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Sept./Oct.
2001
COVER
PAGE PRACTICAL
INFORMATION REGIONAL
NEWS FEATURE
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Regional
News
AFGHANISTAN The BBC has launched a new radio series aimed at children in Afghanistan called REACH (Radio Education for Afghan Children). REACH broadcasts informative and inspiring programs to children who have few other opportunities for learning. The series is not intended as a substitute for classroom-based education, but aims to stimulate curiosity by helping children to ask questions about the world and understand what's happening around them. Programs are broadcast in Pashto and Persian. REACH is
funded by Britain's Department
for International Development, the United
Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) and the Canadian
International Development Agency (CIDA). The project is managed by
the BBC Afghan Education Projects in Peshawar.
BBC
World Service
AUSTRALIA New Media Services explores the growing development of alternative media systems. Regulation Policy and the Australian Media examines issues of censorship and possible regulation of media services. In addition,
Australian Catholic University is launching a new visual arts and design
program, scheduled to commence in February at both the St. Patrick's campus
and at Sydney's Strathfield campus. This three-year program offers a combination
of courses in two-, three- and four-dimensional visual arts projects,
graphic design studies and art and design theory. The program will also
include courses in marketing principles, ethics and self-directed studies.
CHINA At present, the Taiwanese Ministry of Education does not recognize degrees and qualifications earned on the mainland. However, this is changing. By the end of the year, Taiwan plans to recognize 40 to 70 institutions of higher education in China. It is expected that Taipei's recognition of mainland degrees will encourage even more Taiwanese students to enroll in Chinese universities. Incentives
drawing students to the mainland include: cheaper tuition; better courses
on Chinese history, art and medicine; and the opportunity for students
to make business connections and familiarize themselves with China's legal
system.
Chinaonline
CHINA (MACAU)
Times
Higher Education Supplement INDIA
University
News
The Lakshmibai
National Institute of Physical Education has been approved as a university
by the Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports.
University
News INDONESIA Money remains the big factor in all this. According to the United Nations Development Program's Human Development Report 2000, Indonesia spends only 1.4 percent of its gross national product on public education, compared with 3 percent in Singapore, 4.9 percent in Malaysia and 4.8 percent in Thailand. Despite these bleak statistics, some institutions are striving to meet current economic demands. The Bandung Technological Institute, the University of Gadjah Mada, the University of Indonesia and the privately owned Atma Jaya University are in the process of establishing new research centers, have implemented administrative reforms and are signing research contracts with international companies and organizations. In addition,
government decentralization has given universities more autonomy over
their own curriculums.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement
MALAYSIA Plans are
in the works to set up universities in Pahang, Malacca and Perlis. In
addition, Kuala Lumpur's Kolej Universiti
Islam Malaysia will be moved to a new campus in Negri Sembilan.
Times
Higher Education Supplement
This is a joint degree program with courses taught by instructors from both the University of Wollongong and INTI College. INTI is one of Malaysia's largest private colleges. Established in 1986, it has a main campus in Bandar Baru Nilai and branches in Subang Jaya, Penang, Kuching, Kota Kinabalu, Beijing and Bangkok.
Campus
Review PAKISTAN
Ziauddin Medical University in Karachi is running a one-year master of public health degree program in collaboration with Wollongong University, an accredited university in Australia. This program has met with the approval of the Pakistani government. The Karachi Institute of Information Technology is allowed to run degree programs in collaboration with the University of Huddersfield in the United Kingdom. Griffith College Dublin's Karachi campus is authorized to run national certificate/degree programs of the National Council for Educational Awards, under joint collaboration between the Academic Services Pakistan in Karachi and Griffith College Dublin. Ibadat Foundation
and Ibadat Educational Trust of Islamabad are allowed to run an undergraduate
degree program in collaboration with Western
Michigan University in the United States.
Pakistan
Link
THE PHILIPPINES
The government is also trying to create a more effective accreditation system. Currently, there are several accrediting agencies in the country, all of them using different standards and criteria. The postsecondary
student population in the Philippines today is close to 2 million. Of
the 1,357 colleges and universities in that country, 1,147 of them are
private and 210 are public.
International
Higher Education
SRI LANKA
The computing department heads from four of Sri Lanka's main universities will be among the new program's instructors. Students
who have a first-level university degree in any academic field are eligible
for the program even if they have no previous experience in information
technology. Even those without degrees but with adequate job-related experience
are encouraged to apply.
Times
Higher Education Supplement
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Times
Higher Education Supplement
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