The main objective of the study is to analyze the process of expanding enrollments at this level of education in these countries so compared. We used three categories: demand, the expansion itself, and the funding. This dissertation discussed two main hypotheses that guided the investigation: that the expansion of higher education in these countries is associated with growth or existence of a potential demand originated in secondary education and the expansion occurred through the growth of non-state funding sources.
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A expansão do sistema de educação superior no Brasil, na China e na Índia : uma análise comparadaMorche, Bruno January 2013 (has links)
Esta dissertação tem por tema o processo de expansão do sistema de educação superior na China, na Índia e no Brasil (três dos chamados BRICS), a partir do fim dos anos 1990. O objetivo central do estudo foi analisar o processo de ampliação das matrículas neste nível de ensino nestes países de maneira comparada. Utilizaram-se três categorias: a demanda, a própria expansão, e a questão do financiamento e discutiram-se, principalmente, duas hipóteses principais que orientaram a investigação: que a expansão da educação superior nestes países está associada ao crescimento ou existência de uma demanda potencial oriunda da educação secundária e que a expansão ocorreu, majoritariamente, por meio do crescimento de fontes de financiamento não estatais. / The theme of this dissertation is the process of expansion of the higher education system in China, India and Brazil (three so-called BRICS), from the late 1990s. The main objective of the study is to analyze the process of expanding enrollments at this level of education in these countries so compared. We used three categories: demand, the expansion itself, and the funding. This dissertation discussed two main hypotheses that guided the investigation: that the expansion of higher education in these countries is associated with growth or existence of a potential demand originated in secondary education and the expansion occurred through the growth of non-state funding sources.
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Daňová a organizační aspekty vybraných vysokých škol ve vybraných zemích / Tax and Organizational Aspects of Selected Universities in Selected CountriesFouknerová, Monika January 2014 (has links)
This diploma thesis compares organizational structures of selected universities in the Czech Republic, in the Slovak Republic and in France. The aim of this analysis is to determine whether the organizational structures of sampled universities are comparable or not, and whether there are inefficiencies in the management of these universities. The first part describes systems and funding of higher education in the selected countries. The second part is focused on comparison of the organizational structures using annual reports of the universities. The second part of this thesis also concludes and summarizes the outcomes of the analysis and determines the management effectiveness of selected universities.
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