Universities under pressure to be flexible and responsive to current needs
New breed of institutional leaders for internationalising SL Universities:
May 30, 2012, 8:18 pm , the island
By Professor Ranjith Senaratne
Vice Chairman
University Grants Commission
(E-mail:ransen.ru@gmail.com)
Vice Chairman
University Grants Commission
(E-mail:ransen.ru@gmail.com)
Origin of the post of Vice Chancellor
Continued from yesterday
In
 many parts of the world, universities are now powerful  catalysts and 
agents of growth and wealth creators. They mobilize and channel  their 
intellectual and infrastructural resources for industrial growth and  
regional and national development. Thus great cities naturally have 
great  universities that contribute to their intellectual, social and 
cultural vibrancy  as well as influence their development. In a 
knowledge-based global economy,  there is even greater synergy between 
development of a city and that of its  universities. Stanford University
 in California, U.S.A., Punjab University in  Punjab, India, Fudan 
University in Shanghai, China, Chalmers University in  Gothenberg, 
Sweden and the NUS in Singapore are some telling examples in this  
regard.
Thus the government encourages the 
universities to contribute to  regional and national development. In Sri
 Lanka, the universities are almost  fully funded by the Treasury. In 
other words, they are maintained by the sweat  and toil of the people of
 the country of whom around 70% are still living in  rural areas. But 
the immense intellectual and infrastructural resource base of  the 
universities has hitherto remained almost untapped or underutilized for 
 regional/national development. Our universities should, in line with  
new initiatives such as Gama Naguma, Pura Naguma, Divi Naguma etc. under
 the  Mahinda Chintana, mobilize and channel their rich intellectual and
  infrastructure resources for regional/national development. Thus they 
could  become catalysts and locomotives of regional development.
Moreover,
 the strategic location, salubrious climate, rich  biological and 
ecological diversity and scenic beauty of Sri Lanka coupled with  its 
high literacy rate and proficiency in English, the high reputation of 
its  universities, and its relatively low cost of education and cost of 
living make  it an attractive destination for higher education.
Nevertheless,
 the Sri Lankan universities have been developed to  cater for the Sri 
Lankan students. Therefore, to attract foreign students and  staff, 
there should be a step change in the higher educational institutions in 
 Sri Lanka ranging from enhancement of the physical environment (i.e. 
landscaping  and improvement of infrastructure facilities for 
accommodation, sports and  recreation, cafeteria, e-library etc.), 
revision of curricula to give an  international flavour and character 
(since much of the present curricula has  only a national focus), 
raising the academic climate and intellectual  atmosphere, establishment
 of an institutional structure on international affairs  to changes in 
governance, management and administration in order to make them  
foreign-students friendly.
In order to 
strategically lead and effectively manage such  systemic changes, 
institutional leaders of right mindset, attributes and skills  are 
required. It is because of these reasons that as shown above, even 
countries  like Uganda and Rwanda advertise high profile positions in 
universities in  international journals so as to recruit leaders who can
 fill the bill in a  highly competitive globalised environment abounding
 with opportunities.
New breed of institutional leaders required
The
 1998 World Conference on Higher Education (WCHE) reaffirmed  that 
institutions of higher learning, and their leadership, have an  
unprecedented role to play in today’s society as pillars to endogenous 
capacity  building and sustainable democracy. This reaffirmation was in 
recognition of the  fact that institutions of higher learning are 
increasingly regarded, and rightly  so, as the bedrock upon which 
nations build a better and solid future.
Dr. 
Kobena T. Hanson and Dr. Frannie A. Leautier of the African  Capacity 
Building Foundation in their seminal paper titled "Enhancing  
Institutional Leadership in African Universities" have dealt with this 
subject  in detail. I draw upon it here, given its relevance and value 
to the Sri Lankan  context.
Global developments
 of the past decade, particularly the shift  from an industrial economy 
to a knowledge economy, have engendered new  challenges, opportunities 
and possibilities for the leadership of higher  educational institutions
 (HEIs). These changes are calling for rethinking and  reviewing of the 
role of higher education, and more specifically a thorough  
interrogation of the calibre and mandate of the leadership of HEIs. 
Leaders of  HEIs are being increasingly held accountable, among others, 
for their support to  growth and long-term success of dynamic learners 
(students and employees) and  their ability to translate leadership 
competence into strategic assets.
Simultaneously,
 the marketplace for higher education is changing  fast with the advent 
of information technologies, the growing demand for  knowledge workers, 
and the rapid globalization of all sectors, both private and  public. 
These developments reflect the shift in the international economy  
towards a global network organised around the value of knowledge, and 
the  capacity of people and organisations to use technological 
developments wisely,  effectively and efficiently. Therefore, as D.E. 
Hanna (2003) said, universities  are being compelled to transform their 
structures, missions, processes and  programmes in order to be both 
flexible and responsive to today’s emerging  socio-economic and 
knowledge needs.
Thus universities no longer 
can afford academic insularity; they  should embark upon strategic 
public-private partnerships and collaborative  endeavours at home and 
abroad. Growing competition faced by universities in the  areas of 
learning and research is compelling many to carve out niches with focus 
 on intergenerational, cross disciplinary and societally-valuable 
learning and  knowledge as well as to rethink their specific role in 
civil society to  transform societies and enhance the transmission of 
appropriate values.
Therefore our universities 
must proactively take on the task of  fostering institutional leadership
 so as to translate leadership competence into  strategic assets for the
 development agenda of the nation. Such assets are the  key to 
bolstering intellectual capital and strategic scanning, the capacity,  
that is, to recognise the behaviour of interconnected systems to make 
effective  decisions under varying strategic and risk scenarios, and the
 transformation of  knowledge as a lever for the achievement of 
specified societal objectives and  goals.
The 
strategic rethinking of the role of institutional leadership  in our 
universities is thus inevitable. In this regard, the dialogue should be 
 articulated around issues of global competitiveness, knowledge 
utilisation, the  changing geopolitical landscape, and paradigm shifts 
in the role of the  university from one of control and regulation to one
 of facilitation and  flexibility.
Universities
 being dynamic institutions do not function  effectively if its 
constituent members do not have the right combination of  skills, 
knowledge and attitudes (competencies) and a suitably structured system 
 is in place.
In the context of the aforesaid 
interactions and complexities,  the tools and frameworks that 
institutional leaders previously used to make  decisions now seem 
inadequate. Sri Lankan universities, therefore, need a cadre  of new 
leaders who possess the requisite leadership skills that empower them to
  navigate through the complexities and interconnectedness of the 
knowledge  society of the 21st century. The specific skills required as 
identified by Dr.  F. Lautier, Executive Secretary of the African 
Capacity Building Foundation for  African Universities are as follows:
a) ability to function in environments with low predictability;
b) preparedness to handle diverse potential futures;
c) capacity to generate strategic maps of pressure points and  risk scenarios;
d) skills, set of values, and behaviours that guide them in  making choices in challenging circumstances; and,
e) capacity to identify patterns of change (shifts), extract  important relationships
(interactions), and select from a variety of approaches for  handling challenges
Given
 that the nature and complexity of problems affecting the  higher 
education in Africa and South Asia are comparable, the above hold good  
for Sri Lankan universities as well.
To be continued tomorrow
 
