By GERALD ANDAE, gandae@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Monday, October 27 2014 at 20:27
Posted Monday, October 27 2014 at 20:27
In Summary
- The Commission for University Education (CUE) said the new guidelines would be adopted by all universities, including those owned by private investors, and implemented over five years.
- Lecturers with master’s degrees have been reduced to tutorial or junior research fellows.
- This brings to an end the current criteria where each university had a different formula of promoting and appointing lecturers.
Only holders of PhDs will be allowed to lecture in
universities following the introduction of fresh guidelines by the
universities’ regulator.
The Commission for University Education (CUE) said the new
guidelines would be adopted by all universities, including those owned
by private investors, and implemented over five years.
Lecturers with master’s degrees have been reduced to tutorial or junior research fellows.
“It is now a basic requirement that for one to be a
lecturer he/she has to be a holder of a doctoral degree,” said Prof
David Some, secretary of the Commission for University Education (CUE).
This brings to an end the current criteria where each university had a different formula of promoting and appointing lecturers.
For one to be promoted to professor, they would now
have at least a minimum of 60 equivalent publication points from
scholarly journals, up from the current 10 points.
The publication points are based on the number of
books published and level targeted such as high school or university.
For example, one university book is equivalent to four points while one
tertiary level book has two points.
The new guidelines also require a professor to
supervise five postgraduate students with two of them at doctoral level,
unlike the current system where one can become a professor without
having supervised PhD students.
The common regulation will curb the situation where
lecturers have been moving to universities with lower grading points in
order to earn higher titles.
“We have had cases where a lecturer would move to a
university with lower grading requirements to earn titles. This has
come to an end with the enforcing of the new standards,” he said.
On the other hand, associate professors will only
earn the title after attaining a minimum of 48 publication points of
scholarly journals and having supervised four students at postgraduate
level.
Currently, one would get the title having accumulated eight publication points.
The new guidelines were approved on Monday at a
stakeholders’ workshop in Nairobi. Education secretary Jacob Kaimenyi
said the new criteria would create order and level the field for fair
competition in local university system.
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