Title: An Analysis of Transnational Pharmacy Education in Asia-Pacific Region
1- An Analysis of Transnational Pharmacy Education
in Asia-Pacific Region
Dr. Benjamin Tak-Yuen Chan Division of Health and
Applied Sciences, SPACE, University of Hong Kong
2Transnational Education (TNE)
- Important and growing phenomenon in cross-border
higher education - Mobility of programmes and institutions across
national borders instead of student mobility - Growth of enrolments in importing
countries/regions (offshore provision) is faster
than onshore international student enrolments (in
the case of UK and Australia)
3Extent of TNE
- For higher education (HE) sector, 33 of
Australian educational exports are offshore
provisions (in 2001) - Top three sites of offshore enrolment parallel
source of international student enrolments - (Singapore gt HKSAR gt Malaysia)
- UK institutions enrolled 140,000 offshore
students against 200,000 international students
onshore in 1996-1997 - Source AEI 2003 OECD 2002
4TNE in Profile
- An average 56.8 of Australian HE educational
exports in these 3 countries/regions are offshore
provisions - Together, they account for 79 of offshore total
enrolments
Countries/ regions Onshore Offshore offshore
Singapore 21,964 13,112 59.7
HKSAR 19,479 12,426 63.8
Malaysia 17,972 8,211 45.7
Source AEI 2003
5Challenge of TNE
- New forms of delivery and partnership involved
- According to IDP (2001)
- Delivery modes are face-to-face teaching (40)
and supported distance education (40) - Partnered with private institutions or providers
(51) or public education institutions (25) - Predominantly postgraduate (56) and in business
related subjects (51)
6Classification of TNE Provision
- Type I Locally supported distance learning
- Foreign curriculum, some local teaching
- Type 2 Twinning programmes
- Foreign curriculum, local teaching and student
mobility in upper years - Type 3 Franchise arrangement
- Curriculum and teaching arrangement approved by
foreign institution - Type 4 Branch campus
- Curriculum and teaching wholly controlled by
foreign institution emulating home context
Source Marginson and McBurnie (2003)
7TNE in Health Sciences
- Very few TNE provisions are in the health
sciences field - Business and management make up 68.2 and IT
(19) of all external bachelor degree enrolments
in Singapore. 90 of external postgraduate
enrolments are in business and management
(Statistics Singapore Newsletter 2001) - Notable provision in health sciences field is in
nursing (both top up or degree conversion and
postgraduate Masters)
8TNE in Pharmacy (1)
- Evolution
- Started as early as 1990 with provision of
locally supported distance learning
MClinPharm-Otago University by HKU SPACE (Hong
Kong) - Twinning programmes (22) model for BPharm
delivery pioneered by IMU/Strathclyde U and
SIT/UniSa (Malaysia) - Branch campus model for BPharm delivery by
Nottingham and Monash Universities represent
latest developments (Malaysia) - Franchise arrangement applies to pharmaceutical
management degrees of Bradford and Sunderland
Universities (HKSAR Singapore)
9TNE in Pharmacy (2)
- Enabling factors
- Shortage of pharmacists
- Lack of postgraduate education training courses
- Insufficient local capacity or barriers to
expansion - Commonwealth sphere of influence in pharmacist
training (UK, Australia, NZ) - Government support (Malaysia) or free market
access (HKSAR Singapore) - Receptive students
- Foreign degree highly valued
10TNE in Pharmacy (3)
- Benefits
- Augments local capacity and achieve faster supply
of graduates - Introduces new curriculum ideas and catalyses
change in local sector - Encourages private investment in education
- Possible side-effects
- Competition and oversupply in the long run
- Hinders localisation efforts
- Uncertain return on private investment in
education (graduates with dual registration may
not work in home country)
11Overseeing TNE in Pharmacy
- National governments
- Define national capacity (HKSAR and Malaysia in
opposite poles) - National pharmaceutical associations
- Connect with professionalisation strategy
(achieving SPD) - Institutions offering TNE in pharmacy
- Quality assurance, internationisation of
curriculum, proper training and support to
teaching staff, ensuring competencies of graduates
12Global Pharmacist Supply Situation
Source FIP 2006
13Pharmacist Supply Situation in the Three
Countries/ Regions
Country/ Region Pop. (mil) No. reg. pharmacists pharmacists to population ratio (2005) foreign trained to local educated (total 2005) No. required to achieve 50100,000 ratio Yrs to take based on 2005 level of new pharmacists registered Strategy pursued
Hong Kong SAR 6.9 1,583 23100,000 82 60 (2005) 3,450 24 None
Malaysia 26.0 3,965 15100,000 - 40 (2005) 13,000 24 Local capacity and TNE in pharmacy
Singapore 4.1 1,330 32100,000 17 21 (2005) 2,050 17 Local capacity
Source P P Board of HK, Pharmacy Board of
Malaysia, Singapore Pharmacy Board
14Global Pharmacists Employment Fields
Source FIP 2006
15Western Pacific Pharmacists Employment Fields
Source FIP 2006
16Challenge for Curriculum Decision-makers in TNE
- To understand local context, priorities, needs
and constraints - To adapt home curriculum with infusion of local
elements - To orient home staff to foreign teaching
environment identify and train local staff up to
common expectation - To involve local stakeholders in curriculum
planning - To uphold academic values over entrepreneurial
concerns of private provider
17Curriculum Influence in Pharmacy in the Western
Pacific Region
- International
- FIP statement of policy/professional standards
(Good Pharmacy Education Practice, Pharmaceutical
Care, GPP Guidelines, Code of Ethics) - US
- 6 year DPharm (Japan, South Korea)
- Postgraduate pharmacy residency training and
pharmacy specialists accreditation (Taiwan,
Singapore, Thailand) - British and Australia
- 3/4 year undergraduate education 2 year
postgraduate education (clinical pharmacy) (NZ,
HK, Malaysia, Singapore) - Autochthonous
- Colonial heritage, but largely independent
development (Philippines, India)
18Practicalities of Curriculum Implementation for
TNE in Pharmacy
- Science-based and Clinical practice contents are
fairly standard as defined by universal consensus
(FIP) - Pharmaceutical legislations and introduction to
health system require localization - Behavioral sciences and health promotion need to
account for varying beliefs about health and
illness and patterns of medicines usage - Social and administrative pharmacy increasingly
important as a subject (SPD, NDP, RUD, regional
pharmaceutical public health issues identified by
WPPF) - How to provide for multidisciplinary learning and
practice placement?
19Benefits of TNE for Exporter Country
- Encourage study abroad for exporter countries
with low rates of domestic student mobility (e.g.
Australias foreign students domestic students
abroad ratio is 19.74) - Enhance staff development in international
education - Foster international awareness of students
through curriculum and extra-curricular
activities - Move beyond mono-culturalism, deepen cultural
capacities and engage with emerging nations
cultures in the region - Source Marginson and McBurnie (2003)
20Strategy for Curriculum Internationalization
- Need not involve large-scale re-casting of the
curriculum of a course - Builds on what is already in it (Levels 1 2 of
the typology) and utilises institutional
off-campus arrangements (Level 3) - Involves changing and transforming students
perspectives from a mono-cultural view to
reflection and acquisition of international
literacy - Ideally complemented by providing students with
skills and knowledge to perform competently in
international environment
21Edwards Typology of Curriculum
Internationalisation
Source Edwards et al. (2003) Higher Educ Res Dev
22(2) 183-192
22Success of TNE in Pharmacy
- When educators have done their lot, it will be
incumbent on - Governments of importing country/region
- To articulate a clear vision of pharmacy
development in order to reap public benefits of
private investment in education (prevent brain
drain) - National pharmaceutical association
- To help shape TNE policy
- To assist graduates/ returnees in integrating
into the local pharmacist corporate - To combat segregation and inequality of
opportunities for TNE graduates vis-à-vis local
graduates
23Thank you!