Australian accreditation for Monash
Malaysia’s medical course
Monash University Malaysia’s medical course
has received accreditation from the Australian Medical Council (AMC),
making it the first medical course fully conducted in Malaysia to be
accredited by the AMC offshore .
The Bachelor of Medicine/Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS)
programme is also the first medical course taught outside Australia
& New Zealand to be accredited by the AMC, and means that its
graduates will be recognised to practice in Australia without having
to take an additional examination.
The accreditation, which will attract a
significant number of students from Asia Pacific and beyond, also
adds to Malaysia’s attractiveness as a destination to study medicine
and will contribute to its effort to become a regional education
hub.
“We are very proud of this recognition of
quality at Monash University Malaysia and thankful to the AMC for
the trust that has been placed in us,” said Monash Malaysia’s Pro
Vice-Chancellor Professor Merilyn Liddell.
She said the AMC accreditation, which is
effective till 2012, also marks another external recognition of
Monash University’s success in ensuring that quality standards are
the same at all its eight campuses in Australia, Malaysia and South
Africa.
Monash University is part of Australia’s Group
of Eight universities recognised for excellence in teaching,
learning and research outcomes, and the university has also been
ranked within the top 40 in the world by the recent Times Higher
Education Supplements from 2004 to 2006.
“Operating campuses in other countries has
been a challenge for Monash University and we’re proud to have been
able to meet this challenge without compromising quality,” said
Professor Merilyn.
“The accreditation is another boost for the
School of Medical and Health Sciences,” said the school head
Professor Dato’ Dr Anuar Zaini.
He said the school will move into the new
RM170-million campus in Semester 1. The Clinical School in Johor
Baru has also been completed for third and fourth year medical
students to undergo their practical training at the city’s Sultanah
Aminah General Hospital.
A number of research programmes will also
begin in 2007 and a world-class Brain Research Institute led by
renowned neuroscientist Professor Ishwar Parhar will be set up at
the new campus in Bandar Sunway.
There are
currently 43 students who have completed Year 1 of the course and
another 51 students have completed Year 2 of the MBBS programme. All
are studying at the Monash University’s Clayton campus in Melbourne,
Australia, pending the building of new facilities in Malaysia.
These students
will proceed with their medical education at the Malaysian campus in
February next year, when the second year students begin studies in
Bandar Sunway and the third year students start their clinical
training in Johor Baru.
The university
expects to take in another 70 first year students next year, with
intakes progressively increasing to a maximum of 160 students.
Among the key strengths noted by the AMC
during its accreditation process was Monash University’s experience
in delivering education in Malaysia.
The AMC also
recognised Monash University’s processes and policies for the
management of multi-campus operations and its high-calibre staff.
“Senior
appointees have in-depth understanding of medical, educational and
government processes in Malaysia, and the staff who will be
responsible for the delivery of the course are enthusiastic and well
informed about the educational plans for the medical programme,”
said the AMC in its report.
The council also
recognised Monash University’s effort to suit components of the
Monash medical program to local settings and case mix, while
adhering to the learning objectives of its medical programme.
The AMC said
“opportunities for clinical learning in community clinics and
hospitals with the current student numbers would be the envy of many
Australian medical schools.”
Another strength
touted was the university’s strength in basic science areas like
pharmacology and pathology, which it said had the potential to
improve Monash’s medical course overall.
Other strengths
included the new campus, a non-profit business structure and support
from a large number of Monash alumni in Malaysia.
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