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Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan
Success Admidst Ongoing Struggles by Fred M. Hayward
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan: Success Amidst Ongoing Struggles by Fred M. Hayward
Society for College and University Planning www.scup.org © 2015 by the Society for College and University Planning All rights reserved. Published 2015. ISBN 978-1-937724-51-1
About the Society for College and University Planning (SCUP) The Society for College and University Planning is a community of higher education planning professionals that provides its members with the knowledge and resources to establish and achieve institutional planning goals within the context of best practices and emerging trends. For more information, visit www.scup.org. What is Integrated Planning? Integrated planning is a sustainable approach to planning that builds relationships, aligns the organization, and emphasizes preparedness for change.
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Contents Foreword..........................................................................................................................................iv Preface...............................................................................................................................................vi Acknowledgements...................................................................................................................xi Chapter 1: The Promise and the Challenges of Higher Education in Fragile Regions..............................................1 Chapter 2: The National Context for Higher Education.................................... 9 Chapter 3: The Higher Education Context...............................................................35 Chapter 4: Leadership Challenges in Higher Education............................... 54 Chapter 5: Challenges on Campus...............................................................................87 Chapter 6: Funding for Higher Education and the Role of Donors...... 117 Chapter 7: Lessons from Experience........................................................................126 Chapter 8: Goals for the Next Five to Ten Years: Continuing the Transformation Process.......................................145 Chapter 9: Conclusions.....................................................................................................154 Appendix.....................................................................................................................................157 Endnotes.....................................................................................................................................166 References..................................................................................................................................170 Author Biography...................................................................................................................176
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Foreword In a speech given on June 6, 1966, in Jameson Hall
effects on higher education on a nation’s plans
at the University of Cape Town on the university’s
for elementary and secondary education; student
annual “Day of Affirmation,” Bobby Kennedy quoted
activism in a politically charged environment; styles of
an unnamed Italian philosopher as saying, “There is
leadership; the interaction between higher education
nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to
and the economy; the impact of culture on gender
conduct, or more uncertain in its success than to take
equity; persistence and personal heroism in the face
the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.”
of conflict (both armed and unarmed); priority setting
Having worked in 15 countries in various stages of
and quality assurance when resources are scarce;
development and sometimes in the midst of armed
introducing radical change such as accreditation
conflict, Fred Hayward has dedicated a considerable
and faculty evaluations when there is little or no
portion of his career to doing the “difficult,” the
institutional history of either; and taking account of
“perilous,” and the “uncertain” in service to higher
external factors such as politics and corruption when
education. Moreover, in a Foreword to a 1999 UNICEF
making a plan.
report entitled The State of the World’s Children, then U. N. Secretary-General Kofi A. Annan wrote,
Then, there is the setting—Afghanistan—a nation that
regarding education, that “on its foundation rest the
has been a dominant subject in the news for at least 35
cornerstones of freedom, democracy and sustainable
years, i.e., since about the start of the Soviet–Afghan
human development.” Given that assessment, it also
War in 1979. Not surprisingly, the people, places, and
seems reasonable to propose that Fred Hayward’s
institutions of Afghanistan that have been in the news
work in higher education has done nothing less than to
are the people, places, and institutions that are the
advance “freedom, democracy and sustainable human
subject of this book. For instance, it was interesting
development” in those places around the world where
to learn that it was President Hamid Karzai who
they may be most needed.
personally “issued a decree requiring a review and ranking of all private higher education institutions” in
Welcome to you, the reader! This is a book that will
Afghanistan. In addition, when I read an account of a
be of benefit to those who study higher education or
recent firefight in Afghanistan, my first reaction was
government and to planners and policy makers no
“Oh my, I read in Fred’s book that there is a university
matter whether they are institution based, system
in that city—I wonder how its students, faculty, and
based, or nation based—and no matter whether the
staff fared in the conflict and how the fighting will
nation in which they work is advanced or undeveloped
interfere with their lives.” And, who in academe could
or at peace or at war. And, because the book is at once
not be interested to learn that, as recently as the 1970s,
an analysis, a history, a candid assessment, and a
“Afghan higher education was among the best in the
memoir, it offers a generous buffet of observations,
region”?
insights, and ideas that have application to everyday use. The menu includes choice topics such as the www.scup.org
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Finally, and above all, there is what turns out to be both the thesis and the conclusion of this book, to wit, “despite the odds against it, in the midst of a prolonged and horrific war, higher education has been transformed in Afghanistan.” Like a member of an audience at an especially good magic show, one might excitedly ask, “how did they do that?” Read on and enjoy! Raymond M. (Ray) Haas Professor Emeritus, University of Virginia and Past President, Society for College and University Planning
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Preface This is a story of success in the face of almost
Afghans to transform the country. They saw a chance
insurmountable odds—success in a fragile state that
to build on the defeat and withdrawal of the Taliban
began a higher education transformation process in
and the promise of a new democratic order, one that
a context of ongoing war and terrorist attacks, lack
would focus on national development, education, and
of funding, rampant corruption, mismanagement in
equality. I jumped at the opportunity to participate in
many parts of government, a large and unresponsive
that process.
bureaucracy, the loss of many of the most well-trained and successful faculty members and administrators
What attracted me most once I got to Afghanistan
due to the Russian invasion, intimidation, threats,
in 2003 was the widespread belief that life would
and other major challenges. What makes this story
be better: dreams realized, democracy put in place,
especially remarkable is that success has occurred
gender equality possible, and opportunities available
despite rapidly growing enrollments and very limited
for everyone to have a better life. The young people
funding.
interviewed were full of hope and ready to do their part in bringing about change, the leaders in higher
Most of what has been written about Afghanistan has
education were committed to this dream, and it
focused on the problems: war, corruption, difficulties
seemed so possible at that moment. And I fell in
in training the armed forces, mismanagement, the
love with Afghanistan, its people, their goals, the
failure of U.S. and other donor assistance, violence
possibilities, and the brave struggle underway.
against civilians, the plight of women and the failures of gender equity, low-quality health care, and a host
It was soon clear that there were many more obstacles
of other problems. Higher education in Afghanistan,
in the way of reaching these goals than people had
on the other hand, has been a remarkable success to
thought: not all leaders were committed to their
date despite tremendous obstacles, rapidly growing
promises, funding for development was slow to
enrollments, tepid support from government, and
materialize, and little of that funding was earmarked
the limited interest of most donors. This success
for higher education. Yet progress was being made.
has occurred quietly with no fanfare and almost no recognition in the press, by governments, or among
What kept me coming to Afghanistan as the problems
most funders. Perhaps that has been beneficial in
became clearer was the dedication of the people I
that thus higher education has not been a center of
was working with in the face of these obstacles. The
attention. Indeed, even those of us involved in higher
battle against incompetence, selfishness, corruption,
education have been surprised by the degree and
powerbrokers, greed, thuggery, passiveness, and
extent of success.
submission was a daily one—one fought amid growing corruption and insecurity in Kabul and the rest of
What drew me to Afghanistan more than 12 years ago
the country brought about by suicide bombers, the
were the dreams and commitments of a number of
Taliban, and their allies. And of course there was the
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ongoing war—now more than 30 years of violence,
5,000 Afghan soldiers and police were killed in 2014,
death, and fear. I met amazingly brave people who put
the most in all the years of war.
their lives on the line to improve higher education, people who had to deal with threats to themselves
This study also grows out of my long-standing interest
and their children to defend their commitments.
in system change and transformation; the struggle
It was often a daily struggle for the integrity of the
for independence in Africa; the creation of political
whole higher education system for those defending
organizations and parties where none had been
the fairness of the admissions process or the integrity
allowed before; elections and political competition;
of medical education or for the young female
the struggle against apartheid, dictatorship, and
academic administrator who worked to improve her
authoritarianism; the search for equality; and the need
university despite constant threats by AK-47-toting
for quality higher education. It also reflects a long-
gangsters, midnight telephone calls, and warnings
standing interest in educational transformation and
of assassination from conservative faculty members
the relationship between higher education and national
because she insisted on following the law and because
development.
she was a women. There were many others who took a public stand for quality in the face of threats to
Previous work has shown the vital role of higher
their well-being. And progress was made. All this
education in national development through knowledge
happened quietly, without shrillness or fanfare. As
production. We know that “the role of tertiary
I worked with higher education leaders I saw how
education in the construction of knowledge economies
widespread was the commitment to integrity, honesty,
and democratic societies is more influential than ever.
fair play, equity, and high quality. Year after year these
Indeed, tertiary education is central to the creation
sometimes seemingly small acts of bravery began to
of the intellectual capacity on which knowledge
add up, encouraging others to do the same thing and
production and utilization depend” (World Bank 2002,
little by little bringing about changes unimagined at
p. xvii). How could that be done amid conflict and war
the beginning. Those leading the process were modest,
in a very fragile state? I wanted to find out.
unobtrusive, yet totally committed. What are the major issues for higher education in I had seen other such leaders in the more than dozen
a fragile state? Surely they include stability, safety
countries in which I had worked, but there was
for students and staff, continued access to learning,
something special about the effort in Afghanistan:
funding, retaining staff, and maintaining quality.
the depth of commitment of some of my Afghan
But how can these be achieved? Further, does higher
colleagues, the lack of fear—or when fearful the
education play a role in facilitating stability in a war
unwillingness to show it—and, for some, the need to
environment? We will see that it does in many ways.
put their lives on the line on a daily basis. I had seen
In part it gives students and staff a positive focus—a
nothing like it except during the struggle against
way to look to something better, prepare for jobs and
apartheid in South Africa. As in South Africa, no one
a normal life, and commit to knowledge production.
talked about fear or threats. And all the time the war
And it has an integrating function, bringing people
raged, with the country paying a very high price: at
together from various parts of the country. While that
least 3,188 Afghan civilians died in 2014 alone and
sometimes sparks conflict, it also teaches students
6,439 were injured (Johnson 2014). In addition, almost
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In a microcosm, higher education helps solve national
decentralization and centered on people. Based on
problems. Gender equity begins to develop in higher
that discussion I prepared an outline with suggestions
education, and that has multiplier effects as we will
for how he and the ministry might go about putting
see. Higher education also can provide the essential
together a strategic plan for higher education.
skills and knowledge needed for development. But that
Some months later the AED asked me to lead a
has to be fostered. I was interested in how that could
team to prepare a feasibility study on private sector
be done.
involvement in the development of tertiary education in Afghanistan. I agreed and was soon joined by Sara
As you will see in the pages that follow, the successes
Amiryar, then at George Washington University, and in
of higher education in Afghanistan provide some
Afghanistan by Mohammed Essa, an AED employee.2
important lessons for other developing countries. These include recognition of the importance of
This was a period of great optimism and excitement
strategic planning and new rules and regulations
in Afghanistan. We traveled around the country a
for faculty and students following the carnage of
great deal talking to people about their hopes for
war in order to get things back on track after a long
higher education and whether they thought there was
period of politicization, disorganization, and loss of
a role for private higher education in this process.
community. Afghanistan needed to reestablish a sense
Our work resulted in a report to the Ministry of
of community. How do you do that? How do you begin
Higher Education (MoHE) and the World Bank with
a process of communication, debate, exploration, and
recommendations about possible roles for private
rebuilding in a context of shattered lives, destroyed
higher education in Afghanistan (Hayward and
buildings, loss of infrastructure, and the loss of
Amiryar 2003). We suggested that private higher
half the faculty and staff? These are questions to be
education could play an important part in the revival
explored in what follows.
and development of Afghanistan.
My work in Afghanistan began in 2002 when I was
That began an enduring relationship with higher
asked by the Academy for Educational Development
education in Afghanistan that continues to this day.
(AED) to participate in a meeting considering ways in
After the study for the World Bank and AED, I worked
which funders, NGOs, and universities might assist the
for the World Bank in 2006 and 2007 as part of the
new government of Afghanistan in rebuilding higher
Strengthening Higher Education Program, helping
education after the removal of the Taliban regime.
six universities develop institutional strategic plans.
There were several officials of the new government
That was followed a few years later by my work on
present at that meeting, including the new minister
the Higher Education Project from 2009 through
of higher education, Dr. Sharif Fayez. He was eager
December 2013 and by consultations for the University
to start work on a strategic plan for higher education.
Support and Workforce Development Program in
Since strategic planning was an area of specialization
2014–15. These projects involved close collaboration
for me, I was asked to work with him to suggest how
and interaction with the MoHE and many university
he might undertake such a plan and to help him
leaders. For the last five years, as senior higher
think about the process. We spent some time talking
education advisor to the deputy minister for academic
about his goals for higher education. He had a vision
affairs, Prof. Mohammad Osman Babury, there was
for a new order in higher education—one focused on
daily contact.
1
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Throughout this 12-year period I worked closely
when critical. I wish to thank all those who have been
with MoHE officials; many of the chancellors, vice
so helpful, hospitable, and open to me during the last
chancellors, and deans; faculty members; and students.
12 years. I hope this document does justice to the
In 2003 Sara Amiryar and I conducted focus groups
tremendous contributions and the numerous sacrifices
in four provinces with 11th- and 12th-grade students,
made by many of those I worked with over the years,
university students, faculty members, parents,
the risks some of them took in the face of threats to
business people, and, in Kabul, a women’s group. Since
their lives (and in a few cases to their children), and the
that time I have had the opportunity to work with
successes they have achieved. There have been a few
people from most of the public universities and higher
people whom I have criticized, though not by name,
education institutes and many of the private higher
in the hope of presenting a fair and balanced picture
education institutions. Some of these relationships
of my experiences, my research, and my assessment
have lasted for more than a decade. Over the years a
of higher education in Afghanistan. I come away with
number of Afghans have become close friends, and
great admiration for the people of Afghanistan and
I am regarded as a family member by some of them.
tremendous respect for their achievements in the face
This has given me the opportunity to see Afghanistan
of challenges that would have deterred most people.
in both a professional and personal way, sharing in many of the intimate experiences of family life in
Recently, M. O. Babury, deputy minister for academic
Afghanistan as well as in its professional and public
affairs for higher education, and I wrote about
face.
these successes in an article entitled “Afghanistan Higher Education: The Struggle for Quality, Merit,
While working in the MoHE from 2009 to 2013, I
and Transformation” (Babury and Hayward 2014). I
was given extraordinary access and became part of
summarize some of those successes in the paragraphs
the inner circle of senior MoHE staff. I was asked
that follow. In this study I seek to put those changes
to represent the minister at a number of meetings,
in context and assess how the MoHE was able to be so
give presentations on his behalf and for the deputy
successful given the challenges facing a fragile state
minister for academic affairs, and represent the MoHE
and the setting in which it operated. I analyze the
at the Human Resources Development Board, which
achievements and difficulties and suggest why higher
consisted of the Ministry of Education, the Ministry
education has succeeded in making such important
of Higher Education, the Ministry of Labor, and the
transformations to date. However, despite the
Ministry of Public Health with the Ministry of Finance
significant progress, higher education has a long way
as an observer. This document draws on many of those
to go to achieve the goals spelled out in the National
experiences over more than a decade. At the same
Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 (MoHE
time, I have tried to avoid violating the confidences and
2009a). (An executive summary of the plan is included
trust extended to me. In the few cases in which I talk
in the appendix.) The current successes are fragile and
about sensitive topics, the identities of those involved
many challenges remain, especially due to the effects of
have been changed or blurred.
more than 30 years of war and the tremendous hurdles that still need to be overcome to bring peace.
I feel a close connection to Afghanistan. No doubt that affects my assessments to some extent, although I
In the pages that follow, I explore the successes to
have tried to be rigorous in my analysis and unsparing
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remain to reach the level of quality needed for national development and better employment opportunities for graduates, and suggest some of the steps that should be taken to ensure long-term success. In the course of this assessment I highlight some of the extraordinary people who have facilitated the successes to date. All of this has occurred against the complex background of Afghan history, and so I start with a brief historical background of higher education. I next lay out some of the changes that have been made to date and try to set them in the context in which higher education operates. I follow up with an assessment of some of the challenges that remain and my thoughts about what might be done to sustain the successes that have occurred. Finally, I discuss some of the lessons others might learn from both the successes of Afghanistan in this fragile environment and the challenges that remain for Afghan higher education. My more than a decade working with higher education in Afghanistan suggests that this remarkable effort has a great deal to teach those of us committed to development and quality improvement in higher education generally.
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Acknowledgements This book grew out of my work in Afghanistan over
For my first contacts with Afghanistan I am indebted
more than a decade and builds on years of working in
to the Academy for Educational Development (AED), to
higher education in both the United States and abroad.
its then president Steven F. Moseley (now of the United
I owe a deep debt of gratitude to those who paved the
Nations Association), and to my boss John Gillies (now
way for me with their openness, friendship, hospitality,
with FHI 360) who made it possible for me to lead a
honesty, and kindness. From my first steps in Sierra
team as we started to work on Afghan higher education
Leone in 1966 to my most recent flight out of Kabul
in 2002 and to go to Afghanistan in 2003. To my
in 2015, I have been aided by countless people who
wonderful teammates, Sara Amiryar and Mohammed
have opened doors for me and given me new insights
Essa, I owe a great deal for introducing Afghanistan to
into the challenges of life in developing nations, the
me. And to Minister Sharif Fayez, whose graciousness
difficulties of politics, the highs of victory and the
continued from our first meeting in Washington, DC,
depths of despair of elections lost, the need for freedom
in 2002 until my most recent meetings with him in
and the willingness to sacrifice everything for it, the
Kabul in 2014, I express my deep appreciation for his
power of truth especially in the face of denial, the
wonderful openness and assistance.
uselessness of hatred, and the satisfaction of a victory gained through commitment and understanding—
More recently, in my work in Afghanistan from 2009
people who have experienced ruthless dictatorships,
through 2013 as part of the Higher Education Project
imprisonment, torture, and humiliation but who
funded by USAID and administered by AED and the
have also seen the joys of victory and vindication
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, I am especially
after years of struggle. I am deeply indebted to these
grateful for the support, advice, and fellowship of Joe
friends, acquaintances, colleagues, and, occasionally,
Berger who co-led the program, the assistance of David
bystanders, some of whom became my “brothers,”
Evans, and the leadership of Michael Blundell when he
“sisters,” and “partners,” and I, in a twist of fate or
was deputy chief of party and chief of party of HEP—
biology, sometimes their “dear father” or “dear uncle.”
and since as a master at every level and a wonderful
I am grateful for their willingness to share their
friend. That work continued under the University
experiences and their lives to help me understand—no
Support and Workforce Development Program
doubt imperfectly—their struggles, challenges, and
(USWDP) administered by FHI 360 and the University
triumphs and sometimes their demons, fears, and
of Massachusetts, Amherst, and supported by USAID.
nightmares. I have spent many of the last 50 years
I am particularly indebted to a number of wonderful
abroad, and sometimes I was able to be an “insider”
colleagues at HEP and USWDP, especially my two
in many ways though always an outsider too. To those
excellent assistants, Mujtaba Hedayet and Mohammad
who trusted me so much, who opened up to me, and
Asef, as well as Razia Karim, Sunila Saqib, and Hassan
who shared parts of their lives with me, I owe so very
Aslami. My debt to Wahid Omar, the current chief of
much in ways words cannot tell. I only hope this book
party, is substantial as is my debt to my former HEP
does justice to their trust, interest, assistance, and
colleagues Santwana Dasgupta, Fiona Rowand, Paul
faith.
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I was also assisted by a number of people at USAID
I am particularly indebted to Kathy Benton, Associate
and the State Department, both in Afghanistan and
Director, Education & Product Development at
the United States. I especially want to acknowledge
the Society for College and University Planning
the assistance of Jean E. Manes, now principal deputy
(SCUP), and Claire Turcotte, managing editor of
coordinator, Bureau of International Information
SCUP’s Planning for Higher Education journal, for
Programs, Department of State, who was of invaluable
encouraging me to turn these writings into a book.
assistance in leading the drive for the critical addition
I am especially grateful to Claire for her thoughtful
of women’s dormitories in Afghanistan that resulted
reading of the manuscript and her many useful
in the building of two dorms for women as well as
suggestions that significantly improved the final
numerous scholarships for women and other critical
product. I also want to thank Kimberly Mass for her
contributions. I am also grateful to Malcom Phelps of
careful editing of the final version and the other staff
USAID who worked closely with us and demonstrated
members at SCUP who helped make this book possible.
a clear understanding of Afghan higher education and its needs, working tirelessly to provide support.
None of these people, of course, are responsible for what is written here. That responsibility is solely my
My most profound debt in Afghanistan and at the
own.
Ministry of Higher Education is owed to Deputy Minister for Academic Affairs Professor Mohammed
Finally, I want to acknowledge the contributions of my
Osman Babury with whom I have worked closely since
family, the children now grown and married, Kent,
2009. He has given me a profound understanding of
Alexandra, Mark, and Adrian, and my wife Linda
Afghanistan that I would never have had otherwise. I
Hunter for her tremendous support of this publication
have learned a great deal from watching him oversee
and my work over more than 30 years. She read every
higher education during that time. I also want to
page—most more than once—and thoughtfully gave
acknowledge the assistance of former minister
her comments, criticism, and suggestions. She also put
Mohammad Azam Dadfur whose warmth and interest
up with my years of travels to Afghanistan, and earlier
in our work was invaluable.
to many other parts of the world, with marvelous patience, good humor, and support. I owe her the
Madeleine F. Green, former vice president of the
greatest debt of all.
American Council on Education (ACE) with whom I worked for more than 10 years; Teboho Moja, professor of education at New York University and a colleague for many years; and Joe Berger, professor of education at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, all read drafts of this book and provided indispensable support, invaluable suggestions, and insights that have added tremendously to this work.
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—DEDICATION—
To the people of Afghanistan
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Chapter 1
Chapter 1: The Promise and the Challenges of Higher Education in Fragile Regions Afghanistan is among a group of countries consisting
terrible for those in the cesspool and dangerous for
of about a billion citizens that are falling behind the
those who live next to it. We had better do something
rest of the world, are highly at risk, and are populated
about it. The question is what.” Collier (2007) makes
by those who struggle to survive on a daily basis
a number of suggestions, including aid, but notes that
(Collier 2007) with 54 percent living in poverty. These
the most successful reforms will come from within. I
fragile states have become the subject of increasing
will explore what was done in Afghanistan as a fragile
concern to scholars and donors (World Bank 2012).
state, what led to its successes in higher education, and
The situation in Afghanistan, one of these countries,
what that suggests for fragile states in general.
is complicated by an ongoing war that was in its 32nd year as I wrote this. It is one of 33 fragile conflict states identified by the World Bank. While 20 of these states have made some progress toward meeting the U.N.’s Millennium Development Goals,1 many of them, including Afghanistan, are unlikely to meet the targets by the end of 2015 as expected (World Bank 2013). The tragedy of these fragile states is that for years they have been largely ignored (Ghani and Lockhart 2009). It was assumed that many of them were lost causes or that improvement depended on ending ongoing conflicts. As Collier (2007, p. 99) emphasizes, “a group of countries with nearly a billion people living in them have been caught in one or another of four traps [civil war, the resources curse, being landlocked, and bad government]. As a result, while the rest of the developing world has been growing at an unprecedented rate, they have stagnated or even declined.” He continues, “A future world with a billion people living in impoverished and stagnant countries is just not a scenario we can countenance. A cesspool of misery next to a world of growing prosperity is both
The Relationship between Fragility and Education Ideally, education mitigates the conditions that create and sustain fragility, although there are some writers who worry that education can contribute to fragility (Dupuy 2008; Inter-Agency Network for Education in Emergencies 2010). Bush and Saltarelli (2000) show how education can be used to undermine stability and exacerbate conflict in their study of armed conflicts, whether through denial of education, manipulation of textbooks, cultural repression, or fostering of ethnic conflict. While the preponderance of recent evidence suggests that this is not generally the case (Østby and Urdal 2011; Winthrop and Matsui 2013), their findings are an important cautionary tale. Winthrop and Matsui (2013, p. 2) argue that they “have found compelling evidence showing that education can play an important role for accelerating progress in fragile states for four main reasons”: they argue that education fosters economic growth and poverty reduction, enhances
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Chapter 1
children’s protection and well-being, encourages
externally fostered conflicts. These weaknesses have
peace building and state building, and reduces risks
profound implications for governance in general,
from disasters. Østby and Urdal (2011, p. 1) provide
the provision of education at every level, and the
especially strong evidence based on a review of 30
establishment of the legitimacy of the government
studies that suggests that “increasing education levels
itself.
overall has pacifying effects” and “rapid expansion of higher education is not a threat”—indeed, higher
The emphasis on primary education
education reduces the chances of conflict. They argue that the policy implications of their findings indicate
Fragile states have been particularly affected by the
that it is important to continue educational expansion
emphasis of donors on primary education as part of
and that this is something most governments can
UNESCO’s Education for All movement, which seeks to
do. They conclude that “this review summarizes
have universal primary education by the end of 2015.
evidence that very clearly points to the pacifying effect
As a result, both primary and secondary education
of education, at all levels.” They go on to state that
have undergone tremendous expansion in many parts
“there is little support for concern that governments
of the world. The results of this in Afghanistan are now
should be cautious about rapidly expanding access to
being seen in the increased numbers of graduates from
education” (Østby and Urdal 2011, p. 4).
secondary school. What has not received very much attention is the effect of this growth in the long run on
Definition of fragile environments
universities and institutions of higher education. As growing numbers of students graduate from secondary
While there is no agreed-upon definition of fragile
school, there is a corresponding increase in the number
environments, most writers concur that the term
who want to go on to higher education. In Afghanistan
refers to states that fail to perform the tasks expected
in 2010 the number of graduates from secondary
of them to meet the basic needs of their citizens. This
school increased by 36 percent, in 2011 by 25 percent,
may include the inability to maintain security; ensure
and in 2012 by 29 percent. This increase will continue
the rule of law; provide basic services such as health
at double-digit levels until 2022 when it will fall off
care, justice, water, and electricity; and meet economic
somewhat. That is over 200,000 high school graduates
expectations. For purposes of this discussion, I am
a year, and by 2016, it will be over 300,000. Of the
using the following definition of a fragile region: “[O]
students who graduate about 80 percent will apply for
ne that is significantly susceptible to crisis in one or
admission to higher education institutions. The MoHE
more of its sub-systems and particularly vulnerable
will only be able to admit about 50,000 since most
to internal and external shocks and domestic and
higher education institutions are already over capacity.
international conflicts” (GSDRC 2015, ¶ 5). What
Some of the graduates will instead go on to technical
is important for the purposes of this analysis is
and vocational training or to teacher training but at
that the state is weak and unable to perform the
least half will not find places.
functions needed by its citizens, provide many of the badly needed services, guarantee security, control
Although higher education has been trying to grow
corruption, and ensure the fair administration of
in Afghanistan, its facilities will not accommodate
law and justice. It is often not in control of all the
increased demand. Despite requests by the MoHE,
areas defined as part of the state due to civil war or
there has been little infrastructure expansion. Most
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donors have said that they do not do “bricks and
tertiary education systems are not adequately prepared
mortar” and are not interested in higher education.
to capitalize on the creation and use of knowledge”
Thus a crisis is in the making. While not all high school
(World Bank 2002, p. xix). Recognizing these
graduates should go on to higher education, the best of
challenges, I will later explore what has been attempted
them should be accommodated in ways that produce
in Afghan higher education since 2001.
high-quality results. However, not enough funding has been provided to increase quality to the level required.
The need to focus on higher education in fragile states
Thus there is a growing potential for a serious crisis both in terms of places for graduates who deserve them
My work in Afghanistan, South Africa, Sierra Leone,
and the quality of higher education required. I will
and several other fragile environments suggests that
examine these problems in the pages that follow. There
higher education can play a critical role in facilitating
is a critical need for a post-basic-education approach to
stability and, in the long run, fostering development.
education in fragile regions.
On the other hand, there are risks of the reverse: increased unemployment, students unhappy with
The critical role of quality higher education in development We know that knowledge is increasingly the “main driver of growth, and the information and communication revolution” (World Bank 2002, p. xvii). Indeed, the ability to produce and use knowledge is essential for ongoing economic growth. As the World Bank (2002, p. 7) notes, “[k]nowledge has become the most important factor in economic development.” It is higher education that is the main producer of knowledge around the world, and it is the primary repository and source of knowledge production in the developing world. The World Bank goes on to emphasize that “[t]oday, economic growth is as much a process of knowledge accumulation as of capital accumulation” (World Bank 2002, p. 8). Unfortunately, most fragile states suffer from inadequate funding for higher education, lack of sufficient numbers of well-trained staff, inadequate access to higher education for most citizens, problems of quality, and the need to update a curriculum not attuned to the needs of today’s business, government, or private sectors. Thus, “developing and transition countries are at risk of being further marginalized in a highly competitive world economy because their
the low quality of their education, or the potential use of higher education as a tool to foster conflict. However, higher education in Afghanistan seems to have fostered stability by focusing student efforts on the future and the need to develop the skills required to gain employment and be competitive in an increasingly competitive world. Students are well aware of the nature of competition today and, as we will see, understand how much their higher education institutions need to improve to properly prepare them for today’s work environment. They too are part of the pressure for quality improvement. They are often among the best critics, and since they are easily mobilized, administrators need to pay attention to their concerns. Further, even as higher education institutions rebuild, they help foster stability by keeping students and staff focused on the future—keeping hope alive for a normal life and a better tomorrow. Higher education is also important in bringing people together from all over the country and teaching them how to work together. Higher education, even when not up to the quality levels sought in the long run, is national in its focus, general in its overview, and increasingly global in nature. Its goals are forward looking (for the most
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part), its aims are future oriented, and its staff are
broad issues and questions that force them to look at
inclined to eschew looking backward. Even the most
the world in new ways, with different horizons than
conservative faculty members regard themselves as
usual, and explore a variety of alternative solutions.
creative and forward looking and tend to impart those
They learn, often for the first time, that many problems
values to students. There is increasing pressure on staff
have multiple solutions—but some are far superior
to think in terms of the skills students need; to talk
to others and the challenge is to find and use those
with employers; and to work to make sure the needs of
solutions.
government, business, and industry are incorporated in their courses and their teaching. I listened recently
Priorities for higher education in fragile regions
to one minister of higher education push chancellors and faculty leaders to think about international
The challenges for higher education in fragile
standards for their institutions and push their faculty
environments are Herculean. Most are faced with
members to do the same. Given the pressures they
violence and conflict, lack of security in many parts of
too are under, most were remarkably responsive. The
the country, lack of funding, and the loss of talented
question was not why, but how to do that effectively.
faculty members due to brain drain, suppression, and
Even in a fragile state, faculty members understand
violence. Many are faced with a weak and often corrupt
that they have an obligation to create a pool of well-
civil service, frequently made up of incompetent staff
trained professionals who can respond to employers’
with little commitment to their jobs. And in most
requirements and meet the nation’s needs.
cases, donors have little interest in higher education, believing that primary and secondary education are
It is important to emphasize the traditional values
the keys to progress. While they are important, no
of higher education—the role of teaching and the
nation moves into the realm of developing countries
multiplier effect that good teaching has on students,
without a high-quality higher education system. That,
as well as the ability of students to write well, speak
unfortunately, is usually not recognized by those in
in public, think critically, conduct research, ask good
government or most funders, although the World Bank
questions, and think clearly and logically. Students
and USAID have been exceptions.
should also learn soft skills, such as the ability to work in teams or groups. That is something businesses
One potential advantage for higher education in fragile
around the world are seeking. Universities are a critical
regions is the fact that these environments are often
laboratory for teaching students how to approach a
fluid. Collier (2007, p. 151) notes that although conflict
problem, work on it collectively, and discard findings
and post-conflict situations “typically start out with
that do not move the process forward while embracing
very poor governance and policies, they are highly
those that do. Higher education institutions are also
fluid: change is easy.” This offers a great deal of latitude
increasingly helping students think about what they
to those who would bring about change. That flexibility
can do for their community and their nation’s citizens
has facilitated change in a number of fragile states,
and their obligation to give something back in return
especially where leaders had clear plans and were able
for their free education. I have been surprised again
to mobilize people to implement them.
and again in fragile states by the strong commitment of many students to make a contribution. In no other context are students more likely to be presented with
What makes for success? The capacity to ensure stability and the safety of students and staff. Leaders
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with clear goals and plans for meeting them, an ability
send their daughters to higher education institutions
to articulate their approach and gain support, and the
without safe, supervised dormitories for them.
strength to lead a successful implementation. I will explore the successes of several masterful leaders in
Another critical issue in most fragile regions is the
Afghanistan and assess some of the factors that helped
need to help government officials, elected leaders
them realize their goals for change.
including members of Parliament, and citizens understand that quality education requires substantial
I will also examine what seem to me to be the priorities
funding. While people are usually eager to have their
for leaders of higher education in fragile environments.
children back in higher education, they forget the
Among them is the identification of key areas for initial
cost of rebuilding and making necessary upgrades,
policy making. What is important depends on the
such as properly equipped laboratories, good housing
country and the situation. But as we will see, getting
for female students, and classrooms large enough to
the house in order has to be an early priority: setting
accommodate students. Most universities in developing
out rules and regulations for faculty members, staff,
countries were built at a time when it was assumed
and students; rethinking administrative processes;
that these would be elite institutions; thus, classrooms
bringing together major leaders to build consensus;
were built to accommodate no more than 40 students.
and building trust in the leadership. A key priority
There were no large lecture halls or small discussion
is strategic planning, building on the goals and
rooms. As these institutions grow, there is a limit
consensus established. Another priority is recruitment
on how many students can be accommodated on the
and the return of quality staff members who have
floor or outside of these small classrooms. Most of us
left. In myriad fragile states such as South Africa and
have seen the situation of a packed lecture room with
Afghanistan, many of the best and brightest faculty
students standing in line waiting for the last class
members fled persecution, imprisonment, and lack
to leave and then 50–60 more students standing or
of freedom. Attracting them back can be a major
sitting on the floor or outside the doors and windows
task, one that becomes more difficult as time passes.
to hear the lecture. Making the case for educational
In the process of rebuilding it is also important to
funding is a critical part of rebuilding in fragile states.
target fields that are critical to national development: agriculture, business, economics, public health, public administration, and teacher education. Rebuilding an infrastructure damaged by war, lack of maintenance due to unrest, or long periods of neglect is also usually a major challenge, particularly because of a lack of funding led by the growing refusal of donors to invest in bricks and mortar. Yet without infrastructure it is very hard to get science programs moving again, research started, and appropriate teaching underway. Further, getting women back on campus will often require an improved environment including women’s dormitories since families will not
What Are the Lessons Learned? How Can We Apply Them Broadly in Developing Countries? In most post-conflict situations, a new set of student and faculty rules and procedures should be among the first priorities to ensure that institutions get started appropriately. The revived institutions are usually opened after a period of educational anarchy or closure; they may have been part of a system rife with corruption or taken over by various factions and run with a particular ideology or factional position
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governing their activities. This may need to be
put in long hours, listen, think creatively, talk to their
reviewed and the system reorganized.
colleagues, and run risks to bring about change. There was also an unspoken commitment to looking forward,
Rebuilding a sense of academic community is another
not backward.
necessary task. The community cohesion that existed before will no doubt have been lost along with top
Some goals such as gender equity are difficult to
faculty members and administrators or as a result
achieve in any context, and in several fragile regions
of politicization. Rebuilding a sense of academic
they are especially challenging given a long history of
community is central to a successful educational
regarding women as second-class citizens. Yet, as will
enterprise, but it takes time to build a new sense of
be shown later, sticking to a commitment to gender
trust, mutual respect, and a commitment to teaching,
equity—even when it is a contentious issue—can bring
service, and research. In many cases it will be
about success one small step at a time. The overall
necessary to draw people away from their focus on
successes in both South Africa and Afghanistan
survival—a focus that allowed them to survive the
demonstrate the importance of continuous broad
strife, hardships, and suffering. That takes time and
consultation. No country did that as well, in my
patience. In some communities in places like South
experience, as South Africa in the post-apartheid
Africa, Sierra Leone, and Afghanistan it will also be
transition period. While it seemed to many people
necessary to deal with the physical and mental trauma
involved that there were constant meetings, those
of war faced by those who lost limbs to the rebels or to
long and detailed discussions paid off. And the rule
land mines, those with other war injuries, and those
for those discussions was that everyone had a chance
who witnessed terrible atrocities. All three countries
to speak before anyone had a second turn—a rule that
have suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, with
held for everyone, including the most powerful leader.
Afghanistan having among the highest clinical levels of depression, anxiety, and PTSD in the world (Babury
Not all efforts to revive higher education will take place
and Hayward 2013). Dealing with these issues requires
in a free environment, but, as Sen (1999) notes, where
professional assistance and a great deal of thought
that is possible, there will likely be a great deal more
to develop communication networks, discussions,
communication, consensus, and democracy in the
outreach, and other activities that bring out the best in
development process. That is a tremendous advantage.
people.
It was critical in the later years for South Africa and has been very important over the last 10 years in
In Afghanistan, great progress has been made in
Afghanistan.
higher education in part because the leadership in the MoHE mobilized a pool of the best experienced faculty members and brought them into the process of reorganization, quality improvement, and capacity building. That process was tied together by the carefully developed National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 prepared in 2009, about which more will be said later. That remarkable group of leaders set the tone for the future. They were willing to
What Are the Challenges for Fragile Societies? The risks are high in fragile societies, especially in those that are still experiencing conflict or are early post-conflict. There is always the possibility that the violence will start once again or that it will grow to a
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point that no higher education is possible. Fortunately
standards? Local standards? Someone else’s
that has not happened to date in Afghanistan but the
standards? These conflicts can lead to bruising
risks remain. And when agreement breaks down, there
battles. But if handled thoughtfully, in a context
is the possibility that old rivalries will be revived or
in which leaders stick to core values and insist on
new ones will be created and shooting will replace
open discussion, they can be overcome. Once again,
talking.
these issues can be buried under the pretext of other issues. This is where clear-headed, frank leadership is
Complicating the efforts to bring about substantial
invaluable.
change in higher education are the issues typical in fragile states: weak central government, corruption,
Staffing is another potential minefield even when merit
the inability to provide adequate security, lack of
is the agreed-upon goal and value. Once again, good
adequate funding, and weak support for higher
committees made up of experienced, credible, and
education among the government and most of the
thoughtful people can save the day. Majority rule is
donor community. Within the higher education
also a good principle that has solved many a personnel
community itself there are also areas of fragility as a
issue although it can be used by dominant groups to
result of years of war and its ongoing impact on higher
defeat merit. Once the merit principle breaks down it
education.
is very hard to get it going again. Thus these values are worth fighting for even if it takes a great deal of time.
All of this results in ongoing challenges in the search for quality. For example, while people agree on the
Finally, the issue of finances is often contentious.
importance of the merit principle in higher education,
Making sure that financial decisions are made
they nonetheless want exceptions for those who were
collectively, transparently, and thoughtfully is key.
important to the struggle or who suffered a great
Discussion and agreement on decision rules in advance
deal regardless of their lack of merit. Then there will
can be vital. Above all, having decision makers who
be the conflicts pitting numbers against quality—
clearly have overall higher education goals as their
the eagerness to admit more students than can be
guide, absent themselves from decisions in which
accommodated without decreasing quality, which in
others might see a conflict of interest, and provide a
most cases will not yet be up to acceptable levels.
periodic public review of finance decisions will help keep those decisions on track and in accordance with
There are other pressures that affect quality
goals. My 20 years of experience with finances in
improvement including issues of ethnicity and social
both South Africa and Afghanistan demonstrated
inequality by gender, religion, region, and class. In
the potency of these rules of discussion and the
many cases these pressures are not expressed blatantly
importance of transparency and public discussion in
but appear as subtexts in decisions about who leads,
financial issues.
who serves on critical committees, or who gets to travel abroad. This terrain requires great tact to cover
The case of higher education in Afghanistan over the
successfully.
last decade is an especially useful one for thinking about the role of higher education in the development
There are also issues regarding standards. Whose
of fragile states. Both the extent of its success and the
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interesting. While Afghanistan still has a long way to go to realize the quality and breadth of higher education that are the hallmarks of its goals, its successes to date are far reaching, and the lessons it has for all of us are impressive—and sometimes breathtaking.
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Chapter 2: The National Context for Higher Education Historical Background to 2014
the Faculty of Science and Economics with Bonn
Afghanistan has a long tradition of education and
Faculty of Education and Kabul Education University
learning going back to 500 BC. Its centers of learning included Herat, known for its rich cultural heritage in art, science, music, and philosophy and as a center for poetry, drawing scholars from around the region, and Balkh, traditionally a birthplace of the Zoroastrianism religion and a center of culture and learning for hundreds of years. Afghanistan’s links with European education go back to 1919 when King Amanullah sent a number of students to study in Europe. The foundations for the current system of higher education were laid with the establishment of the Faculty of Medicine in Kabul in 1932, the Faculty of Law (1936), the Faculty of Science (1942), and the Faculty of Letters (1946). These became the core of Kabul University, which was established in 1946. The second university to be established was Nangarhar University, which opened in 1963. By 1990 there were 14,600 students in the system including approximately 10,000 at Kabul University of whom 60 percent were women (Samady 2001). By 2015 the system had 36 public universities with more than 170,000 students (figure 1). Higher education in Afghanistan received a great deal of assistance from many nations in its early years including France, Germany, the United States, Norway, Japan, Russia, and a number of others. Many faculties benefited from cooperative arrangements
(Germany); the Polytechnic with Russia; and the with Columbia University and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. There were also more than 100 foreign academics teaching in Afghan universities before the Russian invasion. Afghan higher education was among the best in the region at that time, attracting students from Asia and the Middle East to its most prestigious institutions, Kabul University, Kabul Polytechnic University, and Nangarhar University. About one-third of the faculty had Ph.Ds. Research was well established, especially in engineering and agriculture. In particular, the Engineering Faculty had carried out major projects in irrigation and dam building in various parts of the country and had an international reputation for its research on irrigation and water projects. Many of the achievements of this period were damaged or destroyed after the Russian invasion in 1979 that followed the coup of the previous year. The Russian occupation lasted almost 10 years, and the struggle to oust Russian forces was devastating. It was followed by a civil war and then the Taliban regime. As we will see in the sections that follow, these struggles had a damaging effect on higher education. It was only with the establishment of the new democratic government at the end of 2001 that it became possible to begin to rebuild higher education in Afghanistan.
with universities abroad including the Faculties of Pharmacy and Medicine with Lyon (France); www.scup.org
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Figure 1 Student Enrollment Totals in Public Universities and Higher Education Institutions: 1992–2014
Source: MoHE data.
Universities and Higher Education Institutions 1. Kabul University
23. Ghazni University
2. Kabul Medical University
24. Ghazni Technical University
3. Kabul Polytechnic University
25. Kandahar Agricultural University
4. Shaheed Rabbani Education University 5. Balkh University 6. Alberony University 7. Nangarhar University 8. Herat University 9. Takhar University 10. Khost University 11. Bamyan University 12. Jozwjan University 13. Kandahar University 14. Kunar University 15. Laghman University 16. Parwan University 17. Baghlan University 18. Kunduz University 19. Paktia University 20. Faryab University 21. Badakhshan University 22. Helmand University
26. Samangan Institute of Higher Education 27. Farah Institute of Higher Education 28. Badghis Institute of Higher Education 29. Panjshir Institute of Higher Education 30. Paktika Institute of Higher Education 31. Urozgan Institute of Higher Education 32. Ghor Institute of Higher Education 33. Sara-e-Pul Institute of Higher Education 34. Logar Institute of Higher Education 35. Daikundy Institute of Higher Education 36. Wardak Institute of Higher Education
Map of Afghanistan with location of universities and higher education institutes. Source: MoHE.
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The period from 2002 to 2014 saw remarkable progress in higher education on many fronts, particularly after 2008. These efforts included the preparation and release of the National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014; quality assurance and accreditation; curriculum review, reform, and updating; merit hiring and promotion; faculty development focused on master’s and Ph.D. training; recruitment of more than 1,600 faculty members since 2008; new student rules and procedures including those regarding plagiarism, publications, and research expectations; preparation of a higher education gender strategy; increased access
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»» enshrines equity including gender equity »» is knowledge based »» is responsive and efficient »» has an active stimulated academic heartland (following Clark 1998) »» is open to the world of ideas and enshrines academic freedom »» operates in a supportive environment »» is sustainable
leading to a doubling of enrollment between 2008 and 2013; and the first steps in granting financial autonomy
In looking at Afghan higher education in terms
and the decentralization of authority to universities.
of these characteristics of transformed systems, we found that there was some success in terms of
As pointed out in Babury and Hayward (2014), those
fundamental changes in the basic aspects and values
changes were in many respects transformational,
of the system. Both the establishment of accreditation
though they remain fragile. In that piece we defined
and the adoption of merit as a basis for recruitment
system transformation to mean that the system is
and promotion were fundamental changes. The latter
fundamentally altered in its structure and in some of
was clearly a major move away from the traditional
its major values. Somewhere along the low end of the
hierarchical patronage-based system. On the other
continuum are isolated changes (Eckel et al. 1999)1,
hand, while progress was made in enshrining equity
changes in one unit or one department that may be
(including gender equity), there remained a long
extensive but do not affect the rest of the university
way to go in this area. The system was becoming
or system. Further along toward the high end of the
increasingly knowledge based in some areas but there
continuum are various degrees of more extensive
were also major gaps in that only some institutions
changes. Finally at the high end of the continuum is
were beginning to move in that direction. Although
transformational change—change that is pervasive and
we found that the system was more responsive and
deep in a way that fundamentally alters the system’s
effective than it was 10 years before, it was still
structure and some of its major values. In assessing
stymied by a hierarchical and cumbersome traditional
transformation following our definition, we suggested
bureaucratic structure with only a few real decision
that in a transformed higher education system there
makers at the very top. This also made it inefficient.
are fundamental changes in basic aspects of the
The academic core was very small and had a long way
system, including major values, and a move from a
to go to qualify as a “stimulated academic heartland”
traditional hierarchical system to one that is primarily
(Clark 1998, p. 5). The sense of academic community
merit based and relatively flat. Further, a transformed
was still being reestablished, along with a culture
higher education system
of learning and a culture of research. While higher education was held in high esteem nationally, as were its academics on the whole, it did not yet operate in www.scup.org
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a supportive governmental, public, or (with a few
realities ranging from the ongoing war to that fact that
exceptions) donor environment. There remained
nearly one-third of the Afghan population cannot get
many threats to the system’s successes, including lack
enough food for healthy lives (World Food Programme
of funding, corruption, and nepotism. Even in those
2014), exemplified by levels of malnutrition among
areas in which transformation had been achieved,
children that have increased 50 percent since 2012
in which change was both pervasive and deep—as
(Queally 2014).
was the case with the introduction of accreditation, the establishment of merit hiring and promotions, and a major upgrade to at least one-third of the curricula—it was not yet clear that the changes would be sustainable, although the prospects looked good. That was where we found Afghan higher education transformation in mid-2014. In this document I explore these transformations in more detail and look at some of those who helped bring them about. These are remarkable stories of persistence against tremendous odds. Some demonstrate the high stakes that can be involved in higher education change—including threats to life. Collectively these efforts show the depth and breadth of commitment to building a high-quality higher education system in a context that was far from fertile ground for such activity. I start with a look at the current context of higher education in Afghanistan. What is the situation in 2014–15? Given that context, what should be the major goals of the MoHE for the next five years? What are the major challenges to be faced? What are the most critical obstacles to achieving these goals? How can they be overcome? Should some of those challenges be approached from new and different perspectives? What should be the highest priorities? What strategies seem most appropriate? What can we learn from the experiences
National Context 2014–2015 The carnage of war Overshadowing everything is the carnage of continuing war. It is something that is always there no matter who you are. Afghans do not talk about it, and it never comes up in day-to-day discussions of work, plans for the future, or concerns about the challenges that confront higher education. But the evidence is everywhere in the bullet-pocked walls in every town and village, the rubble that remains in many of them, the burned-out hulks of tanks and military vehicles, and the other detritus of war. In more than 30 years of war, tens of thousands of Afghan civilians were killed, with some estimates at over two million. Thousands of Afghan soldiers, Mujahideen, and local defense forces died, and more than six million Afghans fled the destruction of their homes or the threat to their lives or were forcibly expelled, with more than five million of them living abroad in refugee camps, with friends, or on their own. On top of the experience of war is the daily evidence of fighting: the armored vehicles racing down the streets, their machine gun turrets rotating menacingly, the roadblocks, and from time to time a suicide bombing or Taliban attack. And always there
of Afghanistan?
are civilians killed, especially women and children who
Let’s begin by looking at the national context of higher
An average of 152 civilians were killed each month in
education as it exists in 2014–15. It is easy to forget that everything done in the process of working on higher education is affected by a number of national
are most likely to be in a market or out on the street. war attacks, and an average of 52 more were killed each month by land mines despite a major effort to demine the country led by the Norwegians and others
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(Lancet 2001). On top of that are the kidnappings
parts of the country was very dangerous. One had to
of prominent or wealthy civilians by gangs, another
take that into consideration on a daily basis. Several of
product of war with the perpetrators hoping for
my staff were threatened at roadblocks even without
ransom money
any evidence of foreign employment. Many were not willing to do any work outside Kabul because they
Almost every Afghan family has lost family members,
feared the consequences. For female staff in particular,
seen someone close to them killed, lost their home or
such trips became nearly impossible. Although we did
had it damaged, spent time as refugees, or suffered in
not lose any staff, all of us had friends, both Afghan
some other way from the devastation of war. It affects
and foreign, who were killed, wounded, or abducted
people of every age. Families have spent many nights
when traveling outside Kabul.
hunkered down in their basements during rocket and artillery barrages. Some have had young children
Added to that are other consequences of war: the loss
taken away to be abused by warlords or soldiers,
of jobs, an increase in communal violence, and a rise in
usually never to be seen again. With the release of
mental health problems. The incidence of depression
prisoners by some forces, banditry, rape, and pillaging
and anxiety disorders is high, especially among women
became so widespread that people were afraid to
and children. One survey in 2008 found that 22.2
leave their houses. And when the shelling became
percent of children met the criteria for the probability
impossible to bear, people fled to the homes of friends
of psychiatric disorder (Panter-Brick et al. 2009). A
and neighbors.
2002 study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control put the number much higher with symptoms of depression
The effect of this on children has been especially
found in 69.7 percent of the national sample and
horrific. The Panter-Brick et al. (2009) study
symptoms of anxiety found in 72.2 percent (Cardozo et
of schoolchildren is but one indication of the
al. 2004). That contrasts with a recent report stating
consequences. While life in some places was relatively
that seven percent of the population in the United
safe, almost every family had family members living in
States had suffered from depression in the past year
cities, villages, or towns that experienced tremendous
(Lehrer 2010). Panter-Brick et al. (2009) also reported
levels of violence. In many areas, violence was a daily
that post-traumatic stress disorder was found in 23.9
experience. Most extended families tried to maintain
percent of students aged 11 to 16. The Centers for
close contact, yet a trip to their rural family homes
Disease Control study put that number at 42.1 percent
could be a dangerous challenge with the possibility
(Cardozo et al. 2004).
of Taliban, warlord, or military roadblocks along the way; bombings by allied airplanes; or routes made
Then there are the normal problems of growing
impassable by previous fighting. Afghans working
up—illness, accidents, stress, divorce, etc. Almost 64
for a foreign employer were especially at risk when
percent of children in the Panter-Brick study reported
they travelled. Most companies instructed their staff
exposure to some traumatic event—about half of which
not to carry any evidence of their employment with
were war related, including witnessing severe violence
a foreign organization—such evidence could lead to
to another person (13.9 percent) or being displaced by
death if discovered at a roadblock. For those staff
force (8.6 percent) as shown in figure 2.
working with me, as well as for the staff of other NGOs or government bodies, rural travel for work in many www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
Queens Palace, Kabul, damaged by war.
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Chapter 2
War damage in Kabul. Source: Student photo.
War damage in Kabul. Source: Student photo.
www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
Figure 2 Most Distressing Lifetime Event from Afghan School-Based Survey
15
Chapter 2
of violence and suppression. By the early 1980s the Russian campaign of bombing villages and dropping anti-personnel mines in rural areas to force people into the cities was in full swing—with devastating effects. That war lasted nine years with hundreds of thousands of civilians killed, several million people forced to flee, primarily to Pakistan and Iran, and countless soldiers killed. The communist coup followed by the Russian occupation had dire consequences for higher education. As the first minister of higher education under President Karzai wrote, “The invasion and communist ideology, which bred leftist and Islamic
Note: “Severe physical injury” includes traffic and other accidents; beaten by a relative; beaten by a neighbor; frightening medical treatment; no access to medical care; war-related injury. “Witnessed severe violence to another person” includes killing or beating by Taliban; saw a dead body; community violence; death from rocket explosion; domestic violence; accidental death or injury. “Death or loss of a close relative” includes due to acts of war; accidental death; criminal acts; missing person. Source: Panter-Brick et al. 2009, figure 4.
extremism and thus polarized the campuses and society in general, brutally radicalized the higher education institutions. During the occupation, all the institutions, constantly harassed by the regime’s security apparatus and violent elements of the ruling communist party, were isolated from their communities” (Fayez 2012, part 1). That began the breakdown of the sense of academic community and
Girls and young women suffered from mental health
brought ideology and religion into higher education
problems in greater numbers than men because of
in a way it had never been before. The campuses were
discrimination, lack of opportunities, lower levels of
inundated with Marxist literature on the one hand and
education, and the requirement for some to stay at
religious publications on the other, especially from
home most of the time. In one study of Afghan young
Iran and Pakistan. As former minister Fayez notes of
people aged 11 to 16, girls showed a two-fold higher risk
the period: “As a result a propaganda mindset began
of psychopathology (Panter-Brick et al. 2009). These
to replace intellectual curiosity and the quest for
problems are compounded by the fact that the mental
knowledge in Afghan academia” (Fayez 2012, part 2).
health care system in Afghanistan is very limited. As noted in one review, “The mental health situation in
The war against the Russians was led by the
Afghanistan is characterized by a highly felt need and
Mujahideen, a combination of local fighters and
an extremely incapacitated mental health care system”
volunteers from neighboring countries. In its later
(Ventevogel et al. 2002, p. 1).
years the war against the Russians was aided by funding from countries including the United States,
More than 30 years of war has left a terrible legacy.
Iran, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. It developed into a
Someone has to be over 40 years old to remember a
grueling and bloody guerrilla war involving a variety
time without war. There was the Russian invasion in
of factional armies with different goals supported
December 1979 that resulted in a tremendous amount
variously by the United States, Pakistan, China, and www.scup.org
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others. The year 1985 was said to be the bloodiest year
destroyed and thousands were killed or injured. In
of the war with an estimated one million Afghans
January 1994 Dostum joined forces with Hekmatyar
killed, thousands wounded, and many more fleeing
against Massoud and the interim government, which
to Pakistan and Iran (Ansary 2012). The fighters
led to more artillery fire, rockets, and bombing and to
eventually forced the Russians to leave in February
the further destruction of Kabul. This brought anarchy
1989 with control nominally under the Najibullah
to some parts of the city.
regime. During 1994, the Taliban began to emerge as an Not long after the Russians departed a civil war began
important force in Afghanistan. They were welcomed
that continued for several years. At the outset, the
in many areas with their promise of law and order in
government of President Najibullah had a substantial
contrast to the unruly Mujahideen and other warlord
army with at least 100,000 fighters, heavy artillery,
fighters who were responsible for a great deal of
tanks, jet fighters, and rockets, all supported by the
ongoing violence and theft and a number of attacks
Russians. Najibullah’s forces were opposed by 11
against local citizens. The Taliban soon began to obtain
armies that surrounded Kabul. Attempts to broker a
substantial amounts of aid from Pakistan, which
cease-fire failed; the main dissenter was Gulbuddin
was tired of the unpredictability of Hekmatyar and
Hekmatyar, who started to move into Kabul on April
his lack of success. Within a few months the Taliban
17, 1992. Most of the other leaders had formed a loose
had modern guns, ammunition, airplanes, artillery,
coalition to work together to capture Kabul, including
tanks, helicopters, and sophisticated communications
Ahmad Shah Massoud, Abdul Rashid Dostum, and
equipment, mostly supplied by Pakistan (Ansary
Abdul Rasul Sayyaf. Some of Najibullah’s army
2012). Their first major assault resulted in the capture
defected to join the army of Massoud (Ansary 2012).
of Kandahar in November and soon thereafter Herat.
In April 1992, the Peshawar Accord was agreed to by
They then turned to Kabul, reaching its outskirts in
most of the leaders, with the exception of Gulbuddin
September 1995. They were not successful in their
Hekmatyar, who wanted to become the sole ruler of
initial assault and so laid siege to Kabul for the next
Afghanistan and was supported by Pakistan. He played
several months, subjecting the city to a bombardment
on Pashtun fears of a victory by the northern alliance
that drove half its residents from their homes. The
as part of his resistance to cooperation. An interim
siege continued until April 1996 when the Taliban
Islamic government was set up in Kabul, but no one
brought 400 tanks to the battle. At this point the main
controlled the city, although a Shi’a Mujahideen group
defenders of Kabul, Dostum and Massoud, withdrew
supported by Iran and aided by some Arabs controlled
their forces, realizing they were outgunned. On
about one-fourth of it (Rubin 2002). Refusing to join
September 26, 1996, the Taliban took control of Kabul
the others, Hekmatyar ordered his troops to begin a
(Ansary 2012).
bombardment of Kabul, firing thousands of rockets that wreaked havoc and killed thousands in the
The Taliban consolidated their control of Afghanistan
first few days. His forces also released thousands of
with great success except in small areas in the north
prisoners, many of whom took up arms and carried
that they were never able to control. In 2001, the
out terrible crimes against local citizens. Other forces
9/11 attacks in New York City and Washington, DC,
fired on Hekmatyar’s troops, and several other forces
by Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda were followed by
fired on each other. As a result, much of the city was
U.S. retaliatory bombings and then the joint allied www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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operation led by the United States to capture bin Laden
major targets remained military. After 2009 there were
and eliminate al-Qaeda. That struggle still continues,
more attacks on foreigners working in Afghanistan
and it has been a costly one. Since 2009 more than
including doctors, nurses, and others working at
14,252 Afghan civilians have been killed and more
hospitals and some offices although, as before, the
than 5,000 Afghan soldiers lost (Johnson 2014). U.S.
targets remained primarily military. However, if you
casualties by mid-2014 were 2,320 killed and 19,415
happened to be near a convoy when a suicide bomber
wounded (Cole 2013; Department of Defense 2014).
attacked, you were likely to be killed or injured. We
Added to that is the tremendous human cost to Afghan
knew every day that violence could affect us. And
civilians, U.S. and Afghan soldiers and their families,
sometimes it did. In my own case, as I was preparing
and others involved in the struggle.
to give a presentation at a hotel in Kabul, machine gun fire rang out from the building next door, a rocket
For the expatriates working in Afghanistan there were
crashed into an upper floor of the hotel, and glass and
other experiences of war. A number of expatriates
debris came crashing down outside the open windows.
working for NGOs, with aid organizations, and as
We were hurried to a room in the hotel basement as
consultants to the Afghan government have been killed
the fighting continued. After five hours we were finally
or wounded—a recent estimate places the number at
able to leave the hotel thanks to the Afghan police
298 since 2001 (Watson Institute for International
and a contingent of Norwegian troops, though the
and Public Affairs 2014). Though not involved in the
shooting continued for many hours after that. This
fighting, expatriates see reminders of war all around. I
was something one had learned to expect, but it was
vividly remember arriving in Kabul in 2003, knowing
nonetheless a jarring experience. We were fortunate
about the damage done during the civil war but having
that no one in the hotel died, but many others did that
no idea of its magnitude. Driving over the hills in
day.
front of the Intercontinental Hotel, I was shocked and amazed to see that almost one-third of Kabul had been
We had to travel with bodyguards wherever we went,
flattened as if it had been struck by an atomic bomb.
and that was a constant reminder that we were in a war
I was horrified by what that implied in terms of death
zone. No matter how calm one was about the potential
and suffering for Afghans. There was rubble all the way
for violence, the possibility was constantly there, and
from the front of the Ministry of Higher Education to
one had to take that into account in planning any
the badly damaged Queens Palace almost three miles
travel, even the short two-block walk from the office
away. Everywhere we went were the bullet-pocked
to our residence. I would like to say that it had no
walls of buildings, some bombed out, others partly
effect on my work or my life. But that is not true. The
destroyed—and some with people still living in what
possibility of an attack was always there, and one had
was left of them, often protected from the elements by
to be on guard all the time. It did wear on people, some
only a curtain or rug hung over the gaping holes.
more than others. I would realize how much each time I went on leave and suddenly realized I didn’t need a
At the beginning of my stay in 2003, most of the
bodyguard. The relief was real as was the recognition
attacks were on military targets. Later there were a
that one did pay a price for living with violence and
few attacks on civilians working on elections or in
war.
hospitals. Subsequently they spread to people working for NGOs and government organizations although the www.scup.org
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It was the people I knew or the soldiers killed or
atrocities, including the random bombings in
wounded that affected me the most. I would see
rural areas to depopulate the villages and towns
wounded U.S. veterans who were being treated at
the Russians couldn’t control, as noted above. The
Walter Reed Hospital when I was on leave. I would see
Russians planted and airdropped thousands of mines
them visiting the mall, operating their wheelchairs
throughout the country (which still kill or injure people
or, in the case of those with missing legs and arms,
regularly) to force people into the cities where they
being pushed by a loved one or another soldier. Most
thought they could control them. After the Russians
of them were in their late teens and early twenties, and
withdrew, there was the violence of the civil war that
it always hurt me to see them. I never had to serve in
lasted from 1989 to 1992. That brought more killings,
the military, having either a student or occupational
brutality, destruction, and ethnic violence as various
deferment—something I sometimes feel guilty about.
factions fought for control of the country. And then
Seeing these servicemen and -women and thinking
there were the Taliban who ruled most of the country
about the U.S. military personnel I had worked with at
from 1996 to 2001 and brought more fear and violence.
the MoHE or seen at the embassy or on patrol made me
That was reignited after 9/11 when the United States
feel very strongly that I had to work even harder at my
and its allies sent troops to eliminate al-Qaeda and the
commitment to help improve higher education. Even
Taliban. The allied effort resulted in major successes
if the Taliban were defeated, it would still be critical to
but at a high price. The struggle continues, with most
national development to provide jobs for young people
foreign forces leaving at the end of 2015 but a small
and crucial to the well-being of all Afghans to leave a
contingent remaining over the next two years.
legacy of high-quality higher education. Fear is always hovering in the background for everyone The cost of the war has been extremely high for
in Afghanistan—fear that you will be in the wrong
Afghanistan, and a very high price has also been paid
place at the wrong time and killed or injured in a
by the United States and some of our allies. On the
Taliban suicide bombing; fear of being attacked in the
ground, substantial progress is being made in building
workplace, in a market or shop, in a government office,
a quality higher education system. Nonetheless, there
or at a major event; fear of being a victim of a robbery
remains a long way to go before there is the high-
or a kidnapping or an errant air strike. And in some
quality system required. No nation enters the realm of
parts of the country there is the constant fear of an
developing economies without a high-quality higher
attack by the Taliban or by coalition forces. People are
education system (World Bank 2002). After all the
wary of going to markets and especially of being out at
carnage, death, and injury, the nation must move
night. Students who travel home worry about Taliban
forward more quickly over the next few years to make
roadblocks, and a few have been threatened when
that goal a reality.
traveling. One family and an employee were confronted by his former schoolmate at a Taliban roadblock only
Violence and fear
a dozen miles from Kabul on the way to Parwan. The schoolmate knew he was working on a U.S. project. He
The people of Afghanistan have been the victims of
was harassed, threatened with an AK-47, and made to
massive levels of violence for more than 30 years.
promise to leave his job. After that he did not return
Afghans have seen the bloodshed of the Russian
to Parwan to see his extended family, though he did
invasion in December 1979 and the later terrible
not leave his job either. And even in Kabul there are www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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the dangers of suicide attacks; there is also the fear of
rural areas and from Afghanistan. As a result of the
being shot by coalition forces for following too close
ongoing violence, more than six million people have
to a military convoy, as happened to one of USAID’s
fled the rural areas over the years, with many going to
Higher Education Project employees who inadvertently
Pakistan and Iran to find safety. While most of them
passed a vehicle to suddenly find himself next to a
returned with the inauguration of a new democratic
convoy. He had his windshield shot out and his car
government in 2001, that event did not bring peace.
riddled with bullets. Fortunately neither he nor his
There were more bombings, and the violence of war
family was hurt, but others have not been as lucky.
continues to this day. With it have come even more bombing, strafing, and rocket attacks, many of which
While there were not many bombings or shootings
are the result of error on the one hand and the Taliban
in and around Kabul until 2014, they do take place
on the other even in places like Kabul that were once
regularly in various parts of Afghanistan, more
thought relatively safe. All this has continued to create
frequently in the south. The evidence of violence can
a climate of fear that for many people rekindles earlier
be seen almost everywhere. There was little or no
memories of violence.
concern for civilian life. Indeed, during some of the strife roving gangs of soldiers sought out people from
Most Afghans have seen or know of family members
particular ethnic groups, regions, or religions to kill,
killed or taken away by the police or military for
rape, maim, rob, or humiliate (Gopal 2014). Homes
unknown reasons. Indeed, the number of innocent
were looted and often destroyed with families forced to
people killed, injured, and frequently hauled off to
flee.
jail is in the thousands (Gopal 2014). Some of this was done by the government of the day, but some
Those of us who have been in buildings that were
was a product of the failure of U.S. and coalition
attacked have vivid memories of rockets and shots
troops to adequately understand traditional Afghan
being fired into them, the rat-a-tat-tat of continuing
politics or even the political system they were there
machine gun fire, the explosion of bombs and
to support with President Karzai at its head. Some of
grenades, the falling glass, and the eerie silence
those imprisoned were Karzai supporters, long-time
between bursts of gunfire. We remember waiting for
enemies of the Taliban. Some of them were people
the police or army to intervene, rushing to basement
competing for power, contracts, and resources with
shelters, waiting for hours, making desperate phone
Afghans close to the U.S. military. At a time when
calls, enduring more shooting and more waiting,
there were large rewards for information leading to the
trying to stay calm, and hoping for news of relief on
arrests of Taliban, some of those close to certain U.S.
the way. And when relief arrived at the scene, it was
commands fed faulty intelligence to U.S. forces, which
often unable to get to you because of the fighting. After
then arrested and often killed key leaders working
such an experience, the sound of gun fire elicits an
with the government who had been “identified” by
automatic sense of panic, if only for a moment, and for
these “informants” as Taliban—leaders who actually
those who saw death or were wounded, the recurring
had been key in turning local communities against
flashbacks often never go away.
the Taliban. Some of these leaders ended up in prison in Afghanistan or Guantanamo Bay or were killed or
Starting with the Russian bombing of villages in
badly wounded (Gopal 2014).
the 1980s, there has been a steady exodus from the www.scup.org
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These atrocities by U.S. forces were well known to
is already undermining our work in higher education
the general public, especially in the south around
in some areas and creating conditions that can foster a
Kandahar, and they turned a local population disposed
resurgence of the Taliban.
to support the U.S. effort against it. This helped foster a resurgence of the Taliban. It also raised the
Even for those who applaud the coalition efforts to root
level of uncertainty in these communities since even
out the Taliban, the terrible and avoidable mistakes
strong support for the United States seemed not to
and the lack of understanding of Afghan culture and
guarantee that one wouldn’t be arrested or attacked
even its current political system have sown widespread
if unscrupulous elements turned in false intelligence
distrust and anger. For those who have lost family
reports for personal gain. There was also the accidental
members or had them jailed, maimed, or wounded
bombing of a wedding party in July 2008 in which 47
(and there have been many), these failures will never
civilians from one family were killed, mostly women
be forgotten. As a result, mistrust of coalition forces—
and children. The United States insisted this was a
and Afghan military and police—is high in many
group of insurgents and thus refused to apologize (Gall
places. The massive and often unregulated use of force
2014). And there were other unfortunate accidents for
has led to the totally unnecessary alienation of huge
which few if any apologies were ever made. There were
areas of the country, areas that were not havens of
also revenge attacks against rivals and efforts to get
Taliban activity or control.
rid of competitors by those working closely with U.S. forces (Gall 2014). The United States seemed to make
All this violence, and the fear of it, has affected
no serious effort to check such allegations even though
students—not just in terms of their day-to-day
it would have been a simple thing to do. Many of these
activities, but in terms of their plans for the future. The
people worked with the Karzai government or U.S.
uncertainty, the loss of trust, the seeming randomness
agencies and could have been identified easily if an
of events, and the often callous response to (and the
effort had been made.
occasional lie about) what has taken place have created a lingering depression and an uncertainty about the
A recent report describes Afghan units trained and
future in general and particularly about the future in
funded by U.S. Special Operations Forces to fight
Afghanistan. It has become difficult to plan for one’s
against the Taliban. While they were successful in
future, to think about job prospects, or to tailor one’s
that regard, they also terrorized the local population,
higher education with the future in mind. What kind
“fostering an environment of lawlessness and
of Afghanistan will be left in a few years? Will it be
impunity, exacerbating Afghanistan’s longstanding
democratic? Will it be run by the Taliban? Will the
problems, and creating fertile ground for the Taliban
rampant corruption of today be the norm tomorrow? If
insurgency to survive” (Gopal 2014, ¶ 5). Although
things seem likely to take a turn for the worse—and for
they fostered corruption and insecurity they continued
many students they do—wouldn’t it be smarter to try
to be supported by U.S. forces who argued that “the
to get out of Afghanistan? Many students want to go to
corruption piece is hard because security reigns
the United States or Europe. But if they can’t go there,
supreme. We won’t remove corrupt officials if it looks
they still want to get out of Afghanistan if they can.
like it will interrupt security” (Gopal 2014, ¶ 11). Yet it
In recent months, more and more students have been
is this very type of operation that has raised the level
trying to find ways to go abroad. Some see scholarships
of fear and led to a growing hostility to U.S. efforts. It
like the Fulbright as at least a way to get out of the www.scup.org
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country for two years or more and hope that things will
so damaging to morale and the future of the country.
be better at the end of that time. Others seek a more
The future of Afghanistan depends on keeping the best
permanent escape.
and the brightest in the country. The growing levels of violence and fear are not going to make that easy.
While expatriates working in Afghanistan do not have such a long history of experience with violence or the
Hunger and malnutrition
threat of it, the need to have bodyguards is a constant reminder of the dangers posed—and to some extent one
For those who live and work in Kabul it is easy to
realizes that just having a bodyguard calls attention
miss the fact that one-third of the population suffers
to you. Most foreign advisors cannot go out without
from malnutrition to the extent that they do not
them, whether it is to shop for groceries or travel to
live active and healthy lives. Another 37 percent of
the office. Some advisors are totally restricted to their
the population (8.5 million people) is on the border
residences or headquarters. For most of us, the guards
of food insecurity (World Food Programme 2014).
have become part of our family since they have worked
This latter group frequently falls victim to natural
for the project for many years. And we know that the
disasters, as was the case when Afghanistan suffered
guards put their lives on the line for us. Several have
a severe drought in 2008. The fighting in some areas
lost their lives doing so. The need for personal security
exacerbates these problems. Although health care has
is a constant reminder that foreign workers are in
improved substantially over the last five years, it is
a war zone, the threats are real, and the danger is
this population that is the first to suffer from national
always present. The situation has become worse over
calamities given the fragility of their life situations.
the 10 years I have been in Afghanistan. In the early 2000s we traveled in Kabul and almost anywhere else
The recent sharp increase in infant malnutrition in
in the country without guards, except in the extreme
Afghanistan seems to belie the improvements in health
south. Sometimes it was necessary to check with the
care, primary and secondary education, and higher
Ministry of Interior to get permission to go to some
education and comes as a surprise. Yet the United
towns or cities, but only once did we need guards in
Nations’ figures show a 50 percent increase in severe
my early days in Afghanistan—when we took a short
malnutrition in children nationwide, even in the capital
trip from Kunduz to the northern border to meet with
(Nordland 2014). The reasons for this increase are not
the commander of the region. That is no longer the
clear. Some of it may be tied to the reduction in breast-
case. Over the years the problem has become worse. By
feeding, not only because of maternal malnutrition but
2009 the project had armored cars and armed guards.
also because of the growing belief that powdered milk
To walk the block from the residence to the office
is better. Another factor that may be leading to the
required four guards with AK-47s on the street and
increased awareness of malnutrition is the availability
one escorting us with a gun. Now both buildings are
of more health treatment centers. Malnutrition is due
guarded day and night by about half a dozen guards.
in part to the disruption of agriculture resulting from
The stakes are higher now for foreign advisors and the
the continuing effects of Russian landmines laid on
Afghans who work with them because of the years of
agricultural lands, in part to the illiteracy of most rural
violence and the continued uncertainty. While there
women, and in the long run is primarily a result of the
have been worse periods, such as the civil war, it is the
war and the disruptions caused by it.
constant threat and the ongoing uncertainty that is www.scup.org
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Kabul in winter.
View of Kabul.
Housing on the hills above Kabul.
Orchards outside of Kabul. www.scup.org
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The potential long-term consequences of malnutrition
As well, the number of those not admitted to some
are worrying: acute malnutrition can cause permanent
form of higher education will continue to grow from
brain damage, stunted growth, developmental
about 44,000 in 2015 to 200,000 in 2020 and about
problems, and lower resistance to disease; in severe
300,000 in 2025. We have some information about the
cases, it can lead to death. The shift from breast
efforts people are making to find work and their level of
milk to powdered milk is also creating other health
success that is presented in the pages that follow. It is a
problems since the formula is usually mixed with water
distressing story and not one likely to get better soon.
that is not clean, leading to diarrhea for the child and
Indeed, all indications are that the problem is getting
further exacerbating the malnutrition.
worse. If Afghanistan fails to meet the needs of people for formal education, especially higher education, the
These problems, when coupled with a host of other
problem will get even worse given the rapid growth in
medical problems including continued high levels
the population of young people.
of infant mortality and one of the highest rates of maternal mortality in the world at 1,600 deaths
The crisis of unemployment is also getting worse.
per 100,000 births (World Food Programme 2014),
The National Risk and Vulnerability Assessment
growing economic problems, continuing high
in 2007–08 estimated that the unemployment rate
unemployment (see the section that follows), and low
was a modest 7.1 percent, which equates to 823,000
levels of female education, demonstrate the complexity
people (International Labour Organization 2012).
of the crises facing the nation.
That is surely an underestimate. Current data suggest that 78.6 percent of the jobs are in agriculture, 5.7
Unemployed and underemployed: A growing crisis for Afghanistan The ranks of the unemployed and underemployed are growing in Afghanistan. They remain a silent threat for now, but in time are likely to become a very vocal, raucous, and potentially violent part of daily life. Data are scarce about the number of unemployed and underemployed, with information about the underemployed especially difficult to obtain. The number of unemployed has been reported to be between 800,000 (International Labour Organization 2012) and several million. No one has even tried to guess the number of underemployed, but it must be many times the number of unemployed. These numbers will grow as the number of high school graduates increases thanks to the success of Education for All (see the section below). The number of those currently unemployed will be augmented by the growing number of secondary school graduates, which is increasing at an average of about 14 percent a year.
percent in industry, and 15.7 percent in services. The minister of economic affairs, Abdul Hadi Arghandiwal, reported in 2013 that 48 percent of Afghanistan’s labor force was unemployed or had only seasonal jobs (International Labour Organization and World Bank 2013). That would be about 5.6 million people. The Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs, Martyrs and Disables reports that Afghanistan needs to create 500,000 jobs a year to deal with its employment problems (Al Jazeera 2013). That is not happening. What makes the current situation even more worrisome is that in the last year there has been a spike in unemployment in Afghanistan caused in part by the beginning of the drawdown of ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) forces, the loss of many jobs related to support for the troops, and the departure of some NGOs and other aid organizations. Added to that are the departures resulting from recent Taliban attacks on civilians in Kabul and other cities, which www.scup.org
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have also caused some organizations to reduce both
for long periods of time. What happens to the
their expatriate and local staffs because of safety
unemployed graduates and others who don’t find jobs
concerns (Druzin 2013). Many of these were high
in Afghanistan? We don’t know very much about them
paying jobs that supported extended families while
but let’s look at one study. A report from Kunduz about
others were jobs for laborers at the usual salaries, but
graduates notes that during one period studied, 320
in all cases they are jobs that will be hard to replace.
educated young people, including some with master’s
This problem will grow as the allies continue to draw
degrees, 180 of whom were women, were jobless in
down their forces through 2016. At the moment, there
May 2013 (Hamdard 2012). Some found jobs in the
do not seem to be any major new employers on the
brick kilns, others managed to find teaching jobs, but
horizon to offset these losses although the mining
the majority remained unemployed or underemployed.
sector is expected to grow over the next few years once the security situation improves. However, the start-
Major efforts to promote job creation and business
up time from the initial decision to start a mining
development are badly needed. These include programs
project to the actual beginning of the operation of the
by the Ministry of Labor and several other efforts
enterprise is usually several years.
supported by USAID and other donors. Especially critical are current plans to improve programs that
While the figures for unemployment are murky,
develop a trained workforce through technical and
there is no question that the level of unemployment
vocational education and training (TVET), community
is substantial and that high school graduates are
colleges, and university-level programs. Then and only
having a hard time finding jobs. In 2013 the minister
then will businesses begin to develop, create jobs, and
of economic affairs criticized the international
reinvest in the economy.
community for creating only short-term employment that is not sustainable (Minister of Economics
A number of Afghans find jobs abroad, many through
2013). The problems of employment for women are
legitimate brokers who operate under the rules of the
even worse than those for men with discrimination
Government of Afghanistan through the Ministry
prevalent, sexual harassment common, and even rape
of Labor and Social Affairs. The ministry has set up
on the job not unknown (Kittleson 2013). Further, a
a program to help Afghans find jobs abroad under
major effort by the Taliban uses “night letters” and
bilateral agreements that include provisions to protect
other intimidation tactics to push women out of jobs
worker safety, health, and welfare. The workers go to
when they have them. A recent International Labour
Pakistan, India, Dubai in the UAE, and elsewhere. The
Organization (2012, p. 7) study reports that “[s]ince
objectives of the program are “to reduce the poverty,
mobility outside the home is limited for cultural
unemployment, and to enhance material and spiritual
reasons, women—especially in rural areas—are
living standard of Afghan workers” (Ministry of Labor,
primarily involved in home-based income-generating
Social Affairs, Martyrs and Disables 2005, p. 2).
activities like carpet weaving, sewing, tailoring, agricultural work and taking care of livestock and
While some workers find jobs in this way, it appears
selling dairy products.”
that many of those who go abroad do so through illegal middlemen, brokers, or acquaintances, some of whom
There are few opportunities amid the growing
charge high fees and put them at risk once they arrive
unemployment. Many graduates remain jobless
abroad. Smugglers charge as much as $15,000 for a www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 2
trip, with the young people (mostly boys but some girls)
gangs that ply the countryside involved in robbery and
forced to work off the fee over the next four or five
kidnapping.
years. Some of them have tried to walk all the way to Scandinavia where they have heard that the reception
The unemployed are also easy targets for recruitment
is good. Most do not make it and are frequently abused,
by the Taliban as their resentment grows over the
often imprisoned, and sometimes killed along the way
lack of jobs and what they see as the failures of the
(Cooper 2013).
government. A growing number of young people were increasingly unhappy with the Karzai government
There have been reports of an “exodus” from
and its chronic corruption. It remains to be seen if the
Afghanistan ever since 2000. For the most part, it
new Ghani government can reverse those perceptions.
seems not to have materialized, though once again
As the number of unemployed continues to grow
there is talk about its resumption. The announcement
and donors begin to leave with the drawdown of
of the withdrawal of most combat troops by the
troops, this is likely to become an even more serious
end of 2014 served to revive these concerns, raising
problem unless solutions are found. In Bagram and
fears about instability and fueling worries, even
the surrounding villages, about 2,000 people lost their
among graduates, about violence and safety. In 2011,
jobs within six months as the military base downsized
more people fled Afghanistan than in any prior year
(Druzin 2013). It is clear that many young people who
according to the United Nations High Commissioner
join the Taliban do so more for economic reasons than
for Refugees (Clark 2013) with an estimated 30,000
for ideological ones.
people seeking asylum abroad (Mail Foreign Service 2012). An alarming report in June 2013 suggests
The problems of unemployment will continue to
that 105 Afghan diplomats due to return from their
grow until the economy begins to produce jobs in
rotations did not return as expected, seemingly having
substantial numbers, not only in agriculture (currently
decided to stay in the countries in which they were
the largest employer), but also in business, commerce,
posted (Kazim 2013). If correct, that sends a very
and industry. The prospects for agricultural recovery
negative signal to others. Some Afghans still remain
are dependent in large part on the weather, but also
as refugees in Pakistan, Iran, and elsewhere, though
on the continued demining of the thousands of acres
more than three million have returned. However,
still unusable because of Russian mines, improved
many of them are finding it difficult to resettle in
agricultural production, improved infrastructure
their homeland, in part because of the high level of
for exports, and better transportation. The most
unemployment.
promising employment opportunities lie in the exploration of Afghanistan’s mineral resources—
As unemployment continues, many young Afghans
in mining, oil, gas, and others—some soon to be
have been drawn to work in the poppy fields by the
developed, others hindered by war. Equally important
lucrative day wages. Those are risky jobs, however,
is equipping Afghan young people with the knowledge,
since the government is increasing its efforts to
skills, and creativity required to meet employer needs
eradicate poppy fields. There have been reports of 50 to
and the ability to think of themselves as entrepreneurs
60 police and an unknown number of workers killed in
who can establish their own businesses to fill the
2013 in these efforts (Maudoodi 2013). Some also join
many economic gaps, whether in import substitution, the development and export of medicinal plants, the www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 2
provision of services needed for the growing mining
along with Somalia and North Korea (Transparency
sectors, or other areas of need. That will take changing
International 2013). In a report to Congress in 2013
the mind-set of students who typically see the
the Pentagon noted that “[t]he progress made by
government as their potential employer; getting young
Afghan forces in taking the security lead from allied
people to think in terms of developing businesses (and
troops has been offset by Afghanistan’s deep-rooted
thinking of innovations as they do); doing a better job
climate of corruption that threatens to derail efforts
in training people with useful job skills through TVET;
to leave behind a fledgling democracy capable of
and fostering the success of community colleges in
holding off the Taliban” (Sisk 2013, ¶ 1). In a news
preparing a new level of pre-professional graduates in
summary in The Week in April 2013, it was suggested
areas like engineering technology, medical technology,
that the biggest source of corruption was the United
accounting, social work, information technology, and
States. The article reported that the CIA has been
many areas of business.
sending bags of cash to Hamid Karzai totaling tens of millions of dollars (Wagstaff 2013). These payments
The scourge of corruption
were confirmed by President Karzai’s office (Gall 2014) and were purported to be intended to “maintain
Corruption has been an ongoing problem in
access to Mr. Karzai and his inner circle” (Wagstaff
Afghanistan for many years. However, it has grown
2013, ¶ 5). The effects of corruption on the Afghan
significantly worse over the last 10 years so that it is
population as a whole have been devastating. A recent
now one of the major obstacles to the operation of an
press report notes that while the Taliban was less of a
effective government able to gain the confidence and
threat than previously given the improvements in the
trust of the public. Much of the corruption has been
Afghan military, “that is of little solace to the millions
fueled by the lavish spending of the allies in recent
of Afghans who may face a graver enemy in the
years, especially the ISAF expenditures for supplies,
government itself—a bundle of inept and corruption-
security, construction, and other services. Those
plagued institutions whose actions could threaten the
involved were more interested in instant results than
gains of the past decade” (Sieff 2014b, ¶ 2).
in checking out the legitimacy or commitment to integrity of the people they recruited to assist them.
When people were asked in 2009 and 2012 what
Especially in the area of security, where local forces
they thought were the nation’s most serious
were used to protect the perimeters of military bases,
problems, corruption and insecurity were at the top
convoys, and other facilities, many of the contractors
(unemployment, poverty, external influences, and
were originally local warlords who soon built up huge
performance of government were the other options),
private armies with the funds they received. Many of
with corruption identified by 60 percent of respondents
them also employed those forces for drug smuggling
in 2009 and 55 percent in 2012 and insecurity
and other illegal activities, often using their links
identified by 53 percent of respondents in 2009 and
to ISAF as a front. Some became very powerful and
58 percent in 2012. When asked about the prevalence
effectively untouchable by the government or any other
of bribery, 60 percent of respondents reported that it
authority (Gall 2014).
was high in 2009, and 50 percent said the same thing in 2012—a slight improvement. However, when people
Afghanistan is ranked among the most corrupt
were asked about having to pay bribes, they reported
countries in the world at 175th on the corruption index
the average number of bribes paid during the year as www.scup.org
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Chapter 2
4.7 in 2009 and 5.2 in 2012, an increase. The number
Those involved at the top have no inclination to stop
of bribes paid in rural areas was slightly higher than
despite donor complaints, in part I suspect because
in urban areas (United Nations Office on Drugs and
many of them have little faith in the future and so
Crime 2012). Military payments, corruption, and
want to accumulate as much as they can now. As Bates
bribery have flooded the country with cash, much of
(2008, p. 102) notes, “A bureaucracy that had been
it transferred abroad by those involved. All this has
created to facilitate the lives of the citizens began
set up a pattern of corruption at the leadership level
instead to undermine their welfare. Its members began
that fosters corruption at lower levels and affects the
to feed themselves by consuming the time and money
operations of government across the country. Added to
of those they once had served.” He goes on to point out
that are the large amounts of money being made from
that the civil servants, soldiers, and others are paying
drug crops and smuggling. While that has benefited
themselves (Bates 2008). That has gone on in an
local economies in some parts of Afghanistan, the
increasingly big way in Afghanistan in recent years.
Taliban have also benefited substantially from the drug trade although they did not believe Afghans would be
Corruption can thrive in a country like Afghanistan
victims. In fact, there are now more than one million
in part because, as Leys (2002, p. 66) points out, “the
addicts in Afghanistan, at least 25 percent of whom
idea of the national interest is weak because the idea
are women and 10 percent children. The women are
of a nation is new. And the institutions and offices of
given drugs to calm them when they are tired of being
the state are, for most people, remote and perplexing.”
virtual prisoners unable to leave their homes without
He goes on to note that corruption is relatively easy
male escorts. The children too are sometimes given
to conceal in a new state or new system. That was
small amounts of drugs to calm them when they are
the case in Afghanistan. More recently, however, the
fussy, but are most often affected by breathing in the
remarkably free press in Afghanistan has made people
smoke from drug use. One doctor who works with me
much more aware of the extent of corruption. Yet,
and has treated many of these young children states
those involved have seldom been caught, or if they are,
that “dealing with children in drug withdrawal is one
they are not punished. Seldom has restitution been
of the most terrible things I have ever seen.”2
sought or made. Even those caught are soon hired elsewhere or, on occasion, rehired at the institution in
Corruption has spread as uncertainty about the
which the corruption took place.3 And so the process
future grows. People say to themselves, “I want to get
continues and grows, no lessons are learned about the
mine while I can”—and they are doing just that. The
cost of corruption, and people get increasingly cynical.
war has caused a kind of moral breakdown in many
Because corruption is so pervasive, we will come back
areas of government aided and abetted by donors,
to it again and again in the sections that follow. We will
foreign governments, and especially the military,
also look specifically at the role of corruption in higher
which is eager for quick responses to its needs and
education later in this study.
little concerned about the consequences other than for security. In some cases corruption pervades whole sectors of the system, as with some police units in which everything from promotions to protection of individual citizens has a price, and those involved divide the spoils in commonly understood shares. www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
The economy
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Chapter 2
Household Survey showed that the poverty rate was 36 percent, a little higher than previously, with the
The funding situation for higher education is clearly
growth rate of the top 20 percent of the population
affected by the condition of the Afghan economy.
three times as high as that of the bottom 20 percent
The part of the budget devoted to higher education,
(Joya and Khan 2014). Economic development was
as noted elsewhere, is very much a function of the
sluggish in 2013 with a growth rate of 3.4 percent and
success—or lack thereof—of the MoHE in making the
estimated in 2014 to be even lower at only 1.7 percent
case for higher education. Overall, the Afghan economy
due to political uncertainty and a worsening security
slowed somewhat during 2013 after good growth in
situation; the growth rate is projected to be slightly
2012, largely because of poorer revenue collection,
better in 2015 at 3.5 percent (Asian Development Bank
especially in customs, and uncertainty about the
2015). Part of the problem for the Afghan economy is
political transition and security situation. The national
its “high dependency level,” which the World Bank has
budget increased slightly from $6.8 billion in 2013
described as a low level of females in the labor force. In
to $7.6 billion in 2014 due largely to the shift of more
Afghanistan, women are estimated to make up only 19
of the security costs to on-budget expenses. Of the
percent of the labor force and are primarily employed
total budget, 65 percent is funded by foreign grants
in low-level and low-productivity jobs (Joya and Khan
while only 34 percent comes from domestic revenue;
2014). This is a huge waste of talent and a major drag
1 percent comes from loans and credits. Security
on the economy.
expenditures in 2013 grew from 10.4 percent of GDP to 11.5 percent. Conversely, austerity measures in
Afghanistan is projected to add an additional 400,000
place for 2013 lowered civilian expenditures from 13.4
workers to the economy a year (Joya and Khan 2014),
percent of GDP to 12.8 percent. The overall education
and that poses a serious unemployment threat, as
budget increased slightly from 3.5 percent of GDP
noted previously. This growth increases the pressure
to 3.6 percent (Joya and Khan 2014). (The higher
on education generally to ensure that graduates
education budget will be discussed in a later section.)
are prepared for the job market. That is part of the
A revenue shortfall of 20 percent occurred in 2014
motivation for the MoHE’s addition of community
resulting in budget cuts (Sieff 2014a). Afghanistan had
colleges, which are preparing job-ready graduates
a GDP per capita income of $688 in 2012 (Joya and
through a 2.5-year associate’s degree program that
Khan 2014), compared to $1,527 for India and $1,164
provides mid-level professional training for such jobs
for Pakistan (Global Property Guide 2014–2015).
as medical technician, business person, engineering technician, accountant, social worker, IT specialist,
On the positive side, agricultural outputs reached
and other professional areas. It is also why the MoHE
record levels in 2013 due largely to good weather
is working to ensure that its programs correspond
conditions. However, construction and private
to the needs of employers and emphasizing needs
investment slowed during the year because of
assessments by faculties as they review their curricula.
uncertainty about the elections and the security
Those reviews include assessments of the satisfaction
situation, with the growth in new firm registrations
of employers with their recent hires and involve
down considerably (Joya and Khan 2014). Inflation
increased cooperation between faculties and business,
increased slightly to 7.7 percent with food prices
government, and other employers.
going up about 9.8 percent (Joya and Khan 2014). The www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
External threats
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Chapter 2
various opposition groups including Hekmatyar during the period of Russian occupation and the Taliban up to
Afghanistan has been at the center of external intrigue
the present, despite protestations to the contrary. Iran
and intervention for centuries. In the 1800s both the
has also played a role especially in the area around
British and Russians coveted the territory. For the
Herat and in efforts to influence students in Kabul,
Russians, expanding through Afghanistan was part
Herat, and elsewhere. In more recent years, China has
of their plan to get access to ports on the Arabian
become involved, primarily out of its interest in raw
Sea, and for the British, Afghanistan was thought to
materials.
be key to protecting their Indian colony from what they perceived as the Russian threat (Ansary 2012).
The United States, Britain, Germany, France, Turkey,
That led to the ill-fated invasion of Afghanistan by
and other allies have played a major role both militarily
British troops from India in 1838 when Lord Auckland
and politically since the offensive against the Taliban
mistakenly thought that Dost Mohammad had made
began in 1991. The role of the United States, as the
an alliance with the Russians. That ushered in a
leading partner in the coalition, will continue through
long period of British involvement in Afghanistan,
2016 militarily and no doubt beyond that through
though they never succeeded in controlling the
USAID and possible military assistance. Afghanistan
country. Germany gained influence in Afghanistan
has been both the victim and the beneficiary of
starting in 1919 as a hedge against both the British
external involvement for centuries. Some of the
and the Russians. This relationship was a positive
assistance has helped higher education, especially
one, leading to a number of successful development
support from Germany, the USSR, the United States,
projects including water and electricity developments.
France, Japan, Norway, Sweden, Canada, India, and
Both the United States and Russia vied for influence
several other countries.
in Afghanistan after World War II, with the United States building roads and schools, conducting a major agricultural project in the Helmand Valley, and providing assistance to Kabul University from Columbia University, Indiana University, and others. The United States also built the international airport in Kandahar. In the 1950s, the Russians carried out major road projects in the north including the impressive two-mile-long tunnel high in the mountains in Salang; built a large bakery complex in Kabul, the military airport in Bagram, and a textile factory in the north; and provided a wide range of military equipment including MiGs and other aircraft (Ansary 2012). Pakistan too played a role in Afghanistan throughout this period, seeing a weak Afghanistan as important in its ongoing conflict with India and thus doing its best to destabilize Afghanistan when it could. That continued, as noted earlier, with Pakistani support of
Ethnic and religious conflict Ethnicity and religion play important roles in the daily life of most Afghans. With a few exceptions, however, they have not been the source of major conflict in political or social processes although that may change as the conflicts during the 2014 elections suggest. There have been numerous attempts from outside Afghanistan to mobilize religious and ethnic ties (as I have noted at several points), including recent efforts by both Pakistan and Iran. And there are ethnic animosities that remain strong, especially in regard to the persecution of the Hazara during the Taliban era and in earlier periods and as a result of what some people see as the overbearing ethnic chauvinism of some leaders since then. There are some points in the history of Afghanistan where religion and ethnicity
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Chapter 2
played a major role. Indeed, the end of the rule of King
I was amazed at this but people seemed very sincere
Amanullah came after he tried to make major social
about it. Similarly, in the ministry and at meetings,
changes and limit the role of Islam. That led to growing
people would often thank me and other Americans for
opposition and mobilized a number of religious forces
our service to the country.
against him, which eventually led to his downfall in 1929.4 Ethnicity also played a role during the civil war
People also worried about our safety. While there were
in the post-Soviet period as we have seen.
no bombing attacks when I first arrived in Afghanistan in 2003, there were a few kidnappings and shootings
What is remarkable, however, is that for the most
in Kabul. The suicide bombing began in 2003 with
part efforts to mobilize religious differences have
an attack on a German bus carrying servicemen to
not succeeded in recent years. The same holds true
the airport at the end of their tour of duty. This was
of ethnicity in general. Nonetheless, people are very
a shock to everyone especially since Germany had a
much aware of ethnic issues and usually work to avoid
long history of good relations with Afghanistan going
conflicts and operate in ways that do not inflame
back to 1919 and was considered to be a vital partner
underlying ethnic differences. Similarly, most Afghans
and friend of the country, in part as a protector against
are not concerned about Islamic religious differences.
both the British and Russians in earlier years. That
People will worship at whatever mosque is nearby
attack raised concerns for all foreign employers. By
when prayer time comes be it Sunni or Shia. The recent
2005–06 there were more frequent bombings along
tensions at Kabul University that resulted in some
with rocket attacks on Kabul. People frequently urged
violence were much more a result of the election crisis
us to be careful and warned us about kidnappings by
than ethnic tension although some people portrayed
criminals who would demand bribes or sell hostages to
them in terms of ethnicity. Nonetheless, the potential
the Taliban. On the whole, however, the situation did
to spark such conflicts is real. Afghans in leadership
not seem particularly dangerous to most expatriates.
positions in higher education have worked hard to avoid, prevent, or resolve them—as was the case in the
In the early years we traveled around most of the
recent conflicts at Kabul University that resulted in
country without guards or fear, occasionally having to
some violence and injuries.
check in with the Ministry of Interior. Our reception whether working for the World Bank, USAID, AED,
Foreigners
or the University of Massachusetts was always friendly, appreciative, and easy. I can only think of one
It was always clear that I was a foreigner in
occasion during which there was some hostility. This
Afghanistan, though not as starkly as when working
was in 2003 in Herat when Sara Amiryar and I were
in Africa. For one thing I always needed a bodyguard
working there interviewing secondary school students,
when I went out, and although they didn’t outwardly
university students, business people, and business
carry arms, they did have pistols. Though many
groups. We were taken by our host, an Afghan doctor,
Afghans are as light skinned as I am, it was evident
to the beautiful Blue Mosque, built before 500 BC, and
that I was an American. To my surprise, when I first
shown into the building. After looking around a bit,
arrived in 2003 people on the street would stop me and
we were suddenly told we needed to leave. People had
thank me for coming to help Afghanistan—old men
thought we were German and therefore welcome, but
in traditional dress and younger men of military age.
after discovering we were American they wanted us www.scup.org
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to go. Several angry-looking young men came toward
One evening the commander talked about his
us and we left very quickly. That was the only such
successes against the Russians as a leader of troops
incident for 10 years. Overall, people went out of their
at a young age. He attributed most of his success to
way to welcome us warmly with tea, local snacks of
what he had learned from his older brother, a famous
nuts and dried fruit, and often a meal. This was true
commander, about how to treat people rather than to
in both the north and south. People knew we were
his military expertise. He said he had learned from his
interested in helping with higher education. Educators
father to listen—that was the first rule. That allowed
are traditionally highly respected in Afghanistan, and
you to think of many options, weigh them, and make
we were shown that respect.
good decisions. He recalled that they had great hopes of U.S. support in those early days when the United
On one occasion in 2003 the regional commander
States started to provide equipment in the battle
in Kunduz generously invited my team to stay in his
against the Russians. Those hopes were shattered
almost-completed personal residence. The hospitality
when the United States abandoned them after the
was overwhelming. When we arrived the house was
Russians left. With that left their hopes of the United
empty but soon people began bringing in piles of rugs
States actively intervening to prevent the factional
and cushions, along with a few chairs and a western
struggle that led to the terrible civil war.
toilet, which was soon installed. The commander’s inner porch was set up in the usual way for gatherings
The commander and I developed a good relationship
with layers of handmade Afghan rugs, cushions
over the next few days. One evening he turned to
around the walls, and at mealtime an oilcloth spread
me and said that he regarded me as his brother and
out in the middle covered with plates of rice, lamb,
would do whatever he could to help us during our
chicken, eggplant in a yoghurt sauce, bread, and
stay in Afghanistan. He was a strong supporter of
lots of fresh fruit. We had many very enjoyable and
higher education. He wanted young people to go to
frank discussions over dinner and developed an
universities and then set up businesses on their own
excellent rapport over those few days. One evening the
rather than depending on the government for jobs.
commander wanted to know if I thought the United
The commander and his staff arranged a number of
States would abandon Afghanistan again as it did in
meetings for us at our request and joined us for some
1992 after the Russians left. I told him that I hoped not
of them. The students, teachers, and others we met
but it would be wise to be cautious. He was a strong
turned out to be eager to talk with us and hopeful for
supporter of President Karzai and had worked hard to
some U.S. help with higher education. Our system was
rid the area of the Taliban. While local people reported
a model for them.
that the Taliban had a good reputation for cutting down on crime, the people hated what they had done
During 2003, we, with a small team, conducted focus
in the name of religion as well as their rigidity and
groups in various parts of Afghanistan to get the views
cruelty to their enemies. Several women in particular
of 11th and 12th graders, undergraduates, faculty
noted that they felt safer then. Others talked about the
members, parents, business people, and others about
Taliban’s harsh treatment of women and the closing of
the state of higher education.5 Wherever we went we
education to women.
found a high level of hope and optimism about the future. As one 12th grader in Kapisa put it, “Education is key to success in life. Peace and stability will not be www.scup.org
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returned in Afghanistan unless people are educated
put it, “Higher education will not allow women to be
and trained properly.”6 We were struck by the fact
victimized any longer, although many men still have
that about half the students wanted to do things that
some sort of fear of educated women.”8
would benefit the country. This is not the case today, although there are still some with such idealism. Part
In the 2003 focus groups, there was a general
of the change in focus since then is no doubt a result
recognition that the models for quality higher
of the cynicism that has grown from seeing so much
education at that time were to be found abroad and
corruption in government and business. Students are
that Afghanistan had to work hard to catch up.
also distressed by the long period of maladministration
Participants also knew that higher education in
and incompetence in so much of the government. As
Afghanistan 20 years earlier had been much better.
one university student said in 2003, “This is a failed
Indeed, Afghan higher education in an earlier era
state. We have to get it to working properly.” That was
had been among the best in South Asia, attracting
even more the case by 2013.
students from all over the region. The level of concern among high school students in 2003 about the quality
People had hoped that education would improve
of higher education was especially striking. They
more quickly. Some understood that the government
were very aware that Afghan higher education at that
had little money and that it had many priorities in
time was not up to standard—that institutions abroad
addition to education. People we interviewed expressed
were much better. And they told us what was missing,
gratitude for the assistance provided by the United
including not enough faculty members with Ph.D.s
States, Germany, UNESCO, and others. Nonetheless,
and master’s degrees, lack of proper training, lack
they lamented how much remained to be done. People
of laboratories and other equipment, few up-to-date
were also grateful to the United States for having
books and other curriculum materials, and inadequate
helped free them from the Taliban and now hoped for a
facilities. Concerns about the poor quality of education
better future. In Kapisa, in particular, the Taliban were
and lack of well-trained teachers were widespread
never able to gain complete control and were fearful to
among all respondents in 2003, including faculty
stay overnight. That allowed some underground girls’
members. These concerns reflected the realization
schools to continue during the Taliban rule, and as a
that without a quality education in proper facilities,
result Kapisa was able to send 15 girls to the university
students would not have the training to succeed and
when it reopened.
compete in a world in which technology and knowledge were far ahead of that in Afghanistan. As one
We heard a lot about how women had been deprived
Kabul University student put it, “Our teachers don’t
under the Taliban. As one female student emphasized
know how to answer a question in terms of modern
in Herat, “The war killed a million people in the last
technology. Teachers should be sent abroad for short
23 years but the Taliban killed education, especially
courses—refresher courses and specialized subjects.”9
for girls. Some female students don’t know which one
People also believed that the quality of education was
was worse—being killed or being forbidden to receive
lower outside Kabul and wanted that rectified.
any education. I must receive education at any cost.”
7
Almost universally, the people interviewed were
When we look back at students’ complaints from 10
hopeful that education for women would improve—
years ago, we see that many of them are still valid,
that, as another female student at Kabul University
although there has been a great deal of progress. www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 2
Participants also were aware that many of the best
and frequently asked, “Why don’t Afghan experts
faculty members had fled and not returned. Again
return to Afghanistan?” They also knew they needed
and again we heard it said that these people had an
foreign experts to help improve higher education and
obligation to return from abroad to help Afghanistan
welcomed that. Students in Kapisa noted that “we
rebuild. They also knew that some of the best people
have very many natural resources. If the international
had been killed, wounded, or imprisoned.
community is serious to help us in any way, then they should help us revitalize these resources. With this
There was widespread hope that foreign funds would
revitalization, work will be created and our economy
do more to help rebuild higher education. There were
will improve considerably. Then we will be able to
many comments about visits from NGOs that had
select the field of study of our choice and even pay
made promises of assistance but nothing had come of
for our education.” At this time the Internet was
them. They were very critical of NGOs’ high salaries,
just beginning to be connected to urban areas in
their propensity to hire the best teachers (thus taking
Afghanistan but students were already aware of the
them from schools and universities), and their failure
need for it. As one student in Herat noted, “Another
to deliver. As one high school senior in Kunduz said
problem is that we are not connected to the rest of the
of NGOs, “Everyone comes and takes surveys, makes
world by Internet. We need that for research and for
false promises, and we don’t hear from them again.”
our studies.” And young people were already paying
Yet people were still hopeful in 2003. They were
to learn how to access and use the Internet in private
concerned by what they felt were broad promises to
courses and Internet cafés in Kabul, Herat, Kapisa, and
help higher education by foreign governments but
Kunduz. As the same student noted, “We, the Afghan
little sign of that help in construction, renovation, or
children, are talented and have the capacity to learn as
modern technology and equipment. They were also
long as the conditions are provided.”11
very concerned that neither foreign governments nor their own government seemed to put higher education
As we have seen, there was substantial progress made
as a very high priority. As one high school 12th-grade
in education by 2015, much of it funded by foreign
girl put it, “This is the time for us to study—and it
assistance. The number of public higher education
will not come again. If education is provided for us
institutions has grown from 18 to 36 with student
now, we will make every effort to study and become
numbers increasing from 25,564 in 2004 to 170,582—
specialized in our fields. Instead of building roads
a more than fivefold increase in 10 years. The number
and restoring electricity, our needs should be taken
of private higher education institutions has grown
into consideration such as providing us with books,
from zero in 2006 to more than 90 in 2014 with about
laboratories, libraries, and qualified teachers. These
130,000 students. Graduate education has developed
should be given priority because once the students are
from no programs in 2003 to 42 in 2014. Much of this
educated and teachers are properly trained, then they
has taken place with the help of two major foreign
can help rebuild the country.”10
donors, the World Bank and USAID. In addition, some assistance has been received from Germany,
Students, parents, faculty members, and business
Japan, Norway, Great Britain, India, and several
people recognized the need for expertise from abroad.
other countries. Most of the technical assistance
They hoped some of that would be provided by
has been supported by the World Bank through the
returning Afghans who fled during the years of war
Strengthening Higher Education Program (SHEP) and www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
34
Chapter 2
USAID’s Higher Education Project (HEP), with some
and health have been especially appreciated. At the
additional technical assistance to the MoHE from
same time, the tragic and unacceptable errors of allied
Germany and UNESCO.
forces, in particular the bombing of innocent civilians, the night raids on the homes of the innocent, and the
When talking to students in 2014, one would still hear
concerns about the mistreatment of women by some
complaints about the lack of faculty members with
troops in the south, have hurt the reputation of the
advanced degrees, too few textbooks, overcrowded
allies and left large numbers of people angry. That
lectures, and limited laboratories. And they were
may yet undermine the contributions made to higher
correct. Faculty members would complain about the
education, and education in general, as well as spike
lack of classroom space, limited teaching facilities, lack
or reverse some of the remarkable progress made in
of office space, limited research support, and heavy
higher education to date.
teaching loads. They too were correct. Nonetheless, the improvement over the last five years has been amazing given the limited funding and very little help from foreign donors other than the World Bank, USAID, India, Germany, and a few others. At the same time, the MoHE had to respond to the tremendous increase in student numbers over this period as the success of Education for All began to produce more graduates from secondary school each year, adding to the strain on the system. Overall, people in higher education will acknowledge the substantial assistance of the foreign community to higher education while noting that the bulk of the funding has gone to primary and secondary education. The contributions are greatly appreciated in the MoHE, at the universities, and by most students. There have been no demonstrations against foreign assistance to higher education, and the lines of students applying for scholarships to study abroad, especially in the United States, India, and Europe, are long. While since 2012, one can occasionally hear shouts against the United States or its allies from a car on the street, this is not generally the case. Since the announced withdrawal of most foreign troops at the end of 2014 and all by 2016, indeed there have been many public expressions of fear about what that withdrawal might mean for Afghan higher education and the safety and security of the population. The foreign contributions to education www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
35
Chapter 3
Chapter 3: The Higher Education Context Given this assessment, what are the effects of the
However, we added that success would be conditional
national context on higher education? Are there major
on the Kabul Donor Group living up to its commitment
disconnects between the two? How can they best be
of $236 million to higher education and depend on
dealt with by the MoHE? What are the key goals for
several other things as well:
the next five years? How different are they from those laid out in the National Higher Education Strategic
[I]f the government increases its support for
Plan: 2010–2014? What are the major challenges?
higher education, and if the MoHE can continue
How can they be met? What lessons can be learned
its focus on quality improvement, new pedagogy
from work on the previous strategic plan? What should
and teaching, merit-based appointments,
be the strategy of the MoHE over the next five years?
revival of research, and faculty development (in
What can the MoHE do to institutionalize the changes
particular Ph.D. and master’s training), Afghan
already made given the fragility of some of them? Can
higher education stands a very good chance of
the MoHE produce the high-quality system needed
even greater success. There are tremendous
over the next five years? How can it do so given the
challenges that confront it, corruption and
very limited financial resources likely to be available to
political interference being the most difficult.
it and the institutions?
Nonetheless, there is a cadre of committed, hardworking academics and administrators who
Deputy Minister Babury and I ended our article on the
are dedicated to the transformation of the system.
current state of higher education with the question,
With a little more financial support, they just
Has Afghan higher education been transformed? And
might succeed in sustaining those efforts and
we answered as follows:
institutionalizing them. (Babury and Hayward 2014, p. 30)
Basically yes, with the caveats noted, and indeed to a surprising degree given its limited resources
We noted that these transformation successes were
and the little support it has received. To its
fragile but significant and welcomed at the universities
credit, the MoHE has focused on critical areas
and higher education institutes. How can these
for quality improvement: the establishment
changes be institutionalized and expanded? How can
of accreditation, an emphasis on faculty
the MoHE move forward given the many challenges it
development, a focus on curriculum development
faces nationally? What strengths does higher education
and upgrading, and a commitment to merit
have to do this? What kinds of human resources are
recruitment and promotion. These efforts have
available to make this happen? How might the ministry
laid the groundwork for transformation. (Babury
sustain and expand transformation? I will look at these
and Hayward 2014, p. 30) www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
36
Chapter 3
issues in the pages that follow starting with several of
(Ministry of Education 2014). The primary limitations
the biggest challenges.
on higher education expansion are lack of facilities, a shortage of qualified staff members with master’s degrees and Ph.D.s, and inadequate funding for
Access to Higher Education
infrastructure development including laboratories,
Afghanistan had one of the smallest higher education student populations in the world. Ten years ago only about one percent of college-age students were enrolled in higher education. That has grown to about 9.7 percent in 2014 (see figure 3 below). This compares to 12 percent in India, 7.8 percent in Pakistan (University World News 2011), 9 percent in Vietnam, 17 percent in South Africa, and 60 percent in the developed nations. In South Asia overall, the average college-age student enrollment is 11 percent (Altbach, Reisberg, and Rumbley 2009). These low enrollments occurred despite the fact that higher education is free in Afghanistan—guaranteed in the Constitution through undergraduate education.1 Nonetheless, many families cannot afford to send their children to higher education. Even with tuition, housing, and meals paid for by the state (room and board is covered for students living more than 36 kilometers from the university), the cost per student averages about $918 per year for books, clothing, transportation, and other education costs. In a country with a per capita income of $425 in 2014,2 that is beyond the reach of many families. Among the challenges related to increased access is the fact that in 2014–15 Afghan public higher education institutions are at capacity in terms of their infrastructure, staffing, and housing for students from outside the campus community, especially women. In an earlier period, access was limited by the small number of students attending primary and secondary schools. However, primary and secondary school enrollments have grown substantially over the last decade from one million in 2001 to the Ministry of Education-published total of nine million in 2014 3
libraries, information technology, classrooms, and student housing. As emphasized earlier, the lack of adequate numbers of faculty members with master’s degrees and Ph.D.s limits the ability of universities to upgrade programs in many areas to meet quality needs. Lack of English language capacity among faculty and students also limits effective access to the Internet even though MoHE faculty members, staff, and students now have access to over 8,000 journals in the MoHE digital library4 (most of which are in English, the international language of academics today). With help from NATO, the MoHE has expanded Internet connectivity to most institutions, but the lack of English language competency limits its effective use by most faculty members and students. Funding shortages have also limited expansion of computer facilities and Internet access on many campuses. The MoHE has plans in its new National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020 for intensive English language training for faculty members and some students and is moving to offer more public higher education programs in English beyond medicine and engineering, which began instruction in English in 2014. Lack of funding is a major stumbling block for both offering additional English language training and further upgrading IT facilities. Overall, the rapid growth in primary and secondary education, the significant expansion of public higher education enrollments over the last five years to about 170,000 in 2014, and the legalization of private higher education in 2006 and its substantial growth to about 130,000 students in 2014 has resulted in a phenomenal www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
37
Chapter 3
Figure 3 Growth of Students in Public and Private Universities: 2001–2014
Source: MoHE data 2001–2014.
Student in pharmacy laboratory. Photo by MoHE.
Female students in all-female computer center class, part of a USAID and State Department program. Photo by U.S. State Department. www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
increase in the total number of university and fouryear higher education students to more than 300,000
38
Chapter 3
Figure 4 Estimated Student Admissions by Type of Institution: 2015
(figure 3). That has opened up additional opportunities for the young people of Afghanistan.
Graduates from secondary school 2014 for 2015 admissions
225,000
The rapid growth in the number of students in primary
Number taking the Kankor (percent of graduates)
180,000
80.0%
Number passing the Kankor (percent of those taking it)
57,600
32.0%
Number admitted to public higher education (percent of passed)
50,000
27.8%
Number graduates admitted to private higher ed. (est.)*
43,333
24.1%
Number Kankor takers admitted to TVET (est.)**
20,250
11.3%
Number Kankor takers admitted to teacher training (est.)
35,000
19.4%
Estimate of graduates going abroad for undergraduate study
2,250
1.0%
Potential yearly intake for community colleges
1,500
0.7%
Total Kankor takers admitted to some higher ed program (est.)
152,333
84.6%
and secondary education is in large part due to the success of Education for All.5 Primary and secondary school enrollments have continued to grow from 3.5 million in 2003 to an estimated nine million in 2014, an increase of 388 percent. That has resulted in a substantial increase in the number of graduates from secondary school from 26,800 in 2003 to an estimated 225,000 in 2014. Of that number approximately 80 percent (180,000 students) will apply to take the Kankor higher education admissions examination. The MoHE will only admit about 50,000 of those students (27.8 percent) to its universities and institutions of education since almost all the institutions are full or oversubscribed in terms of available places. About 43,000 students will be admitted to private higher education institutions. Another 20,250 will be admitted to TVET, and about 35,000 will be
Percent of those graduating from secondary school
67.7%
admitted to teacher training colleges. Approximately
Percent of Kankor takers
84.6%
2,250 others will go to universities abroad at the
Kankor takers not admitted to any higher education institution
27,667
15.4%
Graduates not in any higher education institution
72,667
32.3%
undergraduate level. Overall then, about 84.6 percent of those who took the Kankor examination and 67.8 percent of high school graduates will be admitted to some form of higher education. That leaves a little more than 27,660 Kankor takers, people who had hoped to go on to higher education, without admission to any higher education institution. Some of them will take the Kankor the following year and be successful the second time around. Figure 4 summarizes these statistics. The MoHE has been a strong supporter of Education for All and applauds its successes around the world and in Afghanistan. However, very little thought has been given in Afghanistan, or anywhere else, to the
*Number in 2014 x 33% **Number from 2013 x 25% Source: MoHE and Ministry of Education data.
consequences of its success once the products of the program start graduating from secondary schools in large numbers. The leadership of the MoHE has been worrying about its impact on higher education in Afghanistan for the last five years, requesting funding for more buildings to house the additional graduates, most of whom will want to go on to higher education. However, these requests have not met with much success. www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
Challenges of access to universities and higher education institutions In 2009, the MoHE released the National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 (NHESP: 2010–2014), which envisioned doubling the capacity of higher education to 115,000 by 2015 to meet the growing demand for access to university-level
39
Chapter 3
a few years. The private higher education sector, which is growing rapidly and now has a head count of about 130,000 students, can probably accept an additional 43,000 students per year. Approximately 2,250 students per year study at foreign universities. That means that about 152,000 students will have access to some kind of higher education in 2015.
education as well as employment needs. In fact that
Conservative estimates of enrollment increases over
goal was achieved in 2013, more than a year ahead
the next eight years suggest an average increase in
of schedule. The budget (requested funding) for the
secondary school graduates of about 14 percent a year
strategic plan was $560 million, regarded as modest
until 2022 when the increases begin to decline and fall
by donors and others who reviewed it. About $111
to about 2 percent in 2024. Nonetheless we are talking
million (20 percent) of the requested funding was
about almost 625,000 secondary school graduates
received from donors, and I estimate that another
in 2022, up from 225,000 in 2014. At the current
$124 million came from the MoHE development
admission rate for the Kankor of 25 to 30 percent,
budget6 (about 42 percent of the NHESP: 2010–2014
about 118,500 students would be admitted in 2022,
budget). An additional $225 million was requested
bringing total public higher education enrollment
of and approved by the Kabul Donor Group, but none
to about 407,300 students, almost twice the current
of those funds have been forthcoming to date. If that
number. Will higher education be able to accommodate
funding is received, that would bring the total to 82
that many students without lowering quality? It seems
percent of the request. Forty percent of that request
unlikely unless a major commitment is made now
was for additional infrastructure construction,
to substantially expand the infrastructure and hire
provision of laboratories and equipment, and repair
almost 10,000 additional faculty members to keep
to existing buildings. If those funds materialize, a
the student-faculty ratio near the 25:1 goal, a goal
major step forward for Afghanistan’s higher education
that will be very difficult to achieve. The alternative
infrastructure will have been realized. While this
is significantly increasing class size and lowering
will not fully accommodate the expected demand for
quality, the opposite of what is required for economic
public higher education given the already overcrowded
development in Afghanistan.
facilities, it will be a critical step in meeting major infrastructure needs.
One of the problems faced by planners at the MoHE is the wide variation in predictions of student
Some of the increased demand for higher education
numbers provided by the Ministry of Education. The
can be absorbed by other higher education programs
differences have profound implications for planning.
including those offered by TVET institutions, which
I have been using the most conservative Ministry of
can probably absorb another 20,000 students per
Education numbers here, but between 2012 and 2014
year given the program’s planned expansion. Teacher
the MoHE received three sets of predictions about
education programs can take an additional 35,000
the growth of primary and secondary enrollments
students. The new community colleges starting in 2015
and they were each very different. More recently,
will be able to admit about 1,500 students per year in
officials in the Ministry of Education and USAID www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
40
Chapter 3
have called into question the totals they provided.
another Ministry of Education projection about the
It is clear, for example, that at least some of the
number of students who will graduate from secondary
totals included students who had dropped out. The
school in 2013 was 14 percent higher, and the
MoHE uses the Ministry of Education student data to
ministry’s projection in June 2012 was an average of 42
estimate the long-term demand for higher education,
percent higher than that. If we take the higher figures
which is especially important to budget requests
in which the Ministry of Education projected 347,293
for infrastructure, which take at least three years to
graduates in 2013, we would expect 277,000 students
process.
to take the Kankor in 2014 and of those about 70,000
7
to be admitted. That is a difference of 63 percent over In this context it is difficult for the MoHE to provide
the figures above.
reliable estimates of the potential growth of higher education. As I noted earlier, the Ministry of Education
Regarding long-term projections, the higher June 2012
(MoE) estimates vary considerably as can be seen in
Ministry of Education figures led us to predict that
figure 6. In 2012 the MoHE used the data in what is
there would be 545,325 total students in public higher
called MoE model 1. In 2013 the MoHE received new
education in 2020 whereas the April 2014 figures
data from the MoE and have been using it as model
suggest a projected total of 313,387 students—almost
2. Then in early 2014 we received access to some
half the earlier figure. The MoHE had been using the
MoE internal data (model 3), which I am using in this
higher Ministry of Education data for projections over
piece (figure 5). However, as can be seen in figure 6, the long-term effects of these different predictions are quite significant with the totals for 2025 being nearly twice as high in model 1 as in model 3. That
Figure 5 Growth Model 3 for Higher Education: 2014–2025
presents different challenges for infrastructure planning depending on which model is employed.8
Increase in secondary school graduates, number & percent
Total higher education students
Total admitted (est.)
Model 4 is based on the assumption of a maximum
Year
of 44,000 students admitted per year as suggested
2014
225,000
10%
170,582
55,600
by some donors. Model 5 is based on the assumption
2015
248,562
10%
193,166
56,700
that enrollments are allowed to grow only 10 percent
2016
304,415
22%
212,696
58,164
each year starting in 2015. Each of these models
2017
354,098
16%
233,171
63,014
2018
398,303
12%
256,648
70,111
2019
450,876
13%
282,390
77,072
has major consequences for the infrastructure, faculty
2020
511,390
13%
319,886
93,331
members, and dormitories required as well as other
2021
572,757
12%
361,252
105,858
needs. For example, from the most recent projection
2022
624,305
9%
407,563
118,561
from the Ministry of Education of 210,106 students
2023
655,520
5%
455,281
129,231
graduating at the end of 2013 we can predict that about
2024
668,631
2%
499,887
135,662
168,000 students will take the Kankor in 2014 and of
2025
682,003
2%
538,316
138,407
makes similar assumptions about conditions. The implications of the others are enrollments three to seven times the current total number of students. That
those about 43,000 will be admitted to universities and MoHE institutions of higher education. However,
Source: MoHE and Ministry of Education data; MoHE estimates from 2014. www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
41
Chapter 3
Figure 6 Growth Models Based on Various Ministry of Education Estimates Student estimates by MoHE for higher education using various Ministry of Education (MoE) estimates of graduates Estimated growth
2013
2015
2020
2025
Model 1: MoE (June 18, 2012)
132,643
236,919
545,325
964,300
Model 2: MoE (April 2012)
132,643
164,330
313,387
536,422
Model 3: MoE (May 2014)
132,643
155,504
281,657
477,832
Model 4: Cap growth in 2016 @ 44,000
132,643
155,504
198,644
213,075
Model 5: Cap growth in 2015 @ 10% increase
132,643
158,345
251,914
404,692
Source: MoHE and Ministry of Education data; models developed by the MoHE.
the last few years (model 1). Those projections suggest
last five years, that has meant that about 25 percent
an even greater potential shortage of space in higher
of those who take the Kankor are admitted. However,
education than the more recent figures. The lower
in the last two years, in response to political pressure,
figures are from internal Ministry of Education data
the MoHE has admitted as many as 35 percent of
that the MoHE only just recently received (model 3).
those who took the Kankor. The result has been large
The differences are staggering and the implications for
classes, some with more than 100 students, with most
long-term planning tremendous. I suspect the reason
in classrooms too small for that number. Increased
for the differences in models 1, 2, and 3 relates to the
enrollment has also led the MoHE to open night classes
pressure on the Ministry of Education to show that it
at nine universities. This has increased the teaching
is rapidly increasing the number of students enrolled
burden on many faculty members.
in primary and secondary education in keeping with the goals of Education for All. That has probably led
Until 2012, any increases in the number of students
officials and some schools to inflate their enrollment
admitted to university-level education by the MoHE
reports. We also know that some of the data reported
were based on the number of places available at each
did not reflect the significant drop-out rate, which
institution and the admission examination score
shows up after about the eighth week of school. In
faculty members set as required for a particular
2015, new senior officials at the Ministry of Education
discipline. In recent years, in an attempt to deal with
reported that their predecessors had inflated student
the bulge in secondary school enrollments and growing
number, as noted above (Khan 2015). In any case, the
political pressure to increase access, admissions have
MoHE will have trouble meeting the demand for places
gone beyond that. One effort to accommodate that
even with the lower totals, but a discrepancy of the
pressure has been the introduction of night classes,
magnitude of 63 percent is staggering. It appears that
which now enroll more than 9,000 students. While
the recent data (model 3) was for internal use and is
enrollments were allowed to grow faster than originally
more accurate.
planned, there are limits to possible growth. The expansion has come at some cost as seven universities
Given the shortage of facilities, the MoHE has tried
are on double sessions and one is on triple sessions.
to restrict admissions to the space available. Over the
Current growth has meant that many faculty members www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 3
are teaching in two or three sessions and therefore
teacher training colleges, private higher education
have little time for advising students, for research,
institutions, or universities abroad for a total of almost
or for public service. That has hurt quality at several
85 percent of those taking the Kankor admissions
institutions. This year, it has also meant that many
examination admitted to some higher education
class enrollments are larger than the classrooms, most
institution. This is a big improvement over two years
of which were designed for only 20 to 40 students.
ago when only 65 percent of Kankor takers were
At Kabul University for example there are a number
admitted to some higher education institution. Some
of classes of 100 or more being taught in classrooms
of the 15 percent of Kankor takers who do not get
designed for 40 students—a product of the past when
into a higher education institution will attempt to
universities were seen as places for a small elite taught
gain admission by seeking to go around the normal
in small classes. That is no longer the case, but few new
admissions process by requesting that their Member
classrooms have been built recently, and there are very
of Parliament (MP) or another important person
few large lecture halls on any campus. Laboratories
intervene with the MoHE to have them added to the
too are overcrowded with the average designed for 15
list of admitted students. Each year there are hundreds
or 20 students. In these cases students have to work
of such petitions with candidates brought to the MoHE
two to three (or more) to a lab space, which limits the
by an MP or sent with a letter from a vice president
hands-on experience that is so important to a solid
or other notable seeking to have them admitted
understanding of the material.
despite their lack of qualifications. In a few of these cases it may be possible to demonstrate a compelling
The excessive admissions in the last two years were
reason for an exception, but that is rare. Most of these
not planned in advance but urged on the MoHE by
requests are from students whose scores are well below
Cabinet and through other pressures. This meant that
the minimum for admission. I cite two examples of
there was no planning for the extra students. As one
such cases.
vice chancellor reported to me, “The university had prepared for 1,300 more students this year than last,
The first case was in 2012 on a day set aside for MPs
but the MoHE sent 1,300 extra students besides the
to come to the MoHE without an appointment. On
1,300 expected. This was a big challenge for us because
that occasion, one of the more powerful MPs came
we do not have the facilities to teach those students
to see the deputy minister for academic affairs,
properly. We don’t have the extra classrooms, desks, or
bringing along a young student who he wanted to have
chairs.”9 The vice chancellor called a meeting of deans
admitted. The MP was a very impressive older man
to work out a solution for teaching these students.
with a substantial build dressed in traditional Pashtun
In the meantime the university turned to the local
attire with a very large turban. The deputy minister
mayor for help. He managed to provide 1,000 chairs
knew him and they greeted each other with affection.
and desks and build five wooden classrooms for 100
The MP made the case that this student was from a
students each that will work at least in the short term.
very poor family in an underserved area in the south
Not all institutions are able to draw on this kind of
and argued that he therefore should be admitted to the
local support.
medical school in Kabul, especially since the area he came from was short of doctors. The deputy minister
About half of the students not admitted to the
looked at the papers the student and MP had provided
universities will gain admission to TVET institutions,
and noted that the student’s grades were way below www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 3
the minimum for admission. The deputy minister
for help. The deputy minister greeted the man warmly
asked one of the admissions people to bring in the
and thanked him for his service to the nation. The
admissions list showing all the scores on the Kankor.
man brushed that aside and emphasized in a furious
He then showed the MP that the student’s admissions
voice that he had been a commander in the war against
score was way below what was needed. Nonetheless,
the Russians and had been badly wounded in the
in a very forceful tone of voice the MP pushed for
fighting, losing an eye—which was evident. He noted
admission. At this point the MP’s phone rang and he
that since that time he had not been able to work or
was called away for an urgent meeting. After he left
make much of an income and had struggled to get
the deputy minister patiently explained to the student
his son through school. He agreed that his son had
that his scores were not only too low to get into Kabul
done badly on the entrance examination but argued
Medical University (which requires among the highest
that he should nonetheless be admitted as a reward to
scores), but also too low for any university and thus
the father who had given so much to the country. The
he could not recommend admission. The student
deputy minister again complimented the commander
seemed to understand his explanation. He asked the
on his service to the country and commiserated with
deputy minister if he would write something to that
him about his injury. He then explained the process of
effect on the letter of request. The deputy minister
the examination to the father, noting that it was totally
did so. The student looked at it, thanked the deputy
open and there were no secret deals. He pointed out
minister profusely for the kind letter, and departed.
that the exams were scored separately from identifying
After the student had left, the deputy minister turned
information, with the results printed out when the two
to me laughing and said, “You know, I think this young
parts were matched by machine. He then asked the son
man is illiterate. What I wrote was that under no
what his score had been. It turned out that his score
circumstances should this student be admitted since
was among the lowest of those who took the exam.
his scores are way too low. If he could read, he wouldn’t
The deputy minister then spoke very gently to the son,
have thanked me so profusely.” He went on to say, “I
telling him that he must work hard to improve and
suspect he has gotten through primary and secondary
then he could take the exam again—that he owed that
school the same way—through pressure from high-
to the father. All this took about 15 to 20 minutes but
ranking people—and thus never learned to read.”
father and son left understanding the system, mollified for being heard, and hopeful for success on a second
The second case, in April 2010, involved a man who
try.
came with his son who had done very badly on the admissions examination. The receptionist told us that
There are hundreds of such petitions each year. What
the man was a former commander of the Mujahideen
is unique about the deputy minister is that he takes
known for his successes in defeating the Russians.
the time to understand each request and then explain
He had waited several days for an appointment and
politely to each MP or sponsor and student the reasons
was very, very angry, as we could see when he walked
for his decision. In most cases they leave satisfied. He
in. There was also a policeman in the office with a
will often show them the list of scores and point out
petition, and he was so concerned that he moved to the
that their score is, say, 50 points below the last student
edge of his seat in case the man attacked the deputy
admitted. He might ask, “Which student should we
minister. At the beginning I also feared violence and
cut to admit you?” or “How would we explain your
thought that the deputy minister might have to call
admission to those above you who are not admitted?” www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 3
The usual answer is “You can’t justify that,” and so
and community colleges. Private higher education has
they leave satisfied. They tried, were heard, and now
been growing rapidly too, from no institutions in 2006
understand the logic and fairness of the system. By
to 93 in 2014 with more than 130,000 students. I will
patiently doing this day after day, the word gets out
assume that the freeze on admissions would result in
that even a letter from the president will not get a
a constant 44,000 admissions to MoHE public higher
student admitted—something the president knows too.
education (that is, the universities and institutes of
And the president has told the deputy minister to keep
higher education) per year. The consequences are
up his good work in upholding standards. When he is
shown below in figure 7 the table for model 4 with the
pressured to write such a letter, he knows it will not
freeze starting in 2016.
affect admissions. The immediate effect of the freeze would be a drop in As we have seen, thanks to the success of Education
admissions to public universities and higher education
for All, the number of graduates from secondary
institutes from between 23 and 25 percent of high
school will keep increasing by an average of about 14
school graduates to 14 percent in 2016. Admissions
percent per year, using the most conservative Ministry
would fall further in 2017 with only 12 percent
of Education estimate, until they begin to stabilize in
of graduates getting into public higher education
2023–24 as shown in figure 5. But even in 2023, that
given the growing number of students coming out
would mean admitting about 130,000 students, which,
of secondary school. The percentage of high school
after adjusting for the estimated number of graduates
graduates admitted to public higher education would
that year, would be an increase of more than 40,000
fall to 11 percent in 2018, 7 percent in 2022, and only
students. Under that scenario, more modest increases
6 percent in 2025. The number admitted to MoHE
would continue over the next few years. Those
institutions will still increase, but at a much slower
increases would still require an ongoing institutional
rate than during the period 2011–14. Even if we
expansion, though a more modest one than is needed
assume that non-MoHE institutions and private higher
in 2014–15. In 2021, the number of students would be
education institutions will take up some of the slack,
over 360,000, more than twice the current number of
the percentage of high school graduates getting into
170,000.
some form of higher education would continue to fall until 2024 when the number of high school graduates
Some donors have suggested that a proper solution
begins to level off.
to the access problem is to freeze enrollments at something like the current level of a little more than
Other higher education institutions such as TVET
40,000 students and use the money saved to improve
programs, teacher training colleges, community
quality. Let us assume that some reasonable formula
colleges, private higher education institutions, and
could be worked out to increase per capita spending
foreign institutions would probably pick up some
to at least $800 per student while holding to this
of the losses especially given the recent expansion
enrollment ceiling. What would be the consequences
of private higher education and TVET. Indeed, the
for admissions to higher education for the country as
percentage of total graduates admitted to other higher
a whole, considering as well what sorts of admissions
education institutions would grow to 60 percent by
levels are likely for other sectors of higher education?
2025. However, the number of students not admitted
Several of these sectors are growing, including TVET
to any higher education would grow from 85,000 in www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
45
Chapter 3
2014 to 272,000 in 2022. As shown in figure 7, by
As noted, the major burden of admissions would
2025, while the admissions in public higher education
be increasingly taken up by TVET, teacher training
institutions would fall to about 6 percent of graduates,
colleges, community colleges, and private higher
the admissions in other higher education institutions
education institutions. They would grow from
would grow to 10 times that number. This assumes that
accepting about 37 percent of high school graduates
private higher education could sustain that growth—
in 2014 to 60 percent in 2025. That growth may be
growth that is funded by tuition from students and
appropriate. Yet, as the number of those not admitted
their families. My own guess is that this would be
to any higher education grows—and it will be over
difficult. More importantly, I do not think the public
200,000 by 2020, about half of whom will have taken
would stand for that kind of major limitation on the
the Kankor—there will be growing pressure on the
growth of public higher education. Thus, I think the
MoHE to increase admissions to public universities
“capping enrollment” argument is a non-starter in
and higher education institutions. A critical question
the long run, and probably also in the short run, as a
is whether the proposed cap could be used to bring
solution to funding and infrastructure problems.
the quality of public universities and higher education institutions up to the level needed, or would these
Figure 7 Estimated Growth of Students from 2014–2025 with Admission Capped at 44,000 in 2016 Secondary school graduates
%
Percent admitted to other higher ed
Percent secondary graduates admitted to some higher ed
Total students other higher ed
48,524
30%
47%
69,875
147,211
84,753
Total students MoHE higher ed institution
Total admitted to MoHE institution
Percent admitted to MoHE institution
Admitted to some other higher ed institution*
77,336
27,000
17%
Total higher ed students
Students not admitted to any higher ed institution
Year
number
2011
160,277
2014
225,000
10%
170,582
55,600
25%
83,850
37%
62%
200,625
371,207
85,550
2015
248,562
10%
193,166
56,700
23%
102,333
41%
64%
240,750
433,916
89,529
2016
304,415
22%
198,532
44,000
14%
122,800
40%
55%
288,900
487,432
137,615
2017
354,098
16%
202,826
44,000
12%
147,360
42%
54%
346,680
549,506
162,738
2018
398,303
12%
206,261
44,000
11%
176,831
44%
55%
416,016
622,277
177,472
2019
450,876
13%
209,009
44,000
10%
212,198
47%
57%
457,618
666,626
194,678
2020
511,390
13%
211,207
44,000
9%
254,637
50%
58%
503,379
714,586
212,753
2021
572,757
12%
212,966
44,000
8%
280,101
49%
57%
553,717
766,683
248,656
2022
624,305
9%
214,372
44,000
7%
308,111
49%
56%
609,089
823,461
272,194
2023
655,520
5%
215,498
44,000
7%
338,922
52%
58%
669,998
885,496
272,598
2024
668,631
2%
216,398
44,000
7%
372,814
56%
62%
736,998
953,396
251,816
2025
682,003
2%
217,119
44,000
6%
410,096
60%
67%
810,697
1,027,816
227,907
*Includes TVET, TTC, community colleges, private higher education, and universities abroad. Assumptions: Enrollments in 2014 actual; 2015 calculated @ 80% of graduates with 23% acceptance rate; from 2016 capped at 44,000. Starting in 2015 admissions to other higher education grow at 20 percent, then starting in 2020 grow at 10 percent. The number of students who graduate each year is estimated at 20 percent of enrollments. Source: MoHE and Ministry of Education data. www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 3
institutions continue to be underfunded and unable to
community college, and a number of other areas in
achieve the necessary quality.
which training is available. Many students will be happier and do better if they focus on non-university
What people will focus on is the large number of those
training, whether it is in technical work, agriculture,
who do not get into any form of higher education
business employment, the life of an artist, or any
along with the increasing burden of tuition for those
of a wide range of other occupations for which they
going to private higher education institutions. As
have the talent. For some, the best training will be in
noted, the number of those not getting into any higher
technical and vocational education through TVET.
education will grow from about 85,000 in 2014 to
Others will be superb teachers and should go into
almost 228,000 by 2025, about one-third of the
teacher training.
high school graduates that year. While some of these graduates will find jobs, most will have difficulty.
Afghanistan needs to attract some of its best and
That number of students failing to gain entrance into
brightest students to teaching and not relegate it
any higher education institution will probably not be
to the lowest level of prestige by sending the worst
politically acceptable even if the 44,000 maximum
performers in secondary school to become teachers as
admissions level for public higher education is seen to
is now the case. That is part of the problem confronting
be effective in increasing higher education quality to
the quality of primary and secondary education today.
required levels. Those who are unemployed who sought
Some students will find their niche at community
admission to higher education but failed to be admitted
colleges, training to become IT specialists, medical
are certain to demonstrate, as they have in the past.
technicians, or other professionals. Most students
My fear is that the results may cause the kinds of chaos
are not told that there are a wide range of non-
we saw in North Africa during the Arab Spring.10 Thus
university options available to them that are exciting
my view is that this kind of enrollment ceiling is not a
and attractive and provide a good living. Thus it is
viable option. In a previous section I discussed what we
important to devise better methods to help secondary
know about what happens to those students who are
students understand the wealth of options available to
not able to go on to higher education and cannot find
them so they can make wise and appropriate choices.
jobs. It is not a pretty picture.
And, some students who want to go to university just do not have the talent to succeed—part of the logic for
The access problems leave the MoHE and the country
admissions examinations.
as a whole faced with a number of pressures and realities that are not easy to resolve. On the one hand,
There is already a shortage in Afghanistan of people
most students who go to secondary school see the
trained for middle-level professional and technical
university as the next logical step in their education.
jobs—jobs that are mostly filled at the present time by
They are also led to believe that getting a university
foreigners from Pakistan, India, Turkey, Philippines,
education is the sensible thing to expect, having been
and elsewhere while thousands of Afghans are
told that by their teachers over the years. The reality
unemployed. Foreign workers are working in finance
is that not all secondary school graduates belong in
departments, as medical and science technicians,
a university. As I have noted, there are other non-
in businesses, and in other professional areas. This
university higher education programs including
is because Afghanistan does not offer appropriate
technical and vocational education, teacher education,
training in these fields. These foreign workers did www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
47
Chapter 3
get the appropriate training for these positions in
quality thus making employment potentially more
their homeland at the equivalent of community
difficult for their graduates. The MoHE is working to
colleges and technical and vocational centers. They
improve the quality and relevance of public university
come to Afghanistan because they meet the job
training to ensure that its graduates meet the
requirements and know they will earn a good living.
employment needs of business, industry, government,
It is important to encourage young people to think
and the private sector. As the security situation
about these occupational possibilities and the training
improves and foreign investment increases, there will
they will need for them. Both the salaries and the
be a greater need for well-trained graduates, especially
opportunities in these areas are very good. Thus, a
in the science, technology, business, and health sectors.
major information campaign needs to be prepared to
However, there is a limit to how many graduates will
help secondary school students become aware of job
be needed and how many can be trained at the level
opportunities, areas in which there are major employer
of quality required. The needs of current and future
needs, and new fields that will require new kinds of
employers should be explored further through new
well-trained specialists. Students and their teachers
needs and employment surveys and the results used
should also think about the possibility of starting a
to help plan for more training in those areas that
business rather than expecting a government job.
need to be expanded as well as to identify new areas
One secondary school in Kabul has begun to advise
of need. Similarly, community colleges are already
secondary students not only about university options
being established in areas where we know there is a
but also about all the educational options beyond
demonstrated need for people with associate’s degrees
universities, and that has met with great success.
and the in-service training they receive as part of
Such career advising will help limit the pressure on
their program of study. The MoHE is working closely
universities and lead to more appropriate training for
with the Ministry of Labor to ensure that appropriate
many graduates of secondary schools—training that
data are gathered on labor and employer needs. Those
will help them become appropriately employed. This
data will be used by the MoHE and higher education
will also more clearly meet the needs of employers and,
institutions to be sure that university training
in most cases, be more in tune with students’ interests,
responds to employer needs and the rapidly changing
skills, and long-term well-being. With such training
job markets in the contemporary world.
Afghans can fill the well-paid jobs now being taken by foreigners.
Secondary education should also focus more clearly on preparing students for the workforce with more
A second challenge relates to the number of university
writing practice, better language skills acquisition
graduates who can be absorbed by employers in
(including in Dari and Pashtu), improved math and
Afghanistan. While the need for university-trained
science training, an understanding of what students
graduates is substantial, it is not unlimited. Expanding
might do for themselves as entrepreneurs, and better
university enrollments by too large a number will
guidance counseling. Students should not just look to
result in unemployed university graduates as has
government for jobs, but also to business, industry,
happened in Egypt and many other countries—and
agriculture, and commerce as well as their own
that is a disaster worth avoiding. The problem is
initiative and creativity for employment they will enjoy
complicated by the rapid expansion of private higher
that will also meet national needs and foster national
education institutions, many of which are of low
development. www.scup.org
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Chapter 3
It is also critical to build a new sense of commitment to
content that is seen to be “contrary to the principles
national development in Afghanistan among students
of Islam or offensive to other religions and sects”
at every level, the kind that existed beginning in 2001.
(Freedom House 2014, ¶ 2).
Much of that energy, romanticism, hope, and national consciousness has been lost during the last decade. It
Freedom was reflected in Afghan society in general
can be rebuilt. With that must come an improvement in
through the expansion of the media and press from
the quality of education at every level and a willingness
one government-owned television station during the
in the donor community to make serious investments,
Taliban period to 65 local and national TV stations
including in university-level education, which has
in 2014. There were also 174 radio stations, 200 news
been sorely neglected in the past by government and
outlets, and 12 news agencies in 2013 (Freedom House
most donors. That must be reversed if Afghanistan is
2014). To hear alternative views under the Taliban,
to move forward. Both donors and government must
the only options were foreign broadcasts such as
emphasize that 2016 is not the end of the world, that
those from the BBC and Voice of America. However,
donors will be here then and long thereafter, that
they posed risks if you were caught listening to them.
commitments remain intact, and that higher education
Now there is a wide diversity of options ranged across
is now a high priority. Otherwise, the efforts to date in
the political spectrum from extreme conservatism
higher education and the contributions of those who
to libertarianism, and there is little attempt at
gave their lives for a better Afghanistan will have been
censorship or suppression of opinions of any type.
wasted. That need not happen.
Government continues to own a few of the media but most are privately owned and reflect different
Academic and Other Freedoms Academic freedom was an integral part of values of higher education in Afghanistan from its beginning in 1946. That freedom was shattered following the communist coup in 1978 and the Russian invasion in 1979, as noted in Chapter 2. During this period free speech was curtailed and faculty members were increasingly intimidated. Their activities were monitored, some were removed from their positions, and some were even arrested. This began an exodus of faculty, one that continued through the Taliban period when religion and ideology increasingly defined success in higher education. Those with contrary views either kept quiet or were silenced in other ways. Thus there was great relief with the coming of the new order in December 2001 and its promise of democracy and freedom. Article 34 of the Constitution promises freedom of the press and expression, limiting only
political views with some partisan and others more interested in entertainment. A few are supported by foreign countries such as the United States, Iran, and Pakistan. Some depend on such support to survive but others such as Tolo TV are successful commercial ventures broadcasting a variety of popular programs including talent shows, news, football matches, English lessons, political discussions, and music. Most TV stations also have programs for women (Khan 2012). Many publications do not hesitate to criticize the government, point to instances of corruption, or spotlight military disasters by Afghan or foreign forces. Nonetheless, the press is constantly watched and sometimes threatened by warlords, conservative religious groups, and the Taliban. As one publication noted, “With all the accomplishments Afghan media has had in [the] past ten years, it faces some daunting challenges. Plentiful obstacles still deter the continuous flow of communication to the public and therefore [make] freedom of speech vulnerable. Since www.scup.org
Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward
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Chapter 3
there is still a vicious war going on in Afghanistan, the
the discussions on most issues could have taken place
extreme challenge Afghan journalists face is how to
at any university in the United States, Great Britain, or
survive in a society full of thrones and traps” (Khan
France.
2012, ¶ 5). Academic freedom became a given starting early Freedom House rated Afghanistan low in terms of
in 2002. To be sure, people were cautious at the
freedom of the press, giving it a score of 66 in 2014,
beginning, especially in the more conservative rural
with 100 being the lowest. However, that was an
areas. A certain level of self-censorship continued
improvement over its score of 74 in 2012 (Freedom
on some campuses even in 2014. But there was no
House 2012). Part of the low rating was due to the war,
evidence of it in discussions at the MoHE or in its
which has made Afghanistan an especially dangerous
commissions or indeed during meetings of chancellors,
place for journalists. The Afghanistan Journalists
vice chancellors, deans, and other senior leaders
Center reported 84 attacks against journalists in 2013
other than that one outburst in 2009 during my whole
(Freedom House 2014).
tenure at the MoHE. This does not apply to decisions about individual capabilities or institutions meeting
Since 2001, the campus environment has been one
standards. These were not free speech issues but
of increasing academic freedom following more than
decisions about performance.
two decades of restrictions under communist rule and then under the Taliban, as noted earlier. People
Looking back on more than five years of such
generally feel free to say what they want on campus
discussions, I realize now how important that was.
with occasional interference based on religious beliefs.
It was in stark contrast to my early work on higher
There has been little interference with discussion
education in South Africa during the last years of
of higher education policy except in cases of gender,
apartheid. At that time, one had to be very careful
religion, or evaluation of credentials. In my 10 years
about what was said in the presence of government
of working with the MoHE, I never experienced or
officials and supporters of apartheid. My phone was
heard of any interference or intimidation in policy
tapped, which I suspected and later learned to be
discussions. There were no government, party,
true, and thus I and others were very careful about
religious, or other “informers” around. No one feared to
what we said, even when talking about plans for
say what they thought about policy proposals, and the
higher education. I later learned a dossier was kept
one attempt to stop such discussions by a conservative
on me during that period.11 Similarly, when I was
chancellor in a 2009 meeting of chancellors was totally
working on higher education in Pakistan some years
ignored by all those present. The same has been true
later, one had to be careful not to discuss anything
of social gatherings and other discussions when policy
related to politics and education on some university
issues come up. Harsh criticism of officials, both in
campuses. There were never such concerns during
higher education and government, can be heard on a
my work in Afghanistan. There was no need to have
regular basis. Most issues are thoroughly discussed,
some discussions outside the normal forums, no sense
and the debate occasionally becomes heated. I never
of fear when criticizing the government, no concern
had the sense that anyone was holding back in such
about talking on the telephone. That allowed a full
discussions because of fear of censorship, punishment,
discussion of issues, including sensitive ones, to be
or other personal concerns beyond politeness. Indeed,
carried out in the proper forums and publically when www.scup.org
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Chapter 3
appropriate. That is not to say there were not issues
capable leaders to begin a two-way discussion of
that were confidential, but that was never used to avoid
ways to do that—policies that would open up higher
discussion because of fear of authorities, police, or
education, thus expanding capabilities while at the
government.
same time enhancing individual freedoms through the expansion of higher education opportunities that
The importance of freedom in development has been
would help create economic and social opportunities
especially well stated by Amartya Sen. He writes
for increasing numbers of individuals. That could
in Development as Freedom that the “freedoms
not have happened without the freedoms that began
of individuals” are the basic building blocks of
to grow in the post-Taliban period and continue to
development. He goes on to say that “attention is thus
expand to this day. Thus the critical role of academic
paid particularly to the expansion of the ‘capabilities’ of
and other freedoms to the progress that has been made
persons to lead the kind of lives they value—and have
to date is clear.
reason to value. These capabilities can be enhanced by public policy, but also, on the other side, the direction of public policy can be influenced by the effective use of participatory capabilities by the public” (Sen 1999, p. 18). This two-way relationship is essential. Sen views development as a process of “expansion of substantive freedoms that connect with one another” (Sen 1999, p. 8). He suggests that
The Role of Private Higher Education Public higher education institutions were the only legal mechanism for providing university-level education in Afghanistan until relatively recently. Private higher education for Afghans was illegal despite several requests by providers to establish such institutions.
Freedoms are not only the primary ends of
In 2003, at the request of the World Bank, the AED
development, they are among its principal means.
was asked to send a team to assess whether private
. . . Political freedoms (in the form of free speech
higher education was feasible in Afghanistan. I was
and elections) help to promote economic security.
recruited to lead that team, which included several
Social opportunities (in the form of education and
other specialists in education.12 The team was to assess
health facilities) facilitate economic participation.
the demand for tertiary education and the supply of
Economic facilities (in the form of opportunities
higher education in 2003 and determine if there was a
for participation in trade and production) can
role for the private sector in the overall tertiary sector
help to generate personal abundance as well as
and the willingness to and ability of students and
public resources for social facilities. (Sen 1999,
parents to pay for private higher education (Hayward
pp. 10–11)
and Amiryar 2003). “Private higher education” was defined broadly as “any non-government provision
This is what happened with higher education in
of education” and “private support” as “any non-
Afghanistan. The expansion of individual freedoms in
government funding—including student fees or tuition”
the post-Taliban period fostered a rethinking of higher
(Hayward and Amiryar 2003, p. 3). Thus private
education and the values it reflects. It allowed for an
involvement in tertiary education could range along a
expanding discussion of new policies that reflected
broad continuum from a fully-funded private higher
a desire to improve human capabilities and expand
education institution funded privately to individual
social opportunities. This then allowed thoughtful,
payment for part of the cost of higher education.
www.scup.org
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Chapter 3
The study concluded that public higher education in
by public tertiary education institutions alone” and
Afghanistan needed to be supplemented by private
adds that “the MoHE will encourage the development
higher education since public higher education alone
of quality private education—especially non-profit
could not meet the need or demand. The report
institutions” (MoHE 2009a, p. 21). Despite the fact
recommended that the MoHE develop a detailed legal
that the World Bank/AED report recommended that
framework for private higher education. Then, under
non-profit institutions be encouraged, only two of
the careful oversight of the MoHE and in the context
these institutions are non-profit: AUAF and Cheragh
of that framework, private higher education should be
Medical University and Hospital. The rapid increase in
encouraged (Hayward and Amiryar 2003).
the number of private higher education institutions in the last few years has made it difficult to ensure their
Legislation was approved in 2006 that allowed for the
quality. In 2013, 17 percent of the students in private
creation of private higher education. The first private
higher education institutions were women, while in
higher education institution established was the
public higher education that number was 19 percent.
American University of Afghanistan (AUAF) in 2006, followed soon thereafter by the Kardan Institute of
During the first few years of private higher education,
Higher Education and several others. By August 2013
growth was slow and carefully regulated. By
there were 63 private higher education institutions
2008 there were only 15 private higher education
officially (and several others unregistered); by May
institutions, but by 2010 the number had grown to
2014 there were more than 90 private higher education
35. Nineteen more were established in 2011 during a
institutions with over 124,000 students (figure 8). A
period when the then minster was encouraging private
little more than half the institutions were in the Kabul
higher education and granted “permission to open” to
area, with five in Balkh, six in Herat, six in Nangarhar,
many institutions without having them screened by
two in Kandahar, and individual institutions in
the MoHE committee established to do so. More than
Baghlan, Kunduz, Jawzjan, Takhar, and Samangan.
40 private higher education institutions were approved between 2010 and 2013—a level of growth that called
The MoHE regards private higher education as a vital
into question the legitimacy of the approval process.
part of its plans to expand access to higher education.
By 2014 there were more than 90 private institutions.
Indeed, the NHESP: 2010–2014 states that the
In 2015 that number had grown to 125. It soon became
“access needs of Afghanistan cannot be met solely Figure 8 Private Higher Education Institutes: 2006–2014 Year Item
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
Private Higher Ed Institutes
2
7
12
21
34
50
66
72
91
Faculties
9
29
45
82
120
156
222
229
269
13
47
86
148
211
244
368
375
383
288
920
2,316
7,046
20,512
35,325
64,459
90,110
122,395
15
38
116
299
1,149
1,714
2,267
2,643
2,643
Departments Students Faculty members Source: MoHE data.
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clear that the primary motivation for some proprietors
institutions, ranging from a low of 1 to a high of 4 with
was financial gain rather than education.
only three of those numbers actually being used.
Almost all the students who go to private higher
At the request of the president and Minister of Higher
education institutions had hoped to attend public
Education Obaid, the deputy minister and I worked
institutions, which have no tuition. They had expected
to facilitate a new review process with support from
to obtain high enough scores on the Kankor to be
HEP. As Minister Obaid stated, the current situation
admitted to a public institution. However, as noted
represented a terrible abuse of higher education and
earlier, on average only 25 percent of students who
risked making a mockery of private higher education in
take the Kankor are admitted. That leaves a large
general. That needed to be prevented. This new review
number turning to private higher education. A few
effort was important to protect academic quality and
private institutions such as AUAF are the first choice of
try to get private education back on track and moving
students because of their high quality. Indeed almost
toward overall quality improvement. It was envisioned
all AUAF students took the Kankor examination
that the review would take one to two months using
though it was not needed for admission. For most
faculty members and staff as assessors working after
students, however, private higher education is a
normal working hours. However, funding was not
fallback both because of its cost and the perception
released until early December, making it unlikely that
that public institutions are higher quality. The fees for
all 90 reviews could be completed before the funding
private institutions range from several hundred dollars
deadline of January 15, 2013, or winter weather made
for one course to $5,000 per year for AUAF and one or
some visits impossible. In the end, all the private
two others.
institutions except those in two rural provinces were reviewed by that time. The others were reviewed in the
The rapid expansion of private higher education
spring when new funding became available.
has worried many in the MoHE, especially since a number of these institutions were turned down for
The reviews were carried out by teams of professionals
“permission to open” by the committee set up to review
selected by the deputy minister in consultation with his
them—in one case, an institution was rejected three
staff. The project was overseen by a steering committee
different times. President Karzai was convinced that
appointed by the deputy minister. I prepared a draft
some of the private institutions were fraudulent or
protocol for the process and several sample worksheets
far below minimal standards. In 2012 by presidential
that could be used. This material was reviewed and
decree he ordered a review and ranking of all private
edited somewhat by the review steering committee.
higher education institutions by the MoHE. A review
In addition to checking the quality of each institution,
was carried out by the Directorate of Private Higher
the president asked that the institutions be ranked
Education. However, the Office of the President
based on the review. The review was also intended
decided that this review was unreliable because the
to identify improvements that needed to be made in
methods employed were woefully inadequate, partly
those institutions that fell below what was regarded as
because the reviewers were not qualified (and included
minimum standards, with necessary improvements
no faculty members), the results defied common sense,
spelled out in each area in which the institution was
and the range of scores was too narrow to differentiate
deficient. In egregious cases, the institutions were to be closed and arrangements made for the students www.scup.org
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Chapter 3
to transfer to another institution if they wished. The
or merged. The report was released in 2015 after the
goal, however, was not to close institutions, except in
minister was removed.
extreme cases, but to get institutions with deficiencies to improve quality to the point that they met minimum
The decision to undertake this review—and its
standards.
implementation—was a critical step in preventing further deterioration in both the public and
Although the reviewers had a training session,
professional assessment of private higher education. It
given the deadline the training was rushed. It soon
has made it clear that the MoHE will enforce minimal
became apparent that the reviewers were not clear
standards and not hesitate to close institutions that do
about how to assess the institutions once they got to
not meet them.
the field. In keeping with Afghan traditions against saying anything derogatory about colleagues or other
President Karzai’s action was important because
institutions, the reviewers ranked everything as high
private higher education had become so politicized,
quality. The MoHE quickly halted the visits by the
with some institutions linked to people of questionable
reviewers and carried out additional training with
ethical standards, that inaction would have made it
clearer guidelines for the rankings. A ladder model
almost impossible to stem the downward trend in
was used with examples of what level of quality each
the quality of private higher education in the future.
rung on the ladder indicated. When the reviewers
The ministry desperately needed to close the door
saw the simple ladder diagram, such as is commonly
on an already burgeoning private sector that was
used in surveys about well-being, showing what the
out of control for lack of any reasonable restraint on
different scores should indicate, they understood
institutional approval or enforcement of minimal
the complexity involved. Once that was clear the
quality standards. There are already additional
process continued without any major problems. This
proposals being prepared to establish new private
was but another demonstration of the importance of
institutions. Some of them are designed either for
careful consultations, clear directions, and ongoing
political purposes or to make money, with little or
monitoring of such processes. When the review was
no concern about quality or educating students for
completed, the results from the evaluation of 256
jobs. Completion of the review and release of the
faculties showed that 11 were ranked very poor and
results will help get private higher education overall
the institutions should be closed, 19 were ranked
back on a proper footing and ensure that both public
poor and should be given one semester to improve or
and private higher education institutions are making
be closed, 209 were satisfactory, 117 were good, and
high-quality contributions to the preparation and
none achieved a ranking of very good. However, the
training of Afghan students. In early 2015, acting at the
minister at the time refused to release the results
request of Acting Minister of Higher Education Babury,
and delayed the process. He asked that the bottom
President Ghani removed the head of the Private
group be reexamined. That resulted in the decision to
Higher Education Directorate, called a halt to the
close only one institution. The review committee then
approval of new private higher education institutions,
decided that the 11 institutions ranked very poor and
and selected a new experienced director for private
the 19 ranked poor would be given a set period during
higher education. This, coupled with the release of the
which they needed to meet quality targets or be closed
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Chapter 4
Chapter 4: Leadership Challenges in Higher Education The country was destroyed by people who were
Characteristics and Challenges
experts in destruction. It will take experts of even greater ability to rebuild it.1
The pages that follow describe many of the characteristics of the Afghan leadership environment
Early during my first visit to Afghanistan in 2003,
and the challenges faced in developing strong, effective
my colleagues and I had a meeting with Hilalluddin
leadership in Afghan higher education.
Hilal, deputy minister for security and police. We were talking about the challenges facing Afghanistan. In the course of that discussion he paused and then looked at us thoughtfully saying, “The country was destroyed by people who were experts in destruction. It will take experts of even greater ability to rebuild it.” Those comments have stayed with me over the last 11 years as I worked in higher education with people who sought to rebuild and improve it. As you will see in the pages that follow, higher education did find those experts “of even greater ability,” and they combined that ability with amazing vision, commitment, drive, and energy. In writing this piece I wasn’t looking for such experts, and if I had been, I would probably have expected to find them in politics, not higher education. Indeed, some of the leaders in higher education did seem to be experts in destruction in their own drive for personal gain or power. Others just did their jobs; nothing more. But what was striking as I began to explore the individual changes that had produced the higher education transformation in Afghanistan was the discovery of the contributions of a number of remarkable leaders at various levels whose expertise and skills turned out to be critical, in their collective ways, to the fundamental changes that took place.
Centralization The Afghan tradition of highly centralized leadership has presented a major challenge in developing effective leadership in higher education. It has produced a hierarchical system in which most decisions are made at the top and little authority is decentralized to lower levels in the ministry, the universities, or the institutes of higher education. In a sense, below the senior administrative level one can talk about a “bureaucracy without authority.” We will come back to that topic. Centralization was also a trap for leaders. It gave some delusions of grandeur—a sense that they had more power than they really did. Others were overwhelmed by the constant demand for signatures, the need to speak to almost every visitor, and the long lines in waiting rooms and hallways. Unless one learned how to manage the demands, how to distinguish the urgent from the unimportant and the necessary from the waste of time, they could be fatal, leaving a trail of undone tasks; unhappy students, parents, colleagues, and staff; and an exhausted leader. My work in Afghanistan and several other developing countries suggests that it is much more important to have good leadership in the developing world than in www.scup.org
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Chapter 4
the developed. In the latter case, it is possible to find
not only had the doubters changed their minds, but
ways to work around an ineffective leader because
they were now among the staunchest supporters of the
almost everyone knows what they should be doing.
process—in fact, the most opposed became the chief
That is not the case in most of the developing world. A
backer.
leadership vacuum can set back the system for years. Furthermore, in a hierarchical system where all major
Understanding Afghan culture
decisions are expected to be made at the top, people are afraid to take the initiative even when they know what
Looking at leadership in Afghan higher education
should be done because the power at the top is often
overall, it is clear that the most effective leaders are
capricious and vindictive. Subordinates have seen what
those who have a clear understanding of the cultures
happens to those who anger the leadership and so pass
of Afghanistan and know how to work within them.
decisions up to the top. This slows down the normal
Leaders such as Minister Fayez, Minister Dadfar,
work of an institution and is especially disruptive
Deputy Minister Babury, and Chancellor Amin
when major changes are sought. Even under effective
were especially respectful of traditional values and
leaders, a hierarchical system creates inefficiencies
niceties—they greeted everyone, listened to their
and bottlenecks that often result in failures because
problems, laughed at their stories, asked about
key decisions are delayed, deadlines are missed, errors
their children (often by name), and attended their
occur due to a lack of information or an overworked
celebrations and their family funerals. The bonds of
executive, or no decision is made at all.
loyalty built up over the years were strong and helped make the case for the changes they sought to put in
Shared values
place. Understanding and respecting Afghan cultures helped avoid conflict between traditions and the
Leadership is most effective when there are shared
changes desired. It was amazing how many Afghans
values (Posner, Kouzes, and Schmidt 1985). Part of
seemed to miss this important part of leadership and
the success of several of the ministers and deputy
paid a high price for it—sometimes being mocked as
ministers in Afghanistan has been due to their
outsiders.
effectiveness in building consensus and shared values. They create a kind of “corporate culture” that fosters
Knowing how to listen
movement in the direction of new goals, goals that are understood and shared. They create a sense of
The most successful leaders at the national and
the “common good” in the work of the institution
institutional levels were those who knew how to listen.
or ministry. The work on quality assurance and
That means more than stopping to pay attention to
accreditation is an excellent example of this. The initial
different views—it includes actually hearing and paying
reaction to the proposal for accreditation was “this is
attention to other views in ways that the speaker
not Afghan” and “it won’t be acceptable here.” Yet the
recognizes and the leader responds to. That response
discussions went forward, differences were worked out,
might be accepting the suggestion, partly adjusting
and work continued with a sense of common purpose
his or her position in response to it, or spelling out
over the next six months by the bright, thoughtful
the reasons for rejecting it. Not many leaders, in my
faculty and administrative leaders brought together
experience, have that talent. This became clear to me
to consider accreditation. By the end of that period,
during my first months in the ministry. It amazed
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Chapter 4
me how many discussions, led by some member of
one resigned because of fear, though in several cases
a commission, a consultant, an administrator, or
the threats were very real, including death threats. In
a university chancellor, quickly degenerated into
at least one case, family members were also threatened,
monologues. Other views were seldom sought or if they
and it was deemed necessary to move the children to a
were acknowledged, seldom taken seriously or acted
safer school. To these leaders’ credit, in only one case
upon. Little serious discussion or collective action
that I am aware of was a threat successful in affecting
resulted during these gatherings. Often eyes rolled.
a decision, and that was disguised by a majority vote by intimidated officials. This was a unique case that
Asking questions
caused great consternation. That is the only incident of that kind during the five years I worked in the
Related to listening is the willingness to ask questions,
ministry. Overall, in higher education people did not
to ask for a fuller explanation; for example, “What
give in to threats when they occurred. Partly that
do you think about that issue?” And then pay careful
was a tribute to the trust built up among leaders and
attention to the comments or suggestions, and when a
participants in the process. Partly it was the strength
good solution is suggested, agree and move forward.
of the commitment to what was being done. And when
Several of the members of the committees and
people were threatened, and there were quite a few,
commissions were old hands in the MoHE, and they
they talked to these leaders who then took appropriate
had a great deal of experience to draw on—experience
action in ways that solidified that trust.
they were sometimes unwilling to share when faced with dominant leaders who didn’t listen. When they
Dealing with corruption
were heard, they usually had useful suggestions, often reminding people of existing rules or regulations that
In an environment in which corruption was rife, it was
needed to be taken into consideration or incorporated
possible nonetheless for a handful of people to end
to ensure success.
the corruption in the Kankor admissions examination process because they had reputations as honest
Instilling trust
leaders committed to working for the common good, the energy to undertake the task, and the authority to
A key characteristic of successful leaders in
make badly needed changes. That was how Minister
Afghanistan was the ability to instill trust and loyalty.
Dadfar and Deputy Minister Babury managed to clean
Several of the leaders, including Minister Fayez,
up corruption in the admissions process. And once
Minister Dadfar, and Deputy Minister Babury, as well
these efforts succeeded the leadership continued to
as several members of the commissions had that skill
work hard to ensure that corruption did not reappear.
and it paid off handsomely. Others did not, and that
That required regular attention to the process—
was soon clear to everyone. For some, it was their
travelling to examination sites, talking to invigilators,
failure to keep promises in the past. For others it was
watching students take the examination, and, if people
lack of principles or their unwillingness to stand up
were caught cheating, making sure proper procedures
to bullying or threats. There were a few people others
were followed to remove and punish those responsible.
trusted completely—even with their lives. And in
In the financial area it required careful ongoing
several cases that trust was needed when members of
oversight and regular review of expenditures. When
commissions or administrators were threatened. No
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Chapter 4
the corruption reappeared, and once again those same
move on to try another. As I look back at the leaders at
leaders were called back to help restore trust and order.
the MoHE and in the universities during this period, it is clear that most of them worked to be successful.
One characteristic of weak leadership is that it spawns
For some the prize was power, authority, deference, or
more weak leadership in the people around it. As
obedience, while for others it was more communal—
Bennis (2007, p. 3) notes, Lipman-Blumen reminds
seeking broad systemwide benefits for society,
us in The Allure of Toxic Leaders (Oxford University
students, faculty members, and the public. The latter
Press, 2006) that “most of the time we choose our bad
focus had a lot to do with the success of many of the
leaders, they do not kidnap us.” And it was almost eerie
leaders in the long run.
how again and again these weak leaders would bring onboard other weak people who detracted from and
Former Minister Fayez, talking about his first day in
often derailed the work of a team. This was particularly
the ministry in 2002, reported that he found it and the
true of one of the MoHE directors, who himself was
staff in total disarray. There was no water or electricity
seldom present at meetings, but who seemed to
in the building, parts of it were damaged, none of the
manage to send in his place people who continually
bathrooms worked, people were wandering around,
disrupted the discussion and hindered progress.
and no one seemed to know what to do.2 The first step was to get the system running effectively again, and
Principled adaptability
that required regaining control of the directorates and the institutions. Some of the universities had
The most important quality of successful leaders
been taken over by warlords or politicians, and
in Afghanistan is what some authors have called
others were closed. Part of this effort involved having
“principled adaptability”—the ability to adjust to
elections, overseen by the MoHE, for chancellors at
changing circumstances while still maintaining one’s
some universities. The plan was to bring the higher
moral compass. In the war conditions of Afghanistan,
education institutions back under central control and
with the constantly changing environment, limited
then decentralize (Fayez 2012). The elections ushered
resources, growing frustration with the failures of
in new leadership at those institutions—leadership that
government, and lack of promised financial support,
had legitimacy and was open to new ideas. The process
leaders needed to be adaptable and flexible within
worked because of the esteem in which the minister
limited ethical parameters. Bennis (2007) suggests
was held. In the months that followed, Minister Fayez
that adaptive capacity or resilience is the most
made a start on a strategic action plan, building on
important quality of leadership, and I agree. The
work he had started in Washington, DC, early in
success in bringing some level of transformation to
his administration.3 The MoHE focused on making
higher education in Afghanistan was a tribute to the
the most urgently needed repairs to institutional
adaptability and flexibility of the leaders and their
infrastructures, worked on a new higher education
commitment to integrity. As Bennis (2007, p. 5) notes,
law, and prepared a decentralization plan. That work
“They create a sense of mission, they motivate others
was interrupted when a new minister was appointed
to join them on that mission, they create an adaptive
in December 2004, driven by President Karzai’s
social architecture for their followers, they generate
efforts to have ministers with large followings that he
trust and optimism, they develop other leaders, and
hoped would help him in the forthcoming presidential
they get results.” If one strategy doesn’t work, they
elections. Minister Fayez had been in the United States www.scup.org
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Projecting a vision
could call on. Another important trait of successful leaders is the With the new minister, the MoHE seemed to drift for a
ability to have and project a vision for the future.
time. To some extent this was due to weak leadership;
Prof. M. O. Babury was appointed deputy minister for
it was also due in part to public suspicion of growing
academic affairs in April 2007. He exemplifies what
corruption in the Kankor admissions process and in
can be done with a clear vision for change. He arrived
the Office of the Deputy Minister for Academic Affairs.
at the MoHE with a vision for higher education that
The main interest of that deputy minister seemed to be
focused on improving quality. He started by working
opportunities to travel with little being done for higher
to establish a foundation of rules and procedures for
education institutions.
governance, recruitment, promotions, students, and faculty. Next he focused on quality assurance and
There were two bright spots during this period—the
accreditation (broadly speaking) including faculty
first was the World Bank’s Strengthening Higher
development, curriculum upgrading and improvement,
Education Program (SHEP), initiated by Minister
and improvement in teaching. What distinguished the
Fayez, which provided $40 million starting in July
deputy minister was his thorough understanding of
2005 to help rebuild and improve higher education.
higher education coupled with a clear vision for raising
That was a major boost for the MoHE. The second, in
the quality of higher education and a plan for making
September 2005, was the USAID-supported Higher
that vision a reality. He envisioned a fundamentally
Education Project (HEP), which provided $40 million
transformed higher education system. That included
focused primarily on improving education faculties,
moving from appointments made through the “old
developing master’s programs in education and
boy’s network”—who you knew, who you pleased, who
public administration, and establishing a program
favored you for whatever reasons—to a system based
to strengthen the capacity of the participating
on merit—what you had done, your training, your
institutions. The project was broadened in scope in
research and publications, your teaching success, your
2009 to include assistance with the preparation of a
service. That in itself was transformational. Some of
strategic plan for the MoHE; quality assurance and
his vision was based on the past successes of Afghan
accreditation; curriculum upgrading; student services
higher education when it was one of the best systems
at 10 universities; professional development centers
in the region—one in which there was a great deal of
at 15 higher education institutions; increased MoHE
important research produced, teachers were devoted
capacity management; ministry and university staff
to their students, and faculty members were involved
training; assistance to the Human Resource Cluster
in the governance of higher education and in making
ministries (Ministry of Education, Ministry of Higher
contributions to the needs of Afghanistan.
Education, Ministry of Women’s Affairs, Ministry of Public Health, and the Ministry of Labor, Social
Having a plan
Affairs, Martyrs and Disables); and advice on policy matters to the ministry.
A vision for the future must be turned into concrete plans. While strategic planning in higher education had been discussed as early as 2002 when Minister Fayez was thinking about an action plan, and although www.scup.org
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over the years several draft plans had been prepared,
some of them just won’t buy in, at least at first.” Indeed,
it was not until 2009 that a strategic plan was put in
some of the senior leaders were not on board with
place and actually followed by the MoHE. The National
this vision, although Minister Dadfar proved to be a
Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 was
powerful supporter. The deputy minister recognized
developed over nine months in 2009. It was initiated
that more support was needed than just that of the
by Minister Dadfar and Deputy Minister Babury early
minister and worked carefully to build a broad base
that year. A steering committee was put in place to help
of support for the changes he envisioned. Part of
prepare the plan. It was a collective effort involving
that support was developed through the various
a number of sub-committees and bringing together
commissions he appointed, including Publications,
leaders from various higher education institutions,
Research, and Curriculum Renewal and later the
NGOs, donor groups, and others. Its two major goals,
Quality Assurance and Accreditation Commission and
as noted earlier, were quality improvement and
the Curriculum Commission. He also worked with
increased access, broadly defined. What was different
the chancellors of the Kabul universities and several
about this plan was that it reflected broad agreement
other major universities including those in Herat,
in the higher education community about the direction
Nangarhar, and Balkh through regular meetings in
and goals for higher education, the meaning of
Kabul. Part of his success in bringing about change was
quality improvement in terms of faculty development,
the care he took in posing questions and discussing
curriculum change and upgrading, and new faculty
the related issues in detail. He didn’t say, “We are
rules and procedures, as well as a broad commitment
going to transform higher education or we are going to
to rebuilding and improving the quality of almost
eliminate nepotism.” But he did talk a great deal about
every aspect of higher education. Unlike so many other
the changes needed, putting them forward one at a
strategic plans in Afghanistan and elsewhere, the plan
time. He would start in a general way and work down
was not relegated to the bookcase. Rather, this plan
to specifics later in the discussion.
actually became the basis for almost all decisions and actions of the MoHE, the focus of donor funding, and
Quality improvement is a good example of this
the basis for individual institutional strategic plans.
approach. No one is against quality improvement. So
Given the consensus that had been developed around
he started talking about quality improvement, and
the plan, movement toward the achievement of its
everyone agreed that needed to be done, especially
goals eventually was largely uncontested (with a few
after years of war and little investment in higher
exceptions), and it became part of the fabric of higher
education. But how might that be done? One way
education planning and action for the next five years.
was to improve the quality of the people hired. That discussion led, over time, to talking about the qualities
Coalition building
needed in new faculty members, and that eventually led to merit hiring. No one talked about abolishing the
Deputy Minister Babury understood that it was not
old boy’s network—but that is how it happened. That
enough to just have a vision and a plan; the goals had
discussion also eventually led to a discussion about
to be spelled out in detail and have broad support
quality assurance in general. During these discussions,
from what Kotter (1996, p. 6) calls a “powerful guiding
the deputy minister asked me to write a concept paper
coalition.” As Kotter (1996, p. 6) notes, “This group
about how that might be done, and that became the
rarely includes all of the most senior people because
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The commissions were an important part of turning
carefully written and thought out that it was hard to
the vision into reality. In the beginning the meetings
disagree with what was said.
would start with a presentation, usually by the deputy minister, about some aspect of quality improvement.
Thus, over a period of years, the deputy minister
It might be faculty development and how to expand
communicated his vision bit by bit, and the members
it. It might be some thoughts on faculty research
of the commissions, as leaders in their own right,
based on a concept paper I had written, or it might
spread it too, as did the chancellors who were regularly
reflect a problem that had arisen about teaching—an
consulted along the way. I can remember only one
absent faculty member, student complaints, employer
occasion on which there was a strong objection to
complaints. It might then lead to a discussion about
any of this, and that was at a very early meeting of
faculty responsibilities—and that discussion in time
chancellors from all the public higher education
would lead to the commission writing something
institutions. Part way through a discussion of faculty
about the expectations for faculty members regarding
rules and procedures one of the very conservative
publications. Or, the deputy minister might have a
chancellors from the south interrupted and said, “We
concept paper translated into Dari so that it could be
shouldn’t be talking about these changes—we have no
read and discussed by a commission. One of those
right to do that—a law must be passed first—we should
concept papers was on accreditation (Hayward 2009).
adjourn and wait for that.” Most of the chancellors
It was read and passed around. The gist of the early
present were stunned. This was a kind of reverse
discussion was that the idea of accreditation was
notion of democracy—the idea that decisions still
interesting but not something that could be done in
had to come from the top. Nonetheless the general
Afghanistan. Yet over time, people came back to it, and
discussion continued and no one left the meeting.
in due course it became the basis of the Criteria for
There were some differences of opinion expressed
Accreditation (standards) for the country.
during the discussions about how various policies should be carried out. And there were some issues
Although the deputy minister was at the helm of this
that were not brought up at all in such meetings, such
effort, it was a collective process. There were a number
as gender equity, because the MoHE leadership knew
of very bright and experienced faculty members on
they were divisive, especially with the conservative
these commissions, especially the Quality Assurance
chancellors from the south. The MoHE leadership
Commission. They were leaders in their fields and their
would wait until a year later to begin to work publicly
institutions. They didn’t always agree as they moved
on that subject.
forward but worked through the issues carefully and thoughtfully. The deputy minister attended almost
Divisive issues were worked on in small groups,
every meeting, but if he could not, he received a
little by little. Minister Dadfar and Deputy Minister
briefing about it. The care and thought that went
Babury had a sixth sense for that too—what ideas to
into each sentence of the policies prepared by the
lead with and what ideas to put off until a later date.
commission members was sometimes frustrating, but
Nonetheless, the overall vision was communicated
as one of the members said, we may have to defend
regularly over several years in a variety of forms and
these in court at some point so let’s get it right. That
in a variety of ways, along with strategies about how
care proved to be critical to success in the long run
to achieve the goals involved.4 Part of the success can
because the processes, rules, and regulations were so
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minister. It put people at ease and fostered discussion
critical to higher education success in the long run.
rather than dissent. Through it all there was the strong
Sometimes it was hard for people to see the value in
support of Minister Dadfar. There was nothing shrill
a particular proposal at first, as was the case early on
or dogmatic about the discussions. Green (1997, p. 37)
for accreditation. Yet, over time people saw that it was
captures this talent well when she writes, “through the
a process based on shared values—the same values
moral force of their words and actions, they can set an
used to select students based on merit—so how could
example for the community.” The two of them made a
it be otherwise when it came institutional quality
very powerful team.
assurance? That too must be a decision based on merit.
Managing change
Critical to moving the change agenda forward was a group of committed, talented, and experienced faculty
One of the great talents of Deputy Minister Babury is his ability to manage change. He does so in a quiet, clear manner that brings people in, shows them the logic of the change, and explains its importance. As Green (1997, pp. 36–37) notes, “As higher education around the world undergoes profound change, leaders must shape the process to the extent feasible, monitoring and interpreting the external environment and providing a forum for change to be discussed, understood, debated, and implemented.” That was what was done again and again over five years—with great success. Despite the fact that the country was at war and many of the changes being proposed were far reaching, in the end most higher education leaders came to see that each of the goals had an important place in higher education and reflected values that were
members who served on the various committees and commissions of the MoHE. Their contributions, along with those of Minister Muhammad Azam Dadfar and Deputy Minister Mohammad Osman Babury, were profound. They included Prof. Hamidullah Amin (geography), Prof. Mohammad Hassan Rashiq (head of the Academic Affairs Coordination Department), Dr. Danish (medicine), Ahmad Shaw (engineering), Homa Khalid (engineering), Dr. Wahid Omar (HEP), Prof. Anwar Afzal (medicine), and Prof. Gul Mohammad Tanin (veterinary science). All of these individuals were important to the success of the policies prepared during this period and to spreading the word to faculty members at the various institutions. They brought a great deal of wisdom, experience, integrity, honesty, and talent to the activities of the MoHE as well as a willingness to spend long hours thinking through the needs, challenges, and strategies essential to MoHE success. As senior faculty members they drew on their experience and understanding of higher education, its changes over the years, and the problems it faced. Collectively, they were an excellent source of knowledge about higher education history, rules and regulations, problems faced in the past, useful ways to get things done, experience with various other ministries and departments, and ideas about the future. These faculty members encompassed a
Minister Dadfur, Deputy Minister Babury, and the author, right to left. Photo by MoHE.
pool of experience that was absolutely essential to the progress made. The fact that Minister Dadfar and www.scup.org
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Deputy Minster Babury were able to attract this group
and pursued. Some chose to flee to other countries
of intellectuals and practical leaders to work with the
where they could teach and work without hindrance.
MoHE was a major part of the success in bringing
Over the next 15 years about half the faculty and staff
about the changes that took place during this period.
left higher education. Most found academic positions abroad. Those faculty members who left were primarily
Sense of community
the best—those outspoken in the defense of academic autonomy, freedom to carry out research on any topic,
One of the memories from the 1960s and 1970s
and a university free of political interference. Thus
occasionally shared by faculty members and former
they tended to be targets, first of the communists, then
students of higher education in Afghanistan was the
others, and finally the Taliban. As the losses mounted,
sense of academic community that existed in academic
those who remained became more cautious, stayed to
life at its major universities, Kabul University,
themselves, did their work, and kept quiet. Research
Nangarhar University, and Kabul Polytechnic
efforts declined, as did the funding for them, and
University. They were centers of active research
those most versed in research methods departed. The
on important issues in agriculture, engineering,
quality of teaching too declined as faculty members
geography, and other areas. Teaching was highly
were lost or feared to express their views, and where
regarded, and its quality attracted students from
replacements were found, most had only bachelor’s
all over the region. Faculty members cooperated on
degrees and very much less experience to offer
research and held lively discussions about their work,
students.
findings, and challenges. They had a powerful shared academic culture. As one writer notes, “To speak of a
A key question for leadership in 2015 is how to rebuild
‘universal academic culture’ is not an overstatement.
the academic culture that once prevailed in the major
The values of unfettered inquiry, the pursuit of
institutions—the sense of community in university
knowledge for its own sake, the quest for freedom from
academic life. Related to that is the question of how
external interference, and the dedication to preparing
to rebuild the culture of teaching and research.
the next generation of leaders, professionals, and
That has turned out to be a difficult task. Part of the
citizens are transcendent academic values” (Green
problem is the history of repression, interference, and
1997, p. 40).
distrust developed over the previous 30 years. That legacy has not been erased from the minds of most
Over the years following the Soviet invasion, the
faculty members. Much of what is needed is difficult
links that created that sense of academic community
to replicate—the academic excellence that comes
were weakened as ideology began to be forced into
from well-trained faculty members with master’s
faculty discussions, harassment began to interrupt
degrees and Ph.D.s and extensive research experience.
university activities, and political factors began
Recognizing these challenges, the MoHE has been
to intrude into institutional administration and
working, as noted earlier, to build a larger core of
activity. The freedom that is at the heart of academic
well-trained faculty members. While that work is in
productivity disappeared as faculty members were
progress, moving from fewer than five percent of the
pressured or arrested for their beliefs and academic
faculty with a Ph.D. to a minimum of 25 percent will
values were attacked or hampered. A number of faculty
take time. And I suspect that is what it will take to
members were imprisoned; others were intimidated
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only 30 percent of the faculty have master’s degrees
members on the commissions understood the need
despite a major effort by the MoHE to send faculty
to emphasize the importance of university and higher
members abroad for master’s training as well as to
education autonomy. When faced with interference
significantly expand the number of master’s programs
in person, the deputy minister would often read from
in Afghanistan from a mere four to the more than 42
appropriate passages in the higher education law or
today. While the number of faculty members returning
MoHE regulations showing why he could not accede to
with higher degrees continues to grow, it is a slow
a particular request. This was surprisingly successful
process.
with MPs. However, pressure from higher up was often more difficult to resist. The deputy minister would
Those faculty members returning from master’s and
often respond that such an action would be unlawful.
Ph.D. study abroad, and indeed many of those getting
That usually worked.
master’s degrees in Afghanistan, are bringing with them a new interest in teaching and learning based
Corruption, as mentioned earlier, was another
on a student-centered approach, a real desire to carry
challenge for leadership. It was a challenge at
out research into nationally important problems
many levels—in the ministry, especially regarding
and issues, and a new sense of attachment to their
admissions in the pre-2007 period, and in
universities and their colleagues. It will take time to
construction. Corruption was also seen from time
rebuild an effective academic community at even the
to time with faculty members, though it was not a
best of the universities, though I suspect that those
widespread problem. The most frequent occurrence
with the largest number of faculty members returning
involving the faculty related to review sessions prior
from master’s and Ph.D. training abroad and master’s
to examinations when a faculty member might offer
training in Afghanistan will be the first to do so. I am
a review session—for a fee. Nonetheless, students,
confident that it will be in place within the next five
faculty members, and administrators were on the
years.
lookout for this, and it was not a major problem. There were other types of petty corruption—requests for
Political interference
favors, special treatment, bending the rules—involving senior government officials or other important people.
There are other challenges for higher education
As mentioned elsewhere, Deputy Minister Babury was
leadership as well, and political interference is one of
well known for turning these requests down, and fewer
them. In the sections that follow I provide a number of
MPs came by with such requests as the years went
examples of political interference in higher education—
by. But there were others who were only too eager to
both at individual institutions and in the system as
please and saw this as part of their role. The biggest
a whole. That has to be resisted as much as possible,
opportunities for corruption were in construction
though resistance is often a difficult dance. Those in
projects, which had so many contracts, obstacles,
positions of power in government often believe that
and cost issues that they provided fertile ground. I
they are in charge of everything in higher education,
did not deal directly with this area, and the deputy
and they often fail to see that their authority has limits
minister avoided it. Thus, I have no direct knowledge
or, when they do understand that, they see themselves
of what transpired. Nonetheless, the feeling that
as exceptions. Both Minister Dadfar and Deputy
corruption was rife in purchasing and construction
Minister Babury as well as a number of the faculty
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senior MoHE officials, who therefore avoided having
with him over the last six years, I would lay out his
anything to do with construction. Hopefully, with a
strategy as follows: First, identify the major goals for
new government in place, this is an area that can be
the next few years. In this case the two major goals
attacked with the same success that the MoHE had in
were quality improvement and increased access.
cleaning up the admissions process.
That included faculty development (master’s and Ph.D. training), curriculum upgrading, gender equity,
Lack of resources
accreditation, upgrades for laboratories and facilities, decentralization of administration and finance,
The lack of resources, as noted previously, has always
doubling student access with a focus on women
been a challenge for leaders in higher education. In
and underserved areas, upgrading private higher
earlier years, the MoHE had not done well in making
education, merit hiring and promotion, and revision of
the case for funding for higher education. This was
faculty and student rules and procedures. Though we
especially striking in comparison to the Ministry of
never talked about it explicitly, I think he then ranked
Education, whose minister, Ghulam Farooq Wardak,
them in his head in terms of both the ease of doing
was a master at fund-raising. He also had the
them and the likely opposition.
advantage of the strong push by UNESCO and other donors to fund Education for All, which was a very
The most important goals would then be discussed
popular worldwide project supported by most donors
broadly, and the more complicated of them turned
with the goal of having universal primary education
over to a commission. Several of these goals were
by 2015. The Ministry of Education continually did
very difficult, especially gender equity, which had
well in both annual funding and supplemental funding
already elicited some strong opposition when it was
from donors compared to the MoHE. Over the last
included in the NHESP: 2010–2014. However, there
four years, the MoHE began to push hard to make the
was also major criticism by a number of donors that its
case for funding higher education and started to have
inclusion was too weak. That latter argument misread
some success in terms of the government subvention.
the current public attitude in Afghanistan. Indeed,
However, that was not the case with donor funding
in order to have the term “gender equity” in the plan
generally. Donor funding continued to come primarily
at all as a long-term goal, the MoHE had to agree to
from only two sources, the World Bank and USAID.
leave out the term “affirmative action” and reduce the mention of gender to only one short section in the plan
Timing Another of the challenges for leadership was the question of timing. Given the large number of changes that the MoHE hoped to put in place, how could one know when a change could be introduced successfully? How should changes be sequenced? Which ones should come first? Which could be put forward right away? Which needed to be delayed? The consummate master in developing an appropriate strategy and timing is Deputy Minister Babury. As I look back on working
in contrast to the many examples and mentions in the original draft. Thus, gender equity was placed as a lower priority, though this did not change the MoHE’s continuing effort to improve the situation for female students and female faculty members. Similarly, it was clear that there would not be enough funding to do much in the way of upgrading facilities. That too was put further down the list. The highest priority was quality improvement with its many parts. While that was a complicated goal with multiple sub-goals, it could be started right away. One aspect of quality www.scup.org
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improvement was faculty development, which focused
Gender equity was an issue about which there was
on giving more faculty members opportunities to
strong opposition from conservative religious groups,
obtain master’s degrees and Ph.D.s. While it was
the Taliban, and others. The MoHE had responded
recognized that money might be a problem given the
to that somewhat by limiting the discussion about
cost of study abroad, there was no opposition to faculty
it in the NHESP, as noted earlier. Nonetheless, the
development so it was started immediately with some
MoHE continued to work to increase the number of
World Bank and USAID funding.
female students and faculty members. At the same time, a small group at the MoHE worked on a higher
The MoHE was worried about the access problem.
education gender strategy. Much of that document was
While everyone agreed that access, especially for
shared with various groups including the leadership of
women and people from deprived areas, should be
the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, female MPs, senior
increased, the MoHE was concerned about the lack
female faculty members, some male faculty members,
of classrooms, dormitories, laboratories, and faculty
some of the chancellors of major universities, and
members. However, it was clear that the real challenge
senior members of the MoHE. The draft was in its
was going to be how to limit the increase in the number
final form for almost a year while it was read and
of students given the growing number of graduates
reviewed by many people, with minor revisions made
from secondary school, not how to increase access. The
as suggestions came in over that period. Indeed, some
NHESP: 2010–2014 goal was to double access from
of those who read it wanted it strengthened to include
about 55,000 students to 115,000 by 2014. That goal
additional items such as housing for single female
was encouraged from the outset. In a sense, the deputy
faculty members, free daycare, and a 30 percent target
minister did a kind of cost-benefit analysis of all the
for female faculty members. Those suggestions were
goals and ranked them starting with those he knew
not financially feasible and so could not be accepted,
had support or, as in the case of access, would occur
but the overall result was that very few changes were
regardless. Thus the MoHE moved forward on faculty
needed when the document was finally released in Dari
development, increased access, and a number of rules
and Pashtu in 2015.
and regulations that would take time to develop but were not controversial.
The following is another example of timing related to the issue of dealing with controversial topics.
Accreditation faced some opposition, which the deputy
When would be the right time to release a potentially
minister recognized. But by linking it with quality
controversial document like the gender strategy—or to
assurance, which everyone supported, the MoHE
introduce a major change such as merit recruitment
could start thinking about it. The quality improvement
and promotions or decentralization of financial
process required devising a method to assess quality
and administrative authority? It turned out that
at the institutions—in the long run, accreditation.
the latter case was easy. The opposition to financial
The deputy minister knew that this would be a
decentralization had come primarily from the
time-consuming process. To get started, he set up a
Ministry of Finance. Its concern was that people at
Commission on Quality Assurance and Accreditation,
the universities did not have the training to monitor
a process discussed earlier. This would lay the
funding. This was an argument the MoHE had heard
groundwork for accreditation.
for years. The MoHE had argued, “How can they demonstrate capacity if we do not give them some www.scup.org
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opportunity to show they can do it?” To deal with
a stamp of approval, permission, or some other
this problem, the MoHE set up a pilot finance project
document. Students mostly want grades, transfers,
with the four Kabul-based universities. After a year
or permissions of one sort or another. It is always like
the Ministry of Finance could see that they had the
that, more crowded when examination results are
capacity needed since they did very well.
due, sometimes frantic, but usually calm. Then there are those who work in the building moving with great
Failing to gain agreement from Parliament to amend
purpose, the more senior in dark suits, the more junior
the Higher Education Act to allow decentralization
often with a tie, and others in traditional dress. There
for reasons having nothing to do with the law or
are very few women working in the building, and only
any other MoHE issues,5 the ministry put together
a few student petitioners are women. When you see
a “MoHE Regulation” to allow the decentralization
them their heads are covered and they are wearing
of major areas of finance. A regulation only requires
long skirts or pants. Somehow, by 4:00 p.m. the crowds
the approval of the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of
have dispersed with signatures received, answers
Justice, and Cabinet. In November 2013, they gave that
given, data secured, or efforts unsuccessful and so with
approval, and the MoHE began to prepare for greater
plans to return another day.
financial decentralization at the major universities. Higher education, like everything else in Afghanistan, I once asked the deputy minister how he knew when
is highly centralized, following a long history of
the time was right to introduce a change. He replied,
centralization in government and education. Even if
“After you have talked to everyone about it, tried to
you start with a clerk in your search for permission to
sway the opposition, and then begin to hear your
transfer to another institution, for example, in the end
arguments for the change coming back to you, that is
you will need the signature of a high official. But you
when you know you can move forward.” He was very
will usually need to go to two or three offices before
good at setting the stage for consensus. Once when we
you can get to that. Even the most minor university
were discussing this issue he said something like, “You
requests normally have to be run through the ministry.
listen to the wind. When you hear that it is all right,
The forms for admission to a university are there,
you move forward.” That seemed like a wonderful
as are the admissions examination forms needed to
description of the process. The deputy minister was a
take the Kankor; identification cards; transcripts of
master at that—he had a very good ear—and that was a
grades; forms for permission to change university, drop
key to success.
courses after the deadline, or take an examination a second time; and proof of graduation—almost every
Bureaucracy without Authority One thing that strikes you when entering the MoHE is that the halls and offices are always packed with people, mostly students, waiting for something. There are also older people of all ages moving from office to office, some with folders full of papers and some clearly MPs or other important officials, seeking a signature,
kind of documentation requires a trip to the ministry and one or more signatures. This is a product of a hierarchical society and a hierarchical political system with a long history. It is so entrenched that people at lower levels who might have the authority to make decisions frequently defer to higher authorities so that there is no risk of them making a mistake. And so decisions keep getting www.scup.org
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referred to a higher level to the point that even the
Something like the desire to transfer to another
most efficient administrator is overloaded. All this
institution (due to, for example, family circumstances,
takes time, and thus even a simple procedure like
a spouse having a job in the area, or a family crisis)
getting a transcript can take several days or a week.
also requires a trip to the ministry. Why this is the case is a mystery. The rules about transfers are spelled
The need for the signature of a senior person on
out clearly: when they can take place, the conditions
almost any major document takes up a great deal of
under which they are allowed, and the agreements
the time of senior administrators like the minister
required of those involved. Why should transfers
or deputy ministers. Every graduate’s diploma must
involve the ministry? If there was a major question or
be signed by the minister and at least one deputy
disagreement about a particular case, then that might
minister. Last year 25,000 students graduated from
have to be referred to a higher level, but not every case.
public higher education institutions. Thus the minister and deputy minister spent parts of many days just
All financial matters are also centralized in the
signing these documents. In most parts of the world
ministry. Until recently, many of the institutions
these documents would be signed by the university
didn’t even have a clear idea of their budgets. They
chancellor and perhaps a dean of the college involved
had virtually no authority to make purchases, order
or the president of the council. They would not be
supplies, make minor repairs, or even replace a broken
signed by the head of the system.
window without ministry approval. Indeed, almost all purchases had to go through the ministry. Similarly, all
All promotions at the 36 public institutions must
funds received had to be turned over to the ministry
be signed by the minister and deputy minister for
and sent to the treasury. Funds earned from university
academic affairs. In the rest of the world they would be
activities were also sent to the treasury. And in cases
signed by the relevant department chair and perhaps
where money was made on a project, such as fees
the appropriate dean. Even the chancellor would not
collected from teaching a night class or analyzing
be involved. Yet in Afghanistan all these documents
drugs for the Ministry of Public Health, the funds went
pass through the ministry, are reviewed by several
to the treasury. The cost of salaries or of the analysis
people, and are signed by at least two or more senior
could not be deducted from the money paid for the
administrators.
service. All the funds received had to be turned over and in most cases were not seen again. Needless to say,
Getting a transcript of grades or proof of graduation
this discouraged entrepreneurial activity.
also requires a trip to the ministry and a visit to two or three offices. It also requires a trip to the institution
In November 2013, after years of trying, the MoHE
in question. Sometimes one must also pay a small
finally obtained approval of a regulation that allows
fee for copies of the documents. At one time these
higher education institutions to raise funds through
requirements might have been due to lack of trust,
entrepreneurial and other means and keep the profits.
but that is not the case now for the major institutions.
These could be spent on university needs. Of course,
Yet the process still takes up a great deal of the time
proper financial accounting procedures are required.
of many different people, disrupts the work of senior
This is a very important reform that will provide
people who must sign the documents, and wastes a lot
badly needed flexibility to university administration,
of time for the student or others—often days.
encourage fund-raising and entrepreneurialism, and www.scup.org
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inspire donors to provide funding. In the past, donor
construction projects and some senior administrators
funding would usually end up in the treasury and not
to fail to push for needed infrastructure projects
be seen again. Especially important, this change will
knowing that some funds would be lost or wasted.
allow much greater decentralization of funding to the institutional level, which will free institutions to
Recruitment of faculty members and staff begins
respond quickly to urgent needs—repairs to broken
at the department level (except at new institutions,
windows after an explosion, chemicals for a new
which work with an established institution like Kabul
experiment, or a requirement for matching funds from
University) once an institution has a vacancy or new
a donor. In the short term, the Ministry of Finance
position. The position must be advertised, candidates
has required a waiting period of one year to access
interviewed, and a top person selected. At that point
these funds. That defeats part of the purpose of the
the candidate must be approved by the institutional
regulation. The MoHE is working to have that rule
academic council. Once that is done, the selection is
changed.
reviewed by the MoHE. A rule change in 2009 requires all faculty members to be recruited and promoted
Major projects will continue to be handled from the
based on merit and reviewed annually based on their
ministry, including construction that needs to be
teaching, research, and service. This change has been
planned on a systemwide basis, overall recruitment
embraced by faculty members because it is transparent
of faculty members and staff, and salary decisions.
and fair and ensures that the old boy’s network is
Construction, in particular, needs to be centrally
not the defining interest in hiring and promotion.
planned. While each higher education institution
Reviews of new hires and promotions at the ministerial
should have a strategic plan, they are not always
level have found few cases in which the proposed
followed. Construction planning is often influenced by
candidates did not meet the requirements. The biggest
local MPs or donors without reference to the strategic
problems have occurred at the senior level where
plan or a needs assessment. And as noted, there is
several requests for promotion have failed because the
not enough money allocated to meet infrastructure
published material presented did not include original
needs. As a result, there is a shortage of classrooms,
material or did not reach the level of quality required.
dormitories for women, and laboratories. The
Reviewers at the MoHE level have been troubled by
classroom shortage grows out of the old assumption
several cases of plagiarism, and in at least one case the
that higher education was an elite process with small
reviewers were reluctant to reject it. Nonetheless, it
classes. That is no longer the case since in the face of
was rejected in the end.
6
rising demand higher education is moving to a more mass-based system. Most current classrooms are
It should be possible to decentralize the whole
designed for 30 to 40 students. The large numbers
recruitment and promotion process to the institutions
now enrolling require more large classrooms, more
as is the case in many other parts of the world.
laboratories, and more facilities that are multi-use to
However, some of the newer institutions are not yet
allow for student-centered instruction. Construction
mature enough at this stage to do so. In the long run
remains subject to corruption, and it is my belief that
both recruitment and promotion cases should be
corruption has resulted in substantial losses of funds,
decided at the institutional level with a review by an
lower quality, and decisions based on goals other than
appropriate MoHE committee or senior official only for
academic need. This has led donors to shy away from www.scup.org
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professorial-level hires and promotions—that is at the
now that a regulation to allow the decentralization
level of assistant, associate, or full professor.
of finances has been approved. That should help to both increase efficiency and provide for greater
The current centralized processes required for the
accountability at the institutional level. The current
approval of a wide variety of requests ranging from
lag between when a request is made by a university
something as simple as solving an individual grade
and the time it is approved remains far too long. For
problem to something as complex as obtaining
example, after a recent bomb attack outside Kabul
approval for a women’s dormitory consume an
Education University that broke hundreds of windows,
inordinate amount of time in the ministry and
some department heads paid for new windows out
necessitate the involvement of a large number of
of their own pockets because the ministry process
people. Even the simplest of requests can take days
was too slow to ensure that equipment was safe or to
to be approved. It is rare that something can be
keep out the winter cold. The ability of departments
approved with a single signature. In many cases the
and institutions to respond quickly to emergencies,
process is made even more time consuming by the
research needs, ordinary upkeep, and repairs will
failure of people to be in their office when they should.
be greatly enhanced with the new decentralization
Absenteeism is common. By 3:00 p.m. most days,
policies. This should end an era of bureaucracy without
the ministry is virtually empty except for a small
authority, enhance responsiveness, and improve
number of hard-working and loyal staff members, most
efficiency. These changes should also raise morale and
working for the deputy minister for academic affairs.
enhance quality.
There are those staff members who make people come back another day as a way of showing how powerful they are. Sometimes the delays are caused by junior staff members who just don’t feel like doing whatever is needed—finding the file, identifying eligibility, checking a score—so they delay things for a day or two. Prior to 2007, bribes were often demanded for admission to certain programs, especially engineering and medicine. Admission to a medical school could cost $10,000. It was also possible to have your admissions examination score raised for $200–$500. These problems were attacked starting in 2007 by the minister and the deputy minister for academic affairs. Several dozen people were fired before the admissions and examination processes were cleaned up. Since that time, ongoing vigilance has ensured that such
The Minister of Higher Education There were five ministers of higher education during the term of President Karzai. I have worked with all of them, some more closely than others. All were appointed by the president but required approval of Parliament, and several nominees were rejected. Each of these ministers had a very different leadership style ranging from authoritarian and top down to near-absentee leadership; there were leadership styles featuring collegiality, bullying, and a variety of other approaches as you will see in the pages that follow. The first minister of higher education appointed
corruption has not reappeared.
by President Karzai at the beginning of the interim
Decentralization of a great deal of financial and
until 2004. I first met him in July 2002 in the United
administrative authority to the institutions is a goal of the NHESP, and it is beginning to be implemented
government was Sharif Fayez who served from 2002 States at a conference at the AED designed to organize support for higher education in Afghanistan. While
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he was in the United States, as noted earlier, we
tight.” With help from the government of Germany,
worked on an outline for a national higher education
a Rectors’ Association was established to give a voice
strategic plan (Hayward 1992) that became the basis
to the private institutions and foster cooperation
for his strategic action plan. Minister Fayez saw
among them. The number of private higher education
his main tasks as four: to develop a strategic action
institutions grew from the original two in 2006 to
plan for higher education; to prepare a new higher
more than 90, only two of which were not-for-profit.
education law that would give greater autonomy to the institutions; to initiate a joint project with UNESCO
Minister Fayez was a great proponent of community
that would focus on renewal and development; and to
colleges and in 2003 convinced the World Bank to fund
develop a decentralization plan to give more authority
the first community college in Afghanistan as a pilot
and power to the universities.7 Minister Fayez’s initial
project on the grounds of the MoHE. The building was
challenge was to open the higher education institutions
constructed by the Bank but unfortunately the next
that were closed because of the war. Some had come
minister, Amir Shah Hasanyar, was not interested in
under the control of local warlords, politicians, and
community colleges and so the building became part
others, and he moved to get them back under the
of the office complex of the MoHE. During the tenure
MoHE. He was successful in doing that. He also
of Minister Fayez significant progress was made on
focused on rebuilding the war-damaged infrastructure.
repairing the higher education infrastructure, and
Minister Fayez helped lay the foundation for the
several new institutions were established. Minister
legalization of private higher education in Afghanistan.
Fayez was a tireless worker and was able to get the
He supported the World Bank review of the
World Bank to provide substantial assistance to higher
possibilities for establishing private higher education
education. Following his term in office Minister Fayez
institutions in Afghanistan, which were illegal at the
played a major role in helping establish the American
time. That review recommended legislation to allow
University of Afghanistan and became its first
private higher education in Afghanistan (Hayward and
president.
Amiryar 2003). That legislation was approved in 2006 with the first private higher education institutions
The period under the leadership of Minister Amir
established that year. They were the American
Shah Hasanyar (December 2004 to March 2006) saw
University of Afghanistan and the Kardan Institute of
a number of improvements in higher education. With
Higher Education.
the help of the World Bank, the Strengthening Higher Education Program (SHEP I) provided $40 million
Minister Fayez believed that private tertiary education
to Afghan higher education over the next several
could help meet some of the challenges faced by the
years. That project was initiated under Minister Fayez
country. However, he felt strongly that government
but final approval came under Minister Hasanyar
should primarily support not-for-profit higher
in May 2005. SHEP I provided six universities with
education, stating, “I do believe that if you want
funds for master’s and Ph.D. training for faculty
good universities you need to go private and non-
members abroad; partnerships with a number of
profit.” He went on to say, “There are some private
universities in the United States, Germany, Thailand,
higher education institutions which are making good
India, and Great Britain; and funds to improve their
progress. They are all teaching skills. But I feel the
infrastructures. It laid the groundwork for major
for-profit institutions will collapse if the economy gets
planning and development at these six universities www.scup.org
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and provided support for the development of 160
about the effects of the war, the refugee camps, and the
faculty members through master’s and Ph.D. training
continuing insecurity, especially on children. Talking
abroad. The institutions were Kabul University, Kabul
about the camps he said, “In the camps, there is no
Polytechnic University, Kabul Education University,
laughter, no playing, no music, almost no education, no
Balkh University, Herat University, and Nangarhar
social stimulation” (Kamm 1988, ¶ 11). After he became
University. All six of the universities were provided
minister, the MoHE began planning a mental health
with technical assistance to help them develop and
project for students under his tutelage. Due to lack of
write institutional strategic plans, including goals and
funds and the inability to find properly trained staff,
budgets for development, for the next five years. The
the process was delayed until 2013 when, with help
plans were prepared during 2005–06 by strategic
from the Higher Education Project, plans for a pilot
planning committees at each institution and reviewed
mental health program for students were completed
by a World Bank consultant at intervals until they
with the intention of starting the program at Kabul
were approved. All plans were completed by the end of
University and Albiruni University in 2014. Planning
2006.
was continued by the USAID-funded University Support and Workforce development Project (USWDP)
During this period, the admissions and placement
with the hope of putting it in place during 2016.
process based on the Kankor examination was badly compromised, as noted earlier. Some students
During Minister Dadfar’s tenure substantial progress
managed to have their results improved through
was made in continuing to rebuild higher education
payment of bribes. Admission to medicine and
facilities that had been damaged. This was done with
engineering, the most difficult programs to gain
help from the World Bank and USAID in particular.
admission to, could be achieved by paying bribes to
The Higher Education Project, which was originally
employees involved in the admissions process. The
to focus on teacher education, was expanded in 2009
reputation of the ministry during this period was badly
to include training at the MoHE for staff and at the
damaged.
universities for administrators and faculty members. During that time the first work on accreditation was
In March 2006, Mohammad Azam Dadfar was
started under Deputy Minister Babury. Efforts also
appointed minister. He had previously been minister of
continued to send more faculty members abroad for
refugees. He was a medical doctor trained at the Kabul
master’s and Ph.D. training.
Medical Faculty and served as a lecturer there. He had been imprisoned for 14 months by the communist
Minister Dadfar’s leadership style was quiet,
regime for his student activism against the Russian
intellectual, and collective. He was an excellent
presence in Afghanistan and was tortured as a result.
listener with a thirst for knowledge, a deep concern
He eventually managed to escape and went to live in
for the faculty and staff, and a broad understanding
Peshawar, Pakistan, where he founded and worked
of the need for high quality in higher education. He
in the Psychiatry Center for Afghan Refugees. At its
would usually ask the deputy minister and me to sit
peak he saw as many as 100 patients a day who were
next to him at meetings and during the lunch break
affected by the traumas of war and exile (Kamm 1988).
pepper us with questions about education in the
His experiences in prison and in the refugee camps
United States or about something we were working on
made him a champion for mental health. He worried
such as accreditation procedures. He worked closely www.scup.org
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with Deputy Minister Babury on broadly improving
President Karzai. He was a very quiet and hands-off
quality in higher education. When he became tired
minister, leaving the running of the ministry primarily
of the constant crush of people coming to his office
to the deputy ministers and directors. Deputy Minister
requesting favors, most of which he could not and
Babury often substituted for him at Cabinet meetings.
did not fill because they were against the rules and
He spent most of his afternoons teaching at a local
procedures of the MoHE, he would come to the deputy
private higher education institution. Minister Danish
minister’s office and join us for a cup of tea to hear
did not leave much of a stamp on higher education
how we were progressing on whatever project we had
except to encourage the continuation of work on the
underway at that moment or whatever problem we
strategic plan as laid out in 2009.
were trying to solve. He had broad support throughout the ministry and at the universities partly because of
In 2012 President Karzai tried again to get approval
his concern about progress, his interest in people, and
for the appointment of Obaidullah Obaid as minister
his skill as a consensus builder.
of higher education. Obaid had recently served as ambassador to Iran. He had a medical degree from
Minister Dadfar and Deputy Minister Babury began
Kabul University and a master’s degree. He had been
to work together to tackle corruption in the ministry
a professor at Kabul Medical University and was later
as soon as the deputy minister was appointed in 2007.
its chancellor. During his studies, he spent some time
They focused particularly on corruption in the Kankor
in California at Loma Linda University—something
examination admissions process and succeeded in
about which he was very proud and a part of the United
eliminating it that year. Minister Dadfar was very
States we had in common and recalled on occasion.
supportive of the quality assurance and accreditation process. As his term was coming to an end, he told
As minister he represented a common tradition of
President Karzai that he wanted to retire. That request
leadership, one dedicated to rewarding friends and
was greeted with sadness among the staff because of
helping those who had supported him for the post and
his exceptional leadership and many successes.
continued to do so. He was an active campaigner for his supporters and measured decisions in part based
The search for a replacement for Minister Dadfar
on who would benefit. He was a friend to many MPs
turned out to be difficult for President Karzai. He first
and they were regular visitors to his office.
nominated Obaidullah Obaid in early January 2010 but he was rejected by Parliament. Next he chose
I came to know him when he was a chancellor. He was
Mohammad Hashim Esmatullahi. However, he too
charming and a good conversationalist and hoped I
failed to gain approval from Parliament. The third
would be a key to more funding for the institutions. He
nominee was Sarwar Danish who was also rejected by
was supportive of the HEP project at Kabul Medical
Parliament. However, the president was unwilling to
University to upgrade the Department of Public
nominate another candidate so Danish served as acting
Health. However, its staff members were not interested
minister for the next two years until February 2012.
and did very little to improve the program. In the long
Minister Danish attended higher education institutions
run the project was cancelled by USAID. As chancellor,
in Iraq, Syria, and Iran and had a master’s degree in
he often came to the office of the deputy minister,
Islamic jurisprudence. He had been a member of the
and we had a chance to talk about medicine and the
Constitutional Drafting Commission appointed by
needs of higher education. As minister, he insisted that www.scup.org
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MoHE staff come to work on time, sometimes having
translated for me. He enjoyed demonstrating his
offices checked to make sure people were there or
English skills.
calling early morning meetings to ensure people were in place. He reveled in the spotlight and worked hard
For a time early in Minister Obaid’s appointment, he
to be the center of attention, calling press conferences
seemed wary of Deputy Minister Babury, though at
frequently.
the same time dependent on him for his wealth of knowledge about higher education. Perhaps he felt that
When he became minister, he wanted to know
the deputy minister was undermining him—something
specifically what HEP had done, and I provided a
that was not true. I suspect it was an idea planted
detailed report that I presented through the deputy
by one of his advisors who was constantly trying to
minister. I later heard that he said he was not
undermine the deputy minister for academic affairs.
impressed—for him doing something was to build
My suspicion was that the advisor wanted the deputy
a building, start a specific program, or construct
minister’s job. I think this advisor was also frustrated
something concrete. Capacity building, such as starting
that the deputy minister had thwarted several of his
an accreditation program, did not impress him initially
schemes to hijack proposals we had prepared in ways
although he became a strong supporter of HEP later in
designed to benefit him. He never succeeded but in the
his term.
process of derailing him we lost out on the funding that would have been provided to higher education based
Minister Obaid had read the National Higher
on the proposals we had written.
Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 and gave it his strong support, pushing in particular for more
At one point early in Minister Obaid’s appointment
progress on curriculum review and updating. He
when the deputy minister was out of the country, he
encouraged all universities to do a careful but quick
fired two of the deputy minister’s senior directors
review of their curricula, develop more appropriate
without consulting him. The deputy minister returned
pedagogy, and upgrade their curricula to meet
to discover that the two directors had been fired and
international expectations.
learned that they had been replaced by two faculty members who were faculty union leaders but who
Minister Obaid knew that I had played a major role in preparing the national strategic plan, though it was a collective effort with the Afghan members of the steering committee, a number of chancellors, several NGOs, and especially assistance from Joel Reyes of the World Bank plus some help from UNESCO. Minister Obaid was always respectful and went out of his way on formal occasions to shake my hand when he entered the room. My traditional seat was to the right of the deputy minister for academic affairs who always sat to his right. I seldom spoke at such meetings but if I raised my hand he always called on me immediately and I was treated with deference—and he sometimes
Minister Obaid presenting the author with a Certificate of Appreciation in 2013. Photo by MoHE. www.scup.org
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did not seem to fit the usual pattern of appointees—
of the president, and the deputy minister felt he needed
distinguished faculty members, active researchers,
to tender his resignation again. President Karzai told
or highly regarded scholars. As a result of this action,
him he could not resign because if he did the ministry
Deputy Minister Babury turned in his resignation to
would collapse into total chaos. That was probably
President Karzai, but the president would not allow
true. However, by this time the deputy minister had
him to resign. He invited the minister, Deputy Minister
begun to worry that the level of corruption was so
Babury, the other deputy ministers, two university
high that he would be tainted by it. My own view was
chancellors, and others to lunch. Over lunch the
that everyone knew that the deputy minister was
president made it clear that it was not appropriate
incorruptible and the last bastion against corruption in
for the minister to fire the senior staff of the deputy
the MoHE and I told him that. He was encouraged to
minister without consultation with and agreement
remain by a number of senior government officials and
from him. He noted that he had appointed the deputy
university leaders who were worried about what would
minister and asked for assurances that problems like
happen if he departed. After several days of thinking
this would not happen again. The minister apologized
about it he reluctantly agreed to stay.
and agreed. At one point the deputy minister and I thought we Despite this meeting, the minister continued to go
might be able to change things if we prepared a
around the deputy minister by making decisions in
“strategy for greatness” for the minister. This was at a
the deputy minister’s areas of authority. This posed
point when we realized how much had been achieved in
difficulties for the effective operation of the MoHE.
implementing the NHESP: 2010–2014. It thus would
While the minister had the legal authority to do these
not be hard to make the case that the minister could
things, in my 10 years of experience with the MoHE,
go down in history as a great minister if he were just to
no other minister had ever circumvented the rules and
do a few additional things and cut down on favors for
procedures in this way.
MPs and other important people. We thought it might be worth appealing to his ego and laid out a series
Minister Obaid was very deferential to Members of
of things the minister could say and do to make this
Parliament. When he could, he would help them obtain
case. We spent one evening talking about how to have
admission for students who had not been admitted to
one or both of us present the ideas to him. I prepared
university or assist in finding scholarships for students
a list of successes, noting that the MoHE had met
they supported. All this created a sense that some
many of the strategic plan targets ahead of schedule
people had special access to the ministry and that the
including doubling enrollments, developing new rules
admissions process and some other procedures were
and regulations requiring merit hiring and promotion,
rigged. The minister was also not very good at keeping
undertaking curriculum review in all public
track of budgets, and at the end of the year it was
universities, establishing accreditation, hiring almost
revealed that the ministry had expended only a little
1,000 faculty members in the last two years, sending
over half of its development budget because of poor
434 faculty members abroad for master’s degrees and
management.
Ph.D.s, and providing master’s training for 390 faculty members in Afghanistan during the NHESP: 2010–
The relationship between the minister and the deputy
2014. In the end, we didn’t make that presentation
minister did not improve much after the intervention www.scup.org
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because we were worried about how the minister would
the reasons for his decision. Very often the issue is
react. Perhaps an opportunity was missed.
a request for university admission for someone who does not qualify—typically, a student brought in by
The minister had strong loyalties to MPs and other
an MP representing some important official or family.
important people who had helped him obtain his
The deputy minister will point out that the student’s
appointment. In this regard he was in the mold of
score on the Kankor is too low to allow admission; he
leaders generally in high positions in Afghanistan.
will often call in someone from the admissions office
In contrast, the deputy minister felt that his loyalties
to bring in the list of Kankor scores and show the MP
and obligations were rather to the public, the students,
and the student that they are, for example, 50 places
the faculty, and the staff. The minister’s vision of
below the lowest admission score. He may say, “These
leadership, however, was often in direct competition
other people would have to be excluded if we move
with the merit-based values of higher education, and
you up” and ask “Is that fair?” Or if it is a request to
that posed problems in the ministry and often put the
be moved to a more prestigious university, he will pull
minister’s actions at odds with other higher education
out the rulebook and show them the regulations. And
leaders and faculty members.
usually when it is all over, they are disappointed but understand. Even when they come with a letter from
The Deputy Minister for Academic Affairs: A Source of Progress The first thing you notice about Deputy Minister Mohammed Osman Babury is his openness—the kind look on his face and the way he greets everyone as he walks down the halls, stopping periodically to say a few words to one of the cleaners or exchange greetings with a former classmate, a student, or a colleague. He is among the first people in the office in the morning and usually the last to leave—often as late as 7:00 pm.
He is the most respected person in the ministry
for his ability to move policy forward, his thoughtful
the vice president or some other high official, he will say no but explain why. And then there are the just complaints—those about a faculty member who is being unfair, about an exam missed because of illness, about sexual harassment. The deputy minister is quick to respond by making a phone call right then to rectify the problem or calling someone into his office to deal with the issue. In one such harassment case, he dressed down the offender—a guard in this case—and called in the boss of security and asked him to deal further with the problem. The man was suspended. This openness and
administration, his willingness to talk to anyone, and his honesty, integrity, and fairness. I have watched him deal with angry students, MPs who want a special favor that goes against the rules, those treated unfairly by someone at a university, a student needing help, a staff member in distress, or someone who has flouted the rules. In each case he takes the time to hear the complaint or issue, give his opinion, and ensure that the person understands
Deputy Minister Babury cutting ribbon for new laboratory at Kabul Polytechnic University. Photo by MoHE. www.scup.org
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responsiveness takes time—and thus on most days
about the process and worried about whether it would
the backlog in the office is long, with both outer offices
work in Afghanistan. A few days later the deputy
filled with people wanting to see the deputy minister.
minister and I talked about it again, along with a
At the end of the day he may have the last of them
number of other subjects including a strategic plan for
brought into his office five at a time to listen to their
the ministry. In the course of that discussion he asked
cases and make decisions, keeping both his executive
me to write a concept paper about quality assurance
assistants standing by to respond to the problems and
and accreditation, taking the discussion further and
other officials coming and going depending on the
including a timetable. I had a consulting commitment
issues.
in Madagascar during the month of February, but when I returned in mid-March I began working on that
His greatest successes relate to the many changes
paper.
he has brought to higher education over the last six years—merit hiring and promotions, quality assurance
In late April I gave him my thoughts on the subject:
and accreditation, curriculum upgrading, a code of
“Concept Paper: Establishing a Quality Assurance and
conduct for faculty and students (with former Minister
Improvement Program in Afghanistan” (Hayward
Dadfar), a gender strategy, development of the NHESP:
2009). In May the concept paper was revised and
2010–2014, implementation of most of the strategic
circulated under both the deputy minister’s and my
plan’s goals, and a policy for study abroad for faculty
names. We received a great deal of comment on it in
members. Usually these new policy efforts began with
June, including comments from UNESCO specialist
a short conversation between us, as was the case with
Jairam Reddy, and made changes to the document as a
accreditation for example. He knew that I had worked
result. Not all the comments were positive. A number
on accreditation in several countries including the
of people thought this was not something that should
United States. One day he asked me, “Would you write
be done by the MoHE. In June I was asked to prepare
something—not more than a few pages—about how
a sample “Self-assessment Protocol” that would spell
we might begin a process of quality assurance and
out criteria or standards for accreditation. In August
accreditation here?” And I would then spend several
I prepared a tentative budget for accreditation to give
days, or in some cases weeks, writing up a short piece.
a sense of the possible costs based on work I had done
Quality assurance was one of the first policies he asked
on accreditation in several other Asian and African
me about, and only a few days after I started working
countries, in particular my review of accreditation in
with him I wrote a short article entitled “Thoughts
Africa for the World Bank in 2003 (Hayward 2006).
on Accreditation” (January 21, 2009). We discussed
All of this was reviewed by the deputy minister and
it together late one afternoon, and then he invited
the commission as well as by a number of chancellors.
me to talk to a group of senior faculty members and
By August the commission was working with me
directors about it a few days later. They had read the
on a draft: Bye-Laws for Quality Assurance and
piece. I knew a few of them from having spent time in
Accreditation.
the ministry earlier when I worked for the World Bank and AED on private higher education in 2003 and for
The deputy minister worked closely with the
the World Bank on strategic planning in 2006–07. We
commission throughout this period, attending most
had a very thoughtful discussion and they were very
of the meetings and getting reports if he did not
polite and seemed receptive, but had many questions
attend. Through it all he was constantly consulting www.scup.org
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with university leaders, especially the chancellors of
to support projects not in its mandate but deemed
the major institutions, as well as with some senior
important by the minister including painting the
administrators and faculty members who he felt were
ministry buildings, maintaining gardens around the
leaders in higher education who understood its needs.
compound, and providing vehicles for the minister.
Throughout this period revisions were made to the
These projects were not necessarily high priorities of
documents, and when they were in final form they
the MoHE or the universities—and because of them,
were translated into Dari. The deputy minister wanted
some scheduled projects went unfunded.
to be sure, as did members of the commission, that the Dari was carefully written to reflect our meaning
Among the most challenging aspects of the position
and not just a word-for-word translation. We spent
was dealing with efforts by senior government
almost a year working on the translations of the major
officials, MPs, and other prominent people to get
documents to make sure that they read like Dari
special treatment for their family members, friends,
documents and that the concepts were laid out with the
or constituents. This usually had to do with admission
meaning intended by the members. The Dari version is
to a particular desired university or a difficult-to-enter
the official version of the documents so it must clearly
program such as medicine or engineering. It might
and correctly spell out all aspects of the process. While
also relate to a failed admissions examination or poor
the original timetable had set the end of 2009 for the
performance in a particular program. The official
beginning of the self-assessment process, it was soon
would send a letter with the student, or frequently
clear that it would take considerably more time to be
come personally with the student, to try to gain the
sure everyone was ready to start. We were prepared to
desired outcomes. As noted earlier, that generally did
take as much time as was needed.
not happen unless there was a legitimate reason for the complaint or petition. Sometimes these discussions
A major challenge for the deputy minister was
were long, and occasionally they were heated with the
the World Bank-supported Strengthening Higher
need to call security on one or two occasions.
Education Program (SHEP), which had its own structure and employees inside the MoHE. This
In many cases in which letters from senior officials,
program provided critical support in a number of areas
such as those in the President’s Office, were presented,
including capacity development at six universities
the president knew that the deputy minister would
(the first five years) and then at 12 universities as part
not admit the student and thus felt safe in pleasing
of SHEP II. Funding included support for master’s
a constituent with a letter of support while knowing
and Ph.D. training for faculty members at those
there would be no action taken. At one point the
institutions, laboratory improvements, classroom
president told the deputy minster to keep doing what
upgrades, quality assurance, funding for faculty
he was doing in upholding the standards and the rules.
research, and several other projects.
Nonetheless, these attempts at political interference in the normal processes of the MoHE took up a great deal
Over time, SHEP became a kingdom of its own
of time, and some of them succeeded through other
within the MoHE, with a great deal of patronage in
channels. This was true for at least 40 scholarships for
employment and inefficiency in operation. Those in
study in India that were given to relatives or friends
charge often operated without consulting the deputy
of high officials who did not meet the qualifications
minister. In later years, its funds were often used
for selection—an effort coordinated by senior officials www.scup.org
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outside the MoHE with the cooperation of the Indian
Those inflated scores had the effect of cutting out many
government but not the knowledge of the ministry.
people who should have qualified for admission since the number of total places was already established.
A growing number of conflicts developed in the MoHE during the tenure of two rather difficult ministers—
Similar corrupting influences were in play related to
the first was not much interested in higher education
awarding some scholarships for study abroad. In the
and was not an academic, and the second was a
end many of these scholarship students (who didn’t
former chancellor eager to assist his patrons and
meet the qualifications for university in India in
use his position and personal power to pay back his
one case) did poorly. They demonstrated, publically
supporters, help his friends, and enhance his status.
blaming their failures on what they said was the poor
These efforts sometimes resulted in conflict with
quality of Indian universities. In fact, they had been
the integrity of the deputy minister and his effort to
sent to some of the best universities in the country.8
raise the quality of higher education and ensure its
The demonstrations greatly embarrassed the Afghan
openness, honesty, and commitment to merit-based
government, which had benefited from Indian
principles.
generosity in allowing large numbers of Afghans to attend their best universities, thus depriving some
The minister moved control of the Kankor examination
Indian students of places. The deputy minister was
from the deputy minister for academic affairs to the
sent to India by the minister to solve these problems.
deputy minister for student affairs, who was easygoing,
Given the poor performance of the students, that was
not well organized, and less strict about rules and
not possible. There was no way to make these students
procedures. The shift in control of the Kankor from
able to meet the requirements of the universities given
the deputy minister for academic affairs unfortunately
their lack of preparation and inability to perform up to
provided an opportunity for attacks on the integrity
expectations. Passing them under those circumstances
of the examination process, not because the deputy
was not an option. Eventually they were sent back to
minister for student affairs was corrupt but because he
Afghanistan in disgrace. It need not have happened.
was not well organized and provided little oversight. In one case, armed men interfered with the process in
One unfortunate consequence of the corruption in
one part of the country. Afterward, the minister was
construction, from my perspective, was that the
reluctant to act against those involved. The results
deputy minister and others shied away from pushing
of that interference were reflected in unusually high
some badly needed construction projects because
scores for students in that region overall. Efforts by the
they did not want to be linked to the corruption.
deputy minister for academic affairs to have the exam
As a result, far too few buildings and projects were
results nullified in that province and the students re-
constructed—construction that was essential to
sit the exam were thwarted by the minister, probably
quality improvement and to accommodating the
because those involved were associated with very
legitimate enrollment growth resulting from the
powerful people. The tainted results were allowed to
growing number of graduates from secondary schools.
stand and no one was punished. We were to learn of
Among these projects were more laboratories, more
further interference in at least seven other areas that
and larger classrooms, and office space for the 1,000
resulted in inflated examination results benefiting
new faculty members. The unwillingness to push
certain groups (as described elsewhere in this study).
hard for infrastructure expansion was an unintended www.scup.org
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consequence of the effort to avoid corruption. It also
seriously. They included threats against his children,
affected donors’ willingness to support building
which caused the deputy minister and his wife to move
projects. They did not want to get involved in
them to more secure schools. The deputy minister was
construction because of the pervasive corruption and
reluctant to have personal security, especially at his
the difficulties of trying to control it.
home, since he felt that made him more of a target. I worried about this very much, as did others, and urged
Indeed, one of the biggest challenges at the MoHE from
him to reconsider. He worried too, but did not feel he
the inception of the new government was corruption.
could trust the security forces, as the head of one group
The admissions process had become corrupt by the
was close to one of the warlords who had threatened
time the deputy minister was appointed in April
him. So far he has been lucky.
2007. One of the deputy minister’s first tasks upon getting the position was to work with Minister Dadfar
When I first met the deputy minister he already had
to set up a separate Kankor Department within the
a clear vision of what needed to be done for Afghan
ministry and move to root out the corruption in the
higher education. The initial goal was to repair the
admissions process—an effort that was successful but
worst of the physical destruction—there were damaged
that required continuing vigilance. The admissions
buildings on almost every campus—resulting from
process was computerized, and major efforts were
more than 30 years of war. Compounding that was the
taken to eliminate the possibility of interference. A
fact that there had been little upkeep or repair in recent
number of staff members were fired, and the deputy
years. Several institutions lacked adequate utility
minister personally oversaw the examination process.
services including water, sanitation, and electricity.
I traveled with him during several examination cycles
Another high priority was to recruit additional staff
where we checked on the invigilators, observed the
to replace the faculty members and staff lost to war.
process at several testing sites, and were present
The deputy minister recognized that most of the new
when numerous efforts to cheat were uncovered. They
faculty members would be hired without master’s
included false IDs, switching identification numbers,
degrees or Ph.D.s given the lack of opportunity for
and impersonation. One year, students in one area
graduate study during the war, and thus most would
thought that if they used the examination ID number
require government assistance to get them the
of a very bright student but their own names, they
advanced training they needed.
would get that person’s high scores. In the end, the computer threw out all the examinations with identical
The deputy minister also understood that new
ID numbers and the plan failed. The effort to keep
policies were necessary to bring the universities into
the process honest was an ongoing one that had to
the modern era, including a variety of faculty and
be carefully overseen each time the examination was
staff regulations spelling out academic expectations
given.
including publication, updated professional standards, and a new legal framework for faculty members and
As a consequence of his honesty, forthrightness in
students. He believed it was essential to make the
speaking out against corruption, and efforts to block
new system more transparent, open, and efficient
corruption, the deputy minister received a number
while at the same time allowing institutions greater
of threats on his life. Several were made by known
autonomy in the name of productivity and flexibility. In
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particular, he was committed to ending corruption at
resignation on several occasions as noted earlier.
the ministry.
However, President Karzai would not let him resign, urging him to stay on several occasions. While I
The deputy minister knew that the curriculum was
was on my last home leave, he resigned again after
badly in need of upgrading, that new laboratories
a particularly unfortunate decision was made by the
and equipment were required to bring teaching up to
minister. Once again the president made it clear that he
international standards, and that teaching methods
had appointed the deputy minister and wanted him to
needed to be improved and made more student
remain in office. It was a difficult period for the deputy
focused. The administrative system had been badly
minister but he acceded to the president’s wishes,
weakened during the war years in part because some
recognizing that much of the progress that had been
institutions had been taken over by local warlords and
made in rebuilding higher education would be at risk if
officials. The institutional administrations needed to
he left. Nonetheless, it was a constant struggle between
be strengthened while at the same time governance
two different philosophies of leadership: the one based
needed to become more participatory, particularly
on helping friends and supporters common in Afghan
for faculty members. Most importantly, the deputy
tradition, and the other based on merit and openness.
minister understood that quality improvement at
The deputy minister and I talked about these pressures
every level was critical as was the establishment of
on many occasions.
mechanisms for continuous assessment to ensure that the process was sustained. He also believed
The corruption in the ministry, in particular, ate at the
that private higher education was an important part
deputy minister constantly. He had cleaned it up in his
of meeting national needs and that this required a
own section, but that was only one part of the ministry.
major effort by the MoHE to improve the quality of
He refused to be part of it, but it was widespread in
private institutions. He wanted to bring them under
some other parts of the ministry. The deputy minister
the umbrella of the MoHE so that the public could be
was aware of that yet he could not control it except
protected from fraudulent institutions and those that
in his own part of the MoHE—academic affairs.
were not focused on academics but were seen primarily
The conflicts tore at him. He and I knew that if he
as money-making bodies for their owners or that were
resigned, corruption was likely to completely take
built for political purposes.
over the MoHE. And so the deputy minister remained on the job. One thing that helped him was that it was
The pressure of the job, the corruption, the threats, and
clear to everyone that he had the total support of the
the constant tension within the MoHE took a terrible
president. But still he worried. As he said during a
toll on several of the leaders in higher education. The
discussion with me on June 12, 2013, “How do you
deputy minister had high blood pressure and the work
make progress and bring change in higher education
tended to aggravate it. He worked long hours and that,
when you are dealing with people who are involved
coupled with the threats and constant requests for
in corruption, nepotism, threats, and incompetence?
illegal favors, wore him down. The MoHE worked to
You realize that there are a lot of good people there
counter these pressures but the human cost remained.
too who are trying to do the right thing and make the system work correctly and you work with them.” The
The corruption and several actions by a minister
question is whether that will be enough to stem the
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tide of corruption and favoritism to make it possible to
chancellors. The deputy minister also had it reviewed
continue and sustain progress.
by faculty members with expertise in Sharia law to be sure that what was said about Islam and gender
Deputy Minister Babury is one of the most admired
was correct. All this was to be certain that something
people in the Afghan Civil Service. I was told that
as critical as gender equity would not be hindered by
countless times by other senior managers in the four
errors on the part of the ministry or something written
other ministries I worked with as a liaison between
that offended. The deputy minister knew that success
the MoHE and other Human Resources Development
in the long run would rise or fall on how well the case
Board members (the Ministry of Public Health,
was presented. The goal was to make as much progress
the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, the Ministry of
as possible in this difficult area—an area in which
Education, and the Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs,
there were centuries of tradition placing women in an
Martyrs and Disables) and the two economics
inferior position. The deputy minister knew how to
ministries, the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of
limit opposition and maximize the chances of success
Economy. I was in an unusual position as an American
even in an area as controversial as gender equity. He
trusted to represent the MoHE in many meetings and
used to say, “We have to deal with reality.” That did not
on special occasions.
mean that he compromised on principles, but that we made the strongest case conceivable and brought along
The deputy minister is one of the most effective leaders
as many waverers as possible early in the process. That
I have seen in the 15 countries in which I have worked
careful preparation allowed the deputy minister to
on higher education. He is a warm human being with
succeed with most of his policy initiatives.
personal values that govern his every action. He is honest, of impeccable integrity, hardworking, and amazingly talented. He understands people and their
Some Directors with Different Quests
moods, and he is able to recognize when the right time has come to move forward with a policy decision
There are more than a dozen directorates at the MoHE
and when it is necessary to wait. That is what he did
including Internal Audit, Procurement, Student
with accreditation, and even more so with the Higher
Affairs, University Relations, Academic Affairs
Education Gender Strategy (MoHE 2015). We had
Coordination, Information Technology, Planning,
completed the gender strategy document long before
Finance, Human Resources, Study Abroad, Private
it was released. Part of the delay was a major conflict
Education, Quality Assurance, Foreign Relations, and
over gender in Parliament caused by the premature
Scholarships. Most of them are well run by dedicated
release of a bill on gender that mobilized conservatives
leaders. However, there are a few who operate for
against gender equity in general, causing a big public
their own ends. Some of them made progress difficult
uproar. So we waited a few more months. And during
in other areas. This section is the story of several
that period he had additional leaders of women’s
of those directors based on an amalgamation of the
organizations in the university community, Parliament,
actions of a number of them—people with relatively
the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, and elsewhere read
similar characteristics who illustrate several different
the document and provide comments. The gender
types of leadership in higher education, some of which
strategy was also reviewed by several prominent
have created challenges to progress in the MoHE. I
faculty members, deans, vice chancellors, and
have altered their backgrounds and made a number
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of changes in discussing them and the events that
graces despite his lack of productivity. He had been in
transpired in order to hide their identities while
place through several ministers.
illustrating their particular brand of leadership. Another director was appointed by the minister over One was a hard worker, focusing almost entirely on his
the objection of several senior leaders who were
work at some expense to his wife and children. He was
concerned about his history of difficulty in working
a former broadcaster and a regular on television talk
with people. Another was virtually unknown but
shows since he had an opinion on almost any issue. He
because he replaced someone incompetent people were
was also very active on a particular campus prior to his
willing to give him a chance. Both were tasked with
appointment. He was enamored by power and eager to
improving the directorates they headed and filling
wield it. He had been largely successful in the past with
vacant positions. Neither director knew much about
a solid record of achievement. He had a tendency to
the area he was to lead but it was hoped each would be
dominate meetings and talked like an expert in every
quick studies and rapidly overcome those limitations.
field. This did not make him popular with his fellow
I spent some time briefing both about the work that
committee members, yet he was respected for being
had been done and what seemed to me a number of key
able to get work done.
issues for their directorates.
Another came out of an administrative background in
One of the directors was receptive to my assistance and
another ministry. He did not have any higher education
carefully reviewed the material I provided. However,
experience but had good connections at senior levels
it soon became clear that his understanding of the
in the government. He saw himself as a power broker
subject was superficial and likely to create problems
who could take advantage of his connections to make
since he was not very good at listening to advice
things happen. He was not concerned with rules and
from his advisory committee. Another listened and
regulations but with getting what his backers wanted
seemed appreciative. His directorate was in dire need
done—with considerable success. His understanding of
of direction having had little leadership prior to his
ethics was limited. He had developed close connections
appointment. The advisory committee of one of the
with those he was supposed to regulate.
directors was excellent and had worked to carefully lay out the policies for the activities of the directorate and
Yet another director was an affable and popular leader
committee relative to the higher education institutions.
who was a longtime bureaucrat but at one time had
The committee members were hardworking academics
been a university language teacher. He moved up
under the leadership of a deputy minister. They were
through the civil service and was eventually appointed
an independent-minded group of highly motivated,
a director. He was a bon vivant with an open office
thoughtful faculty members and administrators who
door. There were always tea and sweets available for
sought to improve higher education as a whole and
visitors. However, his directorate was noted for its
were willing to put in long hours on a weekly basis to
inefficiency and limited output. Some people suspected
do that. Several of them were also involved in other
that it was also a center of corruption, but I never
committees working on the improvement of higher
saw any evidence of that. It was his popularity and
education. The other directorate lacked an advisory
friendliness with everyone that kept him in good
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Soon into the tenure of these directors it became
questions. As a result, some changes were made. The
clear that they were not consulting the appropriate
process had worked well, resulting in the development
deputy minister who was their supervisor. They both
of an excellent relationship between the commission
focused primarily on the minister, who had little
and the higher education institutions. The results were
knowledge about these areas. One paid most of his
positive to this point and engendered a great deal of
attention to some of the institutions he was supposed
interest from the institutions.
to be regulating. The air of confidence of one of the directors and his interest in almost every aspect of
In another case, some of the higher education
higher education soon had him involved in many areas
institutions were not happy with the Bye Laws
other than his own. Among his earliest initiatives was
prepared by the MoHE and regarded them as an
a proposal for major changes in the Bye Laws for his
intrusion. The Bye Laws were intended to protect the
directorate. The thrust of the proposed changes was
public but the institutions saw them as interference.
to give more power to the director, allowing him to
They sought to have a number of them changed and
override decisions of the advisory committee. This was
argued that they were autonomous bodies and so
something not even the minister could do. The Bye
could not be regulated by the MoHE. The director
Laws and other procedures had been worked out over
set up a new advisory committee that included some
more than a year by committees that had taken great
of the strongest objectors. Together they revised the
care to ensure that the language was clear and the
Bye Laws, weakening many of the major provisions
process free of political or other improper influences as
including protections for the public. These Bye Laws
well as transparent with careful checks and balances.
were then put in place without having gone through the
The committees believed that the procedures needed to
proper MoHE vetting procedure. Indeed, most of the
be open and clear to all participants while at the same
MoHE was not aware of these changes until a major
time protecting confidential and personal information.
crisis emerged some months later.
A major goal was to encourage universities and higher education institutions to view their relationship with
Up to this point the process of planning in one
the MoHE as a positive one—one that would benefit
directorate had been led by a deputy minister or, in his
the institution. The founding members saw the
absence, a senior faculty member, a very experienced,
process between the MoHE and the institutions as a
dynamic, and thoughtful person who was a former
cooperative one that included a learning process for
administrator at a major university. The members
the institutions designed to make improvements, not
worked well together and the results were clear—the
punish or penalize.
outcome of careful collaboration, expert input from a consultant, discussions about the process in other
The committee members had been very careful
parts of the world, and review by experienced faculty
to work with the chancellors, vice chancellors for
members and administrators. Everyone was happy
academic affairs, deans, and other academics to
with the outcome after the last workshop with the
explain the process, get their feedback on the rules
institutions. There were no dissenters.
and procedures, and support the institutions so that the process worked well. In one case, once the Bye
Soon after the new directors were appointed they
Laws were agreed upon, the committee held a number
began to assemble staffs. None of the new staff
of workshops to explain the process and answer
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not surprising since the processes in these areas
During this period one director became increasingly,
were relatively new to Afghanistan. In one case, the
and publicly, critical of the major donor to his
director began to run the committee meetings in an
directorate. He so offended the staff of the donor
overbearing manner, no longer as a collective effort
that they refused to work with him. The ministry
but one in which he told the members what he had
was also getting complaints from universities and
done and did not foster discussion. What discussion
higher education institutes about his arrogance, high-
did occur concerned policy issues about which
handedness, and lack of respect for senior academics
he had already made decisions and in some cases
and administrators. The director publicly criticized
written to the institutions to inform them without
senior MoHE management as well as some chancellors
any consultation with the committee. People on the
in ways people found offensive and untrue. They
committee were polite, but made it clear that was not
complained to the minister and told him that the
how they believed the work should be carried out.
director was undermining the whole process. While
As this leadership behavior continued unchanged, a
the minister recognized this was the case, he seemed
number of committee members stopped attending
unwilling to remove the director, perhaps afraid of his
meetings because they were no longer consultations
ties to one of the nation’s leaders and his links to other
but sessions in which differences of opinion were not
important people. Thus nothing was done.
welcome. This deprived the directorate of some of its best and most knowledgeable leaders. Nonetheless,
It became increasingly difficult for many in the MoHE
several of the remaining members and the advisor did
to work with several of these directors. One director’s
not hesitate to disagree when things were suggested
tone during meetings with his committee became
that they did not think were proper or appropriate.
increasingly strident and threatening. Funding was becoming a problem, and he demanded more
At this point the relationship between this director
funding from the donors, refusing to move forward
and many of the higher education institutions began
with the program unless the donors put more funds
to sour. The director began to threaten institutions
at his disposal. In the meantime he became publicly
with sanctions if they did not respond to him quickly
disparaging of the donors and accused their staff
or move to the new timetables he had set out for their
of incompetence. At this point the donors froze the
activities. He had developed timetables for institutional
remaining funding. The director argued that he was
action that seemed to many of the committee
protecting the project and the faculty against donor
members to be unrealistic. In part this reflected his
interference and said he would not move until he
lack of experience—his lack of understanding of the
was given what he wanted even if the work of the
complexity of the processes and the need for adequate
committee and the directorate had to be stopped.
time to carry them out properly. Soon thereafter, the
Indeed, by the time my contract finished at the end of
director began to send letters to the institutions about
December 2013, the work had come to a halt.
their slow response to his timetable. Most included veiled threats of sanctions for those who were late.
In another case, the director defied orders to carry
He publically accused some of the chancellors of not
out a detailed review of institutions, instead using his
working very hard. In another case, the director began
staff to do the job in a way that did little to distinguish
to treat institutions unequally, favoring some and
those that were performing well from those that were
punishing others. This caused a major uproar.
failing to meet minimum standards. The effort was www.scup.org
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deemed unacceptable by almost everyone including
the protector of some institutions against both the
senior government officials. The whole episode was an
government and the MoHE. It was their interests that
embarrassment to the ministry.
were most important. As a result people lost faith in both his directorate and in many of the institutions he
The irony of one situation was that the director was
represented.
a very capable person who worked hard—indeed, it appeared that higher education absorbed his entire
There are a number of lessons to be learned from
interest and all his time leaving little for himself or his
these cases—most critically, the importance of
family. Yet it was also clear that he liked power and
leadership that is committed to the goals of the
control and constantly sought it. He seldom asked for
ministry, not to the power or the potential benefits
input from committee members, in contrast to the way
for themselves or their personal clients. The change
the committee had operated previously. When some
process had proceeded without major difficulty prior
members dropped out he appointed replacements
to the appointment of these directors, with major
without consulting the appropriate deputy minister
buy-in by most of the institutions, faculty members,
who was the appointing authority. This director
and leadership because they came to understand the
increasingly wrote hostile-sounding letters to the
potential benefits of the changes proposed for their
institutions, to other sections in the MoHE, and to the
ability to attract students, provide opportunities to
major donor. For example, he would say to a university
faculty members, and demonstrate capacity. That
or faculty representative, “If you do not do ‘x’ by next
hard-won trust and confidence was eroded by these
week, I will report you to the minister and then there
directors, in one case at the institutions and in the
will be serious consequences for you to pay.” As a
other with the public. In their quest for power, these
result, he lost much of the good will that had been built
directors alienated many of the higher education
between the committee members and the institutions
institutions, turning what started out as a positive
over the years of hard work. What had seemed to be a
experience into an arduous nightmare for many and
joint effort between the ministry and the institutions
a bureaucratic ordeal for others. While their styles
became a complex chore for the universities, with
mirrored many of the traditions of leadership in
increasing demands for action accompanied by regular
Afghanistan—the patron-client leader, the all-powerful
criticism and browbeating. The whole process became
leader, the popular leader—they weakened respect
increasingly bureaucratic and oppressive, totally unlike
for the MoHE, harmed the reputation of institutions,
what was intended. People were afraid of the director,
and undid some of the goodwill that had been built
many staff members avoided him, attendance fell off at
up by the MoHE over the years. In these cases, their
committee meetings, yet he seemed to grow in power—
connections to powerful politicians made it difficult,
and all of this was very damaging to the MoHE.
if not impossible, to remove them. They seemed untouchable for a while, although one was finally
In another case, the director acted in a very
removed. Perhaps that will be seen as a lesson to be
highhanded way, favoring some institutions and
learned by the others.
ignoring or punishing others. He had especially close ties with several higher education institutions in
Despite these problems, a number of the institutions
ways that verged on conflicts of interest, something
working with these directorates have made especially
that worried many leaders. He regarded himself as
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committed, and they have been able to work with, or around, these directors. There has also continued to be a major commitment of time and energy by a dozen or so of the brightest, most dedicated faculty and staff members to help bring about major changes in these areas despite the problems. Nonetheless, the misdirection of these directorates has been disastrous for the MoHE, weakening some of the major successes of the NHESP: 2010–2014 in their areas of control. However, significant progress has still been made. These cases show that it is possible to move forward when support is broad even in a context in which some powerful and influential people are hindering progress.
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Chapter 5: Challenges on Campus The Challenge of Gender Equity
The MoHE has requested funding for additional
Gender equity has been a formal goal of the Ministry
proposal to the donor working group and its budget
of Higher Education since 2009 as laid out in the National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010– 2014 (MoHE 2009a) and the Higher Education Gender Strategy (MoHE 2015). The MoHE has been committed to the National Action Plan for the Women of Afghanistan (Ministry of Women’s Affairs 2007) and has been working closely with the Ministry of Women’s Affairs to both develop its own gender strategy and help bring the national action plan to reality. The ministry has been committed to increasing the number of female students and faculty members since the end of the Taliban era, during which women were excluded from primary, secondary, and higher education and as faculty members. The MoHE set a target of 25 percent female students by 2015. That number is currently at 18.2 percent (figure 9), and it seems unlikely that the target will be met for reasons we will explore. Although the number of female students increased by 5,791 in 2014 and almost 6,000 the year before, a lack of housing for women has prevented greater increases. To offset that problem, the MoHE is building two women’s dorms during 2014–15. One has already been completed by the U.S. military at Herat, and one other is under construction—a two-block dormitory for 800 female students at Balkh University
dormitory places for 4,000 female students in its request to government. That should help higher education move closer to the 25 percent goal for female students since the lack of safe housing remains the main factor in deterring women from applying for admission. The effort to recruit more female faculty members with a goal of women making up 20 percent of all faculty members by 2015 has been less successful; this number now stands at 14 percent (figure 10). Even with a 20 percent increase in female faculty members last year, higher education will still not meet the 20 percent goal by 2015. The obstacles to the recruitment of female faculty members remain substantial. They include too few women studying for advanced degrees (only 28 percent of the total graduate student population), the difficulty women have in getting permission to study for graduate degrees abroad, the pressure of family obligations, and the lingering resistance to encouraging women to become professors. The small number of female faculty members, 693 in 2014, also means that there are few women to mentor female graduate students, particularly since only two percent of female faculty members have Ph.D.s and only 30 percent have master’s degrees. My experience elsewhere suggests that recruitment will become much easier once at least 25 percent of faculty members are women. To that end, departments have been encouraged to make a special effort to recruit women, scholarships have been set
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Figure 9 Female Students in Higher Education: 2008–2014 (number and percentage) Students % increase
Number of females
Number of males
% female
9,991
44,692
18.3%
% increase female
Increased number of females
Year
Total
2008
54,683
2009
59.206
8.4%
12,180
49,529
19.7%
21.9%
2,189
2010
63,837
7.7%
12,465
51,372
19.5%
2.3%
285
2011
77,336
21.1%
15,025
62,311
19.4%
20.5%
2,560
2012
101,300
31.0%
19,215
82,085
19.0%
27.9%
4,190
2013
132,949
31.2%
25,206
107,743
18.9%
31.2%
5,991
2014
170,582
28.3%
30,997
139,585
18.2%
23.0%
5,791
Source: MoHE data.
Female dormitory in Herat funded by the United States. Photo by MoHE.
Female dormitory in Kabul remodeled and upgraded by U.S. State Department. Photo by MoHE.
English language training in Kabul University dormitory. Photo by U.S. State Department. www.scup.org
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Chapter 5
aside for graduate study for female faculty members,
brightest female students have received scholarships to
funding is being sought for research by female faculty
study abroad only to have their families refuse to sign
members, and a program is being established to
the required papers.2 There also appear to be cases in
encourage bright female undergraduates to go on to
which women have been delayed in getting promotions.
graduate school to become academics. In addition, a
The MoHE is in the process of setting up a commission
review of promotion to ensure there is no gender bias
to review all promotions for bias. However, as we know
will be undertaken, and a number of other measures
from U.S. experience, proving bias in promotion cases
are planned that are designed to improve gender equity
is very difficult even in an environment in which the
at the departmental, institutional, and system levels
rules and laws about gender equity are very clear.
(MoHE 2015). The difficulties for professional women, including The ministry has recognized the many challenges
several faculty members at Kabul University, were
that must be faced in the effort to achieve gender
made clear in interviews in 2003. As one respondent
equity—including some within the ministry itself.
put it:
But the reality is that biases against women remain strong especially among older faculty members and
The problem is culture, not religion. If we want
staff. Some of the bias is based on the misguided belief
to restore the rights of women we have to educate
that there is a religious basis for it in Islam, which is
the men—begin with the right of woman on the
not the case.1 There are also deep-seated traditional
basis of the Qur’an. Islam has given a lot of rights
prejudices that are hard to overcome, although
to woman, but a lot of men are illiterate. . . . Even
education is beginning to make a difference, especially
if they do read, they don’t know the meaning of
with the growing number of girls getting a primary
it because it is written in Arabic—they do not
and secondary education. There have been attacks on
know anything different than the conservative
female students going to and from school and attacks on schools themselves as recently as this year. Sexual harassment and intimidation also occur
Figure 10 Female Faculty Members in Higher Education: 2008–2014
at higher education institutions though the Female Faculty Members
MoHE has put in place strict rules to prevent Year
Total faculty
Percent increase
Number female
Increase number female
Percent female of total
Percent increase female
2008
2,556
382
14.95%
2009*
2,789
9.1%
419
37
15.02%
9.69%
2010
3,023
8.4%
456
37
15.08%
8.83%
loads for teaching assistants (most women are
2011
3,110
2.9%
474
18
15.24%
3.95%
teaching assistants), difficulty in obtaining
2012
3,427
10.2%
512
38
14.94%
8.02%
advanced training such as a master’s degree
2013
4,169
21.4%
616
104
14.81%
20.31%
or Ph.D. because of family resistance to study
2014
4,946
18.2%
693
77
14.00%
12.50%
it. Sexual violence is not unknown, although traditions about the separation of men and women make such contact less likely to happen than in many other countries. At the faculty level, women face many additional obstacles including discrimination, heavy teaching
abroad, and pressure from family obligations. There are a number of cases in which some of the
*2009 data are estimates. Source: MoHE data. www.scup.org
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way. Even the husbands of professional women
One reason for the higher rate of mental health
wield tremendous power. If they say do not do
problems among young women compared to men is
something that is it. One woman reported that
the constant oversight of parents and family and the
she liked to paint. It upset her husband that she
concern that once they graduate their parents will
would sit outside and paint something for a long
marry them off. Even if that marriage turns out to be
time—people will talk [say nasty things] about
a good one, they will nonetheless usually have a very
her—this is not good for the husband’s reputation.
unequal relationship with their husbands, have trouble
Therefore, the husband did not allow her to paint
getting a job (assuming their husbands allow that), and
and said no to her demand—what could she do
run the risk of discrimination and harassment once
but stop?3
employed.
The woman went on to note that even though Afghan
There are other types of intimidation women face as
law states that men and women should be treated
well. The night letter4 is one of these. A night letter
equally, you cannot take a man to court. As one of
was handed to one of the women working for me as
them, a professor of law, put it, “Traditions about the
she got home from the office by a masked man who
role of women are more important than the law. You
then fled. It read, “We know where you work and you
cannot go against these powerful traditions.” While
must stop working for the Americans. We know you
the situation has improved somewhat in the last 10
live with your mother alone and if you do not stop
years, the basic problems noted by these professional
this work you both will face consequences.” She did
women in 2003 remain very real today. For the average
not stop working, but she was badly shaken by this
woman, the situation is even worse. These women are
and asked to be allowed to apply to a U.S. program
often secluded in their homes, unable to leave without
to move to the United States with her mother—which
a male escort and then only if they keep their bodies
was refused by the U.S. Embassy because she worked
covered with a burqa. In extended families, they are
for a contractor, not directly for the U.S. government.
also often under the authority of their mother-in-law,
Unfortunately, even those who worked directly for
which is frequently a difficult relationship.
the U.S. government—even some who were wounded in that work— were seldom given visas despite U.S.
Women in urban areas have a great deal more freedom
promises to the contrary.
now than they did 10 years ago. More are employed, and fewer than five percent wear a burqa in contrast
Young women who want to go to university often have
to 95 percent in Kabul 10 years ago. The cell phone
a hard time getting permission from their family or
has been an important tool in freeing young women
spouse to attend. Thus, for the most part only those
somewhat from parental authority—they now have
women who do extremely well in school are allowed
better communication with their families when at the
to go because there is great pressure on their family
university to the relief of many mothers. Some young
to let them continue. This means that overall those
people do make decisions about their own partners for
women who do get into the university are on average
marriage, but even in Kabul that holds true for fewer
brighter and more articulate than the men. Some
than 10 percent of marriages, which remain arranged
women at the university face discrimination from
for most people.
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is unusual since male/female contact is limited and
at the end of 2016, there is widespread fear that the
opportunities are few. Female students generally
progress made to date on women’s rights will be
receive less assistance from faculty members and less
reversed and there will be a reemergence of extremely
mentoring than male students, in part because male
restrictive views about the place of women in society.
teachers worry about seeming to be alone with female
All these concerns increase the pressure on women,
students and because there are too few female faculty
making their day-to-day lives difficult and the picture
members to provide the amount of mentoring needed.
of their future clouded and uncertain. A positive
Only 14 percent of faculty members are women while
change for higher education is the appointment in 2015
19 percent of undergraduates are women. To put that
of a woman as minister of higher education. She is
numerically, in 2013 there were 43,750 female students
taking an active role in issues facing women.
in higher education and only 615 female faculty members, a ratio of 71:1.
An example of the challenges faced by a young professional woman is presented in the section below.
Female students are often under great pressure from
This young academic is someone I was asked to mentor
their extended families to get married at puberty
by the MoHE. She was a top student and an effective
and to stop their university studies before they have
teacher and is now one of the highest ranking women
graduated. If they get married during their university
in any administrative position in higher education in
years they often withdraw. These and other pressures,
Afghanistan. While her experiences are not those of a
plus the experiences of more than 30 years of war,
typical woman, they illustrate how difficult it is for a
have led to a high incidence of clinical levels of post-
young female professional to operate at a university,
traumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety
even with strong support from the leadership of the
among women. This affects at least 40 percent of
MoHE. For her protection I will not identify her or her
college-age students and is twice as high among
institution. I have changed a few facts that might give
women as men (Babury and Hayward 2013), as we
her and the location of her institution away, but the
noted earlier, in part because of the daily pressures on
basic issues, circumstances, and threats are facts from
women plus the fear that the future holds little hope for
her experiences.
them. These fears are borne out by the experiences of their older female siblings and the experiences of other female graduates. The job situation for female university graduates has improved somewhat, and there are a greater number of women working in government, for NGOs or private companies, and in education than there were even five years ago. As to marriage, most women still do not have a say in their marriage arrangements. A few women have a degree of freedom in marriage choices but that is the exception even for college graduates of either sex. With the uncertainties around the elections and the departure of all or most NATO troops expected
The Challenging Life of a Female University Professional and Administrator At our first meeting I was struck by the confidence and poise of this young woman. A senior ministry official had asked me to meet with her to give her some suggestions about how to deal with some of the serious challenges she faced at her institution as vice chancellor for academic affairs. Here was someone who was totally comfortable with herself, courageous, and very open to talking about herself and the situation at her university. She carried herself with ease, standing
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up straight to her maximum height or sitting tall and
a woman. She is young, about 29, and lives with her
assured. Her eyes on that first day I met her reflected
parents, brother, and sisters in a city but commutes to
a kind of honesty that was striking and haunting. Her
work outside the city. The ministry is supportive of her
face was kind and open and without make-up except
as one of the few women in leadership positions and
for around her eyes in the Afghan way.
eager to ensure that she can continue her work despite the obstacles put in her way because she is a woman.
She talked in a clear confident voice, emphasizing
Trust came quickly, partly because I was asked by a
certain points with her hands. As her comments were
respected senior ministry official to help her, partly
translated for me she waited patiently but was eager
because I am a foreigner with no ethnic associations
to go on. I was to meet with her many times over the
or political links in Afghanistan and am not tainted
next year to help her deal with a wide range of issues
by a culture of looking down on or ignoring women,
on a troubled campus. In time I was able to read her
and partly because I am her elder. During the year, we
face a little bit better, and that was helpful in getting
developed the openness and respect of a trusted and
past her outward confidence and her initial reluctance
admired elder and a very respectful daughter. It was
to say negative things about anyone or to lay out
an amazing and unusual experience, especially in this
the magnitude of the threats against her. I began to
culture. There was no touching, no hugs, no pats on
understand how the troubles were affecting her. It was
the back, no contact. That is forbidden in this culture.
her eyes that reflected what was going on in her life,
And our conversations, though spoken directly to each
what she had seen and experienced, although only
other, were translated (usually by a female translator)
after several meetings did I begin to learn the details
so we were always one step removed in a way. Yet when
of some of the more frightening and outrageous of her
I left Afghanistan for the last time in January there
experiences. When she was troubled her eyes showed
was deep sadness.
it, a bit marked with sadness, but they also showed a kind of determination when threatened, a deeper set
She was appointed to a senior administrative position
when exhausted, a warmth when happy, and a glow
by the ministry on the recommendation of her
when proud.
institution’s chancellor after she had taught there for several years and then finished her master’s degree
As I came to know her, she told me about several
at the top of her class. That program was a new one
threats to her life, attempts to humiliate her to prevent
supported by USAID using the American model—very
her from carrying out her duties, and efforts to
demanding with a great deal of writing, many oral
blackmail her. She also explained the need to keep all
presentations, and a heavy reading load. She was very
this from her family lest they forbid her to continue
motivated by what she had learned in the program
working. There was her obvious hurt in the context
and wanted to put some of these new ideas into place
of her good intensions, her efforts to improve the
at her university, especially those ideas that would
institution. Later, there were a few occasions when
improve the quality of teaching. This university was
tears welled up in her eyes, yet she never lost her poise.
notorious for its lack of discipline, with both faculty
Through it all she remained proud and unbowed.
members and students often missing class. The requirements of the institution, such as the required
Over time I got to know her well since I met with her
final examinations, were frequently ignored. Early in
regularly as a mentor—always with a translator, usually
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members show up for their classes on time and take
is devout. Some of this opposition was organized with
attendance of their students.
the knowledge of a senior administrator who wanted someone else in her job—someone who would be more
The university was subject to a great deal of
passive. He tried to have her removed without reason
interference from powerful local MPs and people in
but did not succeed.
the community, and that made progress difficult. She began a number of workshops to improve teaching.
Because a senior administrator now opposed her, most
She established committees on scholarships, strategic
faculty members were afraid to show their support
planning, examinations, rules and regulations, and
for her work, fearing retribution. However, over time
quality assurance. She established new faculties of
they realized that she was their best hope for positive
economics and computer science, was able to obtain
change on campus. A number of faculty members and
tables and chairs from ISAF (the International Security
many students began to show strong support for her
Assistance Force in Afghanistan) for 20 classrooms,
and went on strike when the chancellor tried to remove
held regular meetings with students, and worked
her. A delegation of faculty members went to the
to build good relations with faculty members. She
ministry to register their support.
convinced a merchant in town to build toilets for the women—something that did not exist prior to that.
Despite the pressure, she remains committed to her work, to being the best in her field, to making a
At the outset her appointment was fought by
difference in her university, to supporting women, and
conservatives at the university and in the community—
to bringing fairness and equity to campus. She is a
people who did not want a woman in a position of
stickler for following the rules—perhaps a bit too much
authority. The ministry intervened and gave her its
for her own good at times—and impeccably honest,
strong support. Nonetheless, several conservative
ethical, and moral. As she says of herself, although
faculty members tried to organize some students
there are many difficulties, “I can say that it is my
against her. While these efforts failed, they were
honesty, my morals [beliefs], my sentiment of loving
draining and discouraging. As she began to enforce the
for my country that caused that I should bring changes
rules, particularly about faculty attendance at classes,
in this university.” Added to these problems was the
some faculty members tried to intimidate her. One
fact that at her university she was also in a minority in
came to her office with an AK-47 and warned her to
terms of ethnicity and that too was held against her.
stop taking attendance. At one point things became especially critical. During a break, she was threatened
It would be nice to report almost two years later
with death if she came back to campus. The ministry
that all this has ended happily with strong support
intervened and warned that it would put police
for her from faculty and students. But many of the
on campus if the threats continued. Yet on several
pressures continued, in open as well as in less overt
other occasions she received phone threats and was
ways. In June 2014 the chancellor was replaced, and
frequently assaulted verbally. A fire was started outside
his replacement was someone who was willing to
her office, several people went to her home in the city
work in concert with her. At that point her situation
to threaten her, and others attempted to humiliate her
began to improve. However, anonymous people began
by starting rumors about her personal life. One group
to call her, threatening to kill her if she returned to
also claimed she was not religious though in fact she
campus. The ministry was informed and moved to www.scup.org
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end the harassment and threats once more. It is hard
to enforce concerning the faculty—about being in
to know if this will bring peace to the campus. On the
class each day on time and teaching as they are paid
advice of the ministry she stayed away for a few days
to do—and the resistance of some faculty members
but is now back on campus with strong support from
who do not take these expectations seriously and
the new chancellor and the ministry. We will see what
some men who do not believe a woman should hold a
transpires. The costs to her personally are high, and
senior administrative position. She was among the first
she is exhausted by the strain.
women to be appointed to that position and remains one of the few at that level.
Here is someone trying to improve the quality and environment of this rather undistinguished institution,
Her motivation to become a teacher and professional
help improve the status of all faculty members,
developed early in her undergraduate years through
protect the rights of female faculty, and set the stage
discussions and interactions with other students. She
for more female administrators. As a result her life
did very well at the university, being first in her class in
was threatened, people tried to humiliate her, and
all four years. She felt that she didn’t get into one of the
others sought her removal. Although she has strong
central universities because of her ethnicity, and so she
support from most faculty and students on campus,
went to a university in the provinces. After two years
the price she has paid is very high. The lessons taken
of teaching at that institution she was admitted into a
from these events by other women may make them
master’s program and again was at the top of her class.
reluctant to speak out or take leadership positions.
Her hard work and brilliance led to her appointment as
While conditions have improved, the situation remains
a senior administrator.
worrisome. Her situation is similar to that of many young women She wrote me recently about her continued concerns: “I
in higher education—dealing with the opposition of
have been under terrible physical and mental pressure
large segments of the population to any education for
from the mentioned group of men in the university,
women, including opposition from family members
especially from some ranking staff of the university
as well as many in the community. She was offered
who has come from another province. The mentioned
a scholarship to the United States based on her
staff and the [X] Department professors even incite
outstanding leadership but was unable to take it. For
students against me. They have spread rumors about
many women in positions of authority, the lack of
my personality and character in order to insult me and
respect, disparaging comments, or efforts to belittle
make me resign from the position.” Yet she persists
are regular experiences. It is having to steel yourself
with strong support from the MoHE, her chancellor,
to that every day and not let it show, not let it eat at
most faculty members and students at her university,
you. That is demoralizing. And women in positions
and others. Nonetheless, all this is taking a toll on
of authority frequently face those who refuse to
her, and in 2014 she reported that she was worn out
acknowledge their authority. Many of those who act
and sick due in part to “the challenges with the rules
inappropriately or without respect are powerful people
and regulations that I’m faced with every day.” She
themselves, in some cases MPs or chancellors or senior
continued, “I feel a little tired and unhappy with such
faculty members. There is the constant need to deal
a situation.” By “the challenges with the rules and
with comments that “a women shouldn’t be doing this”
regulations” she means those that she tries faithfully
or assumptions that “women do not belong here.” And www.scup.org
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even women who have strong support seldom get that
the ministry—something seen as threatening to many
support when they are threatened. People are afraid.
of those in weak institutions. The ministry hoped this
As she wrote recently, “Without having a supporter it is
cleansing process would give private higher education
difficult for a woman to work in an environment which
some legitimacy and reverse the decline in the quality
is still so unsecure.” The cost of being among the first
of that sector.
women in a university leadership position is very high indeed.
Participating in this review effort involved real risks for those faculty members involved—especially for
Faculty Leadership in Action: Taking Risks for Their Commitment to Change I know it might cost me my life, but I want to do my own small part to change the system and will take that chance. I will lead the review. While most threats are against senior leaders, faculty members involved in the change process are sometimes targets, especially those involved in reviewing programs or institutions that might be closed, fined, or put on probation as a result. This was a concern for some of those involved in the review to assess the quality and right to operate of private higher education institutions. The comments above came from a medical school faculty member I had been working on to lead the planned review of private higher education institutions requested by President Karzai. The rapid and largely unfettered growth in the number of private higher education institutions led to a number of weak or fraudulent institutions. The public soon discovered that many of these institutions were weak, and that began to affect public attitudes about private higher education in general—deservedly so. President Karzai was among those concerned about low quality. He issued a presidential decree5 ordering a review to weed out the corrupt and below-par institutions and encourage the weaker ones to improve. The MoHE was to undertake this review, which involved the assertion of greater oversight over private higher education by
the leadership because of the political connections of some of those involved in establishing the private institutions. The physician who took on the leadership of this review was one of a small number of faculty members who had already given a great deal of time, thought, and energy to the work of the ministry on quality assurance and accreditation. Let’s look at how the process transpired. Review of private higher education Because of growing concern about the quality of many of the new private higher education institutions, President Karzai issued a decree requiring a review and ranking of all private higher education institutions, as previously noted. The MoHE Directorate of Private Higher Education undertook the review but both the methods used and the staff involved lacked credibility, and the results were deemed unreliable. This was a serious embarrassment for the ministry. As a result the minister asked the deputy minister and me to facilitate a new review using appropriate methods and faculty reviewers. The stakes were high since most of the institutions were for-profit and closure or a poor performance report would be costly. There was opposition to this second review from the Directorate of Private Higher Education since its leaders didn’t want any interference with the close relationships they had developed with some of the institutions. The director of private higher education argued that a viable review was not possible in any case since the owners would lie about their
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finances, give false information about employees, limit
were overcome through discussion and persuasion
the reviewers’ access, and probably try to intimidate
by team members and MoHE officials. In the end,
or bribe the reviewers. For the seven private medical
perseverance, care, and even-handedness allowed the
universities the stakes were particularly high since
process to be completed in all but two regions of the
one of the review’s leaders was a medical doctor
country. Work there was prevented by the onset of
known for his high standards. There had already been
winter weather. Soon thereafter the funding expired.
several public statements suggesting that some of these
Those reviews that were not completed were carried
medical schools were of such low quality that they put
out with different funding when warmer weather
patients at risk and should be closed.
arrived.
These concerns made preparation for the review a
The success of these reviews was crucial in trying to
challenge. In addition, the president had set a very
reverse the quality decline in private higher education
limited time frame. The funding from USAID for the
and beginning to recoup its legitimacy with the public.
review also had a short time frame. While my staff
The reviews could not have taken place without the
and I had already prepared an assessment protocol,
dedication, diligence, and risk taking of several dozen
the faculty reviewers had to be trained and that would
committed faculty members. Although there were a
take time. Given the opposition to the review, it was
few threats and attempts at intimidation, the process
critical for the peer reviewers to demonstrate an open
went forward. A few reviewers were intimidated and
and unbiased demeanor and be prepared to make
dropped out after the first day, but the rest continued
differential judgments about quality. Following the
and prepared careful, thoughtful assessments that
training the first reviews were undertaken. As noted
allowed the institutions to be ranked with a few put
earlier, the results of the first few institutional reviews
on probation or threatened with closure if they did
were alarming. The reviewers gave high scores to
not meet standards within a short period of time.
all the institutions on almost every item reviewed.
This process is but one example of the commitment
They did not seem to understand their obligations in
of many faculty members and a handful of dedicated
the process, and the review was halted immediately.
administrators to bringing about fundamental changes
Additional training was mandated for the reviewers
in the system.6
emphasizing the importance of a wide-ranging scale that differentiated excellence from medium and low
Quality assurance and accreditation
quality and providing clear examples of what each level of the ranking should indicate—e.g., the highest
Quality assurance was the responsibility of the MoHE
level indicates one of the best in the country. This time
when I started there in 2009. No processes were in
the training was effective and the reviews proceeded
place to review or assess the quality of institutions,
appropriately.
the curricula, or any other aspect of higher education. Most neighboring countries had accreditation
Some review teams had problems of access at the
programs; India had been accrediting universities
outset including difficulty in gaining permission
since 1994 and Pakistan since 2005. By 2009, the
to enter the campus, having open access to faculty
ministry was eager to put a quality assurance process
members, and obtaining information about faculty
in place. Deputy Minister Babury knew that I had
members’ background and training. These problems
been executive vice president of the Council for Higher
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Education Accreditation in the United States and had
rather than program accreditation.7 Members then
helped set up accreditation in Pakistan, Ethiopia,
turned to the development of bye-laws and a set of
and Madagascar and worked on it in several other
12 criteria (standards) to be used in the accreditation
countries. Thus, one of my first tasks when I arrived
process. They also developed a draft accreditation
at the ministry that year was to help establish quality
process building on existing models in Asia, Europe,
assurance and accreditation. Much of that work has
the Americas, and Africa. The discussion was
been discussed earlier in this study. I want to focus
thorough, sometimes heated, but always positive.
here on faculty participation in the process. The deputy
As the discussion proceeded, it became clear that
minister for academic affairs set up a commission
opposition had ceased and that even the most ardent
to review the early material on accreditation and
critic was now a strong supporter. The members of
consider the appropriateness and possible scope of
the commission, with one or two exceptions who
such a process. At the outset, I don’t think anyone was
soon withdrew, were dedicated, hardworking, and
aware of the commitment this would involve for the
thoughtful, and they became increasingly convinced
MoHE or the faculty members on the commission. As
that accreditation was not only a good idea, but also
it turned out, they met two times a week for two hours
essential for developing the kind of quality higher
each time from early 2009 through 2013 with most
education system they all wanted for Afghanistan.
members serving throughout that whole period. This
After discussion with university leaders, the ministry
was volunteered time with only minimal payment for
approved the process of accreditation. Seminars
travel.
on accreditation led by the faculty members on the commission were then held to familiarize universities
Some academics in Afghanistan were aware of
and higher education institutions with the process.
accreditation in other countries, but no one had any
Accreditation was inaugurated in June 2012 for public
experience with it. The general view outside the
higher education institutions to be followed a year
MoHE at the outset was that it was not something that
later by the inclusion of private higher education
was needed in Afghanistan. However, it was clear to
institutions.
the minister and the deputy minister for academic affairs that accreditation was essential to quality
Public higher education institutions then began to
improvement and to the ability of graduates to study
prepare their individual institutional self-assessments
abroad for advanced degrees since many of those
to show how well they met each of the 12 criteria for
universities would only accept graduate students from
the first step in the accreditation process, candidacy
accredited institutions. The eight faculty members on
for accreditation.8 The self-assessments were to
the commission worked with me as an advisor over
demonstrate their degree of compliance with the
the next six months on initial efforts to set up the
criteria (standards)9—how closely they met each
program, reviewing documents on accreditation from
of them. For example, there were criteria related
several countries and other material I had prepared
to faculty qualifications, teaching, and research;
as well as exploring a great deal of literature about
facilities such as adequate laboratories and libraries;
accreditation in university systems around the world.
and computer access for students. Watching
This led to a general consensus that accreditation
the commission members review the individual
should be considered for Afghanistan and that
institutional self-assessments was striking given the
the focus should be on institutional accreditation
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support of each institution’s case. For example, they
the process for institutions, and then the review of
looked carefully at statements about the library and
the revised and upgraded curricula of each of the 157
its holdings, the hours of computer access, and the
public university faculties during 2013. In each case in
publications by faculty members. The commission
which weaknesses were found (about half the cases),
was generally divided into two groups to carry out the
the commission reported back to the institution,
reviews. One member took notes on the discussion,
often meeting with representatives of the institution
another read the self-assessment aloud, and a third
to explain its comments about the deficiencies found.
read the criteria and the sub-categories for each item.
The goal of these meetings was improvement, with
It usually took several two-hour meetings to finalize
the commission members showing great care and
the review of each institutional self-assessment. By
patience in helping the institutions understand what
the end of 2013, 34 institutional self-assessments had
they needed to do to gain approval. In late 2013 the
been completed and reviewed with comments sent
commission also began to review the curricula of a
back to the institution. Six institutions had been visited
number of private higher education institutions that
by peer review teams of four to six faculty members.
had started the process.
These teams made a recommendation for “admission to candidacy” or denial of admission. Six universities
At the outset of the review, some private institutions
had “admission to candidacy level 1” recommended by
tried to avoid the process, arguing that the curriculum
the site visit teams and approved by the commission.10
was the responsibility of the individual institution.
The first step in accreditation had been achieved and
Some of the institutions feared that this process was a
the process was well underway. The success of the
MoHE effort to force them all to adopt public university
process was a tribute to the careful, tireless efforts of
curricula. That was not the case at all. Indeed, many
the faculty members and administrators involved since 2009. Curriculum Commission A critical part of the transformation effort was the plan to review and upgrade all the curricula in public higher education with the goal of bringing them up to international standards. Years of war and isolation
Workshop on curriculum revision and updating at the MoHE.
had left Afghan higher education behind most of the world in terms of material covered, up-to-date programs, pedagogy, and methodology. Major changes were needed. To oversee this effort a Curriculum Commission was established, composed of about 10 faculty members and MoHE staff. As was the case with accreditation, this group was to devote a great deal of time (two hours twice a week for two years) to the preparation of procedures for curriculum review (MoHE 2012), the conducting of workshops about
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senior leaders saw the competition between public and
commitment of time by the faculty members on the
private higher education institutions as positive for
commission, often including a site visit. This was all
the system in the long run. People realized that in time
voluntary, with occasional support for local travel. The
some of the best institutions in Afghanistan might well
costs of the site visits were covered by the MoHE, HEP,
be private universities. Already, at least one of them
or SHEP. This was the first time in the history of higher
was moving quickly in that direction.
education in Afghanistan that a major systematic curriculum review had been undertaken followed by
Overall, however, almost everyone involved recognized
an upgrading of all curricula. By the end of 2013, one-
that most of the curricula at the private institutions
third of the reviews and upgrades had been completed
were in need of review and updating. The helpful,
with 50 of those by public institutions published and
cooperative tone adopted by the commission members
made available to interested parties. This curriculum
allayed most fears and led to very productive
upgrading was a major success for the transformation
engagement with the institutions. In particular, several
effort and was only possible because of the enormous
new institutions were relieved to have this assistance
commitment of these faculty members and the strong
as they began to set up their programs. Members were
support of the minister, deputy minister for academic
especially helpful to several of these institutions, which
affairs, and other senior administrators.
had set very high quality goals for themselves. Each of the faculties was to write a report showing how it had reviewed its curricula, carried out a needs assessment, and then revised and upgraded the curriculum. Each of these reports was to include the results of the needs assessment, the purpose of the program, its educational goals and objectives, the educational strategy (types of instruction, labs, student focus, field trips, etc.), an implementation plan, and plans for assessing the program during the semester and after it was completed (MoHE 2012) as well as a syllabus for each program with a detailed outline and a list of textbooks and readings. Over the course of 2013, the members reviewed each program carefully, meeting with faculty members when they had questions or when the commission felt there were major weaknesses that required further discussion. By the end of December 2013 the commission had reviewed and approved 52 curricula of faculties at public higher education institutions (many a second time with revisions) and reviewed those of 30 faculties or programs at private institutions. As with quality assurance, this process involved a tremendous
Committee on Graduate Studies— High Commission for Coordination of Graduate Programs In 2010 there were only half a dozen graduate programs. The ministry was eager to expand this number if it could be done with high quality so that more people, especially faculty members and women, could obtain master’s degrees without going abroad. Not only was study abroad expensive, it was largely not viable for female faculty members who had children, needed family approval for such trips, or faced other obstacles, noted earlier, to undertaking such travel. In this context a committee was established to review proposals for new graduate programs, which could only be offered by major universities. This committee was called the High Commission for Coordination of Graduate Programs (HCOMP). As was the case with the other faculty committees and commissions, the graduate committee required a great deal of time from its faculty members. In several cases, master’s programs had been set up without the permission of the MoHE, which was required by law, and thus if the
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committee rejected a program, the work of students to
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Kankor review
date and any degrees awarded would be invalidated. The Kankor examination (admissions examination) Given the stakes involved, committee members were
is another effort that depends on substantial
under a great deal of pressure from some senior
contributions from a large number of faculty members.
faculty members, deans, and chancellors to approve
This examination is taken by high school graduates
particular programs during the initial review process.
who hope to be admitted to public higher education
In several cases people went to see the minister and
institutions—universities and higher education
urged him to take the unusual step of putting pressure
institutes run by the MoHE and technical and
on the HCOMP to approve their program—which he
vocational institutions and teachers colleges run by the
did on several occasions. But the HCOMP was firm
Ministry of Education. More than 100,000 students
and insisted on following its procedures thoroughly.
have taken the examination in each of the last few
In at least one case a member was threatened by some
years with the number growing each year because of
senior administrators, but the process was carried out
the increase in the number of students graduating
appropriately despite the fact that some members of
from secondary education. Several hundred people
the HCOMP felt intimidated. One member in particular
are needed to invigilate the examination, most of them
stood up to those making inappropriate demands and
faculty members. Faculty members also prepare the
in so doing gave courage to a few wavering members.
questions.
That made it possible for the process to continue unaltered. The tough stand taken by the committee in
As noted earlier, a major crisis occurred in 2013
this case made it clear that the process could not be
because of disruption, intimidation, and, in one case,
compromised by pressure or threats.
armed intervention that took place during the Kankor examination. For the first time in five years, there were
The courage and perseverance of the HCOMP is a
a number of breaches that threatened to undermine
tribute to the strength, integrity, and courage of a
the whole process. As a result, a committee was
handful of faculty members who were fearless in the
established to make recommendations about how to
face of unprecedented pressure, some of it unethical.
prevent a recurrence of these problems.
Their commitment set a precedent for all to see. Over the next months, the committee members continued
An investigation of the examination nationwide
to do their jobs appropriately. In the course of their
showed that there had been massive irregularities and
deliberations they rejected several master’s program
interference in more than a half dozen places. As a
requests that did not meet the requirements. Early
result, some people received much higher scores than
on they closed three existing programs including the
they would have otherwise. Some of the interference
Kabul University master’s in physics, which no longer
was facilitated by schoolteachers who had been used as
had enough Ph.D. faculty to qualify to offer a master’s
proctors because of the increased number of students
degree. They also resisted pressure to approve two
and a shortage of faculty members. In other cases the
Ph.D. programs that did not meet requirements. Their
interference was by regional administrators or other
commitment, along with that of the commissions
high officials, which made resistance difficult. The
mentioned above, helped solidify the procedures put in
results should have been annulled in all these areas
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but the officials in charge of the examination were
and students coming from the same families. It is
unwilling to do that.
statistically improbable that there could have been
Chapter 5
improvements in the results of this magnitude over The post-examination review committee was under
the space of one year. This interference had the overall
great pressure to prevent a repeat of these violations of
effect of rejecting for admission a large number of
the process when the Kankor admissions examinations
students who through their own hard work should have
were given again in 2014. It was clear to most that
qualified for admission. The magnitude of the fraud
these interventions had benefited some people at the
affected thousands of students, advantaging many
expense of others since there are only a fixed number
and depriving an equal number of the admission they
of places open for admission. It appeared that the aim
deserved. While admissions for 2013 were increased
had been to advantage some regional or ethnic groups.
over the previous year by almost six percent, that does
The unusually high scores in several of these areas
not account for the differences in these provinces.
would eliminate some good students elsewhere whose
Many of those admitted had not achieved their scores
scores would now be below the cutoff for admission.
honestly. Those who had tried to prevent or rectify
For example, in one of the most egregious cases, scores
this fraud were threatened and cowed into silence. The
in a particular province had averaged 49.7 percent
process was thoroughly sullied, which made the work
over the previous three years. In this examination the
of the committee all the more difficult. In the end there
averages reported were 85.9 percent for men and 81.8
was no real resolution for the students, although new
percent for women. That was an increase of 173 percent
procedures were agreed on for the 2014 examinations
over the previous three-year average. In another area
in the hope that there would not be a repeat of the
where the average had been 16.5 percent over three
problems of 2013. As a result of this corruption, I
years, the scores for 2013 were 60.3 percent for men
believe it will take a long time for public trust of the
and 54.7 percent for women—a 365 percent increase
Kankor to return.
for men and a 332 percent increase for women. In another area with a three-year average of 28.1 percent,
A number of remedies were proposed to improve
the scores were 83.4 percent for men and 67.1 percent
the Kankor process, one of which was to turn the
for women, a 219 percent increase over the previous
administration of the examination over to a new body.
three-year average for men. The magnitude of the
That seemed unlikely to lead to improvements and
fraud is clear, and it means that a large number of
more likely to create additional confusion. Another
people in other regions who should have been admitted
remedy proposed was to allocate places by regional
to universities were not admitted because the inflated
school population rather than merit. That suggestion
scores gave these individuals an unfair advantage.
had strong support from people in areas with weak
The increase in the number of people who passed
schools and less student success on the examination.
the examination in 2013 in the seven provinces with
After heated discussions that effort failed. Another
questionable results was in the thousands.
proposal (from the subcommittee) included a mix of merit and regional admissions on the grounds that
These increases did not happen by chance. The
more regional places would lessen the temptation for
secondary schools attended by the students taking the
organized fraud and not penalize those areas with
examination were the same ones as in previous years,
weak schools as severely as in the present system.
with generally the same teachers, the same curricula,
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There was also a proposal to admit the top 10 percent
The meeting about the Kankor involved over 100
of students from every secondary school. While that
participants, more than half of whom were higher
had initial support, people realized that it would
education faculty members who appeared on a
disadvantage students from better schools, which
voluntary basis, along with a number of MPs,
sometimes have as many as 100 percent of their
university officials, and a few administrators from
students surpassing the Kankor cutoff score, while
other ministries such as the Ministry of Education
admitting many students from weak schools who do
and the Ministry of Public Health. Sadly, they failed to
not meet university standards. The most successful
resolve many of the problems related to the Kankor—
schools are usually in urban areas such as Kabul or
interference, excessive numbers of exam takers,
Herat. They are usually better funded and the teachers
threats to merit admissions principles, and regional
better qualified. This proposal was initially accepted
concerns about being shortchanged. They did set the
but when the total number of students who would be
stage for some improvements in examination security.
affected became clear, it also was dropped. The story of interference in the admissions A problem facing the MoHE when the results are
examinations of 2013 emphasizes the ease and the
posted is the anger of the large number of students
impact of intimidation and outright violence on both
who do not get admitted to any higher education
the admissions process and the policy process in
institution—about 65 percent of those who take the
higher education. The people subjected to efforts to
Kankor. They usually demonstrate in Kabul and other
intimidate, which for the most part succeeded (and
urban areas, demanding an increase in the number of
there were quite a few), were unable or unwilling
admissions to accommodate more students. As it stood
to resist. Most of them were afraid to say anything
in 2013, more students had already been admitted than
and did not call for assistance. In the face of guns
places for them, creating major problems for the more
and intimidation, those involved in oversight at one
popular institutions which were already overcrowded.
location were so fearful that they did not report the
Only about 35 percent of those who take the Kankor
incident for several days. In the aftermath, most senior
are usually admitted. One solution to the large number
administrators were afraid to speak their minds at a
of unhappy exam takers was a suggestion that the
meeting on the subject and so said nothing—in fact
ministry set a minimum score required for students to
they did not even support the one administrator who
be able to take the Kankor in the first place, perhaps
spoke out to request that the examination results
a 65 percent average in secondary school. This would
be cancelled in that area and the exam given again.
cut out a large percentage of takers who would not be
Several people involved told me later that they were
able to pass the examination in any case. That way
too afraid to speak up. The one who did had his life
they would not have false hopes of success. After long
threatened.
discussion, that solution was agreed upon. However, a month later it was overturned by Cabinet. Thus, the
People in other areas where irregularities occurred
examination will continue to be open to all comers.
were also afraid to say anything. As one senior faculty
Some changes were made to reduce the number of
member said to me, “What can you do when the
examination centers to make security easier and to
governor and his people are doing these things?” The
further improve security by putting the national police
irregularities in other places ranged from allowing
in charge of it in 2014.
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Chapter 5
people in the exam rooms to provide help with actual
there were disruptions again in several areas, some
exam questions and admitting others to the exam
encouraged by local officials. This time, the acting
rooms who should not have been there. In several
minister annulled the results in those areas and set
cases, the interventions appeared to be a systematic
new examinations with enhanced security. They went
effort to raise scores in particular regions or provinces.
off without difficulty. Thus the Kankor is back on the
Several faculty members were so put off by the
correct path. Despite the problems in 2013 and the
threats and interference that they told me they would
challenges of fragile states when it comes to dealing
refuse to invigilate outside of Kabul (which didn’t
with violence and intimidation, the overall record
have problems) in the future. Though some of the
of faculty members in the transformation of Afghan
perpetrators were identified, no one was punished. Two
higher education over the last six years is one of
officials in the Kankor office who were caught changing
courage, determination, dedication, and success. As we
scores by the police were moved to other offices but not
have seen, there have been many acts of great courage
fired. Thus it appeared that such corruption could be
in the process of bringing about these successes.
carried out with impunity, and that will no doubt lead to other disruptions in the future. This sad saga adds to the perception, already widespread in some areas, that the examination process is corrupt, although in fact prior to 2013 only a few individual or small-scale efforts to cheat had been identified. The process was fair and transparent overall during the previous four years. This is a clear example of the failure of the administrative process to work as it should, to guarantee a fair and open examination experience where the final decisions are based on merit, and to protect the integrity of academic processes. Although faculty members were minor players in the final decision regarding the Kankor in 2013, they were in the front lines of the intimidation and threats. In contrast to the other successes noted above that have played a major role in the transformation of higher education in Afghanistan over the last five years, this case is a clear setback to progress and a warning about how hard it will be to continue to move forward with the major changes in direction spelled out in the National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014. Fortunately in 2015 the process was once again under the direction of Acting Minister Babury. Because of the failure to take strong action in 2013,
Reestablishing a Culture of Teaching, Research, and Service Decades of war have left a difficult legacy for teaching, research, and service that is proving hard to reverse for a number of reasons. In some ways the most straightforward problem to overcome is the loss of many of the most talented scholars and researchers, many of whom fled the violence, intimidation, and destruction starting with the Russian invasion and continuing through the attacks on intellectuals over the following years—purges of those felt to have the “wrong” values or who were opposed to the regime in power. Some of those lost have been replaced by new young faculty members who for the most part only have bachelor’s degrees. Others, however, are recently returned faculty members with master’s degrees and Ph.D.s earned while studying in the United States, Europe, Asia, and elsewhere or in the new master’s programs in Afghanistan. Most of these returned and recently trained faculty members are eager to impart their excitement and new knowledge to their students, carry out research to help deal with many of the nation’s challenges, and restore the traditions of excellence that made Afghan higher education so
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Chapter 5
outstanding in the past. Having given workshops to
especially in the urban areas. Water, electricity, and
some of them, I found these young faculty members to
other services were interrupted, several universities
be an exciting, highly stimulated group bursting with
were closed, and even Kabul University had to move
questions, eager to make a contribution to the quality
its operations to mosques and other facilities for a time
of higher education, full of ideas about research, and
when its campus was taken over by warring factions.
committed to a better Afghanistan. Their main worry was whether their older colleagues would give them
During this period, almost every day was a struggle
the freedom to do that. While it will take time for these
for survival for many faculty members and staff.
new faculty members to reach the top ranks in their
Violence was a constant threat, especially in places
fields, develop their own research specialties, gain
like Kabul during the civil war, with parts of the city
an international reputation, and become leaders in
destroyed, daily shelling, and attacks on civilians by
teaching, I am impressed by their talent, energy, and
troops from different factions—along with the struggle
early productivity. Some of them will have to confront
for food and safety. Much of urban Afghanistan was
older faculty members jealous of the competition they
destroyed, and many of the staff had to flee as their
represent and reluctant to share leadership—and that
homes were damaged or demolished by the fighting
is already happening on several campuses. However,
and shelling of rival factions. Salaries were often paid
in the long run they will prevail. Indeed, in this new
late, which made the struggle to survive even more
system where merit is becoming paramount, they will
difficult. People began to look inward as they struggled
succeed and emerge as the new leaders in the long run.
to keep themselves and their families alive. During this
Some are already there.
period, the sense of community at most universities broke down. Faculty members continued to be targeted
More difficult is the struggle to overcome the
amid political rivalries, violence, and the breakdown
consequences of the violence, depredation, and
of higher education. In some cases the curriculum
hardship faced by those faulty members and staff
became a victim of the struggle, further dividing
who remained through the war years. They were
faculty members; some campuses were invaded and
isolated from their peers abroad, unable to travel
badly damaged in the fighting. Some faculty members
to professional meetings or go abroad for advanced
were arrested and imprisoned, while others continued
training, and kept out of touch with higher education
to flee the violence, the lucky ones finding jobs in
outside Afghanistan for decades since most of
Pakistan, Iran, the Middle East, Europe, and the
their isolation preceded the age of the Internet.
United States. Those who remained in Afghanistan
They faced increasingly difficult conditions at their
suffered but continued to try to keep the institutions
institutions over the years—deteriorating facilities,
going—often at great personal cost.
lack of equipment, insufficient funding, shortages of staff, loss of research funds, and increased teaching
Many of the faculty members and staff who remained
loads. On top of that was the growing politicization
endured this situation for decades. For others it was
of higher education under the communists and later
a shorter period, but for all of them the war left an
the Taliban—ideological purges, political oversight,
indelible mark. As one administrator said to me, “We
and hostility. That was followed by high-level anarchy
all suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder to some
during the civil war that resulted in damage to and
extent as a result of wars.” Indeed, the level of clinical
destruction of many higher education facilities,
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Chapter 5
the highest in the world, affecting almost half the
an obligation to help rebuild education for their people.
population. And for some of those who stayed behind
If I were in their place, I would have come back.”11
there is bitterness about those who left for Pakistan, Iran, or elsewhere and did not suffer. Those who
Most of the replacement faculty members were new
remained felt that they stayed and kept the universities
recruits, as were the new faculty members hired to
going. They didn’t have a chance to get higher degrees
deal with the growing enrollments. Few of them had
or expand their knowledge during this period. They
master’s degrees or Ph.D.s. This was particularly
suffered and believed they should be rewarded for it.
true of female faculty members because, as noted
To be sure, many of those who fled also suffered greatly
earlier, they had difficulties going abroad due to family
while trying to escape, often fleeing at night, frequently
obligations or because they could not get permission
having to walk long distances, risking arrest, suffering
from their spouses or families to travel for advanced
injuries along the way, and sometimes enduring
training, even if it was available. This meant that many
robberies, beatings, imprisonment, and even rape.
of those who were teaching were newly graduated and
And almost all of them left their belongings behind.
only a few years older than the students they were
The conditions they found in Pakistan and Iran were
teaching. Many students resented that. They wanted
often appalling, with limited sanitation, little access to
experienced teachers. While the ministry tried to
health facilities, and difficult housing in refugee camps.
send as many of these young faculty members as possible abroad for master’s and Ph.D. training, given
Some former faculty members who left Afghanistan
the shortage of staff and funding the number had to
did manage to do well abroad, obtaining good
be limited. In 2012 President Karzai found funds to
academic jobs. It was this group in particular that
increase the number of faculty members sent abroad.
people hoped would come back to help rehabilitate
At the same time, the ministry was increasing the
higher education, bringing with them what they had
number of master’s programs in country so that by
learned abroad. And some of them did return including
2013, almost 200 faculty members were working on
Sharif Fayez, the first minister of higher education;
master’s degrees in Afghanistan. This was important
Chancellor Hamidullah Amin of Kabul University;
for female faculty members in particular.
Ashraf Ghani, who was minister of finance, then chancellor of Kabul University, and now president; and
The fact that few new faculty members had advanced
others. However, the total number of returnees was
degrees when hired meant that the cost of master’s and
low, a much smaller percentage than in South Africa at
Ph.D. training had to be borne by the state. As noted
the end of apartheid, for example. Part of the difference
earlier, the need to hire large numbers of new faculty
may have been the many years that some had been
members to replace those lost and meet the demand
away and their new obligations to children in schools
of the growing number of students seeking higher
or universities abroad. The MoHE made major efforts
education meant a delay in increasing the percentage
to attract them, but with little success. People were
of faculty members with advanced degrees. That also
disappointed at the lack of response. Several students
meant that the effort to recreate a culture of teaching
in 2003 were puzzled that so few former faculty
and research was slowed since few of the new hires
members had returned. As a 12th-grade girl in Kapisa
had any research experience. Their own education in
said, “It is their birthplace—their country. They have
Afghanistan had been provided by faculty members
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who also had little research or professional experience;
excuse for not carrying out research was that there
most were also without master’s degrees or Ph.D.s.
was no funding. That was largely correct until 2010
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when limited funding was provided by the World Bank Added to these problems were the effects of inflation—
through SHEP. But it was more than funding that
especially increasing food prices—on faculty morale.
had been lost during the war years; it was the culture
The consumer price index had been increasing at about
of research with its focus on new ideas, creativity,
10 percent a year since 2004, but in 2008 it jumped to
questioning, and problem solving.
30 percent (World Bank 2015). Salaries were doubled in 2009 but by then the increase only caught up with
The most productive researchers were among those
inflation. Many faculty members had to have second
lost in the years after the Russian invasion—lost in
jobs to survive, with some working for private higher
part because they were often faculty leaders and
education institutions when they became legal after
thus victimized during the politicization of higher
2006. However, it was not legal for faculty members of
education. As repression and violence increased, they
public institutions to also teach at private institutions
looked for opportunities to obtain academic or related
without authorization. Most who did such teaching did
positions abroad—and they found them, much more
not seek authorization. They were often paid higher
than their less productive colleagues did. Many of
salaries, and this income was frequently not reported
those who left were role models in their departments,
for tax purposes. Although such teaching could only be
mentors of young faculty members, research partners,
done legally on weekends or after hours, most taught
and opinion leaders. Also lost during this period were
during normal school hours, which meant they were
most of the 100 foreign faculty members, many from
not on their public institution’s campus when students
partner institutions in Germany, France, Great Britain,
needed them. This limited their ability to advise
and the United States. They too were active researchers
students, carry out research, participate in university
often involved in joint research with their Afghan
governance, or provide service to the government
faculty colleagues, sometimes bringing research
or the community. Although the number of public
funding with them. They often served as mentors for
university faculty members who taught in private
faculty members and brought with them expertise
higher education institutions is unknown, it was
and contacts that facilitated research and teaching
probably as high as 50 percent in Kabul and several
linkages. The wars and violence brought most of these
other urban areas.
productive partnerships to an end.
The fact that public higher education institutions
Putting all these factors together, coupled with the
had to operate with these limitations over many
daily struggle to keep the universities open, explains
years led to the loss of the original traditions and
the development of the “culture of survival” that
expectations for teaching and research that had once
prevailed on most campuses. Keeping the institutions
distinguished Afghan higher education. New patterns
going was a major effort on its own. Added to that
had been institutionalized—patterns that were less
was the struggle to keep one’s own program and one’s
student-centered, ignored research, and disregarded
family going, ensuring their safety and meeting basic
community service. All this resulted in new models
needs amid the constant worries created by a nation
that turned out to be hard to change. The effort to
at war against a foreign invader, torn apart by civil
increase faculty research had limited results. The
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from outside Afghanistan. Then there was the presence
facilities, and build additional classrooms and offices
of foreign military forces that came to assist in the
for faculty members? And all this is in the context of a
struggle against al-Qaeda, but that far too often
very fragile state that is having trouble providing basic
inflicted substantial damage on the local population in
services such as electricity, clean water, health care,
a war that seemed without end.
roads, and, most needed of all, security. As we saw during 2012–14, these are not easy questions to answer
These were some of the challenges faced by the
in a very tight financial situation with an ongoing war.
MoHE as it came to the end of the National Higher
Yet the current priority must be to both consolidate
Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014. As we noted in
the gains made to date and continue to move higher
a previous paper (Babury and Hayward 2014), there
education to the level of quality that must be achieved
has been a major transformation in higher education,
if it is to make the contributions so necessary for
but there remains a long way to go to realize all the
national development and provide the employment
plan’s goals. Furthermore, many of the changes made
opportunities graduates deserve.
are precarious and exist in the context of a very fragile state. And major challenges remain. The most
Part of the problem is the general failure of senior
serious of these is the substantial underfunding of
administrators and faculty members to reestablish
higher education (see section on funding). Related
a sense of community on the campuses. Much of
to that is the failure to expand the higher education
that failure is a consequence of the inward-looking
infrastructure to meet the increased enrollment
character of most of the university staff members
and the need for modern, up-to-date laboratories,
who had to endure so much carnage, chaos, violence,
information technology, and student-centered
and disruption over the last 30 years. To some extent,
teaching. Equally serious is the fact that only about
that loss of faith is being blunted by some of the new
40 percent of faculty members have master’s degrees
faculty members who have been hired over the last 10
or Ph.D.s, leaving 60 percent teaching with only a
years, who now constitute 59.8 percent of the current
bachelor’s degree—something that makes it very hard
faculty. Over this same 10-year period, 38 percent of
to increase the quality of instruction and thus the
the faculty members have earned master’s degrees
quality of university graduates.
and Ph.D.s. Yet most of these new additions are young faculty members not yet at professorial levels. They
How does a university, or a system, reestablish a
are spread out over a number of institutions. At least
culture of teaching and learning and a culture of
five institutions (Kabul University, Kabul Polytechnic
research? How does it create a sense of community
University, Kabul Medical University, Kabul Education
once again? How does it ensure that the new student-
University, and Nangarhar University) now have
focused pedagogy is actually implemented? How does
enough faculty with master’s degrees and Ph.D.s to
it rekindle a sense of obligation on the part of faculty
begin to change attitudes and create a new, more
members and institutions to both the communities in
positive, sense of community. The faculty members
which they operate and the nation when that idea has
coming back from abroad with master’s and Ph.D.
been lost? What needs to be done to make the case
training are especially positive, excited about what
for adequate funding for higher education in a way
they can achieve, and eager to pass on what they have
that legislators will understand in order to expand
learned to students. There are not yet enough of them
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is beginning in some faculties. Part of the delay in recreating a sense of academic community relates to the large number of faculty members who have second
Chapter 5
Challenges for Effective Governance in Afghan Higher Education
jobs and are thus off campus a high percentage of the
The outline of governance in Afghan higher
time. That is a problem that must be tackled soon if
education—on paper—is not unlike that in many
quality is to continue to be improved and if a new sense
universities in the United States and most of the rest
of community is to be established in Afghan higher
of the world. Much of the authority rests with the
education.
faculty members in departments and faculties, with
There are some positive signs however. As mentioned above, the large numbers of recent faculty hires bring new energy and enthusiasm to their institutions. Many of them are fresh from master’s and Ph.D. study abroad or in Afghanistan, excited about the research they carried out, and eager to make a contribution. Many of those who went abroad took advantage of the technology available in laboratories and classrooms, using computers, PowerPoint, the Internet, and other information technology in their teaching and research. They intend to do the same in Afghanistan. While technology and the Internet are not as good as the MoHE would like, they have improved greatly over the last five years and will continue to improve. Most of these young faculty members also know English and can thus take full advantage of what the Internet has to offer, including the 8,000 journals in the MoHE digital library that are available for free to all students, faculty, and staff members. In addition, in the new National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020, the MoHE calls for a distance education
the latter being the center of initial decision making in hiring, promotion, course adoption, review of faculty members, and other academic decisions. The deans also play an important role and by law are elected by the faculty members although they are sometimes appointed by the minister and deputy minister for academic affairs.13 Major decisions of the faculties must be approved by the Academic Council, much like the Faculty Senate in the United States, which is chaired by the chancellor. The Academic Council has committees to deal with more complicated issues such as promotions, although the initiative there too rests with the faculty members in the departments and faculties. The roles of the chancellor and vice chancellors are weaker than in the U.S. system, though as always it depends somewhat on the personality and drive of the individual. The deans are often more powerful than the chancellors, especially where they are elected. Some have been in place for many years and have strong faculty support although by law they can only be reelected once.
pilot project, both to provide access to the many
The chancellors and vice chancellors have been
people who do not have it at the present time and
appointed by the ministry in most cases ever since
to begin to use this important instructional tool in
Minister Fayez held elections at several universities
general.12 While the MoHE has faced many problems
in the early post-Taliban period. In contrast to the
with distance education in the past, including forged
U.S. system, the bulk of the authority remains in the
documents, it is time to establish rules and regulations
MoHE, with all major decisions including hiring,
for distance education and procedures that facilitate
promotion, new courses, major revisions, budgets,
the contributions that can be made to higher education
and other decisions dependent on approval at the
by taking advantage of this important tool (Hayward
ministry. This fits in with the general pattern of highly
2013).
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earlier, this means that much of the load of higher
the faculty and staff each year, and major equipment
education rests on the shoulders of the minister and
purchases should continue to be budgeted centrally
deputy minister for academic affairs. Even with an
on an annual basis based on requests from the
efficient and effective minister and deputy minister,
institutions. Decentralization will increase flexibility,
that puts too much authority in the hands of the
help improve the effectiveness of institutional
MoHE, slows down the processes of governance, and
academic performance, and give university leaders the
leads to great inefficiencies. That affects hiring and
opportunity to respond to academic needs when they
promotions, but more importantly affects the day-
occur as well as to research and other opportunities
to-day operation of the institutions and hinders even
that might be missed while waiting for the MoHE
minor decisions in areas such as repairs, upkeep, and
bureaucracy to move or for information to get up the
normal administrative processes like the graduation of
chain of command—which at present takes far too long.
students, since the minister and deputy minister have to sign all the degrees.
Such decentralization will require additional training for university administrative leaders.14 The MoHE,
Since 2009, the leadership of the MoHE has pushed
working with HEP, has tried to start this process
for greater autonomy for higher education institutions,
through a series of staff training exercises at both
arguing that it is essential for effective governance in
the senior and lower administrative levels. The
both financial matters and administrative affairs. The
deputy minister for academic affairs has held regular
leadership has been trying to make this happen for the
workshops with senior leadership focusing on quality
last five years. The new decentralization regulation for
assurance, leadership problems, curriculum review,
finance now being put in place will help. Similarly, I
teaching methods, and other topics. HEP has provided
believe that decentralization efforts should extend to
a number of workshops in Kabul and at the institutions
promotions and hiring at the lower levels with approval
on leadership, teaching methods, team building,
needed only for positions at the professorial level
testing, curriculum upgrading, and a wide range of
(assistant professor and above). The initial positions
other topics.
would still need to be allocated by the MoHE since that is really a budgetary decision with systemwide
Accountability is increasingly being demanded of
implications. Similarly, degrees and certificates should
higher education at every level. Higher education
be signed by institutional leaders—department chairs,
institutions must have a high level of autonomy if
deans, vice chancellors, and the chancellor—with no
they are to carry out their functions effectively. The
signatures from the MoHE. Those should be saved for
appropriate mix of autonomy and accountability is
Ph.D.s.
often difficult to find. However, it has been clear to the leaders at the MoHE since at least 2009 that greater
Decentralization will increase efficiency when
autonomy is needed. They have worked over the last
dealing with emergencies such as natural disasters
few years to make greater autonomy possible while
(for example, storm damage), violence on campus,
holding the institutions accountable through regular
and major equipment malfunctions, with each
meetings with institutional leaders, accreditation,
institution having a reasonable budget allocation
periodic reviews, financial audits, and other measures
to cover those contingencies. Major items such as
of accountability. The system remains too hierarchical,
buildings, the number of people to be recruited to
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greater decentralization. More is planned for the
intellectual growth. At the same time, political texts,
future.
both liberal and conservative—including Marxist literature and Islamic texts—were secretly passed
Students and an Unknown Future in Afghanistan The character of the Afghan higher education student population has changed dramatically in the years since Kabul University first opened in 1946. Similar to most universities in developing countries at that time, it was seen as a place to train a small elite of professionals— specialists who would work for government as civil servants and leaders in a broad range of fields. Classes were to be small and intimate, and the buildings reflected that with most classrooms built to accommodate from 20 to 30 students. Expanding higher education became a priority for the government in the late 1940s with higher education getting 40 percent of the education budget in 1969 (Giustozzi 2010). Although the government was pushing for the expansion of higher education, government officials did not plan to include these graduates or the faculty members in national affairs. Indeed, the growing educated elite was largely excluded from politics, and, as a result, by the 1960s the universities were becoming centers of opposition to the government. As one writer put it, “[T]he increasingly frustrated intelligentsia started clamouring for more influence, and soon turned against the ruling elite. The radicalisation of the educated class in the 1960–70s was arguably one of the causes of the crisis of the Afghan state from 1973 onwards” (Giustozzi 2010, p. 2). In a society that was closed and generally conservative, the more open atmosphere of the universities and their emphasis on discussion and critical thinking provided a fertile ground for political debate and
around some faculties. It was during this period that several students who were later to become prominently involved in politics got their early political education: Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Mohammad Najibullah (later to be president), Ahmad Shah Massoud, Babrak Karmal, and others (Giustozzi 2010). Various political organizations had their roots in the universities, including Maoist organizations, various Islamic groups, and the pro-Soviet organizations that were to play a major political role at the universities after the coup in 1978.15 The student unions also became very active during this period with Islamists battling Maoists for control at one point. Women were also active in these organizations, although this was primarily limited to Kabul—until the period of Taliban rule when women were excluded from higher and other education. There were also a number of ethnic-based organizations at Kabul University, Herat University, Nangarhar University, and several others. Many Pashtun students were active in Afghan Millat in Kabul, Mazar-i-Sharif, and Herat. There was also a group in Kabul called Yashlar Jawanan (Students Live) dedicated to improving Uzbek culture (Giustozzi 2010). As in most developing countries, many of the student organizations were anti-government regardless of their political orientation, and this led to conflicts in several cases. Many of the students came from political and professional families, although the number from rural areas also increased as the universities expanded. Student activism was extreme by the mid-1960s with organizations on both the left and the right. Some students who had been educated in Russia brought back Communist ideas, and many of those who had been in Egypt and other Islamic countries had been influenced by radical Islamists. As one writer put it www.scup.org
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about this period, “the student activists of Afghanistan
for their futures. So did many others who had fled
were polarized from the start. What’s more, neither
Afghanistan and the legacies of violence, oppression,
extreme had a single, unified leadership. Both Right
and fear. Many of them began to return. High school
and Left splintered into many factions, reflecting
students interviewed in 2003 had high expectations
underlying ethnic, tribal, and personal conflicts;
for the future; they saw higher education as “the key
and even the splinters were riven by rivalries, which
to success in life” and were desperate for “security,
generated further splinters” (Ansary 2012, p. 175).
peace, stability, and a good economy.” But they were
The disruption of higher education by student
sure that “peace and stability [would] not be restored
organizations during this period was destructive. By
in Afghanistan unless the people [were] educated and
the late 1960s activism had spread to the schools and
trained properly.”16
was marked by numerous student strikes at both the universities and the schools, especially in Kabul.
Some of those already in the universities during that period were discouraged by the conditions they
As higher education enrollments began to grow
found: the shortage of faculty members with advanced
from 1,700 students in 1950 to 7,600 in 1970, 18,000
degrees, the damaged facilities, the lack of funding,
in 1980, and 25,500 in 2003, the nature of higher
and the lingering corruption in admissions and
education began to change—it lost its elite character
scholarships. The university students talked about
and moved away from being primarily an urban
how the “Taliban killed education,” but they were also
phenomenon. In 2003 about one percent of college-age
upset that the teachers were not well trained, that
young people were enrolled in higher education. By
some were not very serious about teaching, and that
2014 the total enrollment in public higher education
the best teachers had fled and not returned. Yet they
had grown to 170,000, more than six times the number
understood that conditions were getting better. As one
10 years earlier. Adding the 130,000 students in private
student at Kabul University said in 2003, “If I compare
higher education results in a total of about 300,000
higher education today with that in the Taliban period
students enrolled in higher education in 2014—almost
it was zero then and now it is up to five [on a ten-point
10 percent of young people of college age. While this is
scale]. Hopefully it will continue to get better.” A group
not yet “mass education,” it is moving in that direction
of students summarized their feelings: “We the Afghan
rather quickly and will continue to do so because of the
children are talented and have the capacity to learn as
success of Education for All. Given the shortage of staff
long as the conditions are provided.” However, they
and the rapid growth in student numbers, there were
worried that the improvements needed would not come
fewer small classes in 2014 with many larger than 100
fast enough for them.17
students. Student-teacher ratios have grown from 15 to 1 in 2003 to 36 to 1 in 2014.
Students recognized the need for quality education. As a student at Herat University put it, “Although the
The period following the Russian invasion, the civil
government tries hard to provide education for us, the
war, and then Taliban rule was devastating for higher
world should also help make it possible for us to receive
education, as noted earlier. With the coming of the
proper higher education.” Another student went on to
democratic government in 2001–02 and the promised
say,
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It is very important to receive higher education,
primary and secondary school, get into the university,
but a quality education. If we compare our
and as long as you pass you will get a government
education today with the world, our quality of
job. And then there is another group of students who
education is substantially lower. The teachers
are in higher education because that was the next
have to be trained—upgraded in order to teach
place to go after secondary school. They are not very
us properly. We too need to be trained as
motivated, and many would have been better off going
specialists—future experts in our fields of study.
to a teachers college, a technical or vocational school,
In the last few years [during the Taliban period]
or one of the new community colleges where they
education was not important. But now that we
would receive the professional training to guarantee
have been afforded another opportunity we
employment, filling positions now held by foreigners.
should take advantage of it in order to have a
The old expectations of these students are hard to
prosperous future.
break.
18
We heard again and again the concerns of students
Ministry leaders are working on ways to instill ideas
about the need to upgrade the faculty, attract more
of entrepreneurialism among students. They want to
Ph.D. faculty, improve the curriculum, and provide the
encourage students to think about businesses they can
needed equipment for laboratories and instruction.
set up, new ways to serve the public, and new products
What was especially interesting was the widespread
that are needed—and to not expect government to
concern about standards and quality. They didn’t
provide jobs. If one travels through any town or village,
just want a degree; they wanted to have the skills and
one can see how entrepreneurial many Afghans have
expertise that would make it possible for them to have
been in the hundreds of small shops and businesses
jobs in what they already saw as a highly competitive
they operate. What they need is training in a variety
world.
of business areas such as finance, marketing, and management—skills that will allow them to grow
Current students continue to worry about the quality
their businesses. Students need to learn to think as
of higher education but have seen major improvements
entrepreneurs along with their other studies—to learn
over the last five years. Many are highly motivated,
to think as innovators early in their university lives,
take full advantage of what they can find on the
if not in secondary school, so that they will begin to
Internet, search out opportunities to work on academic
explore what they can do themselves to start new
projects, and work to improve their computer skills,
businesses, provide new services, or develop products
learn English or another language, or learn new
and techniques that will provide solutions to the
techniques. There is another group of students who
many challenges facing Afghanistan. Deputy Minister
just want to get a job—preferably a government job as
Babury is working to try to encourage the teaching
they still believe that government should provide jobs
of entrepreneurialism as well as a focus on student
for every graduate, a story they may have heard from
research and innovation as part of instruction—
their teachers in primary school. That is no longer
especially in engineering and the sciences. He recently
possible for many graduates. One of the concerns of
prepared a paper with me on the subject (Babury and
the senior officials at the ministry is this expectation
Hayward 2015) in an attempt to lay out a process to
of employment. While the ministry tries to disabuse
incorporate these practices in higher education.
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The small number of female students, only 18 percent
2010, p. 6); they were actively anti-Taliban. There were
of total students in 2014, leads to male-dominated
also pro-Soviet groups during the Soviet occupation,
campuses in general, with some fields such as
as noted earlier, and a small number of underground
engineering having almost no female students. While
groups as well. Overall, however, after the collapse of
women are no longer separated from men (as they
Najibullah’s regime and then during the Taliban period
were in some cases as recently as 2003) there is still
there was less space for politics on campus (Ruttig
only limited interaction between male and female
n.d.).
students, and they tend to sit in different parts of the classroom and stand apart during breaks. They are not
After 2001, political groups on campus were banned by
as vocal as male students in those classes where there
the MoHE, and that shifted political activity away from
is discussion, although this is beginning to change as
higher education, although a number of politicians and
faculty members encourage their participation.
some foreign governments continued to try to influence students’ opinions on particular political and religious
The quality of students is improving overall, and with
issues.19 The ministry actively worked to prevent
the upgrading of the curriculum in almost half the
political organizations from operating on campuses,
public universities (and now underway in the rest of
and when politicians attempted to become involved in
them), the quality of the graduates, and thus their
student life administrators tried to thwart them, for
chances of employment, should improve. Private
example by urging MPs to desist from such activity
higher education is also moving to begin the processes
during the student disturbances in 2012. Because of
of curriculum upgrading and quality assurance. The
President Karzai’s suspicion of political parties and
changes initiated at the MoHE have started to improve
his refusal to be part of any political party, the role
the quality of higher education and should improve the
of political parties in Afghanistan remained weak.
quality and employability of graduates over the next
Given the prohibition against political activities on
few years.
campus and the constant turnover of students, party leaders did not find the universities fertile ground
Students and politics
for mobilization. Thus what activity did take place on campus tended to revolve around ethnic or religious
While student politics was an active part of university
issues or support for a particular MP who provided
life at the major urban institutions from the 1960s to
assistance to student supporters.
the 1980s, it was disrupted by the Russian invasion and later the Taliban period. Most of the political
As Ruttig (n.d., p. 44) noted about politics during
activity during those periods was focused on either
this period, “The real demarcation runs between the
pro-government or anti-government activity, the latter
new democrats, the post-PDPA 20 left and most of the
by necessity being underground and thus difficult to
ethno-nationalists on one hand, and the Islamists on
organize in a university setting. Nonetheless, there
the other, on their intransigently divergent positions
was some student political activity during these
on the relationship between government and religion,
periods. For example, there were the Hazara political
i.e., Islam. While the latter support an Islamic republic,
parties, which were active on some campuses and
the former favour secularism.” Thus throughout
said to be “the only ones in the country to openly limit
this period political parties remained weak, and the
themselves to Hazara or Shiite members” (Giustozzi
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on their own. Nonetheless, there was a small group of
to rise, and so in the context of the unresolved election
politically active students on both the left and right—a
crisis and demonstrations, the MoHE decided to close
very small number who supported the Taliban; others
all classes until August 2nd so that the mix of tensions
linked to ethnic, religious, or other radical groups.
would not escalate into a major battle spurred on by
The majority of political activity that did take place
political interests.
involved students who lived in the dormitories—an environment that fostered ethnic, religious, and some
Ethnicity and religion
political activism with occasional external support from MPs and others. Those students who lived at
While Afghanistan has had religious conflicts, they
home were generally not involved in such activities.
have most often been sparked by ethnic conflicts
Overall, the majority of students are not involved
rather than by religion. Indeed, Afghanistan has been
politically at the present time; they support the system
remarkably successful at preventing Sunni vs. Shiite
in a critical and pragmatic way and watch the direction
tensions, with Muslims attending each other’s mosques
of the current political situation with concern.
for prayers when they happen to be closer to one than the other. However, outside groups from both Pakistan
The most recent example of student conflict, which
and Iran have tried to spark Sunni vs. Shiite conflicts.
occurred in July 2014, started as a clash between
The worst case was an attack on a mosque by suicide
students on a soccer field and resulted in a brawl
bombers from Pakistan in 2011 that killed more than
between some Tajik and Hazara students living in the
60 Sunni and Shiite worshipers during the Ashura
dorms. Campus security officers broke it up and took
celebrations and shocked Afghans since such attacks
those involved to the head of security who resolved
were practically unknown there.
the issue. However, news of the fight had spread, and a crowd of Hazara and Tajik students gathered
Despite efforts to prevent ethnic and religious conflict
outside the dorm to support their ethnic colleagues.
on campus there have been forces that brought those
The students involved tried to tell the crowd that the
issues to the fore on several occasions over the last
issue was settled. The deputy minister for academic
few years. There was a conflict at Kabul Education
affairs also tried to calm the situation and the students
University when President Karzai changed its name
dispersed. However, some of the students, partly
to Martyr of Peace Professor Burhanuddin Rabbani
motivated by the conflict over the elections—which
University, in honor of Mr. Rabbani, a Tajik and former
was seen by some as a conflict between Hazaras and
president of Afghanistan who was killed by a suicide
Tajiks—left and got knives and swords. This group then
bomber. That caused some fighting between Pashtun
came back to the dorm and attacked Hazara students
and Tajik students that was quickly dealt with by
as they were breaking their fast. That brought out
administrators who rushed to the scene. There was
armed Hazara students to protect their comrades. In
also a disturbance that threatened to get out of hand
the course of the trouble about half a dozen Hazara
that grew out of some Hazara students failing an
students were injured. There were others trying to
examination. They charged that they were victims of
provoke tension between Sunni and Shia. The police
ethnic bias. The incident was initially badly handled by
eventually broke up the fighting. In reality, there were
administrators, but the deputy minister for academic
no doubt several motivations for the tension. As time
affairs with support from President Karzai eventually
passed it became clear that tensions were continuing
worked out a solution to what had become a crisis that
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threatened to turn into a full-scale battle between
out of hand it is almost always because of the failure
Hazara and other ethnic groups on campus.
of administrative leaders to respond appropriately.
Chapter 5
For example, the conditions in many dormitories are The worst case of ethnic conflict happened during the
unacceptable,21 partly because of the lack of funding.
celebration of Ashura at Kabul University in 2012. The
Administrators should respond to that complaint by
crisis had its origins in an attempt by Shiite students,
acknowledging that the problem exists and making an
MPs, and non-students to turn this Muslim holiday
effort to resolve at least the worst of the conditions.
into a specifically Shiite holiday. These efforts were
Too often, administrators at the university respond in
supported by Iran, which spent a considerable amount
hostile ways or accuse the students of being impolite
of money erecting arches throughout Kabul for the
or disrespectful. The problems usually escalate from
celebration and encouraging students to press the
there. During my work with the deputy minister of
university for a campus celebration. This has always
academic affairs, we have met with dozens of groups
been both a Sunni and Shiite holiday in Afghanistan,
of students in his office. In some cases we have met
though celebrated more actively by Shiites. As part
with demonstration leaders there while a few thousand
of the festivities, a group of Shiite students asked
students chanted and waited outside the gates of the
permission to have a Shiite ceremony in a mosque
ministry. I have always found the students polite,
attached to the Kabul University dormitories. Their
thoughtful, and respectful of us and each other. They
request was refused on the grounds that this was a
know that the deputy minister insists on that, and on
celebration for all Muslims, and the ministry would not
one or two occasions when a student has gotten out of
support use of the mosque by only one religious group.
line, the deputy minister has had to ask that student to
Despite MoHE efforts to prevent problems, the Shiite
leave. The result is that there is a thoughtful discussion
students broke into the mosque and started their own
that includes a give and take of ideas, and in every
celebration while the Sunni students tried to prevent
case so far, some kind of agreement has been reached.
them from doing that. The trouble started with stone
Several times during these discussions, after making
throwing but soon turned into a brutal brawl with one
great progress, we have been joined by a chancellor,
student killed and several students wounded (Ahmed
vice chancellor, or dean who is so angry about what
2012). As a result, the MoHE closed the universities
he sees as a student’s “lack of respect” that he comes
until the beginning of the new semester in March in
close to reversing the progress made. The deputy
order to let things calm down so that there would not
minister has to calm the administrator and steer the
be counterattacks and other escalations that could get
conversation back on a positive track—occasionally
out of control. It was a sensible plan and seems to have
admonishing the administrator in front of the
worked well.
students—which in the Afghan culture is seldom done, but works.
Most student demonstrations, and there are a few from time to time, are about specific student
Hopes and concerns for the future
complaints such as conditions on campus including overcrowding in the dorms, the quality of food in
The major concerns of students are about the future.
the cafeteria, or limited Internet connectivity or the
They are aware of the limited number of jobs available
actions of a particular faculty member or dean. In my
in government, the private sector, NGOs, and other
experience over the last five years, when problems get
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as engineering, they are competing with people from
Most worrying to me is the widespread anxiety among
neighboring countries with better and more advanced
students about the direction of the country. They are
training. That is what leads them to complain about
fed up with the extensive corruption in the system as
the lack of faculty members with Ph.D.s, the limited
a whole and worried about what will happen when
amount of modern lab equipment, or the outdated
the foreign troops depart Afghanistan in 2016 along
texts and curricula. They understand that the MoHE
with many donors. Many of them have lost faith
is working to improve these areas and they say so.
in the political system. This is in stark contrast to
But they also know that it may be too late for them.
the students we interviewed in 2003 who were so
Their challenges are very real, and even in areas that
hopeful, so excited about the future, and so pleased
are growing, like mining, the need for specialized
with their new freedoms; many of them talked about
engineers and technicians is several years off.
their commitment to helping rebuild Afghanistan. You don’t hear much of that talk anymore. Part of this
Prospects for students vary by individual success,
malaise is the result of the general failure of senior
their field, and their experience, if any. On the one
administrators and faculty members to reestablish
hand there is a group of incredibly bright, motivated,
a sense of community on the campuses, as I noted
hardworking students who will do well working in
in an earlier section. With that sense of community
government or the private sector, at NGOs, or on their
would have come a new interest in research, discovery,
own. They are a very impressive group, many of whom
innovation, problem solving, and creativity that would
are able to compete with graduates from other regional
have suggested what students might do on their own,
universities—as, for example, Herat graduates are in
fostered entrepreneurialism, and enhanced hope for
information technology. There is another group of
the future. On the other hand, much of the student
students who are not as bright or well-trained but who
distress is caused by events happening outside the
should be able to find employment in the long run,
university—national politics, the loss of foreign
although they will struggle in the process. And then
commitments, the ongoing war, the security situation,
there are those who went to university because that
and the general malaise enveloping the whole country
was the next thing to do, who didn’t work very hard
given the uncertainties about the new government and
and were not interested in much of anything, who did
whether it will be able to deal with corruption, improve
not distinguish themselves, and who will probably
security, and move the economy forward. Added
have great difficulty finding jobs. Many will remain
to that are the vagaries that haunt a fragile state:
unemployed unless they have family connections. They
administrative weakness, corruption, lack of funding,
are also the most likely to complain and to blame the
incompetence, and general uncertainty. All these
MoHE or the government for their failures. These are
factors are out of students’ control and leave them
the people that the government needs to worry about
filled with uncertainty, anxious about their next steps,
because if their numbers grow too large, they will
concerned about their future, and trying to devise
become a major political problem for the government
strategies that will protect them in the long run.
22
and the country as a whole.
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Chapter 6: Funding for Higher Education and the Role of Donors Government Funding for Higher Education
noted earlier, to date the MoHE has received about 42 percent of that—below what it will take to raise quality
Funding is a major and ongoing problem for higher
to necessary levels and meet reasonable increases in
education in Afghanistan. Part of the problem is that
enrollments.1 A major effort needs to be made to obtain
higher education has not been a very high funding
more funding. The Kabul Donor Group promised an
priority for government or most donors in recent
additional $236 million, which would bring the total
years, as noted earlier. The focus has been on primary
funding for the NHESP: 2010–2014 to 82 percent of
education, in particular on Education for All, the very
that requested, a major improvement. However, despite
laudable effort by UNESCO and other donors to have
the approval of this request by the donors and the
universal primary education around the world by 2015.
Ministry of Finance more than three years ago, none of
What has been ignored is that the success of Education
that funding has been forthcoming.
for All produces an increasing number of secondary school graduates in the long run. Most of them want
The World Bank and the United States have been the
to go on to higher education. Not much thought has
major donors to higher education with some additional
been given to these consequences except at the MoHE,
funding coming from France, Germany, Norway,
and its pleas for additional funding to accommodate
Turkey, India, Pakistan, Japan, and ISAF. Despite the
these students have been largely ignored over the
MoHE’s success in meeting most of its strategic plan
last five years. These students are now graduating
goals by the end of 2014, because of a lack of funding
from secondary schools in increasing numbers—far
it has not been able to embark on a major expansion
more than can or should be accommodated by higher
of the infrastructure to accommodate growth and
education. Equally important, if higher education
continue improving quality. Such an expansion would
is to produce the high-quality graduates required
include building more facilities to meet the needs of a
for national development and employment, it must
larger number of students: more and larger classrooms
continue to improve the quality of its institutions. That
and lecture halls; offices for new faculty members;
cannot be done without increased funding.
high-quality laboratories in physics and other areas of science, the health sciences, and technology; and
The MoHE’s funding request in the National Higher
additional teaching equipment including expanded IT
Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 was $564
facilities. In addition, libraries need to be upgraded to
million over five years, a total regarded as modest
take advantage of the Internet access now available in
by most donors and those who reviewed the plan. As
Afghanistan, dormitories need to be built for female www.scup.org
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students to break a major bottleneck to increased
Budgets for the MoHE have been far too modest to
access for women, and some additional dorms need to
allow it to provide the quality of education required to
be built for men—and there are a variety of other needs
attract investment and meet development needs. As
that must be met so that all higher education campuses
shown in figure 11, per capita funding has decreased
can be brought up to a level where faculty members can
over the last five years from $521 in 2010 to $443
provide first-class instruction and learning.
in 2014, a decline of almost 18 percent. A general assumption is that a good-quality higher education
Additional funding is also needed to help implement
program in a developing country should cost about
plans to upgrade the curriculum, offer more
$1,000 per capita.2 As can be seen, the MoHE’s per
internships and in-service training (essential to
capita budget is a little less than half that amount. In
employment), and develop additional high-quality
comparison to Afghanistan’s spending of $443 dollars
graduate programs so that most master’s training
per student in 2014, Pakistan spent $3,328 per capita;
can be provided in Afghanistan. In the long run,
India, $2,627; Ghana, $3,197; Kenya, $1,850; Senegal,
preparations need to be made to add Ph.D. programs in
$4,140; Iran, $2,130; and Turkey, $4,128 (Saint 2002;
critical areas in the sciences and technology. However,
UNESCO 2014). These figures present a stark contrast
more faculty members with Ph.D.s in each of these
to Afghanistan.
areas will be required to produce high-quality Ph.D. programs. Anything less would be a waste of funding
The problems are compounded by the fact that the
and deceptive to students. The MoHE needs significant
actual funding provided is usually lower than either
additional funding to continue to send substantial
the approved budget or the allocated budget as can be
numbers of faculty members abroad for master’s
seen in figure 12 for 2012—a year that is an excellent
and Ph.D. training until at least 60 percent of the
example of the problem. The MoHE’s approved
faculty have those degrees—only 40 percent of faculty
ordinary budget in 2012 was $47 million and its
members had master’s degrees or Ph.D.s in 2014—after
development budget $57.2 million. However, its actual
which the number of faculty members sent abroad can
received development budget was only $24.6 million
be reduced.
(43 percent of that originally allocated).3 Since total funding is usually only allocated toward the end of the year it is often hard to spend all of it on development
Figure 11 MoHE Budget: 2010–2014
Final examinations taken outdoors because of the lack of large halls at Nangarhar University.
Year
Ordinary Budget (US dollars)
2010
$33,295,162
2011
35,000,000
5.1%
20,500,000
98%
452.57
2012
47,133,996
34.7%
57,224,514
179%
465.40
2013
64,000,000
35.8%
78,000,000
36.3%
481.39
2014
71,429,000
11.6%
82,696,472
6.0%
443.07
Increase %
Development Budget (US dollars)
Increase %
$10,379,000
Ordinary budget per capita $521.57
Source: MoHE data 2014. www.scup.org
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efforts in the last days of the budget cycle. The
Given the increases in enrollments over the last two
limited development budget makes it especially hard
years of 31 percent in 2012 and 31 percent again in
to meet the desperate need to expand and upgrade
2013—plus a 28 percent increase in 2014—it is clear
the infrastructure. Donors, with the exception of
that the increases in the budget have not kept up.
USAID, the World Bank, and a few others, have not
Substantial enrollment increases are expected to
contributed to infrastructure development, arguing
continue over the next six years after which graduation
that they no longer fund “bricks and mortar.” Only the
rates from secondary schools will finally drop to single
World Bank, USAID, and GIZ of Germany have made
digit increases. Thus, Afghan higher education is going
major infrastructure contributions to the goals of the
to continue to need substantially more funding just to
National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–
keep up with enrollment growth. When one adds to
2014.
that the current shortage of classrooms, dormitories for women, and offices for new faculty members along
Of the total allocation for education in the government
with the need to expand and upgrade most laboratories
budget, only about 10 percent goes to higher
and other teaching facilities, it is clear that the funding
education. The other 90 percent goes to primary,
crisis has reached a critical point. Further added to
secondary, technical, and other education. The
that is the desperate need to increase quality overall
actual funds allocated for higher education in 2012
if higher education is to meet national development
were even less: only eight percent (Boardman et al.
needs. That too has costs: advanced training for faculty
2012). The usual allocation in developing countries
members, up-to-date laboratory equipment, state-of-
is about 20 percent of the education budget to
the-art textbooks, expanded internships for students,
higher education. In Pakistan it is over 20 percent;
and other needs. Afghanistan should increase its
Turkey, 31 percent; India, 19.6 percent; Thailand,
support to higher education to at least the average
18 percent; and Malaysia, 37.6 percent (Altbach,
level of 20 percent of its education budget or to a per
Reisberg, and Rumbley 2009). The base budget for
student expenditure of at least $600 in 2016 and $800
2012 was a little better than for 2011 with an approved
by 2018 if it is to begin to meet the minimum quality
ordinary budget of $47,133,996 and a development budget of $58,276,051. The actual allocations were $47,126,791 and
Figure 12 An Example of the Reduction from Approved to Allocated MoHE Budget: 2012
$24,639,090 respectively. During 2012, MoHE expenditures of the ordinary budget were $44,242,880 (93.9 percent of the total approved ordinary budget). Its expenditures of the development budget during 2012 were only $22,796,620 (39.8 percent of the total approved development budget), primarily because the budget year was changed to only nine months so that in the future the budget and calendar years will be the same. Source: Boardman et al. 2012, p. 35. www.scup.org
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standards needed to foster national development. A
year delay. Prior to this, any funds received went to
$600 per capita allocation would have produced an
the treasury and were seldom seen again. This new
ordinary budget of $96 million for 2014 as opposed
initiative should substantially assist higher education
to the approved budget of $71.4 million, an increase
institutions in raising funds on their own to invest in
of 35 percent. As it is, increases in the budget do not
upgrading higher education. While the results of this
keep up with increased enrollments and do not allow
financial decentralization will take time to appear—
for the quality improvement necessary to develop the
and will probably be seen only in the Kabul institutions
kind of public higher education system that will foster
at first—I am optimistic about the possibilities in the
essential national development and produce graduates
medium term.
who find employment or are able to develop their own businesses or professions as entrepreneurs.
Other funding options need to be considered as well. The Afghan constitution guarantees free higher
In addition to increasing government support to both
education through the undergraduate level. Students
the ordinary and development budgets, one quick
pay fees for master’s and Ph.D. programs and for
way to improve the budget situation is to allow higher
night classes. In the short run, at least, it would not
education institutions to raise and keep funding from
be possible to amend the constitution to change that.
entrepreneurial activities, donations, and other fund-
Such an effort would guarantee student opposition
raising. Since 2001 that has allowed higher education
and violence. On the other hand, as I have noted
institutions in Pakistan to increase their income by
earlier, no nation can afford to cover all the costs of
an average of 49 percent while at the same time the
higher education. One possibility would be to charge
government subvention increased by 98 percent.
students for accommodations and food. The costs of
This would be an easy partial solution to the funding
housing and feeding students eat up a little more than
crisis in Afghanistan that would have little effect on
one-quarter of the ordinary higher education budget.
the treasury since this is not income being earned
The charges could be assessed on a needs basis. As it
by anyone at the present time—it is income forgone
stands, a good many students could afford to pay for
and lost to higher education forever. If such a change
housing since they come primarily from middle- or
had happened in Afghanistan in 2001, as it did in
upper-class families. Furthermore, in contrast to
Pakistan, that income would have created a multiplier
students in public higher education, students in private
effect of investments, resulting in millions of dollars
higher education pay most or all of the costs of their
of additional income to the Afghan economy each
education, some as much as $5,000 per year.4 Private
year. One study suggests a benefit of 14 to 15 percent
higher education in Afghanistan now accounts for
on funds invested (Universities Australia and KPMG
about 45 percent of student enrollments.
Econtech 2009). Afghan higher education would be in a much better position if that had happened.
South Africa moved to privatize its student housing several years ago, and the plan worked smoothly and
In that context, in November 2013, the government
well in part because it gave students more control over
approved a recommendation that for the first time
their accommodations including which companies
will allow public higher education institutions that
provided the meals. Students in South Africa now
have the capacity to raise and keep funds, although
review three or four different catering firms each
their ability to access those funds is subject to a one-
year and the winner gets a year-long contract. Meals www.scup.org
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have improved significantly in South Africa, and the
such low quality that no one would want to hire them.
headache of housing is no longer an ongoing problem
It would also guarantee that Afghanistan would be
for university administrators—something that used
deprived of the economic contributions that come from
to take up to half of their time. In Afghanistan, the
high-quality public higher education.
poorest students could continue to receive subsidized food and housing at public institutions with others
Given the fact that the government is facing a 20
paying on a graduated scale from half to full cost based
percent budget shortfall (Sieff 2014a), some alternative
on family income.
solutions for funding higher education are essential in the long run. It seems unlikely that anything close
If government is unable to increase its funding for
to the current level of external support will continue
higher education, one of the only other alternatives
beyond 2016 when the last of the foreign troops are
is to allow standards and quality to fall and make no
scheduled to leave. The medium-term economic
pretensions of striving for high quality. That seems to
prospects for Afghanistan are very good given the
me an unacceptable solution for any government. On
known mineral, oil, and gas deposits throughout
the other hand, we have seen that happen in a number
the country. However, those take time to develop,
of developing countries—Kenya and Nigeria being good
especially in a war environment. Even if new mining
examples where public higher education quality has
operations started today, they would not produce
fallen below that of private institutions. In Nigeria, the
much in the way of revenue for at least five years
quality of higher education was so low that businesses
because of the need to build access roads to the mines,
would only hire Nigerian graduates from universities
prepare the sites, build housing for workers, purchase
abroad. In cases like these, the wealthy send their
equipment, put in place mining and processing
children to private institutions or universities abroad.
structures, begin to mine the ore and refine it, and
That, however, hurts the economy (through a large net
set up marketing and delivery mechanisms. Thus, it
outflow of foreign exchange to pay tuitions abroad, as
is especially critical that plans begin to be made right
happened in Kenya), increases the gap between the
away to ensure that higher education has access to the
poor and the wealthy, and deprives the country of the
funding it needs now for both quality improvement and
other benefits of quality public higher education such
infrastructure expansion. That will require a major
as research and service. In the meantime the graduates
national economic plan and an enhanced commitment
of public universities are unemployed, unhappy
to higher education.
5
about it, and likely to become both disruptive and destabilizing. The only other alternative, if additional funding is not available, is to limit enrollment to the current number of students or an even lower number to free up funds to improve quality. While that would be very hard to do and the pressure from new secondary school graduates demanding admission would be enormous, to allow the institutions to expand while quality falls would be to guarantee that the graduates produced would be of
Donors and the Challenges Posed Donors have been very generous in support of education in Afghanistan in general, but, as noted above, with the exception of USAID and the World Bank, higher education has not been included in that support. The vast majority of donor funding for education has gone to primary and secondary education. Part of the reason for that has been the
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emphasis on Education for All, which grew out of a
USAID and the World Bank have been excellent
mandate from the Dakar Forum in 2000 and aims to
partners of the MoHE. They regularly consult with
provide basic education for all children around the
the ministry about its priorities and have paid careful
world by 2015. In addition to USAID and the World
attention to the NHESP: 2010–2014. That has not
Bank, a few other donors have provided support
been the case with a number of other donors. One in
for specific areas of higher education, but the donor
particular has consistently failed to consult with the
community in general has made it clear that it
ministry prior to providing aid. This has led to the
“does not do higher education,” as one donor put it,
duplication of other donors’ efforts in several cases
suggesting that it was not important to the future of
involving very costly equipment and laboratories. In
Afghanistan. Indeed, higher education has not been
other cases it has resulted in the double funding of
a high budget priority for government, although it is
projects. In some cases those funds can be shifted
one of the pillars of the Afghan National Development
to other uses but in others the funding is wasted.
Strategy. The donor focus on basic education has made
Another donor has sometimes sent equipment without
it very difficult for higher education to obtain the
instructions for its setup, maintenance, or operation
funding needed to support the goals of the National
or has sent directions in a language for which there
Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014.
are no translators in Afghanistan. Furthermore, this largess has tended to focus on areas and institutions
For reasons that are hard to comprehend, neither the
that are not among the ministry’s priorities. The MoHE
government nor most donors seem to understand the
usually learns about such contributions only after
findings of the World Bank and several other research
they have arrived and are publically announced by the
organizations that show that no nation joins the ranks
donor. Consultation could have ensured that the items
of developing countries without a high-quality higher
purchased were priorities that everyone could celebrate
education system (see, in particular, World Bank
once they were put in place and working. As a result of
2002, Chapter 1). Although Afghan higher education
these issues, some of the equipment provided remains
has improved tremendously over the last five years, it
in boxes unused because there are no instructions or
has not yet reached that level of quality. While public
training for its use, because duplicate equipment is
support for education is generally strong, except among
already in place, or because it is not needed. This is a
supporters of the Taliban and in some other extremely
tragic waste of funds when there are so many needs
conservative Islamic communities, neither the public
in science, technology, and numerous other areas of
nor the government appear to understand that national
higher education.
economic development and the ability to attract foreign investment depends on a substantial improvement in
When working for the World Bank in Afghanistan
the quality of Afghan higher education. Other than
in 2005–06, I was struck by the cooperative way in
those in the MoHE (and, more recently, in the Ministry
which World Bank staff worked with the ministry to
of Education), no one is making that case. Without
develop proposals for Bank support. That approach
strong government support and the necessary funding,
continued in 2009–10 when I was on the other side
the improvements in the quality of Afghan higher
of those efforts working with the MoHE. World Bank
education required will not be achieved in time to do
staff and ministry officials and staff met or consulted
much good.
almost daily over a month-long period to work out a proposal for the Bank based on the priorities set out in www.scup.org
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the NHESP: 2010–2014. The result was a joint funding
has prioritized English as the most important foreign
proposal written by both parties that truly reflected
language for students; other languages, including
the goals of the MoHE. I had never before seen such
German, Chinese, Russian, French, Spanish, and
detailed and careful collaboration between a donor and
Japanese, are considered secondary. Because of the
a ministry in any country. It was a model of how such
high cost of language instruction, the ministry is
work should be done.
eager to focus its limited resources on English since by presidential decree all programs in engineering and
In more recent years, such World Bank cooperation
medicine are to be taught in English beginning in 2015.
has not been the norm. Rather, a plan is developed in
That target is going to be difficult to meet even under
Washington or elsewhere and some partial drafts are
ideal circumstances. While the MoHE has shown its
shared along the way by e-mail, but there is nothing
appreciation for the generous gifts of buildings and
joint or cooperative about the process. While there
equipment intended to be used for instruction in other
may be a meeting to discuss the plan, the “discussion”
languages, all of this consumes scarce resources in
is only one way with very little listening on the part
faculty salaries, upkeep, repair, instruction, heating,
of World Bank officials. What has resulted in these
support staff, and related costs. Suddenly those funds
cases is a proposal that duplicates work already done,
are not available for support of priority areas.
neglects to consider achievements made already, and fails to build on the current state of affairs. Consultants
The shortage of English speakers among the faculty
are sent to repeat work already completed, wasting
has meant that some scholarships provided by various
their time as well as that of people at the MoHE. With
governments for master’s and Ph.D. training abroad
careful cooperation the same funds could be used
have gone unused because there are not enough
to move forward from the current state of affairs to
faculty members who can achieve high enough scores
achieve results close to the ultimate goals of both
on the required language proficiency examination
the MoHE and the funder. By 2015 the World Bank
to be able to use them. Most instruction abroad is in
procedures seem to have improved with consultation
English including that in India, the European Union,
again taking place as it should. Nonetheless, there is a
Turkey, Pakistan, the United States, and a number
tendency among donors to think “we know what should
of other countries. The lack of English proficiency
be done” and a failure to recognize that professionals
also limits access to graduate scholarships for a
in the ministry and advisors from various parts of the
number of students. Ph.D. and master’s training is
world have already moved beyond a particular stage.
a critical need for faculty members. Yet once again,
In such cases, both time and precious resources are
when these scholarships cannot be used because of
wasted, and no one is satisfied with the results.
the lack of language proficiency these resources and opportunities go to waste—opportunities that are
Another problem that occurs far too frequently is
unlikely to continue to be available to faculty members
that with little or no consultation a donor provides
and graduate students for much longer. There are
funds for a specific project that is of interest to the
several other cases in which support and non-priority
donor but not a high priority for the MoHE. This
academic programs have diverted funding from critical
was the case in several language areas, although the
areas in the sciences, social science, and technology.
problem is not limited to that area. While the ministry
While the generosity is appreciated, these gifts often
is eager to have students learn a foreign language, it www.scup.org
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make it financially difficult for the MoHE to provide
from both the institutional and employer perspective.
the support needed in critical areas.
One-third of the faculties (35) have completed their reviews including the needs assessment. In the new
Recently there has been a great deal of donor interest
National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–
in workforce and skills development. Much of this
2020 there is a section on workforce development
relates to valid concerns that university graduates are
urging institutions to increase their consultation with
not being adequately prepared for employment—that
employers to ensure that graduates are appropriately
their education is not relevant to the world of jobs,
prepared for the workforce (MoHE 2015). The MoHE
the needs of employers, or the changing nature of the
expects its graduates to be able to use their training
market. The MoHE has worked for years to ensure
to deal with a changing environment, adapt to the
that the curriculum includes training that relates
constantly evolving work needs of the modern world,
to employer needs and expectations. However, the
and apply their creative abilities to the development
ministry has heard from some employers, especially in
of innovative solutions for tomorrow’s challenges and
engineering, that graduates of engineering schools are
problems. Thus, while higher education training should
not meeting their needs. Others have expressed similar
be relevant to today’s employment needs, it must also
concerns about the need for more relevance. Some of
train students for an unknown future: new issues they
the donor concerns seem unfocused—preparing the
will need to confront, new techniques that will have
graduate for “an appropriate role in the economy”
to be developed, new methods that will be required
(Roth 2014, p. 2). What does that mean? What is an
to improve today’s technology, and new software and
appropriate role? Who defines that? Nonetheless, the
processes that will be needed to meet future demands.
MoHE takes these concerns seriously and is working with faculties to solve these problems. It is for that
An ongoing problem with some donors is their failure
reason that in 2012 the MoHE included a “needs
to maintain regular and continuing coordination
assessment,” referring to the needs of employers and
with the leaders of the projects they are funding. Too
other institutions, in the procedures for curriculum
often their local staffs do not bother to talk with those
review and upgrading.
involved in the actual process of implementation at the MoHE or university. Often they meet only with
The MoHE continues to take the concerns of employers
the minister or other senior officials who usually do
seriously and is working with a number of them to
not have much understanding of the details of the
meet their needs. For that reason the MoHE directed
process. Those meetings are important, but they must
its Curriculum Commission to ensure that in the
be followed up by regular consultations with the actual
process of mandated curriculum reviews, faculties
implementers. The donors assume that the minister
consulted with employers to ascertain their needs,
passes on any suggestions they make, which is often
hear any criticism they might have about the training
not the case. While this is partly a problem the MoHE
of students, and listen to suggestions for future
needs to solve, it requires work by both parties. Even
training. During 2012, the Curriculum Commission
the most informed senior ministry official will not
developed its “Curriculum Review and Development
be aware of a project’s day-to-day issues, problems,
Guidelines,” which include a section about the
obstacles, or needs. Sometimes this leads to the total
process of needs assessment that was used during
failure of critical sections of a major project—as it did
the curriculum reviews in 2013–14 to identify needs
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have ensured success. There are many such examples.
This list of challenges does not negate the strong and
While meetings with the minister and senior officials
positive relationships the MoHE has had with most
are essential, it seems to me that they often appeal
donors. The problems are mentioned here in the hope
to donors because they sound more prestigious than
that they will help future donors think through their
meetings with ordinary staff. Yes, the prestige may be
processes and operating procedures in ways that will
there, but in the long run some of these projects fail to
help improve cooperation, increase the effectiveness of
meet their targets and may fail totally. This problem
grants, and provide an even better connection between
has gotten worse in recent years as donor staffs have
donors and the ministry. As part of the MoHE’s effort
been reduced and security concerns often mean
to improve coordination, it plans to reconstitute the
that those who are there seldom leave their offices.
Higher Education Donor Group and hold regular
Yet, project managers continue to need direct input
meetings with its members to help build closer ties and
from donors in order to rectify problems or eliminate
ensure that the donors and the MoHE are partners in
bottlenecks.
these efforts, working closely together, targeting the same goals, and able to celebrate even more exciting
Some donors’ staff members seem to shy away from
successes in the future.
working closely with staff in the field or getting directly involved in or observing the operation of projects. This breakdown of contact and cooperation is increasing and does not bode well for the future. Regular meetings with staff in the field also help donors understand the workings of Afghan higher education, the challenges to be faced, the local culture, and the kinds of pressures that can spoil a good project or, if properly understood, lead to great success. Part of the problem recently was the assumption that donor coordination was occurring through the Human Resource Development Board.6 This body does provide important mechanisms for communication at a general level. But as a former member of that body for over three years, I can say that it is no substitute for personal contact with those directly involved in a project.
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Chapter 7: Lessons from Experience What Lessons Have Been Learned to Date?
be done. That was part of the reason why the first steps taken by the leadership were to reestablish
Most importantly, we have seen that a significant
faculty rules and regulations about obligations, duties,
transformation of the public higher education sector is
conditions of service, teaching, research expectations,
possible even in a war environment in a fragile state.
and proper conduct. This strategy worked because
This was possible because leaders were committed
a small but active pool of senior leaders and faculty
both to rebuilding higher education to what it had
members was clear about these rules and expectations
been before the Russian invasion—a leader in the
and made them explicit early. That enabled them to
region—and to building a high-quality system that
mobilize administrators and faculty leaders to bring
would foster national development regardless of the
about changes in attitudes and behaviors by working
challenges. They spelled out these goals clearly in
with others willing to make the commitments needed
2009 in the National Higher Education Strategic
to create change. Further, the process of implementing
Plan: 2010–2014. The leaders of the MoHE saw war
the new rules and regulations was carefully developed
as but one of the many challenges they faced and, in
so that the goals and mechanisms for implementation
many respects, not the worst of them. The fragile state
were understood, put in place, and followed.
posed additional challenges that had to be dealt with one by one, including weak government, unpredictable
A good example of success in that vein was the
funding, limited support from other sectors of
implementation of policies about merit recruitment
government, and regular political interference. The
and merit promotions. This was a change that
war had created a number of problems that made
many senior faculty leaders did not think could be
progress more difficult including an inward-looking
implemented because they felt it was not “the Afghan
faculty and staff more focused on survival than
way” and thus faculty members would not agree. Yet in
anything else. That attitude had fostered a kind of
the end there were no major problems in implementing
selfishness that made corruption and irresponsibility
these policies. Why was that? Because the changes
easier and broke down the strong sense of community
were explained clearly along with the justification for
that had existed prior to the Russian invasion and civil
them, people knew about the changes well in advance
war. It had also weakened faculty members’ sense of
and understood the reasons for them, and, most
responsibility for the state of higher education.
importantly, people agreed with the changes. They all knew that the traditional system based on the “old
It was the corruption, irresponsibility, and survival
boy’s network” was unfair—some of them had suffered
instinct that were hardest to overcome. To tackle these
from it, and many of them were fearful that it would
challenges required a clear vision of what needed to
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also knew from experience that it didn’t work very
faculty members know they should do research. This
well in terms of the quality of the people promoted
was drummed into them during their training and
or recruited. An additional factor fostering support
is part of the assumption about faculty obligations
was the argument made by MoHE leaders that since
worldwide. Some faculty members are already doing
students were admitted on the basis of merit, the
research, and many others have thought about topics
ministry could not continue to support a non-merit
but used the excuse of lack of time to explain their
system for the hiring or promotion of faculty members.
inaction to date. Some are hindered by the fact that
Indeed, as we have seen overall, there was no major
they have second jobs teaching or consulting, often
long-term resistance to any of the policy changes
without university approval. But they expect to carry
introduced over the last five years except in the case of
out research in the future. In addition, there is the
those policies regarding the review of private higher
option of writing a textbook, which meets the research
education institutions—and that only by a small group
requirement as long as the department or faculty
with a conflict of interest.
agrees that the text is needed. Many faculty members have taken that option. In the arts it is clear that a
Two changes that affected many faculty members and
major show, performance, or exhibition is equivalent to
might have sparked resistance did not: the requirement
publication.
that faculty members know a major foreign language and the requirement that they conduct research in
While the real test of the research requirement may
order to be promoted. Part of the explanation for
come later, it is not likely to become a major issue. It
the lack of resistance to the language requirement
doesn’t affect older faculty members who are already
is that because of the 10-year Russian occupation of
at the associate or full professor level or on their
Afghanistan, many faculty members already know
way. What will be harder is the development of good-
Russian. In addition, a significant number already
quality research projects by some of the younger
know English, or if they do not they realize they should
faculty members who do not really know much about
if they want to be part of the international academic
research—how to write a proper research question or
community or work abroad. Those that do not know
choose appropriate research methods—and who have
English plan to learn it. Even if they have not already
no mentors in their field to guide them. As they work
started to do so they expect to start in the near future.
toward promotion, they may have trouble producing
Thus the requirement is not a threat.
the research required. On the other hand, the youngest faculty members who have had the chance to obtain a
The lack of resistance to the requirement for research
master’s degree or Ph.D. abroad have come back full of
is a more difficult one to explain. It has not engendered
ideas about research, well versed in research methods,
resistance so far, only questions: Where is the money
and eager to carry out new research or continue
to fund research? Does the requirement really apply to
research they started as graduate students. The
the new universities and higher education institutions?
challenge for some of them, especially in the sciences
How is research defined in the arts? These questions
and technology, will be finding the funding needed for
have straightforward answers that were well thought
their projects. Little funding is now available but the
through in the process of preparing the rules and
new World Bank project in 2015 is expected to include
regulations regarding research. Resistance to the
some funding for research.1 The fact that there will
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with master’s degrees and Ph.D.s is the best hope
private institutions are now often higher than at public
for rebuilding a culture of research and will, I am
institutions, enforcing the rule might lead the faculty
confident, succeed.
member involved to leave—as a few have. Nonetheless, if an effective academic community is to be rebuilt
Of the challenges that remain, perhaps the most
and a culture of teaching and research rekindled,
difficult will be rebuilding the academic community—
faculty members must be present on campus full
the culture of teaching and research and the sense of
time, available to provide direction and counseling to
community that existed prior to the Russian invasion.
students, and engaged in research they can share with
Part of the difficulty, as mentioned previously, is the
colleagues and students.
loss of senior faculty stars and mentors, many of whom left Afghanistan following the Soviet invasion. Few of
Related to faculty research is the need to expand
them have been replaced, although a little research
graduate education opportunities in Afghanistan.
continues to be done. Nonetheless, the isolation and
That is important because sending people abroad for
self-interest, discussed earlier, resulting from so
master’s and Ph.D. training is very expensive and
many years of fear, the struggle to survive, and the
probably cannot be continued at the current level
unknowable consequences of war will be hard to break.
except in highly specialized areas that can’t be offered
I see this most clearly in the flouting of faculty rules
in Afghanistan. In addition, depending on foreign
regarding the prohibition against outside teaching,
institutions for advanced degree training largely
especially during normal university business hours, by
eliminates that possibility for women who often have
a large number of faculty members. I would guess that
trouble getting permission to go abroad, frequently
at some institutions as many as 50 percent of faculty
have child care responsibilities that make foreign study
members violate this rule.
difficult, and usually have husbands who are unable to join them. Thus the expansion of graduate programs in
Faculty members are not actively protesting these
Afghanistan is especially important for female faculty
rules because they are only rarely being enforced and
members and female graduate students who hope to
then only in particularly audacious cases or when
become faculty members. We are currently learning
there are many student complaints. Furthermore,
the lesson that the expansion of graduate programs
administrators recognize the need for many faculty
requires additional faculty members with Ph.D.s to
members to take these jobs to support their families
oversee them. These Ph.D. faculty members also must
given the way inflation has cut into salaries in recent
be committed to teaching, research, service, and their
years. Nonetheless, this violation of the rule on outside
colleagues. That is the only way first-rate graduate
teaching means that these faculty members are not
programs can be offered, and as their numbers
on campus much of the time and thus not available
increase, more faculty members will be needed full
to advise students, participate regularly in faculty
time on campus to make sure high quality prevails.
governance, or carry out research. There is also the
Quality graduate programs must be led by faculty
belief of many faculty members that they should be
members who are active in research, leaders in their
able to have outside work as long as they meet their
fields, and full time at their institutions so that they
obligations to their home university. That is a much
are available to impart their knowledge and research
more difficult and complicated problem to police. There
expertise to their graduate students as well as work
is also fear among administrators that since salaries at
with their colleagues.
2
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Another lesson that should have been learned is the
meet normal work expectations. It seems to be a good
difficulty of controlling outside teaching. The lesson
solution to the problem though only time will tell.
that should be taken from the failure to enforce these rules is that given the economic conditions and low
Another lesson learned relates to making the case for
salaries a more reasonable approach is needed. It is
more funding for higher education. This is a difficult
not a good idea to have rules that end up being broken
challenge that will take persistence, well-prepared
by so many people. That makes “law breakers” out
data, good concise examples, and strong support from
of a large proportion of the faculty members. While
other sectors of government to overcome. Despite
the main impediment to ending outside teaching and
requests for more funding over the last five years, the
consulting is low salaries, and while there is some
MoHE has not made a substantial, sustained effort
talk about salary increases for faculty members, the
to make the case for a major funding increase to
government’s current financial situation is unlikely
Parliament, the Ministry of Finance, and other leaders.
to allow a salary increase significant enough to make
The facts for a strong argument are there including
faculty members believe they no longer need outside
the huge and continuing growth in graduation rates
employment.
from high school, the resulting rapid enrollment growth, the critical need to expand the infrastructure,
One step that might be taken to help eliminate this
and the need to improve quality to meet development
issue would be to relax the current rules somewhat so
requirements.
that a faculty member could teach elsewhere one day a week as long as he or she was on campus the rest of
There has been little success to show for funding
the week. The salary problems and the tight definition
requests to date. The effort to make the case was
of outside employment are barriers to keeping faculty
intensified in 2013, which was the first year the MoHE
members on campus full time and thus an impediment
seemed to make some headway. In addition, this
to the improvements needed to restore high quality,
was the first time the Ministry of Education joined
establish more essential graduate programs, and
in support of the MoHE in its efforts to get greater
rebuild the academic community. A more effective
funding. The Ministry of Education realized that the
policy on outside teaching needs to be put in place
MoHE was underfunded and that it was in its best
to make this possible. The new National Higher
interest to ensure that the MoHE was adequately
Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020 proposes a
funded since that ministry trains its secondary school
review of the rules on outside teaching and suggests
teachers and because TVET and teacher education
recognition of the right of faculty members to teach
are affected by higher education admissions. The
up to two courses outside their public institutions, but
battle is far from being won, and the MoHE will need
only with permission, with proof that they are meeting
to continue to work very hard to make its case. Part
their teaching, advising, administrative, research,
of the problem is getting people to understand the
and service obligations, and on the condition that one
trade-off involved—that increased access without
course be outside normal teaching hours (the other
increased funding results in the loss of quality and
can be during regular hours if not more than half a
an inadequate higher education for their children.
normal teaching day is missed) (MoHE 2015). This
While people understand the quality issues somewhat,
proposal recognizes the need of many faculty members
they are much more concerned about access to higher
for extra income, but also requires that those involved
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carefully refined in ways that policymakers can better
While students, on the whole, are supportive of gender
understand, perhaps by focusing on specific examples
equity, and most faculty members say they agree,
of areas where Afghanistan higher education is behind
there is little action in following up on those views.
its neighbors and competitors, such as in medicine or
We have watched Parliament weaken existing laws
engineering.
and reject proposals to protect women from rape. We have also seen faculty members who are reluctant to
The Higher Education Gender Strategy (MoHE 2015)
advise female students for fear of what their colleagues
is being released after two years of development and
will say. It has been difficult to get women onto
extensive consultation. It is clear that some parts of
commissions and major committees partly because
the strategy are going to be difficult to implement, in
of their home obligations but primarily because male
particular the push to increase the number of women
members are reluctant to nominate them or support
undertaking graduate education and the number of
their inclusion. I have noted earlier some of the
female faculty members. The MoHE learned a great
problems the MoHE has faced in attracting women
deal about resistance to gender equity in the process of
to faculty positions and the difficulties many women
preparing the gender strategy. Staff members witnessed
have in getting permission to do graduate work abroad.
the subtle resistance of many ministries to the efforts of
To some extent the latter problem is being lessened
the Ministry of Women’s Affairs to work with them on
by the increase in the number of master’s programs
gender equity issues, including increased employment
now offered in Afghanistan. Added to these problems
for women. Their method of resistance was to simply
are those faced by women who do get into senior
fail to show up for those meetings. Only the MoHE was
administrative and leadership positions—problems I
present at most of the meetings with the Ministry of
have highlighted earlier in this study.
Women’s Affairs. Thus the Ministry of Women’s Affairs gave up trying to work with other ministries on gender
Hiring more female faculty members, while hindered
equity. In recognition of the MoHE’s support, the
by the small number of candidates, is primarily
Ministry of Women’s Affairs provided a great deal of
hampered, in my view, by the biases of male faculty
assistance on its gender strategy and will have a major
members who do not want more women employed
role in its success.
in the faculties. The lack of candidates, while true, is mostly an excuse. The same holds true for the promotion of women. While the MoHE has not yet reviewed recent promotions as it promised to do in the Higher Education Gender Strategy, it is clear that it is harder for women to be considered for promotions than men. Part of this is because of their usual family duties that make it harder for them to meet the expectations of publication and service needed for promotion, but I suspect a larger part of it is the attitudes of male faculty members who do not want to see women promoted partly for sexist reasons and partly because they fear the competition. Most of the
Meeting about Higher Education Gender Strategy. Photo by Asef Mehry.
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the very brightest students because they had to work
serious deficiencies. As a result, the process moved
especially hard and be particularly competitive to
forward with very few problems.
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survive in the system long enough to reach graduate school. They will be tough competition, but so much
The potential utility of outside consultants is another
the better for quality purposes. Nonetheless, strategies
lesson learned. That has been demonstrated again and
need to be developed that will make it harder to
again for the MoHE in preparing the national higher
discriminate against women and provide opportunities
education strategic plans, setting up accreditation,
and incentives to at least equalize or level the playing
undertaking institutional strategic planning,
field. The MoHE has learned that tough problem areas
establishing community colleges, and preparing of
like this one require careful preparation, a medium-
a variety of policies in areas such as study abroad
term approach, patience, and hard work to make the
(including the return of graduates and their obligations
case.
to the MoHE), gender strategy, rules and procedures for merit promotions, new graduate programs, and
Another lesson learned is the importance of extensive
others. To be sure, great care must be taken in picking
consultation, especially when something new is being
the right kind of consultants—people who listen to
proposed. A good example of this is the development
what is needed locally, respect Afghan traditions and
of a system of accreditation. The MoHE started
honor them, are open to other ideas and not defensive,
working on accreditation in 2009. The commission
and understand the environment of developing
working on accreditation developed Bye Laws for
countries. The MoHE has had some bad experiences
Quality Assurance and Accreditation during 2009–10
with consultants who didn’t meet those requirements.
that were completed in final form by July 2011.
Overall, however, foreign consultants can bring, and
However, wanting to be sure that the process was
have brought, badly needed specialized expertise
fully understood and that there were no obstacles to
that was lacking in country. Much of the explanation
its implementation, the MoHE waited until July 2012
for success has to do with the expertise of individual
to publically announce accreditation and start the
advisors, and in that respect one lesson learned is
process. During that year the bye laws were reviewed
that they must be carefully vetted.3 One advantage
by chancellors, many senior faculty members, the
of consultants is their neutrality—the fact that they
Ministry of Justice, and a variety of specialists in
are not from a particular ethnic group or associated
Afghanistan and abroad. The MoHE held four general
with politics, political parties, or particular factions.
workshops on accreditation and additional smaller
They are thus easier to fire than local staff if they don’t
workshops at the major campuses. In addition, the
produce—and this was done in three cases over the last
MoHE asked the Kabul universities to pilot the self-
five years. Other advantages include the fact that they
assessment and used their feedback to improve the
usually do not have long-term interests in Afghanistan
procedures. By the time all the consultation was
and thus do not stand to benefit from their consultation
completed, almost everyone agreed that it was a good
beyond their payment as employees, as well as the
process, relatively easy to undertake, and important
fact that most people who have worked in several
to improving the quality of higher education in
foreign environments are not likely to be dogmatic or
Afghanistan. Furthermore, the pilot experience helped
wedded to one particular way of doing things. Foreign
universities understand their own weaknesses and
consultants also provide an important check on local
gave them time to work on areas in which they had
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because an experienced consultant can draw on many
lack of funding, the difficulty in identifying mental
similar experiences in many different countries under
health specialists who could be used, and the shortage
a wide range of conditions. If something worked well in
of ministry staff prevented immediate action.4
several other similar settings, the odds are high that it
Nonetheless, a small core of senior staff kept the issue
will work in Afghanistan.
alive.
The problem of mental health provides another lesson
In late 2013 Deputy Minister Babury appointed a
learned—one that demonstrates the importance of
steering committee on mental health at the MoHE that
persevering even when an issue seems critical but
included members from the Ministry of Public Health,
unrecognized or unmet and never giving up in the face
the Ministry of Education, Kabul University, HEP,
of multiple roadblocks. Sometimes it is important to
Kabul Medical University, and Albiruni University.
wait for the right moment, seek the right partners, or
With support from USAID through the HEP program,
pause until adequate funding is secured.
plans were made to set up two pilot mental health centers, one at Kabul University and one at Albiruni
That was the case with the issue of mental health
University. This was an issue that the deputy minister
care for students in Afghanistan. Afghans, as well as
and his advisor had kept alive since 2009 awaiting an
most of the rest of the world, have been reluctant to
opportunity to move forward.
recognize the mental health problems that exist as a consequence of more than 30 years of war. And of
During 2013, the Ministry of Public Health developed
course people around the world tend to look the other
a national project on mental health and began to
way when mental health issues come up, to ignore
train professional staff5 who could work in clinics
them or write them off since they seem to show human
with doctors. However, the Ministry of Public Health
weakness. Men in particular are loath to recognize
did not have the funding or the capacity to include
these problems in themselves and thus more likely
higher education. During discussions with senior staff
to ignore them in others. Yet, the damage caused by
at the Ministry of Public Health about the problems
years of war and other traumas has affected the mental
faced by the MoHE, it became clear that there was an
health of at least 40 percent of university students with
opportunity to join forces to include this mental health
a much higher percentage of women affected than men.
effort as part of a MoHE pilot project. This cooperation
The effects on women are higher for many reasons we
would expand the Ministry of Public Health program
have noted including the pressure put on them by their
in ways it could not on its own and assist the MoHE
families to help at home or get married, the greater
in addressing the mental health issues it had been
obstacles they face in continuing their education,
working on for several years. HEP contributed a staff
the reality of sexual harassment, and the fear that
member, a doctor who was the only woman trained
their future options will be limited. Some leaders in
and certified in mental health by the Ministry of Public
higher education recognized these problems early on,
Health, Dr. Brishna Sadiqi. The University Support and
especially under the enlighten direction of Minister
Workforce Development Program will continue that
Mohammad Azam Dadfar (March 2006–January
collaboration. Dr. Sidiqi worked with the senior higher
2010) who was himself a trained psychologist. With
education specialist to help develop the outline and lay
his help the ministry began to work on mechanisms
the foundation for this effort as well as with the staff
to help students with mental health problems. A
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material they had prepared. As a result, two clinics for
education institutions, and for most donors, going
students are planned and expected to open at Kabul
through numerous reprints in English, Dari, and
University and Albiruni University in 2016 as pilot
Pashtu. The NHESP: 2010–2014 was widely regarded
projects on student mental health. This will be a first
as a model of strategic planning among donors, NGOs,
step in beginning to meet the mental health needs
and others interested in higher education.
of students and in time of faculty members as well. Funding or in-kind assistance was provided in small
Finally, the successes in Afghan higher education
amounts by most of the participants, all believers
demonstrate the importance of operating in a relatively
in the critical need for mental health services to
free environment. This has been the case not only in
alleviate a major and mostly unrecognized problem
higher education in Afghanistan over the last decade
on university campuses. Clinical levels of depression,
but also in society generally, with an active and
anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder affect
growing media representing a wide range of views,
nearly half the students, cause some to drop out,
willing to criticize government, NGOs, and higher
undermine the educational progress of a large number
education, and prepared to take on almost any issue.
of others, and in extreme cases lead to long-term
This freedom has helped Afghanistan realize an
disability or suicide. These are problems that can be
expansion of social opportunity, especially in health
resolved and results that can usually be prevented. The
care and in primary, secondary, and higher education.
first steps in that direction have now been taken.
Academic freedom and freedom of expression have been the keys to successful change. As Sen (1999,
This case demonstrates the importance of
p. 18) notes, freedom is “a principal determinant of
perseverance—keeping after a problem even when it
individual initiative and social effectiveness. Greater
seems impossible to resolve it in the short run, even
freedom enhances the ability of people to help
when needed expertise and funding are lacking at
themselves and also to influence the world, and these
the moment. The problem remains as do the negative
matters are central to the process of development.”
consequences. In the case of mental health in higher
This freedom was critical to the process of change in
education, this perseverance means that in the long
Afghan higher education, allowing a five-year process
run the chances of success are much higher.
of discussion, debate, and exploration to result in a variety of fundamental changes that facilitated higher
Another key lesson learned is the importance of
education’s transformation—a process that is still
careful strategic planning—planning that creates
underway.
consensus but also produces a new model for higher education.6 Unlike so many strategic plans that have been written around the world, the National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 became the basis for almost everything done during that five-year period. Because of the consensus that was developed over time regarding the plan’s goals—all of which were linked to the two overall goals of quality improvement and increased access—the plan became a constant
Were Some Key Issues or Problems Missed Along the Way? Looking back on the work done since 2009, it is clear that some key issues had to be left until a later date or were missed altogether along the way. Let’s look at some of these:
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Differentiation
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that there is not a single model for higher education, and realize that Afghanistan needs a diversified
One of the major goals spelled out in the NHESP:
system with multiple missions divided among the
2010–2014 was “to lead and manage a diversified and
nation’s institutions. As missions are differentiated,
coordinated system of higher education comprised of
it is important to ensure that there is a division of
public and private universities, institutes and colleges”
labor, not a hierarchy.8 Excellence must be fostered
(MoHE 2009a, p. 6). At that time, differentiation
at all institutions, but duplication must be avoided.
was thought to comprise universities, the MoHE’s
Expansion should meet Afghanistan’s need for Afghan
institutions of higher education,7 and community
institutions while at the same time producing students
colleges, although differentiation had not been clearly
who meet the global standards of today’s highly
defined. Part of the problem the MoHE faced was that
competitive environment.
all its higher education institutions aspired to become universities and offer at least master’s degrees, if not
As van Vught (University World News 2008, ¶ 5)
eventually Ph.D.s. The distinction between a university
points out differentiation has many advantages for
and an institution of higher education was primarily
the system, including that it “improves access for
based on whether or not the institution had four or
students with different educational backgrounds
more faculties. That criterion was not hard to meet—
and achievements.” It also helps “meet the needs of
it didn’t define the quality of the programs or the
the labour market by creating the growing variety
expertise of the faculty members or say anything about
of specialisations that are needed for economic and
research. Furthermore, there was a political push in
social development” (¶ 6). Differentiated systems
some regions that had higher education institutes to
also encourage “the crucial combination of elite and
have them called universities for reasons of prestige—
mass higher education” since they “absorb a [more]
and indeed some had their status changed before they
heterogeneous clientele” than elite systems (University
had met the criterion. This missed the fundamental
World News 2008, ¶ 7). Added to that is the fact that
need for differentiation, which was academic,
differentiated systems are more cost effective and
financial, and practical. In short, no real plan for the
efficient in that they limit master’s and Ph.D. training
differentiation of the system was in place by 2014.
to a smaller group of institutions with the highly trained and qualified Ph.D. staff required to teach in
Yet a truly differentiated system is essential both to
those programs. Master’s and Ph.D. programs are at
provide the high quality needed and to use scarce
least 10 times more expensive per student to operate
resources effectively. To respond to the tremendous
than undergraduate programs. It does not make sense
growth in the number of young people graduating
to spread them over the system either in terms of
from secondary school, the resources for higher
cost or existing faculty expertise. In addition, high-
education must be expanded, but that expansion must
cost undergraduate programs in the sciences and
be targeted and efficient. As access is increased, it is
engineering should be limited to those institutions
important to help students understand that there are
set up for graduate education with the Ph.D. staff and
many paths to excellence that meet their different
research expertise needed to produce high-quality
talents and dreams as well as national needs. Similarly,
programs. Thus, a differentiated system fits the
administrators and faculty members need to be clear
needs and current conditions of higher education in
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Afghanistan and responds to its quality requirements
of themselves as potential research universities,
as well as its constrained financial condition.
proposed master’s programs, and tried to emulate
Chapter 7
Kabul University. That wastes resources, drawing them In 2014 MoHE higher education institutions were
away from the effort to build high-quality institutions
only divided into two categories, universities and
and is likely to lead to the creation of a total system
higher education institutes, the main distinguishing
that is mediocre at best.
factors being the number of faculties and size. A third category, community colleges, was established in 2015,
No nation can afford to operate as if all institutions
and the first two have begun instruction.
are potentially comprehensive research institutions with graduate programs. That is just not financially
The solution to providing the quality graduates
viable even in wealthy states, nor will it produce the
needed in Afghanistan must involve much more than
quality needed. Furthermore, the research institutions
just creating opportunities for access—that will be
and their faculty members must be held to a very high
meaningless unless the system is highly differentiated
standard of achievement or be financially penalized.9
and founded on high quality, integrity, and creativity as
To make this work well, an integrated higher education
well as committed faculty members and staff. It must
system must be established with distinct missions
be a system that fosters an inclusive approach to the
spelled out clearly to meet a diversity of needs, talents,
different missions of each institution as part of a whole
and goals. The system must inspire excellence in
with carefully managed growth and expansion. The
students, faculty, and staff at every institution at every
system must be dedicated to the development of all the
level if it is to produce students who will contribute
people of Afghanistan—regardless of wealth, gender,
to the growth, development, and creativity that will
family occupation, region, or origin. The diversity
distinguish Afghanistan once again as a regional
of Afghanistan should be carefully and sensitively
leader making unique contributions to growth and
managed to foster the development of the nation as a
development. As noted, this type of system constitutes
whole. That means that the boundaries between types
a division of labor between types of institutions, not a
of systems must be clear and policies must be put in
hierarchy. The brightest students may well choose to
place that do not allow “mission creep” of the sort that
go to a community college because it fits their dreams,
is happening in Afghanistan today. It also has to be
background, and talents. This system should also help
recognized that the costs differ substantially between
Afghanistan move away from thinking of programs
types of institutions, with the comprehensive research
in hierarchical terms with medicine and engineering
and graduate institutions the most expensive given
at the top and education at the bottom.10 Why would
their advanced programs and research emphasis.
one want a system in which the weakest students are
Those budget distinctions must be clear and followed
trained to be the teachers of our brightest students in
with care.
primary and secondary school? They too need to be the best and brightest.
Although this type of differentiation was discussed in detail in 2013 and a concept paper developed for
In a differentiated system in Afghanistan, one
Cabinet, nothing happened. And so many institutions
group would comprise the “research and graduate
that were categorized as comprehensive universities
universities” and might consist of Kabul University,
and general education institutions continued to think
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University, Kabul Medical University, Herat University,
Institute of Higher Education is affiliated with Kabul
Nangarhar University, and possibly Balkh University,
Education University.
although it might belong in the second category. These universities have large numbers of students, significant
The fourth group is the “community colleges,” which
numbers of faculty members with master’s degrees,
are now being developed. The first two community
some faculty with Ph.D.s (and many in training), large
colleges will be colleges of Kabul Polytechnic
numbers of graduates each year, and all but Balkh and
University and Kabul Medical University. They will
Nangarhar are authorized to offer master’s programs.
provide 2.5 years of mid-level professional training (including a six-month internship) designed to prepare
The second tier would be called the “comprehensive
students for employment at the end of the program.
universities” and made up of somewhat smaller
They will grant associate’s degrees. They fill a critical
universities that are still experienced and well
need for well-trained, mid-level professional and
established, offering well-developed programs. They
technical graduates. These jobs are now being filled
have fewer faculty members at the master’s and
primarily by foreigners from Pakistan, Turkey, India,
Ph.D. levels, but are stable with a clear direction and
Iran, and the Philippines. Graduates would not be
mission and working to increase the number of faculty
allowed to transfer to universities or higher education
members with advanced degrees. To avoid duplication
institutions. Thus, community colleges will not be an
and ensure quality at the graduate level, they would
alternative gateway to university-level education. If at a
not be allowed to have Ph.D. programs. They include
later date some graduates want to go on to universities,
Takhar, Bamyan, Khost, Parwan, Albiruni, Paktia,
they would be eligible only after five years of
Jawzjan, Baghlan, and Kunduz Universities.
employment and success on the Kankor examination, which they would need to take at that point.
The third group would be called the “general education institutes” and would include other higher education
Limits on the number of research universities
institutions, many of which are newer institutions. Most of them are just getting underway and do not
The NHESP: 2010–2014 stated a goal to limit master’s
yet have well-planned programs or strategic plans
and Ph.D. programs to a small number of universities.
in place. This group needs special attention to better
To date, those universities have not been identified.
integrate their programs, develop high-quality
That has allowed all higher education institutions to
education, and bring them fully into the system. They
think of themselves as potential research universities
will not be allowed to offer specialized undergraduate
offering master’s degrees and Ph.D.s. That is
programs like the comprehensive universities will.
unfortunate, as such an open system is much more
Their capacities will be improved by having each of
costly than a limited one and is unlikely to be of high
them mentored by an institution in the first or second
quality. Furthermore, it is more costly at a time when
group; if they have especially serious problems they
resources are scarce. It is important for the MoHE to
could be put under the direct supervision of one of
set these boundaries clearly, although it has not done
the institutions in group one or two. In 2014 six of
so before now. A similar set of boundaries needs to be
these institutions were under the mentorship of older
put in place for private higher education institutions,
institutions. For example, Farah Institute of Higher
several of which have been allowed to offer master’s
Education is affiliated with Herat University, and Logar
programs.
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Moratorium on new public higher education institutions
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issue year after year, and policies need to be developed regarding access. These include how large the higher
In the NHESP: 2010–2014, a moratorium on building
education system will be allowed to grow by 2025, and
new higher education institutions was suggested
here I refer to the public universities and MoHE higher
(MoHE 2009a). There was tremendous pressure to
education institutes. Although the number of graduates
build a higher education institution in every province
from secondary school is continuing to grow each year
in the country. That is financially impossible and
and doesn’t begin to level off until about 2022, how
would be inefficient and counterproductive to quality.
big should the higher education sector be allowed to
What is needed is to consolidate and build on existing
grow? How much do we know about the demand for
institutions. Furthermore, having many small
higher education graduates? How much can higher
institutions is much more expensive to operate than
education be allowed to grow and still make the
a smaller number of large institutions since there are
quality improvements needed? What are the space and
few if any economies of scale in small institutions.
infrastructure needs in terms of expanded facilities?
Nonetheless, the MoHE has not been able to totally halt
How will the growing cost of increased access and
the expansion of institutions even when it has opposed
improved quality be met?
this expansion in Cabinet. The political pressures have proven impossible to resist, and so Afghanistan
It is essential that the MoHE make some long-term
has moved from a system of 22 higher education
decisions about the rate of growth that is possible,
institutions in 2009 to 36 today. That has weakened
determine the costs involved, and set those plans in
quality overall. There are 16 institutions without a
motion as an integral part of MoHE policy. Working
single Ph.D. faculty member and six without anyone
with the Ministry of Education and the Ministry
with a master’s degree or Ph.D. That means that all
of Labor, Social Affairs, Martyrs and Disables, the
their teachers are operating with only a bachelor’s
MoHE should try to get a better understanding of the
degree. There are 16 institutions where the highest
needs of employers than is now possible. Although
ranking faculty member is a teaching assistant, and in
the Ministry of Labor has the legal responsibility to
most of those the highest ranking faculty member is a
assess employment needs and prevents the Ministry
junior teaching assistant. That should be unacceptable.
of Education and MoHE from doing that on their
This is no way to produce graduates who will meet
own, it has not been responsive to the requests of
employer needs, and it runs the risk of creating a
either ministry for studies of the current labor force
large pool of unemployed and unemployable higher
or estimates of labor needs. With a new president in
education graduates. The moratorium needs to be put
place, this may change. Otherwise the Ministry of
in place once again.
Education and the MoHE are making estimates of need in a partial vacuum. The MoHE has carried out
Confronting issues related to access
some focus groups with employers in preparing for the community colleges. However, much more long-term
At one level the MoHE has successfully responded to
planning and needs estimates should be conducted
demands for increased access by meeting its goal of
as soon as possible. That requires assistance from the
doubling the number of students in higher education
Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs, Martyrs and Disables
by 2014 as noted above. Indeed, it met that goal a year
as specified by law. The MoHE cannot legally do such
earlier than planned. However, access remains an
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Decentralization
Expanding the infrastructure
Decentralization has been a goal of the MoHE
There has been some infrastructure growth over the
since 2001 when Minister Fayez sought to put it
last five years but it has been based on individual
in place, though without success. It was a goal of
campus decisions about what was needed rather
the NHESP: 2010–2014, again with only minor
than an overall plan for system growth that takes
success. Decentralization continues to be a goal of
into consideration national needs including employer
the new National Higher Education Strategic Plan:
demand, economic growth prospects, and the possible
2016–2020. The major impediment has been the
expansion of local businesses and industries such as
Ministry of Finance, which has resisted MoHE, World
mining, gas, and oil. While government has been eager
Bank, and other efforts to decentralize financial and
to see higher education enrollments grow, it has not
administrative authority to the institutions. During
provided the funding needed to appropriately teach
the last few years the MoHE has managed to carry
and house these additional students. This has hurt
out a pilot project with the four Kabul universities
quality in general and dulled some of the major quality
that allowed them financial control over some of their
improvement efforts put in place by the MoHE. An
smaller expenditures. That project has been a success.
overall plan for the infrastructure growth of the whole
That success helped the MoHE gain the authority
MoHE higher education system is essential, one based
in 2013 to allow higher education institutions that
on a careful examination of needs, funding prospects,
demonstrated they had the capacity to raise funds
and educational realities.
and keep them to use for various budgetary needs as long as they followed proper accounting procedures. However, as noted earlier, institutions must wait a year before they can access those funds. Thus, while this is a step in the direction of greater decentralization, decentralization is not yet a real fact. The MoHE also needs to work out mechanisms to decentralize many of the administrative functions now centralized in the ministry to those institutions that can manage them. This should include control over graduation certification, student records, and transfers from other institutions as well as greater control over promotions, with review by the MoHE only for the senior professorial levels (associate and full professor). These goals are part of the National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020 and should be put in place over the next few years along with expanded institutional financial authority for expenditures and other budget matters, including elimination of the oneyear wait to use funds from entrepreneurial activities and gifts.
Was the MoHE Using the Wrong Models? The MoHE is following a Western model of higher education modified for Afghan realities that emphasizes good teaching, careful and practical research, and service to the community and the nation. Afghan higher education also enshrines academic freedom, open discussion, and participation. Is that the right model for Afghanistan? Some people have suggested it is not. In particular, it is argued that this model is not appropriate in terms of “Asian values,” which one writer suggests “are supposed to be more keen on order and discipline than on liberty and freedom” (Sen 1999, p. 149). It is argued that Asian values put the state before the individual and Asian traditions see individualism as potentially destructive. Yet, it is hard to find verification for that other than in the words of autocrats and dictators. These statements were particularly popular in the proclamations of Lee www.scup.org
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Kuan Yew, who as head of the government in Singapore
Some people have suggested that the idea of gender
combined an authoritarian state with a phenomenal
equity is also something based on a Western model.
economic rise. His efforts achieved wide acclaim at
That is not correct. There is a great deal of evidence
the time, and he and others attributed these successes
to the contrary from various parts of the world where
in large part to strong state control. Yet, Asia has its
gender equity is well enshrined in tradition, as in early
own traditions of freedom and individualism including
hunting and gathering societies and some parts of
Buddhism and early philosophies in India such as
Africa with a history of female chiefs. In Madagascar
Carvaka and Lokayata (Sen 1999). Some have asserted
women are treated as equals, have served as monarchs,
that academic freedom and an open participatory
and any gender biases, where they exist, seem to be
model is unsuited to Asia. That is reflected, it is said, in
something introduced by French colonialism.
the difficulties some Afghans seem to have in making public judgments about other people. The tendency is
Was the MoHE’s slow approach to gender equity the
just to say “everything is fine” and give high ratings to
proper strategy? Yes, I think it was, and the successes
everyone. The MoHE had that problem with the first
so far support that. Indeed, the problems of gender
group of private higher education reviewers, but not
equity at the national level in May 2013 reflected an
with the peer reviewers for accreditation or any other
effort to push a policy through Parliament before
reviewers once they were given proper training. The
adequate background work had been done. That
problems with the initial private education reviewers
resulted not only in its defeat, but also in additional
were resolved once the MoHE provided them with
legislation that reduced existing protections for
clear indicators for each level of quality. The reviewers
women (International Crisis Group 2013). Should the
then had no problem making differential judgements
MoHE have accepted the biases as givens, as some
and did so very well.
have suggested, and not advocated for gender equity? Will the Higher Education Gender Strategy create
It is hard to see what an alternative model of education
a backlash for the MoHE? There will no doubt be
for Afghanistan might be. Indeed, I do not think this is
some opposition from the conservatives, but that is
a Western model, but rather a general set of standards
to be expected. The current leadership of the MoHE
for effective higher education. Higher education is
is operating under the assumption that if higher
about knowledge and the search for knowledge; the
education does not push gender equity, then there is a
search for truth; the process of asking questions,
great risk of losing much of the progress already made.
exploring, seeking new knowledge, and replacing old
Gender inequity is a tremendous waste of human
knowledge with new findings when you have them;
resources and the potential contributions of half of
and then passing that knowledge and the techniques
society–something Afghanistan can ill afford. Taliban
for using it on to the next generation. It has to be an
views against education for women are still strong as
open, participatory, and free process. That requires
are the similar views of conservatives and many of
honesty, truth, accuracy, and a process that links new
the uneducated. However, young people on the whole
knowledge to old knowledge, building on tradition
regard gender equity as important in their lives. The
and history. That is what the MoHE is doing in
steps taken to date by the MoHE have been managed
Afghanistan.
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members in higher education in 2001. The MoHE
returning from abroad after twenty years as refugees
policies are firm, based on reason, and not pushed with
showed a similar desire to make money.”
excessive haste. We will see how people respond to the Higher Education Gender Strategy over time.
This is an aberration, not a tradition. The notion that corruption is traditional is just an excuse for tolerating it and not doing anything about it. Corruption in
Does Afghanistan’s Uniqueness Require a Different Approach?
Afghanistan has grown tremendously over the last 10 years. Yet it was not an important factor when I arrived in 1993. Its spread is a consequence of many factors.
Every society is unique, with its own traditions,
One of those factors, as noted in an earlier section, is
expectations, and customs. The MoHE and those
the huge amount of money brought into Afghanistan
working with it have tried to be very cognizant of
by ISAF forces and donors, mostly in cash in the early
those traditions. Indeed, some people have argued
days. Most of it was spent without requiring much
that corruption is an Afghan tradition and people
accountability. That created opportunities that fostered
shouldn’t worry too much about it. I don’t believe
corruption, and soon large numbers of people were
that. One writer (Gall 2014, p. 216) puts it well: “This
out to get all they could while it lasted. But there are
was a society that functioned on patronage, a duty to
other causes as well, as noted earlier, including a moral
help your relatives and clan, and the everyday use of
breakdown in some parts of society, the drug trade
bakshish—whether a tip or a bribe.” But she goes on to
and the influx of a great deal of drug money, and the
say of the Karzai government: “Yet the combination of
many opportunities provided for corruption by the
Karzai’s poor management and the influx of vast sums
development process. Now of course the corruption
of assistance, often poorly administered by donors,
will be very difficult to stop, but it must be reduced if
created the most corrupt regime Afghans had ever
Afghanistan is to have effective governance. The large
seen. The mujahideen commanders who came into
amount of donor funding will not continue to pour
government brought an unbridled sense of entitlement
in much longer, and many donors will depart even
to take property, ministries, and jobs. . . . Afghans
sooner if corruption is not reduced. Furthermore, most of the population is fed up with corruption. The new government of Ashraf Ghani is off to a good start in its effort to curtail corruption. While corruption is not unique to Afghanistan it has become out of control. The problem needs to be tackled quickly, broadly, and seriously. Religious issues are also not unique to Afghanistan, although the mixes are different in other parts of the region. The historical traditions, though unique (as they are everywhere), do not constitute unique situations that must be treated differently. Thus, I see no basis for arguing that Afghanistan requires a
Female students in pharmacy laboratory. Photo by MoHE.
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any development project or change in Afghanistan
the outset and 60 percent within five years; graduate
requires careful planning, an understanding of Afghan
programs must be high quality with the requisite
history and culture, and extensive consultations and
number of Ph.D. faculty members (and certified by the
planning with those involved, as was done for the
Graduate Committee); 30 percent of the faculty must
National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–
be engaged in ongoing research at the outset and 60
2014. Successful development also requires a careful
percent must have publications that are peer reviewed
assessment of its impacts, costs, benefits, and possible
within three years; 20 percent of the students and
unintended consequences. To date, that is how the
15 percent of the faculty members should be women;
MoHE has approached most of the planning described
the curricula of all faculties must be updated and
in the previous pages—which has led to success. I see
those updates implemented; the institution must
no need for a different approach.
reach full accreditation status within four years; half the courses offered must be evaluated annually
Focus on Quality Graduate and Research Universities Success in achieving the broad quality goals of the new NHESP: 2016–2020 should start with a focus on select institutions and targeted funding. The target institutions should include those that can move quickly and are the most likely to be productive in terms of national development. The MoHE should focus initially on those universities that could be identified as research and graduate institutions11 since already they are the most advanced, yield the best graduates, and can produce what is most critical to national development: high-quality graduates, faculty research on critical national problems, and highquality graduate programs. The ministry’s focus should include institutional performance expectations; a time line for achieving teaching, graduate program, and research goals; and a willingness to make changes in institutional leadership and transfer faculty members where progress is lacking. A significant amount of funding should be set aside for this purpose, with goals and expectations clearly spelled out. The goals at minimum should include the following: at least 40 percent of the faculty members must have master’s degrees or Ph.D.s at
(preferably by students but at least by senior faculty members) starting within the next two years; and all departments and faculties must have in place up-todate statistics on the job placement of their graduates one year and two years after graduation. The top four or five institutions meeting these conditions should receive a special top-up of at least 25 percent of their development budget as funding to enhance the achievement of the quality goals noted below. No other public institutions would be eligible to offer Ph.D. degrees. The additional goals are to »» Improve infrastructure: Upgrade existing classrooms and build additional facilities to meet reasonable enrollment projections. This must include large lecture halls and large classrooms for 50–100 students; offices for new faculty members; up-to-date laboratories and modern equipment in the sciences, IT, some social sciences (sociology, political science, and psychology), engineering, and health; and administrative offices to accommodate the new staff needed for the decentralization of many financial and administrative decisions as spelled out in the strategic plan. »» Improve academic quality and standards: Provide funds to implement updated curricula as spelled
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out in the programs presented by the faculties
to graduate and research universities on a
and approved by the Curriculum Commission.
competitive basis.
»» Provide research support. Provide funds to be
»» Continue curriculum upgrades and follow up
administered competitively at each graduate and
on the upgrades proposed. Provide funds to
research university based on the quality of faculty
support the Curriculum Commission’s follow-up
research proposals as reviewed by an appropriate
reviews starting with the research and graduate
panel of faculty members.
universities.
»» Fund graduate instruction and research. Provide
»» Enhance gender equity. Follow up on the goals
supplemental funding for graduate education
of the Higher Education Gender Strategy for
including master’s research programs. Only
institutions, faculty members, and students to
those graduate programs certified as high
ensure that progress is being made.
quality by the Graduate Commission would be eligible. Focusing attention on the quality of graduate education is critical to future growth in Afghanistan. We can see what happened in subSaharan Africa because of the neglect of quality graduate instruction—a period of economic decline and stagnation.12 That need not happen in Afghanistan. »» Link academic programs to employer and
»» Continue support for faculty development. Foster the development of well-trained faculty members (at least 60 percent with master’s degrees and Ph.D.s) and an active research and teaching culture. The most expensive part of this is the need to continue to send large numbers of faculty members abroad for Ph.D.s. Most of the programs needed cannot be found in Afghanistan, nor should they be in the short run. In addition,
development needs. Provide funding to allow
in some specialized areas master’s candidates
faculties to contact a significant percentage of
will also have to be sent abroad. Priority for
employers of their graduates to determine their
scholarship support for faculty members should
satisfaction with these graduates as employees
be given to research institutions until they meet
and a sample of at least 25 percent of recent
the 60 percent goal.
graduates to assess the utility of their training to the jobs they now have. »» Continue to foster accreditation with funds for upgrades where weaknesses are found based on the priorities of institutional action programs. »» Provide funds designed to significantly improve
Preparing for an Unknown Future Over the next few years there will be a number of unanticipated challenges for Afghan higher education that will complicate the tasks faced by the MoHE.
the quality of science and technology programs.
Given the war and the fragility of the state, there are
Make funds available to graduate and research
likely to be more unpredicted challenges than might
universities on a competitive basis determined by
be considered usual. Nonetheless, given the successful
the quality of proposals.
transformation in many critical areas of higher
»» Continue efforts to improve teaching with studentcentered approaches. Make funds available
education over the last five years, the tasks ahead will be much easier than they would have been otherwise. Let’s look at what are likely to be the major areas in www.scup.org
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which unexpected events may occur that will affect
above, especially expanding and upgrading the
higher education in Afghanistan over the next five to
infrastructure? This is a major unknown.
ten years. »» Finding the delicate balance between funding and the number of students that can be admitted to quality higher education. The challenge is to ensure that although enrollments increase, they do not do so at the expense of quality. Academic quality must continue to be brought up to appropriate levels to foster national development and encourage foreign investment. This balance
»» Developing leadership. Will the government and the MoHE be able to attract and appoint the active, supportive, talented, honest, and committed leadership needed to continue progress in higher education? Will the related ministries have leadership that will be supportive? These are unknowns that will be played out over the next few years. »» Enduring the war and understanding the prospects
will be hard to assess given the unknowns related
for peace. Of immediate concern to Afghans is the
to donor support, government revenue, success
departure of most of the coalition forces and the
in reducing corruption, and the ability of the
increasing role of Afghan military and police in
MoHE to move higher education farther up the
the fighting, although a small contingent of U.S.
government financing priority list.
combat troops will remain. The year 2014 was
»» Limiting external interference in higher education. It is critical for the MoHE to have the ability to set enrollment targets, budget priorities, rules and procedures, and quality targets without having them overruled by Cabinet, the president, or Parliament—or because of public pressure to expand enrollment beyond the targets. Part of the ability to do that depends on solid planning by the MoHE, the initial key to which is the new NHESP: 2016–2020. »» Obtaining adequate funding to ensure continued quality improvement. A key unknown is whether donors will live up to their commitments to provide funding for the NHESP: 2016–2020 and whether government will be able and willing to commit the increased funds needed. Will the government be able to increase the allocation to higher education from the ordinary budget to something close to $800 per capita within the next two years and increase the development budget sufficiently to fund the goals prioritized
the most costly in terms of death to the Afghan armed forces with about 5,000 killed. The civilian toll for 2014 was also the highest of the war with an estimated 3,699 civilian deaths for a total of 26,270 since 2001 (Taylor 2015). There is concern that without continued U.S. assistance the tide may turn against Afghan forces. On the other hand, the Afghan military and police have been doing better in the field of late, and people are more hopeful. They remind each other that Afghan forces soundly defeated the Russians in an earlier period. Nonetheless, after more than 30 years people are very tired of war. While some peace talks have been taking place, the timing of the onset of peace is likely to be unknown for some time to come. We have already seen that several early efforts made by President Ashraf Ghani were rejected by the Taliban though more talks are said to have begun. These talks are almost always carried out in secret, and there will surely be more of them. Higher education has managed to make remarkable progress even in the midst of war. Imagine what could be done www.scup.org
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in an environment of peace. This is the most important unknown of all. Let us hope peace comes very soon so that the talent, creative energies, and resources of Afghanistan and the donor community can concentrate on national development at all levels of education and throughout the country as a whole.
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Chapter 8: Goals for the Next Five to Ten Years: Continuing the Transformation Process What are now the most critical needs of higher
graduates committed to national development who
education in Afghanistan? What should be its goals
have the honesty and commitment to transparency
for the next five to ten years? Which of them should
required to restore public faith in government,
be the highest priorities? In the preceding pages I
business, and major institutions; and to encourage
have explored a wide range of challenges facing higher
in graduates the entrepreneurship needed to take
education in Afghanistan. Addressing these challenges
advantage of the many opportunities that can be
requires a number of goals to be met. And as is almost
created and developed in the new knowledge economy.
always the case, choices will have to be made in terms
The country is already behind its neighbors in this
of priorities, available funding, logical order, need, and
regard. It must move quickly to catch up.
1
the current realities of Afghanistan. What goals are most important to continuing the transformation of
Moving quickly will require a great deal of political
higher education?
will and commitment to goals, some of which are likely to face strong opposition. In the short run, success
Afghanistan faces a number of key decisions that
will require the MoHE to focus its major quality push
will be critical to continuing the transformation
on a small number of institutions, the research and
process. Many of them will not be easy. There is one
graduate universities. That will not be an easy task and
goal that must be paramount—continuing the quality
is likely to be contentious as other institutions feel left
improvement process to bring at least the research
out. Nonetheless, real progress requires focused action.
and graduate universities up to a level of quality within the next five years that will allow them to reach
In the early sections of this piece I have described both
the international standards essential for success in
the major accomplishments of and the challenges for
today’s highly competitive environment. This is a
Afghan higher education given the work carried out
critical moment for Afghanistan if higher education
by the MoHE through 2014. In the comments that
is to produce the well-trained graduates desperately
follow I want to spell out what seem to me to be the
needed to contribute to national development. Quality
most important goals for the next five to ten years.
higher education is also essential to attracting the
These goals should be highlighted in the new National
foreign investment needed to develop its many
Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020.
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Access to Higher Education
if enrollment growth becomes a threat to increased
How should higher education respond to the
enrollment limits by making tough decisions about the
substantial increase in the number of graduates from secondary school? Can higher education institutions accommodate the growing demand? What alternatives are there for graduates? What can be done to limit growing unemployment? There is no easy solution to this crisis. However, one thing is clear: increasing the number of students in universities and higher education institutes without increasing quality would be counterproductive. Already, some of the progress made in improving quality over the last five years has been hurt by the far-too-rapid increases in enrollments. Indeed, efforts to improve quality must receive the increased support needed to provide better equipped laboratories and additional classrooms, continue advanced degree training for faculty members, follow up on curriculum updates, and continue the accreditation process. Only by increasing the quality of instruction will Afghanistan have the kind of quality graduates needed to attract investment and foster economic growth. While the bulge in graduates from secondary school creates problems, the large number of people in this age group—estimated at 42.3 percent of the population under the age of 15 and 68 percent of the population under 25 (Lavender 2011)—represents a huge population shift, and if they are well educated, potentially a huge shift in attitudes. Thus, part of the solution to meeting the needs of Afghanistan is to make sure that the half of the student population that is able to get into higher education has access to a better and more appropriate education than is available today and that those who do not get in are steered to training that will make them employable or able to set up their own businesses. For that to happen, a great deal more planning is needed to ensure that growing enrollments do not lower quality and,
quality, growth is curtailed. That means setting number of admissions each year. Ideally, university and higher education institution enrollments should not be allowed to grow more than 10 percent a year for the foreseeable future. That is a level of growth that can be accommodated by reasonable expectations for increased higher education funding. While higher education overall (including TVET, teachers colleges, and community colleges) could continue to admit as many as 25 percent of those taking the Kankor, the additional enrollments should be directed to TVET, teacher education (TTC), and community colleges. The majority of these additional students might be taken up by the new community colleges, which are focused on employment. For that to happen, their rate of growth must be increased. TVET should become more oriented to jobs, with limits on the movement from TVET to higher education enforced and significant improvements in quality made in TVET itself. TTCs should focus more clearly on teacher training and be protected from becoming a waystation for those who want a university education but have no interest in teaching, as is currently the case for probably at least 25 percent of TTC students. It is essential, as noted above, to make sure that the critical balance between enrollment growth and funding for quality improvement is met. That will require tough decisions to limit access so that growth does not affect quality improvement. It will also require teachers to encourage high school students to think about options other than universities for their future. Quality improvement must continue to be the highest priority of the MoHE for the next decade—and that includes private higher education as well. Failure in this area will produce more admissions and more graduates, but they will be graduates without the www.scup.org
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kind of quality training needed to meet employer and
funding needed to ensure high-quality infrastructure
development needs who will then create a growing pool
expansion that meets the needs spelled out in the plan.
of unemployed that will be a long-term threat to the
There are many reasons why such planning has not
nation’s security and stability.
been done. These efforts were begun in the Office of the Deputy Minister for Academic Affairs. However,
Expansion of the Infrastructure to Meet Enrollment and Quality Needs While some discussion has taken place internally at the MoHE over the last five years about the need to expand the infrastructure, there is no overall plan to do so and there have been no space needs assessments, space use studies, or other systematic planning conducted regarding the most critical infrastructure needs. In previous sections I have written about infrastructure needs for teaching, especially laboratories and more and larger classrooms; for research, especially laboratories and equipment; for faculty member offices, which are already in short supply and will be in even greater need as hundreds of additional faculty members are hired with the expectation that they will be available to consult with students, carry out research, and provide services to the university and community; for women’s dormitories, given that this is the most critical bottleneck to increasing the number of female students; and for basic services such as water, sanitation, heating, and electricity. There is no need to make the case for the expansion of the infrastructure again here. The missing link has been the lack of will to prepare a badly needed broad-based plan; to undertake the hard political task of setting priorities; to lay out detailed plans with their far-reaching implications for additional services; to rationalize the use of existing space so that it is fully utilized six days a week and not the private possession of each faculty; to make decisions based on the quality of programs rather than political
to make such planning meaningful requires the support, cooperation, and commitment of the minister and other senior officials as well as the president and Cabinet. The conditions to make such planning happen were not present during the 10 years I worked in Afghanistan. The results of the one space audit carried out at a single university during that time were quickly hidden away because they showed too much unused space—that is, the results were politically unacceptable. Even when ideas about space use were discussed, it was clear that the challenges could not be met through the Office of the Deputy Minister for Academic Affairs alone, although no one else was willing to support the tough decisions needed. To make such planning effective requires a number of other difficult decisions of the sort mentioned earlier including a limit on the rate of growth, a strict limit on the number of research and graduate universities, stringent differentiation of higher education institutions by type and mission (as noted above), and a commitment of funding to implement these changes from both the government and donors. I am not talking about huge increases in funding but increases significant enough to bring per capita ordinary budget spending to at least $800 per student. This is doable, but will take a new commitment to higher education, very thoughtful and careful planning in the MoHE, and support from the president and Cabinet. Development funding will need to be increased to cover the costs of infrastructure expansion as worked out in such a plan. That will require a major new commitment to higher education.
or historic considerations; and finally to allocate the
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Differentiation of Higher Education Institutions
The differentiation of higher education should be
In the earlier section on the differentiation of higher
and complaints from the second-tier institutions, but
education institutions, I laid out a four-part structure
that kind of differentiation is essential given limited
that differentiated the four categories of MoHE higher
funding. Not all higher education institutions can be
education institutions: (1) the research and graduate
Kabul Universities, just as not all U.S. institutions
universities with first-rate graduate programs, (2)
can be Harvards or Berkeleys or all UK institutions
the comprehensive universities focusing exclusively
Oxfords. No country can afford to maintain a limitless
on high-quality undergraduate education, (3) the
number of top-quality institutions offering a broad
general education institutes, and (4) the community
range of courses and graduate programs. Nonetheless,
colleges. Master’s and Ph.D. training would be limited
all institutions can offer quality undergraduate
to the first category of institutions, the research and
programs focused on those niche areas in which they
graduate universities. I would not expect that group to
have qualified faculty members.
number more than six to eight universities including perhaps two private higher education institutions. The conditions for this status were laid out in the section on differentiation. The comprehensive universities would offer a broad range of undergraduate programs. The general education institutes would be the higher education institutes as they now exist. The fourth category would be the community colleges, as
among the major goals of the next five years. These distinctions by type of institution will pose challenges
Thus, funding must be focused if Afghanistan is to develop the high-quality higher education institutions it needs in a reasonable time frame—in time to ensure progress in attracting major business and industry investment. The alternative is to have a mediocre higher education system that fails to provide the trained graduates required to meet even current
discussed previously.
needs and certainly unable to meet development
Differentiation is essential to the efficiency and
those conditions, those who invest in mining, oil,
effectiveness of higher education, the optimal use
gas, and other development projects would have to be
of funding, and the elimination of unnecessary
prepared to bring in not only senior talent from outside
duplication. While differentiation has been discussed
Afghanistan, but also the kinds of technical expertise
before, it is important to implement such a plan now to
that should be available in any country. Afghanistan
avoid wasting scarce funds and prevent the continued
must develop a diversified higher education climate
expansion of expensive programs at institutions that
attractive to investors that produces the graduates they
do not have the capacity to provide quality teaching—
need at a variety of levels.
including a lack of well-trained faculty members—in many areas in which they now operate. Differentiation would limit graduate programs to a handful of institutions with the qualified faculty members and research background needed to offer high-quality master’s and Ph.D. programs.
needs. That option should be unacceptable! Under
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appropriate graduate courses that meet international
this point must focus on institutions and individual
standards.
faculties.
Quality Assurance Including Faculty Development Higher education in Afghanistan is better today than it was 10 years ago, but it is not good enough. While university education has progressed overall it needs to improve pedagogy, offer more writing opportunities for students, become more student centered, make a commitment to creativity, offer opportunities for research experience at the undergraduate level, foster student/faculty discussion and interaction, and ensure that programs are relevant to employers and meet international standards and employer expectations. Afghan higher education has already moved a long way in this direction, but there must now be a major push helped by a significant infusion of funds in order to upgrade laboratories, build more classrooms, and continue faculty development by sending more faculty members abroad for master’s degrees and Ph.D.s. University-level education continues to suffer from the fact that only 4.1 percent of the faculty have Ph.D.s (a slightly decreased percentage from the previous year given forced retirements and a rapidly growing number of new faculty members without advanced degrees); however, the total number of faculty members with Ph.D.s has increased over the last five years from 134 to 188. The number of faculty members with master’s degrees has increased from 959 in 2009 to 1,496 in 2014, although it is still at about 31 percent for the reasons noted for Ph.D.s. In addition, there are more than 475 faculty members abroad studying for master’s degrees and Ph.D.s. This effort must continue to be supported to allow higher education to raise the quality of instruction to the level expected to meet international standards. Quality assurance at
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The success of Education for All must be followed by a major commitment of funds to continue to raise the quality of higher education, expand its facilities, and encourage students in secondary school to think about the range of postsecondary options including TVET, teacher training, community colleges, and other training options. At the same time, efforts must be expanded to ensure that programs are relevant to employers, government, and business; that they meet international standards (as required); and that students are encouraged to be entrepreneurial so that many of them use the skills, professional knowledge, and creativity sparked by education to establish their own businesses and professions that can develop solutions to critical problems in areas such as agriculture, engineering, business, finance, mining, and countless others. This requires a major emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship and encouraging innovation—all part of quality improvement. Walk down the street of any town or city in Afghanistan to see how entrepreneurial Afghans have become. There are hundreds of shops everywhere, open long hours, competing with each other, and selling an amazing array of goods. By adding new technologies, innovative ideas, and research and development skills to that spirit of entrepreneurship, many new businesses can be started that create employment because they help solve Afghan problems and move Afghanistan back to the forefront in critical areas such as agriculture, engineering, and business. The focus on quality improvement broadly includes continuation of the accreditation process with the expectation that at least half a dozen universities will be accredited in the next three to five years, and all of them, public and private, will reach at least level one candidacy for accreditation. The few private higher www.scup.org
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education institutions that did not succeed in meeting
programs built on well-trained faculty members
minimal requirements in the recent review must be
who are actively engaged in research. Success in
closed, given a short time frame to make necessary
increasing research quality and output is essential to
improvements, or merged with other institutions
the development of the high-quality graduate programs
making progress toward accreditation. Quality
so badly needed in Afghanistan. While the number of
improvement includes the continuation of curriculum
master’s programs has increased substantially, it is
upgrading and its implementation at all public and
Ph.D. programs in critical areas such as the sciences,
private higher education institutions. Another critical
economics, and engineering that will be essential.
part of quality improvement relates to the continuation
That requires rebuilding the culture of research that
of faculty development, with the goal of at least 60
existed in Afghanistan in the 1950s and 1960s. The
percent of faculty members having either a master’s
shortage of faculty members with Ph.D.s limits the
degree or Ph.D. by the end of 2019.
possibility of success in this area. Establishing joint Ph.D. programs with foreign universities might be one
Community Colleges Increased funding to expand the community colleges will be critical to building the pool of technical expertise essential to development and investment. There should be at least five community colleges in place within the next five years serving at least 5,000
way to move forward quickly. While sending faculty members abroad for master’s degrees and Ph.D.s has been important in improving the number of faculty with graduate degrees, it is also expensive and difficult for female faculty members. As noted in the previous section, Ph.D. programs would be limited to the four or five graduate and research universities.
students and providing graduates with 2.5 years of training, including a six-month internship, in their area of specialization to prepare them for employment
Gender Equity and Support for Students from Disadvantaged Areas
as engineering technicians, IT technicians, medical technicians, accountants, finance specialists, business
Gender equity and support for students from
specialists, purchasing agents, human resource
disadvantaged areas were part of the goals of the
management specialists, or specialists in other related
National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010–
areas. Community colleges must be a high priority
2014.2 While progress has been made in both areas, as
in order to meet business and government needs in
mentioned in the sections above there is still a long way
these vital professional areas—positions now held by
to go. Implementation of the Higher Education Gender
foreigners while large numbers of Afghans remain
Strategy should be a major goal of the next five years.
unemployed because of their lack of appropriate
This document lays out a comprehensive strategy for
training.
action by the MoHE, the universities, faculty members, staff, and students. Special programs to enhance the
Graduate Instruction and Research Support
admission of students from disadvantaged and conflict areas have been put in place by the MoHE. They should be continued and expanded.
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Moratorium on New Universities and Institutions of Higher Education A moratorium on new universities and institutes of higher education was suggested in the previous national higher education strategic plan to no avail. It should be put in place now. The focus should be on existing rather than new institutions, bringing the smaller ones up to at least 5,000 students since smaller institutions are much more costly per capita. This should be done in conjunction with limits on admissions to keep total student numbers under control, increasing overall at public higher education institutions by no more than 10 percent a year. The moratorium should also be placed on private higher education institutions since no additional institutions were approved in the latest strategic plan.
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required to make the contributions to the economy so desperately needed in this period of transition in Afghanistan. Afghanistan can build on the improved foundation that has developed from the commitment of the MoHE to high quality over the last five years and the resulting transformation of higher education. At the same time, higher education must finally receive the resources needed to expand its overloaded facilities, provide high-quality laboratories and teaching materials, upgrade the training of faculty members to the point that at least 60 percent have master’s degrees or Ph.D.s, and expand high-quality graduate training so that most students can get their master’s degrees in Afghanistan. That will help provide the quality graduates that will attract foreign investment and produce a well-qualified Afghan workforce that will help expand the national economy and build greater
Increased Funding for Higher Education
well-being among the people of Afghanistan on the solid foundation that has been laid.
A major challenge for the MoHE in 2015 is to obtain the funding needed to implement the National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020 (MoHE 2015). The plan seeks $450,166,665 in additional funding over the next five years—a total that reviewers agree is modest given what must be done to bring higher education up to acceptable quality levels and respond to student, government, and employer needs. It is essential to convince government and donors to increase their funding for both the ordinary and the development budget. As has been noted, without adequate funding, quality will decrease and graduates will not be adequately prepared with the skills and knowledge required by the modern, highly competitive economy in Afghanistan and internationally. Higher education must have up-to-date capacities in infrastructure, staffing, and facilities to meet the current student surge and to produce graduates with the technical, professional, and creative skills
Dealing with the Consequences of a Fragile Environment How did higher education manage extensive change in such a fragile environment? Is higher education a potentially destabilizing factor in Afghanistan? Did it foster stability? If so, what were its contributions to stability? One reason that higher education was able to move forward in this difficult environment was the fact that it had a number of excellent leaders supported by a core of bright, hardworking faculty members committed to the goal of rebuilding a highquality higher education system—a goal that was not contested. These efforts were undertaken quietly, thoughtfully, and carefully, without fanfare or public celebration. They were not seen as a threat to any other unit or to the aspirations of other ministries,
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and where there were potential conflicts, as with
development funding the MoHE has received over the
the establishment of the community colleges, quiet
last few years.
negotiations took place to ensure that the Ministry of Education, Ministry of Labor, Ministry of Health, and
The MoHE was also fortunate to have the strong
others were in agreement. If concerns about MoHE
support of President Karzai during this period and,
plans came up, they were dealt with quickly and
more recently, the support of President Ashraf Ghani.
quietly on a face-to-face basis so that agreement was
That support was critical when there were crises. It
maintained.
protected Deputy Minister Babury’s position on several occasions and resulted in badly needed funding for
The MoHE worked cooperatively with these other
faculty development from the Office of the President
ministries on a regular basis in support of their
when it was critical in 2012 and thereafter.
programs and efforts and in return gained their support. The Ministry of Education is a case in
Unlike some other ministries, the MoHE generally
point. Prior to 2009, the relationship between the
avoided the spotlight, and most of its ministers over
two ministries had been difficult, with little or no
the last 10 years avoided comments that were likely
cooperation even when the two ministers were in
to spark opposition or create crises. Even the more
agreement, partly because the bureaucracies were
publicity-minded ministers tended to use occasions of
immovable. From 2007, Deputy Minister Babury
success as the basis for press conferences—successes
worked tirelessly to build bridges between the two
such as 50 faculties upgrading their curricula to
ministries as did a number of his staff, regularly
international standards or announcements of student
attending the Human Relations Directorate meetings
scholarships to India or the United States. And while
even when they were focused solely on primary and
there were moments of bad press—such as those
secondary education. That paid off in the long run
reporting disruptions of the Kankor examinations or
with the Ministry of Education publically supporting
violent student demonstrations—the MoHE was not
more funding for higher education in recent years,
defensive but rather honest and apologetic, promising
recognizing that both ministries were working toward
to make improvements and rectify errors.
the same ends and that it was not a zero-sum funding situation—that gains in funding for the MoHE did not
The ministry tended to deal with the problems of a
put Ministry of Education funding at risk and actually
fragile state by working to make its own contribution
benefited the Ministry of Education. Weaknesses in
to improving the situation—providing a stable
other ministries, including the Ministry of Finance,
environment; fostering cooperation, integration,
were dealt with by working closely with them at
and harmony; and focusing on a positive future.
the ministerial level and through their senior staff.
When problems arose with students, staff, or faculty
Ministry of Finance and senior MoHE staff met almost
members, the ministry leaders, in particular Deputy
weekly from 2010 on to discuss development goals
Minister Babury, were quickly on the scene at the
and needs, and in the end the MoHE presented a
university, in the dormitory, outside the ministry
development plan for the National Priority Program
talking to students, or, if it was a mob scene, in the
3 that was regarded by the Ministry of Finance as the
deputy minister’s office quietly meeting with a group
best of any ministry. That opened many doors for the
of student leaders. Most of the time these efforts
MoHE and probably helped foster the increases in
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known as a problem solver. He never feared to go on
Nonetheless, the expansion of higher education,
campus—something that could not be said of all higher
especially the rapid increase in the number of low-
education leaders in times of crisis. His commitment
quality private higher education institutions, does
to truth, fairness, and justice was known by all and
pose some risks to stability as Bush and Saltarelli
became part of higher education’s contribution to
(2000) suggest. If large numbers of graduates are
national stability. And on those rare occasions when
unable to find jobs they could become a force for unrest
presidential support was needed to solve a critical
of the sort we have seen in Egypt and other parts of
problem, it was available.
the Middle East. That is why the MoHE has moved forcefully to rein in the expansion of private higher
Indeed, as Winthrop and Matsui (2013) have
education and to insist that weak institutions meet
suggested, higher education in Afghanistan played an
minimum quality standards or be closed, as discussed
important role in bringing progress and stability to the
earlier. This concern is also behind the ongoing efforts
country. Part of this success, as Collier (2007) suggests,
of the MoHE to improve quality in public and private
was its ability to use aid funding effectively. Although
higher education and to ensure that the curricula are
the MoHE was not a major recipient of aid funding, its
geared to the needs of society and potential employers
careful use of those funds enabled it to have additional,
and able to create entrepreneurial opportunities for
and sometime unexpected, opportunities for funding
graduates.
such as the State Department funding for women’s dormitories noted earlier. But most of its successes, as
Finally, the commitment of the MoHE to a high-
Collier (2007) affirms, came from what it did internally
quality higher education system is key to national
on its own—the ongoing push for quality improvement
development, as the World Bank (2002) has
broadly in teaching, curricula, recruitment,
emphasized. While Afghanistan is not yet at that level
promotions, accreditation, and faculty development.
of quality, its continuous effort to improve quality in all areas over the last five years is moving the country
As Østby and Urdal (2011) suggest, the rapid expansion
in that direction. The effort to differentiate higher
of higher education in Afghanistan has also had a
education institutions so that graduate education and
pacifying effect in that it kept the large number of
Ph.D. training is available in only a limited number
secondary school graduates, a consequence of the
of institutions will help. While graduate education in
success of Education for All, occupied in positive
Afghanistan has a long way to go to achieve the level
activities geared toward employment, their future,
of quality desired, the commitment to high quality is
and the opportunity to contribute to their own well-
already having a positive effect on quality at every level
being and that of the nation. To ensure that these
of Afghan higher education.
contributions materialize, the MoHE has been working to guarantee that the curricula meet the needs of employers—something emphasized even more strongly in the new national higher education strategic plan.
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Chapter 9: Conclusions Despite the odds against it in the midst of a prolonged
high-quality higher education system needed for
and horrific war, higher education has been
major development, job creation, and a substantial
transformed in Afghanistan. Looking back at what
improvement in the well-being of its citizens.
has occurred since the defeat of the Taliban and the establishment of the interim government in late 2001,
The continuation of that kind of progress will require a
I am struck by the extent of the changes—and all this
major new commitment by government and donors to
in the context of a fragile state. Afghanistan has moved
increasing funding for higher education—bringing both
from no female students at the end of the Taliban
the ordinary and the development budget to adequate
regime to more than 31,000 women in public higher
levels more in keeping with the funding required for
education in 2014. Public higher education as a whole
successful development, as noted in the section on
has grown from 7,881 students in 2001 to more than
funding, and more in accord with the funding levels
170,000 today. Private higher education, which did
of other successful developing countries. The kinds of
not exist until 2006, now accounts for almost 130,000
progress needed will require some hard choices by the
students for a total higher education enrollment of
MoHE related to access controls that limit enrollment
about 300,000 students in 2014—an increase from one
growth to no more than 10 percent a year and higher
percent of college-age students in higher education to
education system differentiation that includes limiting
9.7 percent—a major transformation in the direction of
graduate education to a small number of universities to
mass education.
ensure high quality and limit costs. Success will also require expanding community colleges and working
The last five years have been especially productive
with the Ministry of Education to steer more secondary
with transformational changes in a wide range of
school graduates to technical and vocational colleges
areas including curriculum upgrading, establishment
(TVET) and teacher training institutions so that there
of accreditation, expansion of the number of graduate
are appropriate education options for those who don’t
programs to over 40, and introduction of merit
get into universities and higher education institutes.
recruitment and promotions. At the same time, it is
In addition, a culture of teaching and research must be
recognized that higher education still has a long way to
revived in higher education with a focus on productive
go to reach the quality levels needed to foster national
full-time faculty committed to teaching and learning,
development, attract investment, and encourage
research in critical areas of need to Afghanistan, and
entrepreneurship. Nonetheless, the remarkable
greater service by institutions to the communities in
improvements to date have laid the groundwork for
which they operate and to the nation.
both the institutionalization of these changes and further progress to ensure that quality continues to
It appears that the elections of 2014 have resulted in
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higher education than has been the case in the past so
resources, few changes would have occurred. And all
that it has both the funding and the political support
of this was accomplished in the face of many obstacles,
needed to carry out the kinds of programs and meet
the most significant of which were the fragility of
the most critical goals laid out in the preceding pages,
state and the war. There was also far too limited
many of which are spelled out in the new National
funding, initial opposition from some segments of
Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020. I am
the university community, and many other hurdles
confident that the MoHE can build the high-quality
discussed in detail earlier. As we have seen, some of
system essential for development if it has the financial
the people involved have faced grave threats in the
support it needs as well as the political backing for a
course of bringing about these changes. Nonetheless,
process that is forward looking, democratic, honest,
they have carried on and as a result of their courage
and transparent.
and perseverance have succeeded. The success stories here are a tribute to this amazing group of people—
In addition to the substantial progress discussed in
people who had a vison of quality higher education
the preceding pages, I have also described some of
in Afghanistan and who have worked tirelessly over
the challenges that face both the government and
the last five years to make it a reality. It has been an
higher education including widespread corruption,
amazing journey! I have been very privileged to have
inefficiencies, funding shortfalls, technical and
been allowed to be a participant and an observer
technological limitations, and the weakness of many
during this remarkable period of transformation in
government bureaucracies. On top of all that are the
Afghanistan.
effects of years of war—a war that continues. Among the consequences of war are the significant mental
Looking back at the successes in Afghan higher
health problems that years of war have wrought and
education, it is clear that part of what made them
the need to provide help to the 40 percent or more of
possible can be attributed to the rare combination
students affected by them. There are the uncertainties
of talent and leadership that brought together both
surrounding continued external military support after
thinkers and careful strategists who recognized
2016 as well as donor support beyond that time. And
what could be done, how it should be done, and
there is the question of peace: when will it come? These
when it was appropriate to move forward. They laid
are issues that are not under the control of higher
out their plans in the National Higher Education
education.
Strategic Plan: 2010–2014 in a way that mobilized the higher education community and gained financial
What is particularly extraordinary about the
support from some far-sighted donors. These leaders
transformation of higher education in Afghanistan
were successful in part because they operated
is that it is largely the product of the remarkable
in a remarkably free and open environment that
commitments and contributions of a small number
encouraged broad discussion and participation. And
of administrators, faculty members, and staff who,
indeed there were long discussions of most of the major
having the freedom to operate and a commitment
changes, discussions that sometimes seemed endless.
to a participatory process, have managed to bring
But it was those discussions that changed people’s
about major changes in the higher education system—
minds from positions such as “it cannot be done” or “it
changes that none of us thought possible in such a
is not Afghan” and turned them into strong supporters
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The results over a five-year period included a number of policies and changes that when put together brought about the transformation of higher education in remarkable ways. Those of us involved only began to see how far higher education had come during the last year of the process when we began to look back on what had happened over the previous four years and were able to recognize the magnitude of the transformation. There were not just a few minor changes, but changes that were pervasive and deep in ways that fundamentally altered major values and structures, cutting across key areas of higher education from the curriculum to quality assurance to enshrining merit to making progress in the direction of gender equity. Major values were changed, the beginning of a new community vision was formed, and the importance of free expression to the success of the process was recognized—the kind of freedom that produces development and vice versa, as Sen (1999) has suggested. The process is not yet complete, but a vital foundation has been laid that can pave the way for the kind of excellence in higher education that is intended. That will require several more years of hard work, discussion, and debate. Yet, it is now clear that long-term successes are possible in a context that most of us would have predicted was among the least fertile ground for change. Key changes have taken place. Now the challenge is to build on this rich foundation.
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Appendix
Appendix
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Appendix
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Ministry of Higher Education
Executive Summary for National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2010-2014
November 2009
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Appendix
Introduction: Higher education in Afghanistan has suffered from thirty years of war, destruction of much of its infrastructure, loss of faculty members, and the near collapse of its teaching, research, and service functions. The last eight years have seen improvements in conditions, extensive consultations, and agreement on goals to transform higher education into an engine of national development, creativity, and knowledge creation. This strategic plan brings together the key elements of that transformation, a realistic plan, consensus on goals, and a commitment of higher education leadership to create a high quality higher education system. The key elements of the plan are to improve access and increase quality – to almost double the number of students in public higher education from the current 62,000 to 115,000 by 2014. Quality improvement is a critical goal and to that end the plan calls for provision of training for more than 1000 faculty members and sponsored students to Master’s or PhD level, adding an additional 1800 faculty members to keep the student teacher ratio constant at 25:1 along with an additional 800 staff members, and a commitment to upgrade facilities to worldclass standards. This is a tall order, but it can be done. The Ministry of Higher Education (MoHE) is committed to success recognizing that quality higher education is the key to national development and the personal well-being of the citizens of Afghanistan. This plan builds on the Constitutional obligation of the state to provide higher education and the Afghanistan National Development Strategy’s provision of higher education as one of its eight pillars. It reflects the Ministry of Higher Education’s commitment to develop a high quality higher education system relevant to national needs and critical for economic and social development. Vision of the Higher Education Strategic Plan A high quality public and private higher education system that responds to Afghanistan’s growth and development needs, improves public well-being, respects traditions, incorporates modern scientific knowledge, is well managed, and internationally recognized. Program I: To educate and train skilled graduates to meet the socio-economic development needs of Afghanistan; enhance teaching, research and learning; and encourage service to the community and the nation. Sub-Program I-1 – Human Resources • Increase the number of faculty members to accommodate a doubling of student numbers by 2014: The MoHE will add more than 1800 new faculty members to the universities and institutes to keep the teaching ratio at 25:1. Attention will be given to increasing the number of female faculty members. Estimated cost is $52 million. • Increase the non-teaching staff to accommodate enrollment growth: The MoHE will increase staff numbers (technical, administrators, support) by more than 800 to meet the
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requirements of increased student numbers. Efforts will be made to increase the percentage of women. Total estimated cost is $3.9 million. Faculty Professional Development: As part of the commitment to increase the quality of higher education the MoHE will increase the number of faculty members with PhDs from the current 5.5% to 20% within five years by sending 330 people for PhD training outside Afghanistan. To increase the percentage of faculty with Master’s to 60%, 700 faculty members and sponsored students will be sent abroad for training. Attention will be given to increasing the participation of women faculty members. The total cost is estimated to be $63 million. Expand Master’s Programs in Afghanistan: through support of 250 Master’s students who will be trained in Afghanistan. Specialist will be retained to help the MoHE and universities at least double the number of Master’s programs by 2014. Cost is estimated at $1.3 million. Staff development: To improve efficiency, quality, and capacity, short courses will be provided for professional development for administrative, technical, and other staff. Cost is estimated at $2.2 million. Teaching and learning: The MoHE will sponsor short courses for faculty members to improve the quality of teaching and learning. Outstanding teaching will be rewarded. Exchanges: Faculty and staff exchanges with other countries and within Afghanistan will be encouraged and facilitated by the MoHE as part of faculty development. Appointments and promotions: Appointment and promotion policies will be clarified, made transparent, and merit-based with regular reviews of all faculty members. Retirement policy: The policies will be clarified with special emeritus status to reward outstanding faculty and allow them to teach on an annual basis after age 65.
Sub-Program: I-2 Curriculum Enhancement and Teaching Material Development • Needs assessment: A national needs assessment will be undertaken to determine critical needs in curriculum reform, development, and expansion in consultation with the private sector, professional organizations, and the Ministries of Education, Labor, and Public Health. • Curriculum reform & expansion: A broad framework will be developed for curriculum upgrading and expansion with emphasis on science and technology and identification of critical new disciplines to be added to respond to national development needs. Estimated cost is $1.7 million. • Emphasis on problem-solving, discussion, and research: The MoHE will stress the importance of the use of improved teaching techniques including problem solving, discussion, encouragement of student research, along with emphasis on writing and oral skills. • English and foreign language instruction: Given the critical importance of English for professional communication, the Internet, international publications, and access to current research, emphasis will be given to improve English and other foreign language proficiency among faculty, staff, and students. Estimated cost is $500,000. • Textbooks: funding will be provided to encourage faculty members to write textbooks in Dari and Pashtu as well as translating outstanding foreign texts into both languages to provide greater access to high quality material to students. Funding requested is $1.1 million.
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Professional practice and internships: Provision of professional practice, internships and other professional practice opportunities for students will be encouraged. Estimated cost is $7.5 million Service learning: Student participation in service learning will be encouraged including the possibilities of credit for such service where appropriate.
Sub-Program I-3: Infrastructure Including Teaching Facilities • Needs assessment: All university and institute buildings will be examined including class rooms, laboratories, libraries, offices, and dormitories to assess whether or not they need to be upgraded or improved. Cost estimated at $514,000. • Moratorium on new universities: A moratorium is in place for the plan period on the establishment of new universities to enable funds to be concentrated on upgrading existing facilities and building new buildings to accommodate an enrollment increase of approximately 60,000 students and 2,800 additional faculty and staff. • Rehabilitation of facilities: Following the needs assessment rehabilitation will be carried out on existing facilities which need it. $28 million is requested for this effort. • Construction of new buildings at existing universities and institutes. Based on the needs assessment new buildings (classrooms, offices, laboratories, etc) will be constructed at existing universities and institutes. $142 million is requested for these projects. • Construction of new dormitories and rehabilitation of existing residence halls. Existing facilities will be rehabilitated and new residence halls built with the goal of accommodating 50% of women students and at least 30% of all students. $112 million is requested for these projects. • IT system infrastructure and management information system: A Higher Education Management Information System (HEMIS) will be established to improve management, data collection, and analysis. System wide and campus IT networks will be established linking all universities and institutes with the MoHE. The seventeen higher education institutions not currently connected to the network will be added. Cost is $36,140,000. Sub-program I-4: Research and Graduate Instruction • Research funding: Dedicated funds for faculty research will be provided to be allocated competitively based on the merit and relevance of research proposals. $5.7 million is requested. • Research unit at MoHE and at universities: The MoHE will establish a research directorate to facilitate research and funding for research at the Ministry. Universities will be encouraged to establish campus research units to provide research administration, assist faculty, and seek research funding. • Regional and international research partnerships: The MoHE will encourage and facilitate research partnerships between institutions in Afghanistan and abroad to foster research collaboration, innovation, and relevant applied research. • Design of Graduate Programs: The MoHE will encourage the comprehensive research universities to establish Master’s programs initially and PhD programs in the long-term in appropriate priority areas where adequate Master’s and PhD staff are available.
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Program II: To lead and manage a coordinated system of higher education comprising universities, institutes, and community colleges dedicated to providing high quality tertiary education. Sub-program II-1 Governance: • Provide capacity building at the MoHE and Higher Education Institutions: Training and capacity building will be provided to the institutions and staff of the MoHE to respond to the planning, implementation, and monitoring needs of the Strategic Plan. The MoHE will restructure some parts of its management to facilitate effective oversight and monitoring of the strategic plan. • The MoHE will have quarterly meetings with the Chancellors and Rectors: The MoHE will facilitate quarterly meeting with the Minister & Deputy Ministers with the Chancellors and Rectors of the universities and institutes. • Establishment of independent Boards of Trustees or Councils for Universities and Institutes: As part of its effort to improve governance and foster decentralization, the MoHE will facilitate the process of establishing independent Boards of Trustees or Councils for universities and institutes. • Donor Council: The MoHE will establish a Donor Council with the donor community to enhance cooperation and coordination of activities. • Association of University Chancellors and Rectors: The MoHE will facilitate the establishment of an association of University Chancellors and Rectors of Institutes. Similar efforts could be undertaken for Staff and Student Associations. • Greater Academic and Financial Autonomy: In keeping with the needs of modern universities in a knowledge and research based environment and given the necessity for institutions to find additional sources of income, the MoHE will work with the institutions and other Ministries to change the higher education law to allow greater financial autonomy and entrepreneurship. • Training for Chancellors, deans, heads of departments and other key administrators: The MoHE will facilitate training programs for senior administrators similar to programs carried out in Europe and the U.S. • Foundations: The MoHE will work to establish a legal framework that will allow higher education institutions to set up foundations to raise and hold non-governmental funds for the institutions. Sub-program II-2 Access, Expansion, and Structure of Higher Education • Efficient use of facilities: In order to accommodate more students and increase access possibilities for working students, the MoHE will encourage institutions to more fully utilize facilities by having early morning and evening classes as well as vacation classes. The MoHE will also seek to expand all higher education institutions to at least 1000 students to provide economies of scale. • Community Colleges: To fill a major gap in higher education training, the MoHE will establish five community colleges to offer mid-level technical training in areas such as science, languages, electrical and mechanical engineering technology, training for medical and laboratory technicians, business, and mid-level professionals leading to an
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associate of arts (AA) degree after 2 years in consultation with the Ministries of Education, Labor, and Public Health. The goal is 5000 students in community colleges by the end of the plan period. Cost of five community colleges including staff over the plan period is estimated to be approximately $26 million. Private higher education. Encourage the expansion of private non-profit higher education institutions as part of the effort to increase access. The MoHE will work with private providers to improve quality, and provide additional assistance to non-profit higher education institutions. Student service: The MoHE will work to establish improved student services at higher education institutions including: counseling, mental health, and placement. $1.8 million has been requested for this effort. Students with special needs: Provision of access and other facilities for students with special needs. Access to education: The MoHE is committed to gender equity. The Ministry will encourage provision of bridging programs for marginalized groups including women.
Sub-program II-3 National Admissions Examination (Kankor) • Acquire and update software and hardware. To improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the Kankor examination, the MoHE will acquire and update the use of IT in the process. • Provide training on software. Staff will receive appropriate training on the new hardware and software. • Redesign the examination to take account of arts and other areas. The MoHE will continue its efforts to redesign the examination to ensure that applicants with high potential in a wide range of disciplines including the arts have fair opportunities for higher education. • Assist universities in provision of admissions and other information to the public. The MoHE will assist and provide funding for higher education institutions to develop catalogues and other information for the public about admissions, requirements, courses offered, rules and regulations. Sub-program II-4 Accreditation and Quality Assurance • Establish a self-assessment process for higher education institutions. The MoHE will encourage and assist higher education institutions in carrying out self-assessments as a first step in the quality improvement process. • Establish the Afghanistan Quality Assurance and Accreditation Agency: To develop and manage a system of quality assurance and accreditation for all public and private higher education institutions in Afghanistan once legislation is approved, the MoHE will establish and facilitate the development of the Afghanistan Quality Assurance Agency. Cost estimated at $2,300,000. • Facilitate interaction between the Accreditation Agency and higher education. The quality assurance process will involve close collaboration between the MoHE, the Agency, and higher education institutions. • Appoint and operate a Board of Directors for the Accreditation Agency. The MoHE will appoint a Board for the Accreditation Agency as soon as the necessary legislation has been approved.
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Sub-program II-5 Funding Strategy • Increase funding for higher education. The MoHE will work to increase government funding for higher education. • The MoHE will continue its efforts to provide for greater decentralization of financial control to universities and institutes. Critical to high quality higher education institutions is substantial financial and academic autonomy. • The MoHE will continue to work to obtain legislation to allow higher education institutions to raise and utilize funds from non-government sources. Institutions must be able to raise funds on their own if they are to achieve the high quality desired. • The MoHE will help facilitate fund-raising from non-governmental sources for higher education. The MoHE will partner with institutions in this effort. • The MoHE will work with higher education institutions to develop mechanisms to reduce expenditures on non-academic expenses and to institute cost-sharing for some services. A reduction of expenditures on non-academic areas is critical to focusing available funds on improving, expanding and enhancing academic programs. Cost sharing will be vital in the long run. • The MoHE will work to establish scholarships for poor students. The future of Afghanistan requires that all students who meet the qualifications for higher education are able to have access regardless of their income or wealth. Sub-program II-6 National Research and Education Network • Establish a Network: The MoHE will develop a national research and education network that will link all universities and institutes to the MoHE and the Internet. • Data collection: The MoHE will develop an efficient data collection and retrieval system for universities and institutes for administrative, student, faculty, and staff data storage, retrieval and analysis (see HEMIS). • Access to Instructional and Research material. The MoHE will organize the Network so that students, faculty, and staff can have access to the vast array of information available around the world for instructional and research purposes. • Digital library. The MoHE hopes to provide access to an extensive digital library for all faculty, staff, and students. • User training: The MoHE will provide user training for administrative, teaching and research uses of the Network. Budget: The total development budget for the Higher Education Strategic Plan 2010-2114 is $564,353,000 in addition to the Ordinary Budget for Higher Education. That breaks down as follows: Program I. Educate and Train Skilled Graduates I.1 Professional Faculty and Staff Development I.2 Curriculum and Materials Development I.3 Infrastructure and Teaching Facilities I.4 Research and Graduate Instruction
$135,755,000 10,260,000 358,159,000 7,475,000
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Program II. Lead and Manage the System of Higher Education II.1 Governance $ 3,375,000 II.2 Access, Expansion and Structure of Higher Education 29,035,000 II.3 National Admissions Examination 1,160,000 II.4 Accreditation and Quality Assurance 3,300,000 II.5 Funding Strategies 1,210,000 II.6 National Research and Education Network 14,604,000 Grand Total $564,353,0001 Conclusions: This strategic plan sets out a vision and goals for higher education designed to move this sector from its current inadequate conditions and transform it into a high quality system that will provide the trained graduates, knowledge, and creativity essential for the national development and well-being of the people of Afghanistan. It is a product of consultation and consensus, realistic in its goals, yet ambitious in recognizing the need for transformation if Afghanistan is to meet its development objectives and be an effective participant in the knowledge economies that are driving growth and prosperity around the world. The Ministry of Higher Education is committed to the successful implementation of this national higher education strategic plan and realization of its vision.
1
The detailed budget can be seen in the National Higher Education Strategic Plan 2010-2014, “Action Plan and Budget,” p. 32. For whole NHESP see: http://planipolis.iiep.unesco.org/upload/Afghanistan/Afghanistan_HESP_2010-‐2014.pdf
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Endnotes
Endnotes Preface
9. Focus group at Kabul University with undergraduates, June 30, 2003.
1. The Afghanistan Higher Education Consortium Planning Meeting was held on June 24, 2002, hosted by the Academy for Educational Development at its offices in Washington, DC. 2. The work was funded by an Emergency Education
10. Focus group in Kapisa, 11th-grade girl, July 2003. 11. Focus group in Herat, July 22, 2003.
Chapter 3
Rehabilitation and Development Program IDA Grant to AED.
1. Modest fees are charged for graduate education and evening courses.
Chapter 1 1. The eight Millennium Development Goals agreed on by world leaders at a UN summit in 2000 are (1) Eradicate extreme hunger; (2) Achieve universal primary education; (3) Promote gender equality and empower women; (4) Reduce child mortality; (5) Improve maternal health; (6) Combat HIV AIDS, malaria, and other diseases; (7) Ensure environmental sustainability, and (8) Develop a global partnership for development.
Chapter 2 1. In a four-part typology used in the On Change project, the four types of change are adjustments, isolated change, far-reaching change, and transformational change. 2. Personal interview by the author, November 2013. 3. There have been several such cases at the MoHE, much to the anger of those who have been trying to root this out. The usual excuse is that “we need to give the person another chance.” 4. For an excellent description of this period see Ansary 2012, chapters 11–13. 5. Focus groups were conducted during June and July 2003 in Kabul, Kapisa, Kunduz, and Herat. 6. Focus group in Kapisa, June 25, 2003, conducted by the author and Sara Amiryar. 7. Comments of an undergraduate woman at Kabul University during a focus group, July 1, 2003. 8. Focus group in Kabul with a women’s group, June 29, 2003.
2. Trading Economics 2015. Cost of education per year calculated by the author for USAID on April 22, 2010. 3. In 2015 both Ministry of Education officials and USAID officials reported that the nine million student number was inflated. See, for example, Khan 2015. 4. Faculty, students, and staff now have access to over 8,000 international journals and 7,000 e-books through a number of providers including HINARI, AGORA, PERii, and OARDA. 5. The “Dakar Framework for Action” mandated UNESCO to facilitate the effort to achieve universal primary enrollments around the world in cooperation with the four other conveners of the Dakar Forum: the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), UNICEF, and the World Bank. 6. Over the five years of the plan, $248 million was allocated for the MoHE development budget, but in most years only about half was released. Thus, I have estimated that 50 percent of the development budget helped fund the NHESP: 2010–2014 since there is not an item breakdown available. 7. Some estimates suggest that the totals may be off by as many as one million students. See also Khan 2015. 8. I assume that 80 percent of students who graduate take the Kankor examination (which is now the case), and 23 percent of them are admitted to an MoHE higher education institution, which is the average rate over the last 10 years. 9. Personal communication, March 2014.
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10. A wave of demonstrations and revolutionary protests, riots, and violence starting in December 2010 that brought changes in regimes in four countries and major demonstrations and chaos to eight others over the next two years. 11. An African National Congress (ANC) Member of Parliament told me later that when she reviewed her own police file as a member of a Parliamentary Committee looking into past police practices, she found transcripts of our phone calls and reference to my file. 12. The other members were Sara Amiryar of Georgetown
Endnotes
Chapter 5 1. Men and women have equal rights in society (Holy Quran, Al Hujarat, 13). See MoHE 2015, p. 6. 2. By law a women must have permission from her husband or father to obtain a passport to study abroad. 3. Focus group with women’s organization in Kabul, June 29, 2003, by the author and colleagues. 4. A night letter, frequently used by the Taliban, is a warning to stop doing something they want stopped. These letters
University and Mohammed Essa of the AED in
are usually delivered at night to be found by the intended
Afghanistan. John Deupree, principal, Global Education
victim in the morning.
Solutions, also provided some case studies on private providers.
5. See Office of the President 2012. 6. More information on these reviews can be found in the
Chapter 4 1. Comments of Hilalluddin Hilal, deputy minister for security and police, at a meeting in his office with the author and Sara Amiryar in Kabul, June 6, 2003.
section on “The Role of Private Higher Education.” 7. It was recognized that setting up program accreditation would require a much more extensive process with standards or criteria set up for each profession. It would require a huge staff and at the same time leave the
2. Interview with Minister Fayez, August 2003.
institutions as a whole unexamined. The MoHE had
3. In July 1992, I worked with Minister Fayez to lay the
quietly into disuse.
groundwork for a strategic plan and prepared a draft outline for it (see Hayward 1992.) 4. Kotter (1996, p. 21) talks about the importance of using “every vehicle possible to constantly communicate the new vision and strategies.” That is exactly what was done. 5. The issue had to do with language—whether to use a Dari or Pashtu word for university. The MoHE did not have a position on that and tried to work out a variety of compromises over five years. But the hardline language advocates have used the issue to prevent approval of the higher education law. 6. Both SHEP and HEP have encouraged and supported institutional strategic plans since 2005. The MoHE has asked all institutions to prepare them, though many of the newer institutions have not done so. 7. Interview with former Minister Fayez, April 13, 2009. 8. The MoHE had insisted that students be sent to only universities ranked “A” or better in the Indian quality assurance system. That was done at some political cost to
established teacher accreditation, but that program fell
8. The three stages of accreditation were admission to candidacy level 1, admission to candidacy level 2, and accreditation. 9. The commission had decided to have criteria (rather than standards) for accreditation. These focused on mission and purpose; governance and administration; academic programs; faculty and staff; student learning; library and information resources; physical and technical resources; financial resources; strategic planning and evaluation; quality assurance and improvement; contributions to society and development; and integrity, disclosure, and transparency. See MoHE 2009b. 10. Kabul University, Kabul Polytechnic University, Kabul Medical University, Kabul Education University, Nangarhar University, and Herat University. 11. Focus group with 11th- and 12th-grade students in Kapisa, June 25, 2005. 12. MoHE 2015, section 2.5.3 Distance Education.
India since these were the most coveted places.
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Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan | Fred Hayward 13. According to Article 19 regarding the chancellor and Article 28 regarding deans in the Higher Education Law, both the chancellor and deans are elected by members of the faculty in an “open, confidential and direct election by majority vote of the academic members for three years.” In fact, most chancellors are appointed by the minister
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Chapter 6 1. Elsewhere I recommend that the MoHE limit growth to 10 percent per year. 2. One study suggests that a minimum of $2,000 per student
in consultation with the deputy minister for academic
a year “is an approximate lower bound for the provision
affairs. Some deans are appointed in the same fashion
of a minimally acceptable university education (without
and others are elected depending on the circumstances.
laboratories, computers, or up-to-date textbooks)” (Africa
14. Research shows that in the rapidly moving environment of global education, institutions must have the flexibility to make decisions quickly and effectively. See, for example, Stern, Porter, and Furman 2000. 15. As noted in Giustozzi 2010. These included Sazman-iJawanan-i-Mutarragi (Organization of the Progressive Youth) and Jawanan-i-Muslimum. 16. Extracts from focus groups by the author and team leader as part of the World Bank project looking at possibilities for private education facilitated by the Academy for Educational Development. Interview is in Kapisa with high school students, June 25, 2003. 17. Focus group with students at Kabul University by the author and team, July 1, 2003. 18. Focus group with students at Herat University by the author and team, June 30, 2003. 19. This was particularly the case with the Iranians, who were very involved with students during the Ashura celebrations that eventually led to violence on the Kabul University campus in 2012. 20. The People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA),
Higher Education n.d., ¶ 10). 3. See Boardman et al. 2012, pp. 35–36. 4. American University of Afghanistan is a little over $5,000 per year and a few others are even higher. 5. Based on interviews by the author in Nigeria during a World Bank review in February 1995. 6. Indeed, some Human Resource Development Board officials asserted that the MoHE should no longer meet separately with donors.
Chapter 7 1. The World Bank SHEP project included about $1 million to fund research by faculty members in the 12 participating institutions, but that project is now closed. 2. I recently talked to a faculty chair who argued that outside teaching benefited both individuals and the public universities since it broadened their knowledge base and provided badly needed income, thus keeping them at public institutions. He tempered this by saying that the approval of outside teaching would be conditional on faculty members meeting their public institutional
which was Najibullah’s party during his presidency,
teaching, research, and service requirements and be
divided into a number of factions after his fall but
limited primarily to non-regular university hours.
continued to have influence. 21. This is a major problem for many universities due to lack
3. I am aware of three disasters. In all three cases, the consultants were not vetted except in one case where the
of funds and failure to provide upkeep as they should.
only vetting was by Skype and no references were checked.
See, for example, Ekhtyar 2012.
That kind of “vetting” is an invitation for disaster.
22. This is according to comments by a visiting IT specialist who had just visited Herat University IT students.
4. See Babury and Hayward 2013 for a discussion of this period. 5. See training materials prepared for the project including Ministry of Public Health 2008a and 2008b. 6. In many respects what happened was similar to what Norris et al. (2013, p. 24) calls “expeditionary initiatives” focusing on value-added processes, user networks such as student services, and problem-solving/solution shops, which in this case were various MoHE commissions and committees. www.scup.org
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7. Several types of institutions within the Ministry of Education, including technical and vocational colleges and teacher training colleges, are also institutions of higher education that use the Kankor for admission. This sometimes leads to confusion when talking about higher education. 8. I regard each type of institution as equally important in providing education for particular types of results—all of which have a vital role to play in the economy and national development. Universities are no more important than teacher training colleges. Each has a vital role to fill. 9. In the Netherlands it is two percent of the budget the first
Endnotes
Chapter 8 1. In my experience the one exception to the question of funding involved the higher education strategic plan for Saudi Arabia. In this case, neither need nor funding was an issue—only the logic of sequencing, the availability of trained faculty in some areas, and the country’s priorities had to be considered. As someone asked to review that plan and make recommendations, it was a fascinating experience. The realities of Afghanistan are very different. 2. See MoHE 2009a, p. 5.
year of failing to meet the targets and seven percent the second year. 10. In the medium term changes need to be made in the Kankor system to ensure that the brightest students who wish to be in technical, artistic, or teaching fields are encouraged to apply for them rather than medicine or engineering because “they are the most prestigious.” The MoHE needs especially to encourage the brightest students to become teachers in the secondary and primary schools. 11. The research institutions have been discussed since the first National Higher Education Strategic Plan in 2009 but have not been defined or identified. The National Higher Education Strategic Plan: 2016–2020 suggests a new category of universities called “flagship institutions,” which would include a small number of research universities receiving supplemental funding to foster research and upgrade capacity (see section I.1.8, Institutional Differentiation). 12. For an assessment of similar problems and conditions see Hayward and Ncayiyana 2014.
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Author Biography FRED M . H AY WA RD is a specialist in higher education
Bank, and from January 2009 through December
with more than 25 years of experience as an educator,
2013 as a senior higher education specialist and
scholar, senior administrator, and higher education
an advisor to the Ministry of Higher Education in
consultant. He has a Ph.D. from Princeton University
the USAID-supported Higher Education Project.
and a B.A. from the University of California. He has
He worked periodically for the University Support
taught at the University of Ghana, Fourah Bay College
and Workforce Development Program facilitated by
in Sierra Leone, and the University of Wisconsin-
FHI360 and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
Madison where he was professor of political science,
until June 2015. Since 2014 he has also worked as an
department chair, and dean of international programs.
independent higher education consultant. Dr. Hayward
He was senior associate for the American Council
has written extensively on development issues and
on Education for more than 10 years and executive
higher education, and his recent works include
vice president of the Council on Higher Education
“Confronting the Challenges of Graduate Education
Accreditation in 2001 and 2002. He has been a
in Sub-Saharan Africa and Prospects for the Future”
higher education consultant for the World Bank,
(2014) with Daniel J. Ncayiyana in the International
Carnegie Corporation, Ford Foundation, Academy
Journal of African Higher Education; “Afghanistan
for Educational Development (AED), USAID, several
Higher Education: The Struggle for Quality, Merit, and
ministries of education, and numerous universities
Transformation” (2014) with M. O. Babury in Planning
focusing on higher education change, governance,
for Higher Education; and “A Lifetime of Trauma:
strategic planning, and accreditation. He has worked
Mental Health Challenges for Higher Education in a
on higher education in Afghanistan for many years,
Conflict Environment in Afghanistan” (2013) with M.
starting in 2003 for AED, in 2005–2006 for the World
O. Babury in the Education Policy Analysis Archives.
www.scup.org