A
divorce in Singapore
A good piece that throws some light on the Johns Hopkins-A*Star
break-up. Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Education
July 27, 2006
Nearly
a decade ago, when Johns Hopkins University started a programme
in Singapore to train doctoral students and conduct research
in several cutting-edge biomedical fields, the effort was
seen as a model for international collaboration.
Here
was a university internationally known for its expertise
in medicine setting up shop in Singapore, opening up the
possibility of educating students who might never be able
to enroll in Baltimore.
Hopkins
also set up a clinic in Singapore, which appears to be thriving.
But the research and education programme is ending - with
Singapore and Hopkins exchanging less than diplomatic words
in the Asian press.
Singapore
officials, who have provided millions to Hopkins for the
programme, say that the university has not recruited the
graduate students or sent senior professors to Asia, as
promised.
A Baltimore-based
spokesman for Hopkins said on Wednesday that the university
was preparing a statement about the collapse of the partnership,
but as of late yesterday, it hadn't released anything.
With
many American universities starting or contemplating international
partnerships in which full degrees are offered abroad, the
Hopkins-Singapore divorce raises some questions:
* Is this dissolution indicative of problems other institutions
may face, or just an isolated incident?
* How will the experience affect other relationships between
American universities and foreign countries?
* What are the keys to making such relationships work?
Not
surprisingly given the fast-changing nature of international
relationships in higher education, some experts think this
does mean something (namely that American universities need
to be sure they can deliver on more than their names). Others
think this is just a case of a programme running its course.
With
Hopkins not talking, it's hard to know exactly why the programme
isn't working. But Singapore has been paying for much of
the programme throughout its lifetime.
And
after a Hopkins spokesman was quoted in the Singapore press
as saying that the nation-state did not fulfill its end
of the bargain, the country's science agency released a
blistering counter-attack.
In it,
the Agency for Science, Technology and Research said that
Singapore had provided more than $50 million to pay for
the programme, but that Hopkins had failed to meet specific
obligations.
For
example, it said Hopkins committed to having at least 8
Ph.D. students enrolled by now, but that there are none.
The university was supposed to have 12 "senior investigators
with international reputations" in residence in Singapore,
but the country said that the university had recruited 13
people, only 1 of whom met those criteria. Two of those
recruited by Hopkins were based in Baltimore.
The
agency in Singapore said that it was "deeply dismayed"
at any impression it was responsible for the problems facing
the junior faculty and students who are doing work at Hopkins-Singapore.
So what
does this mean beyond Hopkins and Singapore?
Philip
G. Altbach, director of the Centre for International Higher
Education, at Boston College, said he doesn't know why the
Singapore-Hopkins relationship soured, but thinks that other
universities should pay attention.
"Singapore
clearly wanted both a brand name - brand names are very
important in the Asian context - and it wanted the substance
behind the name. If they don't get both, there's a problem,"
Altbach said.
The
problem for many American colleges (and other colleges in
English-speaking countries) is that there are plenty of
Asian nations right now where governments or private entities
care only about brand name, and the brand just needs to
be Western, not necessarily a "name" institution,
Altbach said.
As a
result, many programmes being set up don't have standards
equivalent to those of home campuses.
Altbach
said American educators need to do more to make potential
partners abroad understand that the excellence of American
higher education isn't just a matter of names.
He recently
wrote an article for a Chinese newspaper that said "you
need to be more careful about who you are letting in the
door - please be aware that every foreign institution that
wants to get into China is not necessarily there for mutual
benefit on both sides."
In the
case of Singapore, Altbach said that officials there have
a tough attitude about making sure that American educational
partners fully deliver.
When
setting up foreign relationships, he said, "both sides
need to be careful."
He added:
"I think this business is getting bigger and more sophisticated
and both sides are beginning to learn that it's not going
to be a walk in the park and you need to be careful about
long-term commitments."
D. Bruce
Johnstone, director of the Centre for Comparative and Global
Studies in Education, at the State University of New York
at Buffalo, said that amid "the flurry" of partnerships
being created, it may be good for all that Singapore and
Hopkins are calling it quits.
"The
high-end partnership is exceedingly difficult to maintain,"
he said.
"This is a rather healthy development, suggesting that
Hopkins doesn't need this, is not clinging to it as a profit-making
activity, nor does Singapore need it. It is an almost welcome
development for a partnership to say it's not serving a
mutual interest," he said.
Why
are such partnerships so difficult to maintain? "Part
of it is that this can't all be done by e-mail. It takes
a lot of travelling. However developed and pleasant a country
and however comfortable the airline, it's a hell of a long
ways away to Singapore," he said.
"And
the kinds of people who the Singaporeans want to see more
of are people whose time is enormously precious."
Johnstone said that the Hopkins programme in Singapore had
a lot of prominence because of the university's reputation,
so he expected plenty of people to now examine what went
wrong.
There
are signs that some universities are getting hesitant about
making big leaps abroad - even when lots of money is available.
The
University of Washington turned down a US$100 million deal
last month that would have involved the creation of a branch
campus in China.
At the
same time, many others are opening full-fledged programmes
in China, Qatar, and elsewhere. Just this month, Singapore
and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology announced
plans for a new joint research centre.
And
as a result, some experts say that it would be wrong to
read too much into the Hopkins situation.
SUNY-Buffalo,
for example, has been offering programmes in Singapore for
close to a decade, generally in business and education,
starting with one programme and growing gradually.
"Programmes
succeed and fail all the time," in the United States,
Singapore, or anywhere, said Stephen Dunnett, vice provost
for international education at Buffalo.
He predicted
that the Hopkins experience would not alter the growth of
American programmes in Asia or elsewhere.
"There
are going to be others that will take its place," he
said.
At the
same time, he acknowledged that the Hopkins-Singapore problems
could lead to more questions for American institutions offering
programmes abroad.
Dunnett
was recently in Singapore and attended a recruiting session
for prospective students and their parents.
One
of the top questions, he said, was "How do we know
Buffalo won't change its mind?" because "there
is concern that Americans can be fickle."
Dunnett
said that the way American institutions need to respond
is by making clear a long-term commitment. Buffalo currently
enrolls about 400 students in Singapore and expects that
to increase.
But
he said that it was only by offering courses for a few years
without desired enrollment levels that the university built
confidence in itself. "They had to trust us and feel
we had staying power," he said.
Given
that, post-9/11, more students from outside the United States
want an American-style education but either can't or won't
get to the United States,
Dunnett
said that these sorts of arrangements will grow. To work,
he said, "there has to be a mutuality of interest."
http://insidehighered.com/news/2006/07/27/singapore