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| May/June 2005 | Volume
18, Issue 3 |
PRACTICAL
INFORMATION REGIONAL
NEWS FEATURE
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Regional
News Russia & The Commonwealth of Independent States
KyrgyzstanIndiana University Deepens Commitment to American University-Central Asia The American-style university, located in the capital Bishkek, was established in 1993 by faculty from the country’s main public university who had become frustrated at the lack of reforms being made to Kyrgyzstan’s higher-education system. Over the last six years, Indiana University has sent approximately 40 faculty members and administrators to Bishkek to help develop faculty and curriculum at AUCA. Similar numbers of Kyrgyz faculty members have enrolled in graduate programs at Indiana. The two donors stipulated that the endowment should be managed by an American institution, at least for the first five years. The Chronicle of Higher Education RussiaMinister’s Reforms Prove Unpopular The egg throwers, who hit their target twice, were particularly angered at Fursenko’s announcement of the location of the first of the "all-Russian” state universities the Siberian All-Russian University during a visit to Krasnpyarsk, Siberia. The creation of the new university, which is to house 80,000 students, requires the merger and closure of other institutions in the city. Siberia has been chosen as a test case for the rest of the country. Approximately 200 universities will form the next tier of federally funded higher-education institutions. The bottom tier will be regionally funded and managed under the reforms. The reforms have apparently been driven by financial considerations and are unpopular within academia. The full details of the reforms are still murky, and there is reportedly much competition among top universities to make sure they are included in the top 20. The Times Higher Education Supplement April 1, 2005 Scientists Protest Privatization of Research Institutes RFE/RL Turkmenistan President’s Second Volume of Musings Cut Even Further Into Curriculum
All prospective students are tested on the Ruhnama as a requirement for enrollment to institutions of higher education, where, for the truly dedicated, there is even a faculty at the country’s top university devoted to the contents of the book and its sequel. In the schools, the national curriculum has been changed radically so that 15 minutes of every lesson are dedicated to reading the Ruhnama, regardless of the subject. This is in addition to Ruhnama studies, a new curriculum subject. To cater for the new material, the study of other subjects such as physical education, foreign literature, chemistry, biology and world history has been reduced or eliminated. Many educators in the country interviewed by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting have expressed deep concern for the future. They worry that the minds of Turkmenistan’s youth are being filled with “nonsense,” and that the Ruhnama generation will be “totally ignorant and devoid of ideas.” The Institute for War and Peace Reporting UzbekistanBritish University Defends Its Campus Collaboration with Uzbek Government Academics at the London campus expressed "serious concerns" about the safety of staff at the Westminster International University in Tashkent and its collaboration with the Uzbek government, which is accused of ordering its security forces to open fire on thousands of protesters in May. However, Westminster Vice-Chancellor Geoffrey Copland said staff and students were hundreds of miles away from the violence, that the university stood as a symbol of the future for a country in turmoil and that it was independent of the government, despite the fact that the government paid for the university to be built. Westminster won a competitive bid conducted by the Uzbek government and the British Council to set up a university in the capital of Tashkent five years ago. The first 20 students, who started courses in 2002, are due to graduate this year. Approximately 100 students are currently studying for law, economics, management, business studies and information technology degrees that follow a British syllabus and are validated by the University of Westminster in London. Two British staff members manage the campus, where the teaching is conducted by Uzbeks in English. The Guardian
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