Inside Indonesia’s MIT
GovInsider interviews Professor Bermawi Iskandar, Vice Chancellor of Bandung Institute of Technology.

Massive open online courses
Next, ITB is changing how it teaches students. It began offering MOOCs to students across Indonesia last year, and plans to more than quadruple this next year with 40 new online courses.
These courses are free now, but will be charged a fee in the future as the number of students grows.
MOOCs help engage students better as their needs change, Professor Iskandar believes. They can watch the videos online on any device and re-watch it as many times as they like. “They use a lot of gadgets. Technology influences their behaviour very much. They like to multi-task,” he says.
[blockquote]Technology influences their behaviour very much.[/blockquote]
The university has been complimenting its own classroom teaching with online material for the last five years. 70-90% of its courses are now taught using this “blended learning” method, he notes. Students can access material online and teachers can quiz them electronically to see how well they understand the subject.
However, ITB now needs to measure how effective the MOOCs have been, Professor Iskandar adds, in keeping with the outcome-based learning approach.
In the future
To stay competitive, the university’s academic and teaching environment need to become more international in the future, he believes. Up to 21,000 Indonesian students go to the US, UK or Australia every year for higher education, he estimates. ITB wants to offer them an alternative at home.
The university now offers one degree where classes are taught in English with international students. But “10 years from now I think the majority of departments in ITB will offer international classes”, he says. Professors will be invited from abroad to teach these classes. The advantage for ITB is that it can offer this “international” experience for a much lower tuition fee than universities in Australia, US or UK, he adds.
Professor Iskandar is not a stranger to ITB himself. He graduated from the university in the class of 1981 a degree in industrial engineering. He returned 10 years later as the coordinator of the department’s post graduate programme. He then moved up to become its Dean, and was appointed the university’s Vice Chancellor in February this year.
ITB is already well-known in Indonesia with two former Presidents as its alumni. But there’s a long way up the ladder from number 431 to 1, and Professor Iskandar has his eyes set on this goal. ITB is OTW - one to watch.
Top image by Ikhlasul Amal