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The NUS Graduate: Establishing NUS’ Reputation
Since its beginnings in 1905, NUS has undergone phenomenal changes in
search of distinction. By actively participating in all these changes,
the Government, our visionary and able vice-chancellors, dedicated staff
and administrators and all our students have collectively established
the excellent reputation that we now have today whereby the NUS degree
is well recognised locally and internationally.
As a university is judged by the quality of its graduates (and its faculty),
NUS will remain a brand name amidst the many institutions of higher education
in the world only if we are able to continue to produce suitably trained
graduates who are in high demand because they are able to provide top
service. Consequently, the education/training process that we provide
for the NUS Student should be examined in greater detail.
Strategically, we must identify the type and quality of graduates whom
we want to produce and can produce. Such strategies will govern the calibre
of students we deem suitable to educate and also that of faculty who provide
the education. Tactically, curricula that stretch the students’
intellectual minds and stimulate their intellectual curiosity, as well
as a conducive learning environment are also important factors for attracting
quality students and academic staff to join NUS and collectively produce
the desired outcomes of NUS. Because the desired outcomes differ with
time, we should also constantly review both curricula and environment
accordingly.
The NUS Student and Curriculum: Past and Present
For the purpose of this essay, I will highlight two distinct phases
of curriculum development in the history of engineering education at NUS.
The first phase of development took place from the early 60s to the late
70s when the School of Engineering was established at the then University
of Singapore during the launch of Singapore’s industrialisation
programme. The aim of engineering education then was to churn out quickly
as large a workforce as possible at the professional level. This was a
necessary measure, as Singapore’s industries were essentially assembly
plants that were labour-intensive. Degree accreditation from UK professional
institutions was used to benchmark our engineering curricula.
Until the late 70s, our faculties/schools were located at Bukit Timah,
Prince Edward Road, Lady Hill and Sepoy Lines. In 1978, a common campus
was founded at Kent Ridge to create an environment that would in future
facilitate interdisciplinary activities. The second phase of curriculum
development next took place from the early 80s into the 90s as Singapore’s
economy boomed. During this period, the focus shifted from promoting labour-intensive
towards capital-intensive industries, with the substantial increase in
the workforce salary fuelling the change from low to high tech economy.
Professional courses such as engineering, accountancy and business administration
were heavily subscribed. However, many bright students chose to study
humanities and become administrators in both public and private organisations.
Engineering and science graduates were also readily absorbed into the
administrative and financial sectors.
Two parallel paths of undergraduate engineering education were available
from the two universities in Singapore (NUS and Nanyang Technological
University) to meet its manpower requirement. With NUS’ emphasis
in research, especially collaborative research with industry, the NUS
curriculum was re-structured introducing more graduate courses, especially
the part-time Masters’ programmes. Many research institutes and
research centres were established and hosted by NUS. Immersed in this
environment, the NUS student was given ample exposure to key academic
issues, entrepreneurship, and understanding of world cultures.
The NUS Graduate of the Future
At the start of this new millennium, not only has its own economy matured,
but Singapore must now also confront global competition to survive. ‘Global
economy’, ‘knowledge economy’, ‘global knowledge
enterprise’, and ‘foreign talent’ are common buzzwords
that sum up the demands of the new worldwide, Information Technology-driven
economy. To meet such challenges, the strategies and tactics for educating/training
the NUS student must necessarily be changed accordingly.
When contemplating curricula reform, two basic questions should be considered
among many:
- Why should a prospective student select NUS, and not another university?
- Why should the employer select graduates from NUS and not from other
universities or polytechnics?
A prospective student will choose the tertiary institution with education
programmes that will satisfy their intellectual curiosity
and concern for high market value. But if immediate market
value is the student’s main consideration, then rapid changes in
global demands and shifts in location of employers will result in transient
market values of graduates. As a result, over-emphasising market value
by prospective students and by faculty/school curriculum committees will
be both short-term and imprudent. Instead, a good balance between training
the intellect and training for market value is necessary. Therefore, for
NUS to attract the best and brightest of students, we must tailor our
academic programmes towards developing students’ personal, intellectual,
professional and communicative potentials. After completing these programmes,
the NUS graduate will be able to continue acquiring further skills independently
to sustain his or her market value regardless of the disciplines majored
at NUS.
The future NUS graduate will then be one who is, on the one hand, professionally
competent within a chosen discipline or disciplines, and on the other
hand, intellectually broad-based and highly adaptable to become cosmopolitan
men or women with leadership qualities. To achieve these aims, the NUS
curricula must strongly emphasise developing the students’ rigorous
understanding of fundamental principles and their ability to generate
new knowledge through applications of these principles. The NUS curricula
must also facilitate breadth of study to satisfy the NUS student’s
intellectual curiosity, interests and aspirations. In addition, the NUS
curricula must leverage on the expertise of other faculties/schools/institutions,
local or overseas, to facilitate cross-pollination of ideas and knowledge
to generate new niche areas and territories.
Given NUS’ comprehensive structure as a university and our adoption
of the flexible Modular System, we are capable of achieving the above
objectives. Yet to further realise the vision of NUS as ‘the intellectual
and entrepreneurial pulse of Singapore’, many new multi-disciplinary
initiatives have been introduced, such as Minor Programmes, Specialisation
Areas, Cross-Faculty Modules, Elective Modules and others that have been
jointly proposed by faculties and departments. The implementation of the
University Scholars Programme and the General Education Requirement will
nurture NUS students to become leaders: these programmes will intensively
stretch their intellect as well as enable them to learn the essential
modes of inquiry in their quest for knowledge within and outside of their
disciplines.
Value-adding vs. Value-creating
When considering curricula development, we should perhaps make another
careful distinction between value-adding and value-creating. What I define
as value-adding in curriculum development is the process by which we often
trim and add topics in existing modules, or we consolidate existing modules,
rearranging and expanding existing topics into different modules. In this
way, dated materials are weeded out and state-of-the-art materials are
covered in order to better prepare the NUS student for the working world.
In business language, such a process is driven by market forces and often
short-term, requiring frequent reviews.
In contrast, we can radically reform our curricula and this requires both
vision and boldness. Successful implementation of such curricula will
create value within the NUS student. In business parlance, this means
to take the initiative to create demand for new products and stimulate
market forces, for instance in the development and marketing of products
and services such as SONY Walkman, MacDonald’s fast food and FedEx
rapid mail delivery.
So this concept begs the questions: Can we value-create our curricula?
How can we achieve this? I have no answer, but I believe that by leveraging
on the strengths of NUS’ faculties and schools, we can create new
disciplines such as Engineering Science, Engineering Humanities, Engineering
Art, etc. For instance, I understand that a well-known US university has
offered a degree course in Computer Music. New niche areas can be created
through this radical approach, and often the reward and the competitive
edge that are derived will last a long time.
Conclusion
NUS now enjoys an excellent reputation. However, we cannot afford to
rest on our laurels. We must continue to revisit our modes of education
and move forward, for the success factors of the past and present may
not guarantee success in the future. By sharing and utilising the rich
supply of expertise and resources available within and outside NUS, we
can both add and create value in the education programmes we offer our
students. In this way, the NUS graduate will have undergone programmes
that will enable them to readily crossover into different disciplines
and develop new disciplines that will determine his or her market value.
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