In addition, if you are a Ph.D. graduate from five public universities, your article is usually not bad. If you bring core journal achievements or have hard-working SCI, I think it is no problem to enter the first-tier cities.
However, if you are a student who graduated from an ordinary school in Malaysia, such as Century University and City University, there is a high probability that you will go to an ordinary second-year or junior college in a second-and third-tier city.
So does it mean that a doctor from Century University or a doctor from City University must not be admitted to a good school? Not exactly. If you want to enter a college or a good school with a score of 100%, academic performance is very important. After all, some university doctors are a recruitment threshold, and even no doctor has the opportunity to enter the school.
Under the same circumstances, doctors who graduated from Britain, the United States and Australia are indeed more popular with schools. But think about how much money Malaysia has and how much you need to study as a doctor in Britain, America and Australia. Malaysia is already the country that can't afford that much money at most and can go to a good school.