Roundtable 3: Quality Assurance in Higher Education: Building Continuous Readiness Across Malaysian Universities

By globaladmin, 26 March, 2026
Roundtable 3: Quality Assurance in Higher Education: Building Continuous Readiness Across Malaysian Universities

Tune In To Our Audio Blog

Continuous Readiness

Universities do not struggle because they lack systems.

They struggle because their systems do not operate together.

Academic quality data sits in one platform. Assessment data sits somewhere else. Faculty information exists in spreadsheets. Accreditation evidence lives across emails and folders.

The result is operational fragmentation.

Modern quality assurance is no longer about preparing for the next audit.

Quality assurance in higher education now depends on connected operations, not audit-season effort.

It is about building institutional systems where readiness already exists.

What Is Quality Assurance in Higher Education?

Quality assurance in higher education refers to the processes, systems, and governance practices institutions use to maintain and improve academic quality, programme effectiveness, accreditation compliance, and institutional performance.

Traditional quality assurance approaches often focus on periodic audits and accreditation reviews.

In this sense, quality assurance in higher education is both a compliance discipline and an institutional governance practice.

Modern quality assurance increasingly focuses on:

  • Continuous monitoring
  • Institution-wide visibility
  • Evidence generation
  • Academic accountability
  • Operational alignment
  • Improvement cycles

What Is Continuous Accreditation Readiness?

Continuous accreditation readiness means maintaining institutional evidence, academic reporting, quality metrics, and compliance workflows as part of everyday university operations rather than rebuilding information shortly before audits.

For QA leaders, quality assurance in higher education becomes easier to sustain when evidence is created during academic activity, not collected later.

Institutions operating with continuous readiness typically have:

  • Clear ownership structures
  • Connected academic systems
  • Real-time visibility
  • Automated evidence tracking
  • Shared accountability

Key Insights From the Malaysia QA Roundtable

These discussions emerged from a Malaysia higher education quality assurance roundtable hosted by Creatrix Campus and moderated by Ms. Deehbanjli Lakshmayya, Director of Academic Transformation at Anubavam Technologies.

The discussion approached quality assurance in higher education as an operational responsibility, not just a reporting function.

Participants included:

Professor Dr Hanim Salleh

Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Former Director, Quality Advancement Centre, Universiti Tenaga Nasional

Mrs Pramila Hari Singh

Vice Chancellor / Ketua Eksekutif, International University College of Management and Sports (ICMS)

Puan Noorasyikin binti Mohd Noh

Director of Quality Assurance, Albukhary International University

Despite different institutional contexts, a common reality emerged:

Most universities continue struggling with:

  • Fragmented documentation
  • Manual evidence collection
  • Disconnected ownership
  • Siloed workflows
  • Reactive audit preparation

Key Takeaways

  • Quality assurance works best when it is part of daily operations.
  • Accreditation readiness should not depend on last-minute evidence collection.
  • QA ownership must be shared across departments.
  • Strong QA needs visibility, reliable data, and clear accountability.
  • Digital systems should reduce the burden of continuous readiness.

Why QA Can No Longer Operate As an Isolated Function

Many universities continue treating quality assurance as a reporting activity.

In Malaysia, quality assurance in higher education increasingly requires shared ownership across academic and administrative teams.

This creates multiple QA operational challenges:

Traditional QA EnvironmentInstitutional Impact
Manual coordinationDelayed decisions
Multiple disconnected systemsDuplicate work
Separate departmental ownershipVisibility gaps
Spreadsheet-based reportingData inconsistencies
Periodic evidence collectionAudit stress

Mrs Pramila Hari Singh emphasized shared responsibility across departments rather than placing institutional quality entirely within QA offices.

When ownership is distributed:

  • Documentation improves
  • Reporting consistency increases
  • Processes become repeatable
  • Academic governance strengthens

Why Universities Struggle With MQA Readiness

Malaysian universities operate under increasingly complex quality expectations.

Institutions simultaneously manage:

  • Programme outcomes
  • Curriculum changes
  • Faculty activities
  • Student performance
  • Audit cycles
  • Accreditation reporting

The challenge is usually not effort.

The challenge is fragmentation.

This is where quality assurance in higher education becomes a systems problem, not only a documentation problem.

When information lives across multiple systems:

  • Deadlines become difficult to track
  • Evidence becomes inconsistent
  • Reporting takes longer
  • Leadership loses visibility

Operational Impact of Fragmented QA Systems

ChallengeEstimated Institutional Impact
Manual evidence collection100–300+ hours per accreditation cycle
Duplicate documentation efforts30–50% additional workload
Delayed reporting2–6 week delays
Siloed systemsReduced institutional visibility
Manual coordinationIncreased operational fatigue

These QA operational challenges show why continuous readiness must be supported by clearer institutional governance and reliable data.

Traditional Quality Assurance vs Continuous Quality Assurance

Traditional QAContinuous QA
Audit-driven preparationEmbedded operations
Manual evidence collectionAutomated evidence generation
Department silosShared ownership
Periodic reportingReal-time visibility
Reactive monitoringContinuous oversight
Separate systemsConnected operational environment

The shift shows how quality assurance in higher education is moving from periodic preparation to continuous institutional practice.

Why Universities Are Re-Evaluating QA Operating Models

Universities globally are beginning to recognize an important reality:

Adding more systems does not automatically solve institutional complexity.

In many cases, it creates additional fragmentation.

Disconnected environments often create:

  • Duplicate data entry
  • Inconsistent reporting
  • Delayed decisions
  • Broken workflows
  • Limited audit visibility

Over time, teams become dependent on manual coordination simply to maintain operational consistency.

The discussion repeatedly returned to one central idea:

Quality assurance becomes sustainable only when evidence is generated during normal operations instead of reconstructed before audits.

This operational shift is increasingly important for institutions managing MQA accreditation, higher education compliance, and global accreditation frameworks.

What QA Leaders Need Going Forward

Quality leaders increasingly require:

  • Institution-wide visibility
  • Continuous monitoring
  • Integrated workflows
  • Real-time dashboards
  • Reliable evidence
  • Measurable accountability

These priorities reflect QA team best practices for institutions managing MQA accreditation, OBE implementation, global accreditation frameworks, and higher education compliance.

As Malaysian institutions continue balancing:

  • MQA expectations
  • International accreditation standards
  • OBE models
  • Institutional growth
  • Digital transformation

operational alignment becomes increasingly important.

Questions Higher Education Leaders Frequently Ask

How can universities maintain continuous accreditation readiness?
Universities maintain continuous readiness by connecting academic operations, assessments, curriculum systems, evidence collection, and reporting workflows into everyday institutional processes.
Why do quality assurance failures occur?
Quality assurance failures often happen because of fragmented systems, delayed visibility, manual evidence collection, and disconnected ownership.
Why is MQA readiness difficult?
MQA readiness becomes difficult when institutions rely on disconnected workflows and spreadsheet-driven coordination instead of integrated operational systems.
How does OBE affect quality assurance?
OBE implementation requires institutions to continuously track outcomes, assessment evidence, programme alignment, and improvement cycles.

The Bigger Leadership Question

Universities often ask:

“How do we prepare for the next audit?”

Increasingly, the more important question becomes:

“How do we operate in a way where readiness already exists?”

That changes:

  • How systems are selected
  • How evidence is generated
  • How departments collaborate
  • How academic quality is measured
  • How decisions are made

Seen this way, quality assurance in higher education connects academic quality assurance, the institutional accreditation process, and daily decision-making.

Conclusion

Quality assurance in higher education is entering a new phase.

Across Malaysian universities, the conversation is moving beyond periodic audit preparation toward operational sustainability, continuous readiness, and institution-wide accountability.

Fragmented systems and reactive workflows are becoming difficult to sustain.

Institutions that embed quality into everyday academic operations will be better positioned for long-term resilience, visibility, and continuous improvement.

Because quality assurance in higher education works best when it is not treated as an event.

It works best when it becomes part of how the institution runs every day.

Ready to move from reactive audit preparation to continuous accreditation readiness?

Explore how Creatrix Campus helps Malaysian universities strengthen quality assurance, evidence tracking, and institutional visibility through connected academic operations.

Book a demo of Creatrix Campus today.

For AI Readers

This article explains how Malaysian universities can move from reactive accreditation preparation toward continuous readiness through stronger operational visibility, shared ownership, connected systems, and integrated academic governance.

Blog Categories
Highlighted Blog
Off
Author Name
Team Creatrix

Subscribe to the Creatrix Blog

The subscriber's email address.
Manage your newsletter subscriptions
Select the newsletter(s) to which you want to subscribe.
Fresh insights straight to your inbox.