The
Korean Council for University Education
(KCUE) is a private association of four-year
higher educational
institutions in the
Republic of Korea
intended to promote cooperation between
universities
and represent their interests, particularly regarding university autonomy from state regulation, to the government. It is comparable in some respects to organizations such as the
Association of American Colleges and Universities
(AAC&U), the German Rectors’ Conference (HRK), or the Japan Association of National Universities (JANU). The KCUE is unique, however, in that the presidents of all
South Korean universities
, public and private, are required by law to hold membership.
[1]
History
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The KCUE was founded in 1982 and legally consolidated in 1984 during the later period of
authoritarian
rule in South Korea. It was largely intended to placate growing demands from universities for greater
autonomy
from a centralized education system that was strictly regulated by the Ministry of Education. During the first several years of its existence, however, the KCUE had little semblance of autonomy from or influence over the authoritarian government at the time and was able to achieve few of its objectives.
[2]
With the beginning of substantial
democratization
in South Korea in 1987-1988 and the subsequent, gradual
liberalization
of the higher education system, the KCUE was increasingly able to accomplish its original purposes and expand its functions, particularly in research and training of university staff. By the mid-1990s it had taken on significant responsibilities related to
university evaluations
and the
university admissions
system previously under the exclusive purview of the Ministry of Education.
[3]
Organization
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The KCUE is nominally controlled by a General Assembly composed of the presidents of all member universities. The General Assembly elects a ten to twenty-member Board of Trustees and a Chairman (currently
Kyungpook National University
President
Won-hwa Hong
) that make most executive decisions. The Board of Trustees elects a Secretary-General (currently
Kyungpook National University
Professor Chong Yul Park
[4]
) that oversees day-to-day operations of the KCUE. The organization's activities are mainly funded by the Ministry of Education and mandatory membership fees from universities.
[5]
Functions
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The main purposes of the KCUE are to support the development of South Korea’s higher education system by “promoting inter-institutional cooperation concerning major issues common to four-year universities and colleges” and represent the collective voice of universities to the government to “increase the autonomy, initiative, public accountability, and overall quality” of higher education.
Research
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The KCUE’s Research Institute for Higher Education, formally established in 1985, conducts research as commissioned by its member universities or the government. It focuses on research regarding the
management and administration of universities
, policy options for reform in South Korea’s university admissions system, financial support of universities from private and governmental sources, and the development of university
curricula
and teaching methods.
[6]
The Institute's research is published, among other places, in the Korean-language journal
Daehak Gyoyuk
(
Higher Education
)
[1]
.
University Faculty/Staff Training
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See also
:
Membership Training in Korea
In order to improve the quality of leadership, instruction, and administration at member universities, the KCUE's Training Center for Higher Education, formally established in 1995 in a separate facility in
Daegu
, South Korea, trains approximately 2,500 university administrators, faculty, and staff annually in areas of greatest need as requested by universities. The Center uses training seminars, conferences, and programs to disseminate updated research information on university education and administration from the KCUE and other organizations.
[7]
University Admissions
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Since the mid-1990s the Ministry of Education has gradually delegated much of its authority over the country's admissions process to the KCUE. In late 2004, it announced that the KCUE would decide admissions schedules and develop admissions rules.
[8]
More significantly, the transition team of incoming South Korean President
Lee Myung-bak
announced in January 2008 its intention to transfer most responsibilities regarding the university admissions system from the Ministry of Education to the KCUE, which would thus allow universities to decide admission criteria, such as whether to include interviews in admissions processes and how to weight the
College Scholastic Ability Test
in admissions decisions. Lee had made a promise during the
2007 presidential campaign
to give universities greater autonomy.
[9]
[10]
University Evaluations
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In addition to conducting research on accreditation and evaluation in higher education, the KCUE is one of the few formal, albeit voluntary mechanisms of evaluation or
accreditation
in the South Korean higher education system. It began conducting simple evaluations of its member universities in 1983 and more detailed evaluations beginning in 1994 that included separate assessments at the departmental and institutional level.
[11]
Academic Records Verification
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In response to the widely reported scandals in late 2007 involving well-known university professors, government officials, and television personalities in South Korea that had
forged academic credentials
from both domestic and international universities,
[12]
[13]
the KCUE established its Academic Records Verification Service in September 2007.
[14]
It currently processes verification requests from any South Korea-based organization to confirm the domestic or international academic credentials of South Korean citizens or foreigners seeking employment at a business, admission to a school, etc. Concerns regarding forged credentials were so widespread that the service received over 500 requests on the first day, and over 10,000 applications were filed within the first ten weeks.
[15]
The South Korean
Ministry of Justice
currently uses the KCUE to verify the credentials of all E-2 visa applicants seeking to teach foreign languages such as English in the country.
[16]
See also
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References
[
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]
- ^
Government of the Republic of Korea, "
Korean Council for University Education Act, Act No. 3727
[
permanent dead link
]
," trans. Korean Council for University Education (1984), 1.
- ^
Korean Council for University Education,
Hanguk Daehak Gyoyuk Hyeopuihoe 20 Nyeonsa
(Seoul: Seonmyeong Inswae, 2002), 24.
- ^
Korean Council for University Education,
Hanguk Daehak Gyoyuk Hyeopuihoe 20 Nyeonsa
(Seoul: Seonmyeong Inswae, 2002), 26.
- ^
Baek Il-hyun, "
Kyungpook's Prof. Park Has New Role
,"
Joongang Daily
, 30 June 2008.
- ^
Korean Council for University Education, "
Articles of Association
[
permanent dead link
]
," trans. Korean Council for University Education (1984).
- ^
International Association of Universities, "
Republic of Korea
," World Higher Education Database (2004), 5.
- ^
Korean Council for University Education,
Hanguk Daehak Gyoyuk Hyeopuihoe 20 Nyeonsa
(Seoul: Seonmyeong Inswae, 2002), 29.
- ^
In-Chul Lee, "
One Out of Every Four Universities and Colleges Will Shut Down
," 28 December 2004.
- ^
Lee Min-a, "
Universities to Decide Who Gets In
,"
Joongang Daily
, 5 January 2008.
- ^
"
Education Reform Plan to Come in February
,"
Dong-A Ilbo
, 3 January 2008.
- ^
Korean Educational Development Institute, "
Country Background Report for Korea
,"
OECD Thematic Review of Tertiary Education
(April 2006), 108.
- ^
Su-Hyun Lee, "
Revelations of False Credentials Shake South Korea
,"
New York Times
, 7 September 2007.,
- ^
Jon Herskovitz and Jessica Kim, "
DJ, Actress and Even a Monk Guilty by Degree
,"
Globe and Mail
, 22 August 2007.
- ^
AFP, "
Fake Degree Probe Extends to S. Korean Civil Service
Archived
2007-12-22 at the
Wayback Machine
,"
Manila Times
, 1 September 2007.
- ^
Kim Soe-jung, "
Most Academic Fakes Still in the Same Job
,"
Joongang Daily
, 12 November 2007.
- ^
Consulate General of the Republic of Korea, Toronto. "
Verification of Academic Degrees
Archived
2011-07-06 at the
Wayback Machine
."
External links
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