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The Higher Education Services Institutes (Indonesian: Lembaga Layanan Pendidikan Tinggi, LLDIKTI) is a system of institutions formed by the Indonesian government to provide guidance to both public and private universities inside the jurisdiction of Indonesia. [1]
The Directorate General of Higher Education (Indonesian: Direktorat Jenderal Pendidikan Tinggi) is a directorate general under the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, and Technology. Originally established in 1966, the directorate general has undergone several disestablishments and reorganizations, with the current iteration being ...
Seleksi Nasional Berdasarkan Tes or SNBT (Test-Based National Selection), is an Indonesian college entrance system for admission of new students in state universities using written examinations nationally, which has various advantages, both for college applicants, public universities, as well as national interests.
In Canada, university college has three meanings: a degree-granting institution; an institution that offers university-level coursework; or a constituent organization (college) of a university, such as University College at the University of Toronto or University College Residences at Laurentian University.
Corpus Christi College, one of the constituent colleges of the University of Cambridge in England Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, one of the oldest liberal arts colleges in the United States Pazhassiraja College in Pulpally, Kerala, India Seinäjoki College in Seinäjoki, South Ostrobothnia, Finland, in May 2018
STAN Polytechnic of State Finance (Indonesian: Politeknik Keuangan Negara STAN; abbreviated as PKN STAN), is a government-affiliated college in Indonesia, located in Banten, in Bintaro Sector V Tangerang Selatan. It offers undergraduate degrees in finance.
Sunan Gunung Djati State Islamic University Bandung, also known as UIN Bandung or often abbreviated as UIN SGD (formerly IAIN Sunan Gunung Djati), is a state Islamic university based in Cibiru District, Bandung, West Java.
The renaming to Seri Begawan Religious Teachers College (MPUSB or Maktab Perguruan Ugama Seri Begawan), and new regulations were authorised by the Sultan. Early in 1971, thirty probationary religious teachers who had completed the Malaysian Lower Certificate were chosen to start a three-year program at MPUSB.