1
HE in Comparative Prospective
 Higher Education Commission (HEC),
 Statutory body
 Established in 2002 under the Chairmanship of Dr,
Atta-ur-Rahman
 Main functions are funding, overseeing, regulating and
accrediting the higher education institutions.
 First established in 1974 as University Grants
Commission (UGC)
 Came into its modern form on 11 September 2002
 Formulating higher education policy & quality
assurance to meet the international standards.
 accrediting academic degrees, development of new
institutions and uplift of existing institutions 2
HE
 Main purpose of upgrading the universities and
degree awarding institutes & research &
development.
 Played an important and leading role towards building
a knowledge-based economy in Pakistan by giving out
thousand of doctoral scholarships for education
abroad
 14 August 1947 Pak, had only one institution of
higher learning, UoPb and among 40 colleges
expanded to four provinces,
 Education policy revised by PM Liaquat Ali Khan,
govt established various universities and colleges
in all over the country.
3
HE
 National Edn Conference 1947 (also known as
Pakistan Education Conference) of academicians
and state holders to revise the policy of higher
education in the country,
 First official education policy in 1956 by
PM,Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy
 President , Ayub Khan 1960—1965, 912 Million.
43000 student enrol
 Nationalization program in 1972, PPP, 1974, the UGC,
 President Zia-ul-Haq(NEP-79), Islamic concepts,
 PM,Nawaz Sharif(NEP-92) streamline HE,
 PM, Benazir Bhutto, 1993, Eighth Five-year Plans,Pri-
Education 4
HEC
 New Era,
 In 2002, President Pervez Musharraf, dissolving the
University Grants Commission and establishing a new
autonomous independent of the Federal Ministry of
Education – the Higher Education Commission.
 HEC Chairman, the status of a Federal Minister
 Executive Director, status of a Federal Secretary.
 Presidential Ordinance on 11 September 2002 to
establish the Higher Education Commission.
 HEC, implemented its program of enhancing access,
improving quality, and increased relevance of
higher education to the needs and requirement of
Pakistan
5
 Reforms by Atta-ur-Rahman, sector 4 Pakistani
universities became ranked among the top 300,
400 and 500 universities of the world.
 Brazil, Russia, India, and China ("BRIC"
countries),("BRIC" countries), the percentage of
high highly cited papers
 183 million cellular, 98 million 3G/4G and 101 million
broadband subscribers.
 distance education and to promote information
technology
 Javaid Laghari was the second chairman from 2009 to
2013 who tried to continue the higher education
reforms
6
HEC
 Task force was formed, by PMIK,Promote research in
technology fields and to initiate projects that can use
science and technology for sustainable and equitable
socio-economic development.
 Pakistan's first foreign engineering university (Pak
Austria in 2020, eight foreign universities collaborating
(three Austrian and five Chinese), in Hazra,
7
HE in Comparative Perspective
 Comparative perspective is based on the idea that a
society or social system cannot be fully
understood without comparing it with other societies
or systems.
 The main limitation of this perspective is that societies
differ in so many ways and therefore may not always be
compared meaningfully.
 What is comparative approach in education?
 An approach whereby all the variations existing
from one area to another within the same country
are taken into consideration while comparing the
system of education of a foreign country with one's
educational system
8
 What is the basic concept of comparative education?
 Comparative education is a fully established academic
field of study that examines education in one country
(or group of countries) by using data and insights
drawn from the practices and situation in another
country, or countries.
 Who introduced comparative education?
 Marc-Antoine Jullien de Paris, referred to as the "father
of Comparative Education".
Importance of comparative education to teachers?
 Comparative education helps us to understand
differences and similarities between our own
education system and others.
9
CoE ( Centre of Excellence)
 Centre of Excellence in University?
 The literal meaning of a Center of Excellence is – 'A place
where the highest standards are maintained.
 Center of Excellence (CoE) is a body that provides
leadership, best practices, research, support, training
of trainers and skill training for a specific sector/s.
What does a Centre of excellence do?
 A center of excellence (CoE) is a team of skilled knowledge
workers whose mission is to provide the organization
they work for with best practices around a particular
area of interest.
 CoEs are often created when there is a knowledge deficit
or skills gap within an organization.
10
CoE
 What is another term for center of excellence?
 Within an organization, a center of excellence may refer
to a group of people, a department or a shared facility. It
may also be known as a competency center, or
capability center, or an excellence center.
 In academic institutions, a center of excellence often
refers to a team with a clear focus on a particular area of
research; such a center may bring together faculty
members from different disciplines and provide shared
facilities.
11

HE in Historical Prospective.ppt

  • 1.
  • 2.
    HE in ComparativeProspective  Higher Education Commission (HEC),  Statutory body  Established in 2002 under the Chairmanship of Dr, Atta-ur-Rahman  Main functions are funding, overseeing, regulating and accrediting the higher education institutions.  First established in 1974 as University Grants Commission (UGC)  Came into its modern form on 11 September 2002  Formulating higher education policy & quality assurance to meet the international standards.  accrediting academic degrees, development of new institutions and uplift of existing institutions 2
  • 3.
    HE  Main purposeof upgrading the universities and degree awarding institutes & research & development.  Played an important and leading role towards building a knowledge-based economy in Pakistan by giving out thousand of doctoral scholarships for education abroad  14 August 1947 Pak, had only one institution of higher learning, UoPb and among 40 colleges expanded to four provinces,  Education policy revised by PM Liaquat Ali Khan, govt established various universities and colleges in all over the country. 3
  • 4.
    HE  National EdnConference 1947 (also known as Pakistan Education Conference) of academicians and state holders to revise the policy of higher education in the country,  First official education policy in 1956 by PM,Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy  President , Ayub Khan 1960—1965, 912 Million. 43000 student enrol  Nationalization program in 1972, PPP, 1974, the UGC,  President Zia-ul-Haq(NEP-79), Islamic concepts,  PM,Nawaz Sharif(NEP-92) streamline HE,  PM, Benazir Bhutto, 1993, Eighth Five-year Plans,Pri- Education 4
  • 5.
    HEC  New Era, In 2002, President Pervez Musharraf, dissolving the University Grants Commission and establishing a new autonomous independent of the Federal Ministry of Education – the Higher Education Commission.  HEC Chairman, the status of a Federal Minister  Executive Director, status of a Federal Secretary.  Presidential Ordinance on 11 September 2002 to establish the Higher Education Commission.  HEC, implemented its program of enhancing access, improving quality, and increased relevance of higher education to the needs and requirement of Pakistan 5
  • 6.
     Reforms byAtta-ur-Rahman, sector 4 Pakistani universities became ranked among the top 300, 400 and 500 universities of the world.  Brazil, Russia, India, and China ("BRIC" countries),("BRIC" countries), the percentage of high highly cited papers  183 million cellular, 98 million 3G/4G and 101 million broadband subscribers.  distance education and to promote information technology  Javaid Laghari was the second chairman from 2009 to 2013 who tried to continue the higher education reforms 6
  • 7.
    HEC  Task forcewas formed, by PMIK,Promote research in technology fields and to initiate projects that can use science and technology for sustainable and equitable socio-economic development.  Pakistan's first foreign engineering university (Pak Austria in 2020, eight foreign universities collaborating (three Austrian and five Chinese), in Hazra, 7
  • 8.
    HE in ComparativePerspective  Comparative perspective is based on the idea that a society or social system cannot be fully understood without comparing it with other societies or systems.  The main limitation of this perspective is that societies differ in so many ways and therefore may not always be compared meaningfully.  What is comparative approach in education?  An approach whereby all the variations existing from one area to another within the same country are taken into consideration while comparing the system of education of a foreign country with one's educational system 8
  • 9.
     What isthe basic concept of comparative education?  Comparative education is a fully established academic field of study that examines education in one country (or group of countries) by using data and insights drawn from the practices and situation in another country, or countries.  Who introduced comparative education?  Marc-Antoine Jullien de Paris, referred to as the "father of Comparative Education". Importance of comparative education to teachers?  Comparative education helps us to understand differences and similarities between our own education system and others. 9
  • 10.
    CoE ( Centreof Excellence)  Centre of Excellence in University?  The literal meaning of a Center of Excellence is – 'A place where the highest standards are maintained.  Center of Excellence (CoE) is a body that provides leadership, best practices, research, support, training of trainers and skill training for a specific sector/s. What does a Centre of excellence do?  A center of excellence (CoE) is a team of skilled knowledge workers whose mission is to provide the organization they work for with best practices around a particular area of interest.  CoEs are often created when there is a knowledge deficit or skills gap within an organization. 10
  • 11.
    CoE  What isanother term for center of excellence?  Within an organization, a center of excellence may refer to a group of people, a department or a shared facility. It may also be known as a competency center, or capability center, or an excellence center.  In academic institutions, a center of excellence often refers to a team with a clear focus on a particular area of research; such a center may bring together faculty members from different disciplines and provide shared facilities. 11