7 Things to Look Out For in a Prospective School, Home and Abroad
7 Things to Look Out For in a Prospective School, Home and Abroad In tertiary education, accreditation is the quality assurance process that ensures that the services and operations of tertiary educational institutions or programs meet or exceed certain minimum standards. Educational institutions accredited by the same agencies or guided by similar accreditation standards are, therefore, considered broadly equivalent for meeting comparable educational standards. But despite accreditation, many reputable bodies go on to publish annual rankings of universities and educational programs. This is because of the bitter reality that all universities are not born equal, and all qualifications or certificates do not carry the same weight. What distinguishes one university from another is far beyond course titles or architectural appeal. It lies deep in the soul of the institution; its founding mission, its vision, the resources available to it, the quality of its faculty and the spirit of its people in general. Below are seven important things to look out for when choosing a higher institution of learning for your studies. 1. Foundational Mission and Identity Every university has a birth story. They do not all begin with the same purpose. While some are born out of great vision, others are born out of necessity. Harvard was founded in 1636 to train clergy and future leaders. MIT emerged in order to bridge the gap between science and industry. Ashesi University in Ghana was created for the mission to help raise ethical and entrepreneurial African leaders. These clearly defined missions give these institutions their identities and direction. They influence the type and quality of education that they offer. Compare this with institutions formed solely to satisfy regional political demands or to absorb growing student numbers in order to maximize profit. The difference is not at all cosmetic but structural, and it always shows. It reflects in the curriculum, the quality of leadership, the recruitment approach and the institution’s long-term relevance. A university established for transformation will, corporately speaking, behave differently from one created for bureaucratic appeasement or mainly for profits. As a prospective student, you must endeavour to understand the core philosophy of the institution where you would likely be educated. 2. Funding, Endowments and Resources Money matters. In fact, it matters in a very profound way. A university’s financial ecosystem determines whether or not it can attract top faculty, maintain state-of-the-art laboratories, offer student scholarships or produce groundbreaking research. Some university endowments exceed $50 billion. In contrast, there are those that are crippled by underfunding, staff strikes and rapidly decaying infrastructure. A brilliant professor or student can do very little without the tools to explore, test, publish and innovate. Brilliance without funding is like a soldier sent to the battle field without a weapon. As a prospective student, you should pay attention to the volume of financial resources that is accessible to the institution where you would likely be educated. It must not always be those with billion dollar endowments, but a prospective higher institution of learning should be one that is well funded. 3. Quality of Faculty and Academic Rigour Perhaps the most important asset of any university is its faculty. Who teaches you shapes what you learn and how you learn it. At elite institutions, students are taught by thinkers who write globally acclaimed textbooks, shape public policy around the world and push the boundaries of science and culture. On the other hand, some universities have to rely on underpaid, overburdened or underqualified lecturers. Brain drain also worsens the problem. Wealthy nations and institutions create attractive evironments to drive the flow of the best talents in their direction. But without excellent faculty, the sort of deep thinking and excellent research culture that leads to meaningful innovation cannot be cultivated in learners. Students naturally replicate what they are exposed to. If they sit under average minds, their worldview and confidence may never rise beyond that level. As a prospective student, strive to ascertain the quality of those who will educate you at the institution where you would likely study. 4. Rankings, Reputation, and Global Recognition University rankings may not tell the full story but they are important all the same. Granted that there are always gray areas, these rankings can provide reliable estimations of the research output, academic quality, internationalization or cultural diversity as well as faculty reputation of ranked institutions. Positive ranking works like a virtuous cycle. High-ranking universities get to attract elite global talent, better funding and high-impact collaborations. Conversely, an unranked or obscure institution may graduate competent individuals who struggle for global recognition. A good reputation opens many doors for such things as further graduate studies, international jobs, partnerships and visas. Where you studied can influence who’s willing to read your CV. Whether through QS, Times Higher Education or the Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU), you should invest some energy and time into finding out the strengths and weaknesses of prospective higher institutions by looking at their rankings over the years. 5. Infrastructure and Learning Environment Learning is not just about the knowledge codified in books. It’s also about the environment. And facilities are not mere decoration. They are education in concrete form. Consider two mechanical engineering students trained in two different settings. One trains in a facility with wind tunnels, AI-powered simulations and 3D printers. The other learns in an over-crowded class, with broken projectors, intermittent power supply and no internet access. They obviously will end up acquiring mismatched levels of skill, and the difference will not likely be intelligence but opportunity. When infrastructure is excellent, learning becomes intuitive. Students tinker, explore and iterate. But when infrastructure is lacking, basic teaching and learning become a struggle. The environment shapes not only what you learn, but how you learn and the dreams that you can dream while at it. As a prospective student, you must consider the infrastructure and learning environment of the institution where you would likely be educated. 6. Admission Selectivity and Peer Influence The kind of students a university admits