ABSTRACT

The nature of higher education is by no means fixed: it has evolved over time; different models of higher education co-exist alongside each other at present; and, worldwide, there are demands for higher education to change to better help support economic growth and to better fit chagning social and economic circumstances.  This book examines, from an Asian perspective, the debates about how higher education should change.  It considers questions of funding, and of who will attend universities, and the fundamental question of what universities are for, especially as the three key funcations of universities - knowledge creation through research, knowledge dissemination through teaching and service, and knowledge conservation through libraries, the disciplinary structuring of knowledge and in other ways - are increasingly being carried out much more widely outside universities in the new "knowledge society".  Throughout, the book discusses the extent to which the countries of East Asia are developing new models of higher education, thereby better preparing themselves for the "new  "knowledge society", rather than simply following old Western models.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter |19 pages

Information and innovation in a global knowledge society

Implications for higher education

chapter |10 pages

What should we teach?

Making higher education curricular choices in an era of rapidly expanding knowledge

chapter |19 pages

Higher education and the knowledge economy

Challenges for Taiwan

chapter |18 pages

Linking graduate and undergraduate education in the knowledge society

Exploring key quality issues from a Japanese perspective

chapter |11 pages

Quality, structure and change

The response of the Malaysian higher education system to challenges of the knowledge society

chapter |11 pages

Quality assurance issues in Korean higher education

The challenges of an emergent knowledge society

chapter |22 pages

Asserting brain power and expanding education services

Searching for new governance and regulatory regimes in Singapore and Hong Kong 1

chapter |16 pages

Higher education counseling

Keeping pace with rapidly changing learning environments

chapter |17 pages

Higher education and gender issues in the knowledge economy

Who studies what, why and where?