Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Between nuclear, education, and terrorism

Don't you find it ironic sometimes that certain countries are more inclined towards having nuclear power in their country and spends large bucks in their military, yet they spend so little on education?

Take Pakistan for example.

They have an illiteracy rate of 48% amongst the productive age group, yet they have so much to brag about regarding their nuclear power.

No wonder those countries have high rates of poverty (and terrorism too).

When you could not afford to read ABCs, it is easy to infuse outside ideologies into your mind. All you need is a big brother to watch you over with some money backings from terror-oriented organisations and...Voila!

There you go, it suddenly becomes way too easy to look for radical supporters in the villages.

Read more...

Master degree unfavourable to find work in Indonesia

This should come as an alarm for those of you undergraduate students in Indonesia...

We live in such an ironic country indeed. It is tough for non-degree holders to find a decently paid white-collar job, yet those who have two degrees at their shoulders have to go to such a length as to hide their second one.

Graduates hide degrees to get jobs



The Jakarta Post , Depok | Sat, 11/08/2008 11:51 AM | City


Maulana Indra, 26, sat on the floor, filling out a job application before putting it into a brown envelope along with his photograph, his undergraduate diploma and other documents. He did not include his master's degree.


"I am applying as an undergraduate because it is difficult to find a job if I apply as a master's graduate," said Maulana to The Jakarta Post during a job expo event at the University of Indonesia (UI) in Depok recently.


Many postgraduates in Indonesia apparently find it hard to get a suitable job based on their qualifications, so they don't include their master's degrees in job applications.

Maulana said he believed he had a better chance of getting the job he was applying for if he excluded his master's degree. He said his decision was based on past experience; he had applied to many companies using his master's degree, but had not even received an interview.

"I do not know why, perhaps they do not want to pay a big salary because of my higher education," Maulana said.

There are more opportunities for undergraduates because only a few companies need starters with master's degrees.

"After graduation, I continued my study to master's level. I never imagined I would have a problem finding a job," said Maulana, a graduate of the management business faculty of Bogor Agriculture Institute (IPB).

Maulana is not alone. Yudi, another job seeker also hides his master's degree.

"I have been looking for a position in business companies for a year. I cannot find one because I am a master's graduate," he said.

He said he originally thought it would be easier to find a job with a master's degree compared to just a bachelor's degree.

"I was wrong. I have to change my strategy. If not, I will never find a job for the rest of my life," said Yudi, a graduate of a well-known private university in Jakarta.

To find a job, Yudi and Maulana attended the job expo at UI several days ago. The university organizes the event regularly for job seekers throughout Jakarta, Depok, Tangerang, Bogor and Bekasi.

"I brought 20 copies of my documents and 20 envelopes. I hope I get a job today," Maulana said.

The UI Career Development Center (CDC), which organizes the expo, charged an entrance fee of Rp 20,000 (US$1.81) per visitor, while the catalogue of job vacancies costs Rp 25,000.

UI deputy director Devie Rahmawati said the university organized the event to accommodate students who needed jobs and companies which needed new employees.

"This is the university's responsibility. After graduation, we help students find jobs," Devie said.

She said she was aware that many master's graduates found it harder to get a job compared to their undergraduate fellows.

"To deal with the lack of job opportunities, the university tries to foster entrepreneurial skills. These skills are important for students to avoid becoming jobless after graduating from college." (naf)


blog it

Read more...

on University of Indonesia enrollment

As I took a sip in my lemon tea, I asked her, "How did you manage to enter UI? You must be quite smart... You went there with that SPMB (Seleksi Penerimaan Mahasiswa Baru, or New Student Enrollment Selection) thingy, did you?"

Citra replied, "Nah, it was UMB (Ujian Mahasiswa Baru, or New Student Examination). And it wasn't me who was smart... It was a stroke of luck actually"

"Really? So tell me... What kind of test is that UMB thingy?"

"Hmm, let me see... That time I got examined on Maths, English, and General Knowledge. And I scored pretty well on the English section, which was perhaps the reason why I got accepted in the first place, T!" she smiled.

I stared blankly at her for a moment in disbelief.

"Are you sure they tested you only that?"

"Yes, of course. Why? Interested on entering UI?"

"Haha.. not in a thousand years perhaps"

"I knew it... You hate the challenge being too easy, right?"

I only chuckled.

(For information, Citra just graduated from UI last week. She majored in tourism. A bit of googling I did turned out a different fact from what Citra told me, though; where it is said that in UMB one is tested in Maths, English, and Indonesian; with Science or Humanities for different streams in High School.)

Read more...

The need for university degree: USA and Indonesia compared

Is a university degree really necessary?

Yes and no.

Yes, because they provide the necessary theories for one in a particular knowledge discipline.

No, because it doesn't guarantee that you could find a job in real-life... and apply them for real.

Today's society -both Western and Eastern alike- have put too much value on university degrees that they consider them tantamount to apply for a decent white-collar job.

Now the lingering question remains:

Does graduating from a so-called top university guarantee someone to have a steady job with good salary?

Not always.

Perhaps a lot of Indonesians are already aware that a couple of weeks back, we had a news showing a large number of UI (University of Indonesia) graduates coming to a recent job fair in Jakarta... and it was a quite dismal news indeed.

What does it mean to enrol in a top university if you're not guaranteed a job after you've graduated?

Apparently, this is not a uniquely Indonesian case.

Although it was dubbed one of the best MBA institutions in the world, Harvard Business School does not guarantee you a job either. Take a look at this:

After many job applications, dozens of interviews and a series of rejections (McKinsey & Co.) from employers he didn't reject first (Google), Delves Broughton comes up empty-handed. (``You went to Harvard Business School and couldn't find a job?'' he imagines people thinking when they meet him.)

As is obvious to all of us, we were born to be humans, not robots. We were born to do things instead of receiving all those theory inputs.

Indonesian schools, in my opinion, only consist of 90% theory and 10% practice. To my observation, most Indonesian public schools only conduct their science laboratorium experiments (at most) once a month.

What a disheartening figure.

Does this mean that educational system in western countries are any better than their Indonesian counterparts?

Well, a bit.

One Western feature notedly absent in Indonesian academic institutions is the fact that the Indonesian students rarely (or in some cases, never) get their hands on the ability to think critically.

Nevertheless, it does not mean that American school values is flawless.

American institutions, IMHO, consist of 50% theory and 50% practice; and this figure is not so much different from the Indonesian ones.

The fact remains that to gain the real-life skills, we should constantly expose ourselves to education that consist of 10% theory and 90% practice.

If you want to see the major flaw of American education, you should read the book by Robert Kiyosaki titled Rich Dad, Poor Dad. Kiyosaki asserted there that real-life education is more about earning your money and manage it wisely by investment and savings, instead of studying in the classrooms.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not speaking against academic education here.I just don't think that university degree should be truly irreplaceable to land oneself a good job.

In complete deference to the societal needs notwithstanding, I would still pursue my own bachelor's degree. It's not me who requires that degree though, but my future employers. Because I know they just won't budge into hiring anyone without a degree.

In the end, it's just a matter of no choice here, gee-hee.


As a closing note, John Mayer has got it attuned to today's blog entry of mine with his song "No Such Thing":


So the good boys and girls take the so called right track
Faded white hats
Grabbing credits and
Maybe transfers
They read all the books but they can't find the answers
And all of our parents
They're getting older
I wonder if they've wished for anything better
While in their memories
Tiny tragedies


They love to tell you
Stay inside the lines
But something's better
On the other side....

Read more...

  © Blogger template Shush by Ourblogtemplates.com 2009

Back to TOP