Ministry of Higher Education (Malaysia)

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Ministry of Higher Education
Kementerian Pendidikan Tinggi
Ministry overview
Formed27 March 2004; 20 years ago (2004-03-27)
Preceding Ministry
JurisdictionGovernment of Malaysia
HeadquartersNo. 2, Menara 2, Jalan P5/6, Precinct 5, Federal Government Administrative Centre, 62200 Putrajaya
MottoSoaring Upwards (Peningkatan Berterusan)
Employees15,978 (2022)
Annual budgetMYR 20,195,970,000 (2022)
Minister responsible
Deputy Minister responsible
Ministry executives
  • Zaini Ujang, Secretary-General
  • Vacant, Deputy Secretary-General (Policy)
  • Megat Sany Megat Ahmad Supian, Deputy Secretary-General (Management and Development)
  • Azlinda Azman[1], Director-General
Websitewww.mohe.gov.my

The Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE; Malay: Kementerian Pendidikan Tinggi) is a ministry of the Government of Malaysia that is responsible for higher education, polytechnic, community college, student loan, accreditation, student volunteer. Its main office is in Putrajaya. The ministry was formed on 27 March 2004, merged back into the Ministry of Education on 14 May 2013, but then reformed on 28 July 2015. After the 2018 general election, the ministry became a higher education division under the MOE. In the Muhyiddin cabinet, the higher education division was separated again from the Ministry of Education to form as a new ministry since 10 March 2020.

Organisation[edit]

  • Minister of Higher Education
    • Deputy Minister of Higher Education
      • Secretary-General
        • Under the Authority of Secretary-General
        • Deputy Secretary-General (Development)
        • Deputy Secretary-General (Management)

Federal departments[edit]

  1. Department of Higher Education (DHE), or Jabatan Pendidikan Tinggi (JPT). (Official site)
  2. Department of Polytechnic Education (DPE), or Jabatan Pengajian Politeknik (JPP). (Official site)
  3. Department of Community Colleges Education (DCCE), or Jabatan Pengajian Kolej Komuniti (JPKK). (Official site)

Federal agencies[edit]

  1. National Higher Education Fund Corporation, or Perbadanan Tabung Pendidikan Tinggi Nasional (PTPTN). (Official site)
  2. Malaysian Qualifications Agency (MQA), or Agensi Kelayakan Malaysia. (Official site)
  3. Student Volunteer Foundation, or Yayasan Sukarelawan Siswa (YSS). (Official site)

Key legislation[edit]

The Ministry of Higher Education is responsible for administration of several key Acts:

Background[edit]

The functions of the MOHE was originally within the purview of the Ministry of Education (MOE) until the departments and agencies responsible for higher education were separated from the MOE on 27 March 2004 and established as a full ministry under a Federal Minister. In 2013, Prime Minister Najib Razak merged the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Higher Education into a single Ministry of Education. In 2015, the Ministry was reestablished.[2]

Organisation[edit]

The MOHE is headed by the Minister of Higher Education, a post held by Noraini Ahmad (UMNO). She is assisted by Deputy Minister Mansor Othman.

The following departments and agencies are under the purview of the MOHE:

Department of Higher Education[edit]

Also known by its Malay acronym, JPT (for Jabatan Pendidikan Tinggi), the department was headed by a Director General, Datin Paduka Ir. Dr. Siti Hamisah Binti Tapsir. This department was responsible for the management of both public and private institutes of higher learning and also Malaysian Student Department around the world.

Department of Polytechnic Education[edit]

Also known by its Malay acronym, JPP (for Jabatan Pengajian Politeknik), the department was headed by a Director General, YBhg. Datuk Hj Mohlis Bin Jaafar. This department was responsible for the management of polytechnics.

Department of Community Colleges[edit]

Also known by its Malay abbreviation, JPKK (for Jabatan Pengajian Kolej Komuniti), the department was headed by a Director General, Asc. Prof. Kamarudin Kasim. This department was responsible for the management of community colleges.

Malaysian Qualifications Agency[edit]

The Malaysian Qualifications Agency or MQA is a statutory body in Malaysia set up to accredit academic programs provided by educational institutions providing post secondary or higher education and facilitate the recognition and articulation of qualifications.

Perbadanan Tabung Pendidikan Tinggi Nasional[edit]

Better known as PTPTN (English: National Higher Education Fund Corporation), this agency provides education loans as a form of financial assistance to students with financial needs to aid them in pursuing a higher education. PTPTN also manages a students savings scheme for higher education purposes.[3]

Tunku Abdul Rahman Foundation[edit]

The foundation (Malay: Yayasan Tunku Abdul Rahman) is named after the first Prime Minister of Malaysia and founder of the foundation, Tunku Abdul Rahman. It provides scholarships for students to pursue a higher education. Students who are awarded the scholarships are known as Tunku Scholars.[4]

Yayasan Sukarelawan Siswa/ Student Volunteers Foundation[edit]

The foundation (Malay: Yayasan Sukarelawan Siswa (YSS) / Student Volunteers Foundation) was launched in 2012 as wholly owned entity of the Ministry of Education (MoE). Holding the vision to develop Malaysia as students' volunteer hub and produce global student volunteer icons, YSS is determined to carry out its mission to encourage, educate and guide the students of higher learning institutions to promote world peace and inculcate the spirit of camaraderie through community engagement within and outside the country.[5]

Public universities[edit]

The MOHE also has oversight responsibility for all the public universities in Malaysia.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Prof Dr Azlinda Azman appointed new Higher Education DG". The Star. 31 May 2023. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  2. ^ "Mahdzir Khalid berazam pastikan sektor pendidikan lebih maju". BH. 28 July 2015. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  3. ^ PTPTN: Corporate Info Archived 4 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Yayasan Tunku Abdul Rahman: Introduction (in Malay)
  5. ^ http://www.sukarelawansiswa.my/

External links[edit]