University World News
02 September 2010 


Study Abroad
English courses in London
Spanish courses in Spain
French courses in France
Italian courses in Italy
German courses in Germany
English courses in UK
English courses in USA
Peer-to-peer learning
Language learning guide
* Sponsored links

Global Edition
Home
Special Report
News
Business
Features
Science Scene
HE Research and Commentary
Academic Freedom
People
Uni-Lateral
U-Say
World Round-up
Special Global Edition
Home
UNESCO Forum – Changing Dynamics
Africa Edition
Home
Africa
News
Features
HE Research and Commentary
Business
People
Uni-Lateral
World Round-up
Special Africa Edition
Home
Differentiation - Issue 0001
Race & SA Universities - Issue 0002

Eduniversal


Archives

Find an Article
Advanced Search

View Archives by Country

View Archived Editions:
* Global Edition
* Africa Edition
* Special Africa Edition

Higher

Useful

Information
Free Registration
About Us
Contact Us
Advertising
Terms and Conditions
Floods in Pakistan drown out a fake degrees scandal. See the News section.
Floods in Pakistan drown out a fake degrees scandal. See the News section.

A 400 page, 10 chapter publication from Unesco describes the social sciences and the role which they play in society. See our Special Report.
A 400 page, 10 chapter publication from Unesco describes the social sciences and the role which they play in society. See our Special Report.

The Second Life avatar of the University of Western Australia's School of Physics manager Jay Jay Jegathesan, with avatar quadrapop Lane, at the university's campus in Second Life. See the Business section.
The Second Life avatar of the University of Western Australia's School of Physics manager Jay Jay Jegathesan, with avatar quadrapop Lane, at the university's campus in Second Life. See the Business section.


CHET


FORD





  



INDONESIA: Cleaning up higher education
David Jardine
17 January 2010
Issue: 107



Indonesia's National Board for Higher Education Accreditation has announced its determination to clean up a sector riddled with bad practices. The board has set 2012 as its target for ridding universities of unaccredited undergraduate courses.

The plan is to set stricter criteria especially for the private sector. Indonesia currently has more than 2,000 private universities, many of which have been issuing degrees outside the purview of the accreditation board.

Adi Sulistyono, an assessor and Deputy Rector of the March 11 University in the royal city of Solo in Central Java, told the media: "The new assessment model should be considered a threat to unprofessional universities."

Sulistyono went on to stress that such institutions were "only interested in turning a profit by producing as many graduates as possible, irrespective of quality".

The board will set an "accreditation validity period" of five years for each undergraduate
programme. A team of around 1,000 assessors will undertake the task and will target all types and levels of study programme.

According to Sulistiyono, accreditation standards will cover the learning system, the academic atmosphere, the quality assurance system, graduation standards, publications as well as theses work. Moreover, graduates will be monitored for how long they take to find employment after graduation. This last prescription reflects the widespread concern at high graduate unemployment figures across Indonesia.

Research work by lecturers will also come under the microscope, given a concern that too few undertake it. The belief in academic circles is that many university lecturers actually undertake no research at all while many do not engage students in the endeavour.

Tuition fees, widely thought to be excessive in the private university sector, will also be scrutinised. As Sulistiyono said: "The amount students pay does not guarantee a top-quality
education," an assertion that not many in Indonesia would dispute.

The accreditation board will require each university to create and sustain an up-to-date database on all the areas just mentioned.

A spokesman for one of the country's top institutions, Gajah Madah University in Jogjakarta, acknowledged the scheme would require hard work but that it would be beneficial in the drive to raise university standards nationwide.


Printable version
Email to a friend
Comment on this article

Disclaimer: All reader responses posted on this site are those of the reader ONLY and NOT those of University World News or Higher Education Web Publishing, their associated trademarks, websites and services. University World News or Higher Education Web Publishing does not necessarily endorse, support, sanction, encourage, verify or agree with any comments, opinions or statements or other content provided by readers.







  


Related Links
About University World
Other articles by David Jardine
Other articles from Indonesia
More News
Newsletter Archives

Most Popular Articles
SOUTH AFRICA: Student drop-out rates alarming

CHINA: Chinese students to dominate world market

SOUTH AFRICA: Universities set priorities for research

FRANCE: Smallest university created

UK: Few surprises in new THES rankings

UK: Two centuries of honours degrees to disappear

OECD: Worldwide ‘obsession’ with league tables

OECD 1: US share of foreign students drops

AUSTRALIA: Free tuition to lure foreign postgraduates

AUSTRALIA: Research quality scheme scrapped
Copyright University World News 2007-2010