Regional
News
| E-Library
Goes Online
An
e-library, designed to give researchers
from former Soviet republics access to electronic journals and databases,
is now online. Researchers from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine
and Uzbekistan can use the service until at least mid-2005.
--
The Times Higher Education Supplement
March 26, 2003
|
Russia &
The Commonwealth of Independent States
KAZAKHSTAN
Majority
of Higher Education Institutions Shuttered
The Ministry of Education has more than halved the number of institutions
of higher education over the last two years, ministry official Maksat
Kalimoldaev announced May 13.
In 2001,
there were approximately 350 institutions of higher education. Today,
there are 170, of which 32 are state institutions, according to Kalimoldaev.
He added that the reduction is the result of institutions not meeting
standards. Almost all higher education institutions are calling themselves
“universities,” even if they are not conducting basic research
and lack the facilities to do so, according to Kalimoldaev.
Ongoing inspections
can result in the downgrading of an institution’s status, or in
extreme cases, in its closure. The primary objective of the ministry’s
inspection is to ensure that universities provide genuinely elite education,
the official noted.
RFE/RL
May 14, 2003
KYRGYZSTAN
Economic
Crisis Fuels Brain Drain
Few prospects exist for skilled graduates in the former Soviet republic
of Kyrgyzstan, as a dismal economic situation forces most to look for
work elsewhere – and more often than not, in Russia.
The situation
is causing concern at the Kyrgyz-Russian
Slavonic University in Bishkek, set up a decade ago by the governments
of both countries, and regarded as one of the best in the nation. The
university is monitored and controlled by the Russian Education Ministry,
so standards are as high as any in Russia and, consequently, it attracts
some of the best lecturers in the republic.
Scholarships
are available to a very select few, but most pay fees of around US$600-US$800
a year – cheap in comparison to the English-language
American University, where fees are more than double. Many see the
costs as justified due to the high quality of education, but more importantly
because of the opportunities that a Russian-recognized degree represents
for their future.
Kyrgyz undergraduates
are allowed to transfer to a Russian university after they have completed
certain supplementary courses, and now exchange programs exist with colleges
in Germany, China and Sweden, too. Reportedly, the vast majority of exchange
students never return from their year abroad; they prefer to take their
chances in Moscow or Beijing than face a future waiting tables in Bishkek.
Employment
agencies are now dealing with many Slavonic graduates eager to move away
from Kyrgyzstan, and the human rights organization Open Viewpoint believes
that the exodus is set to continue. “Slavonic University will continue
to prepare workers for other countries until Krygyzstan pulls itself out
of its deep economic crisis,” according to Open Viewpoint. “The
departure of so many talented young people feeds a vicious cycle that
deprives the nation of the very people who could contribute to its revival.”
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting
Feb. 20, 2003
RUSSIA
Dagestani
Students Turning to Islamic Education
Faced with ever worsening levels of corruption at state colleges, many
Dagestani students are choosing new Islamic institutions of higher education.
Liberalization
of Russia’s education system, coupled with a great demand for higher
education, has led to a boom in private universities across the Russian
federation. In Dagestan, Islamic colleges are especially popular with
students from rural and poorer backgrounds, as these institutions often
provide financial help to struggling students.
According
to the Dagestani government’s committee on religion, there are 17
Islamic colleges in the republic enrolling approximately 5,000 students.
To some, this is a problem because the network of colleges is largely
unregulated and potentially dangerous -- only seven of the 17 are licensed.
To others, these schools are filling an important gap by providing education
to an underclass in society and not, as some would have it, fuelling Islamic
fundamentalism.
The state’s
-- unproven -- belief that many of the Islamic colleges are financed from
abroad has been enough to raise suspicion. In addition, the Russian Education
Ministry’s recent insistence that all new Islamic colleges be accredited
has given rise to accusations of discrimination.
Institute
for War and Peace Reporting
May 22, 2003
New Zealand
a Hot Destination for Russian Students
A 14-day promotional trip to Russia in March by members of the Trade New
Zealand-backed Russia Education Export Network (REEN) has proved to be
a success. Hundreds of Russian students are expected to enroll with education
providers in the island nation in the coming months.
According
to REEN officials, approximately 70 student-visa applications are being
received by the New Zealand Embassy each month, compared to approximately
70 each year before REEN began promotional activities in 2002. In a statement,
REEN Chairman Peter Wilkins said new enrollments had already been received
as a result of the trip, and hundreds more are expected later this year.
Russia has the potential to become one of the top six source markets for
foreign students in New Zealand, Wilkins said. In 2002, there were 308
Russian students in New Zealand, ranking Russia 18th among student source
markets.
INL
Newspapers
May 14, 2003
Online
Computer Science University Launched
The Internet University of Computer Science has opened to satisfy the
demand for computer science education programs and training courses.
The Moscow-based
institution is providing educational services through the Internet at
www.intuit.ru, and is developing its
own curriculum and more than 100 courses, as well as publishing computer
manuals. The courses are focused on basic education in computer science
rather than on mastering particular commercial systems.
All course
offerings are subjected to mandatory certification and the appraisal of
leading universities and colleges.
Europemedia.net
April 10, 2003
Russian
Academics Protest Increasing Number of U.S. Visa Denials
Russian academics have launched a campaign against what they describe
as “cultural fascism,” in response to perceived discrimination
in the issuance of U.S. visas.
The Russian
American Public Visa Council, set up by aggrieved university lecturers,
plans to lobby embassy officials on behalf of Russians denied visas to
work or study in the United States. The group claims that 60,000 Russians,
or one in four applicants, have been denied visas in the past 18 months.
It is concerned by the rejection of academics who have already spent time
in the United States and are now unable to retrieve libraries and research
materials built up during earlier visits.
The council,
which has 100 members, said the rejections seem to have increased at a
time when U.S.-Russian relations have vastly improved. The 25 percent
visa-rejection rate is higher than in European countries, which average
about 3 percent, according to the council.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement
March 21, 2003
Moscow
Looking to Gain Foothold in Asian Market 
Prior to the breakup of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, thousands
of students from the Indian subcontinent were studying in the region.
Now, it seems, the newly formed Russian republic is trying to recapture
a slice of the Asian market in an aggressive marketing campaign.
Russia’s
Lomonosov Moscow State University
(MSU) and Tula State
University were among the institutions participating in a three-week
tour of Malaysian cities, and, in India, the Russian Center of Science
and Culture of New Delhi recently held a news conference promoting Russia
as a quality destination for further studies.
MSU is in
the process of obtaining accreditation for its various programs with the
Malaysian Ministry of Education and hopes to have this accomplished within
six months. This move, it is hoped, will add to the current 400 Malaysian
students enrolled at institutions in Moscow.
Overseas,
Overwhelmed
May 21, 2003
TAJIKISTAN
Compulsory
Russian-Language Study Reintroduced
Tajik President Imomali Rakhmonov has ordered the reintroduction of compulsory
Russian language study in Tajik schools beginning in September, the Krasnaya
Zvezda newspaper reported May 22.
The decision
stems from the fact that Tajik men wanting to enter Russian military service
generally have poor Russian-language skills. In addition, the same problem
confronts thousands of Tajik laborers who go to Russia seeking work.
One serious
stumbling block is that Tajikistan has almost no Russian-language textbooks.
A campaign to collect textbooks has been organized in 10 Russian regions,
according to the article, which urges Russian publishing houses and newspaper
readers to contribute.
Eurasianet
May 23, 2003
TURKMENISTAN
Spiritual
Education Policy Marks its 10th Year
A brief commentary broadcast by state-run television on May 3 recalled
the milestones of the country’s New Education Policy on its 10th
anniversary. The reform package, drawn up by President Saparmurat Niazov,
includes as part of the national curriculum the allocation of school hours
for the study of national history and the Ruhnama -- a spiritual guide
written by Niazov -- as “the sources of national identity.”
“The
education system staff, guided by the sacred Ruhnama’s spiritual
light, are forming ideas of high morality and patriotism in young hearts
and minds,” the broadcast said. The presenter recited some passages
from a message sent by Niazov to mark the anniversary: “The New
Education Policy is a firm step on the road of national revival, combining
general school education with life experience, and the theoretical education
with vocational training in high schools.”
There are
more than 1,700 schools and 1 million students in Turkmenistan. There
are another 16,000 students at vocational schools. All of them “are
learning their spiritual roots from the Ruhnama, cherished by our people
as a sacred source,” the report said.
The New Education
Policy has “promoted better education for a generation of Turkmens
of the golden age,” the commentary concluded.
Eurasianet.org
May 5, 2003
Foreign-Trained
Teachers Get the Boot
Teachers who earned their degrees from foreign institutions of higher
education after 1993 are being fired from schools throughout the country,
centrasia.ru reports.
The unemployed
teachers have reportedly traveled to the capital, Ashgabat, to find out
why they were dismissed, because the officials who gave them their marching
orders could not produce any published orders justifying their actions.
It is presumed that the orders came from oral remarks by President Saparmurat
Niazov, which were reported by the Russian human rights group Memorial
on April 6.
Those teachers
who were not fired must pass an examination on Niazov’s Ruhnama,
a rambling account of the president’s views on Turkmen history and
traditions, to stay employed as educators.
Centrasia
April 16, 2003
School
Services Cut as Thirst for Power Continues 
Human rights activists are accusing the Turkmen government of trimming
school services in an apparent attempt to dumb down its people and strengthen
the stranglehold of President-for-Life Saparmurat Niazov.
Children
start their school day by studying the Niazov-authored “Rukhnama,”
or “Book of the Soul,” which is held up as a sacred text,
and the president’s ruminations permeate their other subjects. The
government justifies its education policies as necessary to develop an
independent Turkmen identity after decades of Soviet rule. As in other
former Soviet republics, authorities have severely cut Russian-language
instruction, and English is increasingly the preferred second language.
Turkmenistan
has 14 Turkish-financed schools and a university - the International Turkmen
Turkish University - that offer good instruction, but they are the bright
spots and are not indicative of the system and are available only to the
privileged few. The duration of primary and secondary education was cut
last year from 10 years to nine, and about 12,000 teachers across the
nation of 5 million people were fired two years ago. The Academy of Sciences
was abolished, and several research institutes were shuttered.
Universities
accept only about 3,000 students a year, a 10th of the number before independence.
College classes have been cut back, and humanities classes were dropped
if not directly related to professional training. Niazov declared the
classes “abstract” and “far from real life.”
The only
growth at universities has been in the newly established Guardians Institutes,
where teachers train to teach the “Rukhnama.”
Associated
Press
June 11, 2003
UZBEKISTAN
Russian
Ambassador: ‘Uzbek Textbooks Too Anti-Russian’
Russian Ambassador to Uzbekistan Dmitrii Ryurikov said on March 11 that
history textbooks used in Uzbek schools contain “unprecedented anti-Russian
bias,” centrasia.ru reported.
The comments
were made at an international conference on objectivity in history. Ryurikov
singled out the textbooks’ concentration on Russia’s plundering
of local inhabitants and the killing of women and children. The issue
of anti-Russian bias has been raised with the Uzbek Education Ministry,
he said, but the textbooks remain in use.
There has
been a massive revision of the country’s history since Uzbekistan
became an independent state. Many Uzbek intellectuals have objected to
the exclusively negative portrayals of the Russian and Soviet periods.
Centrasia
March 12, 2003
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