Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | LB 2329.8 .S644 W45 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5031020 |
LB 2326.3 .H36 2012 The handbook of institutional research / | LB 2326.3 .M36 2007 Enhancing learning through the scholarship of teaching and learning : the challenges and joys of juggling / | LB 2328.5 .G56 2010 The global growth of private higher education / | LB 2329.8 .S644 W45 2011 Higher education in Southeast Asia : blurring borders, changing balance / | LB 2330 .P48 2002 Schools across frontiers : the story of the International Baccalaureate and the United World Colleges. | LB 2331 .B34 2004 What the best college teachers do / | LB 2331 .B378 2003 Effective teaching with technology in higher education : foundations for success / |
"This is the first book to systematically chart and comparatively assess the trend towards private higher education in Southeast Asia. It includes a substantial analysis of key policy issues, as well as detailed case studies of Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Philippines, and Vietnam"--Provided by publisher.
"Throughout SouthEast Asia, the balance between public and private higher education is changing. Caught between conflicting imperatives, of spiralling demand, and limited resources, the balance between public and private higher education systems in South East, South, and East Asia has shifted markedly. Twenty years ago, no private universities existed in Malaysia, or Viet Nam - now private higher education is challenging for a major role. But this is not the whole story. The same cost pressures affect public HEIs. Governments press for more enrolments, but state support is slipping, at least in per-student terms. The effects push public HEIs to diversify income sources, by various means: offering high demand courses for high fees, or developing parallel courses, taught at nights or weekends, sometimes in shopping malls, for high fees. Is there a connection between the two trends? What is argued is that we are witnessing not merely a changing balance between public and private sectors, but a blurring of borders between them, with public HEIs now often behaving more like private, for-profit institutions. The book charts and illustrates these trends, posing questions about their meaning, including issues of transparency, equity, and what the reforms might mean for traditional conceptions of public good in higher education"--Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
There are no comments on this title.