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Palestinian Tertiary Education Strategy

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Title: Palestinian Tertiary Education Strategy


1
Palestinian Tertiary Education Strategy
  • Challenges and Responses
  • Khalil Nakhleh
  • (abusama_at_palnet.com)

2
Beginnings
  • So far, we have been nibbling at the margins of
    strategic planning for the Palestinian Tertiary
    Education system. We have been unable to go
    beyond that. The main challenge is why?
  • CHE absence of an enforceability authority

3
Beginnings2
  • In 1997, a diagnostic analytic base document, for
    a national tertiary education strategy, titled,
    Rationalization Plan for the Higher Education
    Sector.
  • In 1999, translating the Rationalization Plan
    into strategic directionsDirection for
    Palestinian Higher Education A Vision for the
    Future.

4
Beginnings..3
  • The Vision focused on three issues
  • Tertiary education and the future needs of
    Palestinian society, and the need for a long-term
    strategy
  • Licensing and accreditation
  • Economics of tertiary education

5
Beginnings .4
  • 1- The need for a long-term strategy
  • A Strategy Steering Committee was set-up, and
    produced, in 2001, Draft Zero for a Strategy,
    which lacked a basis for action.
  • 2- Licensing and accreditation
  • An Accreditation and Quality Assurance Commission
    (AQAC) was established in 2002.
  • 3- Economics of tertiary education
  • a Financing Strategy document was prepared in
    August 2002.

6
Where Are We Now?
  • Draft Zero, titled Palestinian Higher
    Education Strategy, is being revised and
    transformed, into a Strategic Action Plan for
    Palestinian Tertiary Education.
  • The Strategic Action Plan document, under
    preparation, is being formulated and structured
    around seven cardinal questions, affecting the
    entire fabric of Tertiary Education.

7
Seven cardinal Questions
  • 1- What is the most feasible institutional
    structure for Palestinian tertiary education?
  • 2- Which specializations and academic programs
    should it include?
  • 3- What is the most feasible governance system
    for Palestinian tertiary education?
  • 4- What are the most feasible criteria for
    recruiting and retaining students?

8
Seven cardinal Questions
  • 5- What are the most feasible criteria for
    recruiting, developing, and retaining teaching
    and research staff?
  • 6- What is the most feasible system for improving
    and assuring the quality of teaching and
    research?
  • 7- What is the most feasible approach for
    reforming the financing and management of
    Palestinian tertiary education?

9
What are we doing to go forward?
  • what challenges confront us?

10
Going Forward
  • On each of the seven cardinal questions, the
    Strategic Action Plan proposes necessary
    strategic interventions, which Palestinian
    decision makers, with the appropriate competency,
    are asked to take.

11
Going Forward ..2
  • With the financial and technical assistance from
    UNESCO, the World Bank, the European Commission,
    the Ford Foundation, and others, a potentially
    promising structure for quality assurance and
    assessment has been set up.

12
Going Forward ..3
  • The setting up, in 2001, of the Student Revolving
    Loan Fund (SRLF), as the main component of
    student aid, is intended to provide support,
    through loans, to needy students, in order to
    offset the cost of tertiary education.

13
Going Forward 4
  • The Strategic Action Plan builds on what was
    accomplished in previous venues over the last
    thirty years, but is not constrained by it, and,
    in many respects, it goes beyond it

14
Going Forward ..5
  • In all cases, however, it is endeavoring to
    respond to the daunting challenges confronting
    Palestinian tertiary education at all levels
    from the systemic to the political, economic and
    cultural environments.

15
CHALLENGES
  • The Strategy is Proposing to Break them

16
Challenge -1
  • The main and overriding challenge has to do with
    the margin allowed for the Palestinians, who live
    under a prolonged and oppressive Israeli military
    occupation system, to establish a formal
    Palestinian system of education, anchored in a
    positive and rejuvenated Palestinian cultural and
    historical identity, which is capable of training
    Palestinian future generations to create
    critical, relevant, scientific, and humanistic
    knowledge, which empowers them to develop their
    own society and economy.

17
Challenge -2
  • The main Palestinian challenge facing tertiary
    education is to consider it a paramount concern,
    and to commit all necessary political and
    financial will and resources for its development.

18
Challenge -3
  • How to develop the system where the pupil becomes
    the center of the learning process, and an active
    partner in the creation of knowledge
  • Where the focus is shifted from heavily academic
    into actual and relevant applications
  • Where assessment and on-going review become an
    inherent part of the culture of learning and
    educating.

19
Challenge -4
  • How to ensure that the educational system becomes
    the producer of modern and relevant knowledge and
    skills, and not just a consumer of knowledge,
    where formal academic degrees become the end of
    it all.

20
Challenge - 5
  • The need for continuous faculty development
    continuous evaluation of academic programs and
    tertiary educational institutions transparent
    professional mechanisms for quality assurance
    and provision of funding and incentives to carry
    out serious scientific research, according to
    international standards.

21
Challenge - 6
  • If Tertiary Education is a right, as stipulated
    in the Law of Higher Education (No. 11, 1998),
    the challenge is how to ensure equity for the
    academically qualified poor for women who cannot
    leave their community and/or family to study and
    for all those who cannot move from their
    geographical locality to attend a college or a
    university elsewhere?

22
Challenge - 7
  • The challenge of relevance is two-fold how to
    train students in tertiary education institutions
    for ready employability in the Palestinian
    market, and how to reward a tertiary education
    system that generates critical knowledge that is
    at the cutting edge of science and artistic
    innovation, and that is necessary for the human
    development of Palestinian society?

23
Challenge - 8
  • The challenge in sustaining the system of
    education boils down to how to ensure the
    availability of well-trained, high quality human
    resources needed to service the system, in the
    absence of a viable economy with weak economic
    growth, and under unstable economic, political
    and social conditions, and with the clear absence
    of the necessary political will and commitment?

24
Challenge - 9
  • Quality staff are always looking for alternative
    or supplementary employment, due to the very low
    salaries and absent financial incentives. The
    main challenge is how to provide financial and
    other incentives in order to recruit and retain
    good human resources, and provide continuous and
    renewable opportunities for effective, life-long
    learning and cross-fertilization of the
    scientific mind.

25
Challenge - 10
  • Tertiary education institutions suffer from a
    serious shortage of funds. Almost all had to use
    their pension funds to cover their deficits. No
    university has an endowment fund to keep it
    going. The precarious and insecure funding base
    for tertiary education bears negatively and
    continuously on the quality of the service
    provided.

26
Challenge - 11
  • Trying to stay afloat, universities embarked on
    different measures to increase their revenues,
    e.g., opening new programs to compete for
    students cutting down on academic full time
    teaching staff cutting down on subscriptions for
    academic journals taking initiatives to increase
    their self-generated revenue, etc. Student
    tuition fees are very high by international
    standards, and cannot be raised at the moment.
    What alternative approaches must be considered?

27
RESPONSE
  • ITS UP TO US!
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