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UKM VC: Students to Design Their Own Programmes (second part of three part interview)

WEDNESDAY, 20 JULY 2011 00:00



By  S. Sivaselvam Pix by Saliman Leman 

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BANGI, 20 July, 2011 - UKM is 
introducing contract learning as 
part of its student-centred learning 
strategy,said Vice-Chancellor 
Prof Tan Sri Dato’ Wira Dr. Sharifah 
Hapsah Shahabudin. 

In contract learning the students, within 
the broad framework of the university’s 
learning outcomes, decide onthe 
activities they want to do on their own 
to achieve those outcomes. These can 
include leadership, teamwork and 
management abilities. 

“The students can design their own 
programmes and they will get these 
accredited, with supervisors to see 
that theyachieve the outcome that 
they set out for themselves.” 

In tis second part of her interview with UKM News Portal
she spoke of how 
professors are important at different levels. At the micro level, where they deal 
directly with the students, they can exert a very profound influence on the students 
with regard to the way they think and behave. 

“It’s not just the knowledge that is being transmitted by the professors, but also how 
the professors help the students to think and imbibe values which are important for 
us as a nation.” 

While previously “we left it too much to professors to their own devices, perhaps now 
we should be a bit more systematic and that’s what we are trying to do with 
the outcomes-based approach and the student-centred learning,” she said. 

“At the classroom level, we can set guidelines on what professors should also be doing, 
rather than only considering themselves as people with knowledge and transmitting
that knowledge.” 


While knowledge is everywhere - on the Internet, in books and journals – she felt that 
what professors must do is to help students learn how to access this knowledge that is 
available. They must learn to show students the world, guide them on how to evaluate 
such information, how to use it, so that they can make changes to the things that they 
are concerned about. 

“So, at this micro level, we determine what outcomes we expect the students to achieve,
how the professors design the teaching and learning to help students achieve this,” 
she added. 

“It would mean things would have to be outside the classroom. You cannot impart a lot 
of the things we want to in just lectures, for example, because a lot of it the students 
have to observe and experience themselves.” 

Combining these two, the professors helping the students, and the students coming up 
with their own teaching-learning activities, then it becomes contract learning, a 
contract between the university and students. 

“It tells the students that if they are allowed to do certain things, they must fulfill their 
contract in terms of the outcomes. At the micro level, we are progressing fairly well,” 
she said. 

At the recent National Professors Congress in Kuala Lumpur, the chairman of the 
National Professors Council, Prof Emeritus Datuk Dr. Zakri Abdul Hamid, wanted 
professors to take on the role of national thinkers, visionaries as well as an 
intellectual tonic and problem solvers, who can help the country’s leaders 
people-related problems. 

He spoke of how the late Prof. Syed Hussein Alatas and Royal Prof. Ungku Aziz impacted 
the lives of Malaysians. In other words, he sees professors as serving the community 
beyond their universities. 

To this, Prof. Tan Sri Sharifah Hapsah points out that there are many other professors 
too who have been doing a lot for the community at large, such as in Islamic banking 
and on social issues. There are a sizeable number of professors who have actually 
introduced projects that could become models of development. 

If Prof. Zakri is speaking about a collective basis, with a more organised level of input,
she said that is what the Council is all about, and it already has several clusters on 
various disciplines. 

“If they (Council members) can get their act together to study an issue and come out
very quickly with well reasoned proposals to the government, that’ll be one very
 big input, particularly when the government spends a lot on consultancy,” she added. 

Prof  Sharifah Hapsah contended that UKM is already a consultancy, as it has groups of 
people working on projects and they submit recommendations or studies. 

“So now, if instead of doing this at the university level, we are going to do it at the 
National Professors Council, I’m not quite sure how this is going to work out in the end. 
This is because at the university we are doing a lot of consultancy work already. 
We have been contributing significantly to various projects undertaken by both public 
and private sector agencies.” 

She felt that the Council could probably come out with some good ideas about how 
universities should be governed or work out programmes for universities on how they 
should move forward.  

It should in fact look not only at the direction of higher education but look at the whole 
education system, from preschool right up to PhD and beyond, even continuing education.  

“Professors should be thinking very seriously in the area of continuing education, because

that’s where you are required to keep the economy going. Once you graduate nobody’s 
holding your hand, and you must learn how to learn on your own. Perhaps professors 
can think about how this can be effectively done. 
They can also help chart research areas,” Prof Sharifah Hapsah said.