Higher education in Kiravia: Difference between revisions

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For most of Kiravian history, universities were open to anyone able to read High Coscivian and pay tuition. Only in Early Modernity did universities - and even then, only the most prestigious ones - establish formal admissions requirements. Entrance exams began appearing during the late 19th century AD. Each school wrote and administered its own exam on its own campus, and as such most students only applied to one or two colleges. The first standardised entrance exams were used by regional associations of Catholic colleges in the early 1900s. The first 'nationwide' exams were adopted separately in the Kiravian Union (the NEE, which was overhauled into the modern CAPE) and Kiravian Remnant (the ARSE).  
For most of Kiravian history, universities were open to anyone able to read High Coscivian and pay tuition. Only in Early Modernity did universities - and even then, only the most prestigious ones - establish formal admissions requirements. Entrance exams began appearing during the late 19th century AD. Each school wrote and administered its own exam on its own campus, and as such most students only applied to one or two colleges. The first standardised entrance exams were used by regional associations of Catholic colleges in the early 1900s. The first 'nationwide' exams were adopted separately in the Kiravian Union (the NEE, which was overhauled into the modern CAPE) and Kiravian Remnant (the ARSE).  


In several heavily populated provinces, such as Kaviska, Etivéra, Devahoma, Dysona, and Sixua, the undergraduate admissions process for public universities is consolidated: Students apply to the university ''system'', sorted by merit, and then admitted to a ''tier'' of colleges in which they may enroll.
In several heavily populated provinces, such as Kaviska, Etivéra, Devahoma, Sydona, and Sixua, the undergraduate admissions process for public universities is consolidated: Students apply to the university ''system'', sorted by merit, and then admitted to a ''tier'' of colleges in which they may enroll.


Some colleges today continue the tradition of admitting anyone (with a secondary diploma or equivalent, for accreditation compliance) who can read and write High Coscivian, as demonstrated on the Collegiate Literacy Assessment.
Some colleges today continue the tradition of admitting anyone (with a secondary diploma or equivalent, for accreditation compliance) who can read and write High Coscivian, as demonstrated on the Collegiate Literacy Assessment.
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Kiravian degrees are not granted on the basis of satisfactory completion of ordinary coursework or credit-hours (though this is ''most often'' a prerequisite). Rather, they are awarded for a ''trua'' (rendered in Ænglish as "{{wt|monstration|monstration}}") showing their mastery of the subject matter. A ''trua'' may take the form of an ''ōrstava'' ("review"), an ''amderen'' ("submission"), or both ''ōrstava amderesk'' ("review of submission"). A review is an {{wp|oral examination}} by ranking faculty, which was the standard mode of undergraduate ''trua'' from antiquity until the mid-19th century ''anno Domini''. A submission is some form of deliverable - normally a paper - submitted to ranking faculty for approval, which accounts for the majority of undergraduate ''trua'' today. A submission review entails delivering a submission to senior faculty for their perusal and subsequently responding to their questions and challenges thereto, usually orally, not unlike an Occidental dissertation defence. The title of one's ''trua'' appears on one's diploma (as it is notionally awarded to the monstration rather than its author), and is cited on one's CV.
Kiravian degrees are not granted on the basis of satisfactory completion of ordinary coursework or credit-hours (though this is ''most often'' a prerequisite). Rather, they are awarded for a ''trua'' (rendered in Ænglish as "{{wt|monstration|monstration}}") showing their mastery of the subject matter. A ''trua'' may take the form of an ''ōrstava'' ("review"), an ''amderen'' ("submission"), or both ''ōrstava amderesk'' ("review of submission"). A review is an {{wp|oral examination}} by ranking faculty, which was the standard mode of undergraduate ''trua'' from antiquity until the mid-19th century ''anno Domini''. A submission is some form of deliverable - normally a paper - submitted to ranking faculty for approval, which accounts for the majority of undergraduate ''trua'' today. A submission review entails delivering a submission to senior faculty for their perusal and subsequently responding to their questions and challenges thereto, usually orally, not unlike an Occidental dissertation defence. The title of one's ''trua'' appears on one's diploma (as it is notionally awarded to the monstration rather than its author), and is cited on one's CV.


At the undergraduate level, the ''ōrstava'' has been largely supplanted by the ''amderen'', though it remains the norm in the Northeast and at historically Taństan, Kandan, and Kaltan colleges, some more traditionalist private universities, and elite schools in South Kirav, and for pre-professional programmes. It is more widely employed for [Degree 1½] and at the graduate level (indeed, it is standard for medical and legal degrees). The ''ōrstava amderesk'' is the most common form of ''trua'' given for [Degree 2] and [Degree 3].  
At the undergraduate level, the ''ōrstava'' has been largely supplanted by the ''amderen'', though it remains the norm in the Northeast and at historically Eshavian, Kandan, and Kaltan colleges, some more traditionalist private universities, and elite schools in South Kirav, and for pre-professional programmes. It is more widely employed for [Degree 1½] and at the graduate level (indeed, it is standard for medical and legal degrees). The ''ōrstava amderesk'' is the most common form of ''trua'' given for [Degree 2] and [Degree 3].  


The ''amderen'' is normally a paper, but may also take the form of a project or performance, commonly expected in arts, culinary, and architectural programmes, and increasingly common at business and engineering schools. At the [Degree 4] level, the standards for evaluating an ''amderen'' or ''ōrstava amderesk'' have converged with the standards for the Occidental doctorate dissertation - that is, they are expected to represent {{wp|original research}} that meaningfully advances the state of knowledge in the field. At the [Degree 2] level and below, this is not so, and [Degree 2] ''amderen'' may represent fieldwork, case studies, etc. rather than a {{wp|thesis}}. At the [Degree 1] level, insofar as ''amderen'' are subject to substantive evaluation at all (see below), they more often take the form of a {{wp|literature review}} than a thesis, especially at universities under a Didactic rule. In former times, universities printed and bound all ''amderen'' to which they awarded degrees for retention in their campus library. Today, this form of archiving is limited to graduate ''amderen''; undergraduate submissions are usually preserved on microfilm or as digital scans only.
The ''amderen'' is normally a paper, but may also take the form of a project or performance, commonly expected in arts, culinary, and architectural programmes, and increasingly common at business and engineering schools. At the [Degree 4] level, the standards for evaluating an ''amderen'' or ''ōrstava amderesk'' have converged with the standards for the Occidental doctorate dissertation - that is, they are expected to represent {{wp|original research}} that meaningfully advances the state of knowledge in the field. At the [Degree 2] level and below, this is not so, and [Degree 2] ''amderen'' may represent fieldwork, case studies, etc. rather than a {{wp|thesis}}. At the [Degree 1] level, insofar as ''amderen'' are subject to substantive evaluation at all (see below), they more often take the form of a {{wp|literature review}} than a thesis, especially at universities under a Didactic rule. In former times, universities printed and bound all ''amderen'' to which they awarded degrees for retention in their campus library. Today, this form of archiving is limited to graduate ''amderen''; undergraduate submissions are usually preserved on microfilm or as digital scans only.
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Changing conditions in Kiravian higher education during the post-Kirosocialist era have altered the role of the monstration at the [Degree 1] and [Degree 0] level. Enrollment at degree-granting institutions, particularly public ones, saw massive growth after post-liberalisation economic growth set in, with much of this enrollment in new disciplines such as business management, for which there were not yet settled standards for evaluating monstrations, and for which some faculty questioned the relevance of the practice. Moreover, under the Kiravian Union, ''amderen'' in most disciplines had been judged according to a fairly standardised set of rubrics heavy with [[Kiravian Marxist philosophy|Kiro-Marxian]] ideological strictures, and so the displacement of Kirosocialist and Analytical Shaftonist ideological orthodoxy from the academy left the standards used to evaluate theses in economics, political studies, history, philosophy, and the humanities deprecated. Under [[The Deluge|the deluge]] of submissions from an enlarged candidate pool and a lack of consensus as to how to evaluate ''amderen'',  most public universities quietly discontinued substantive examination of undergraduate theses, granting [Degree 1] after cursory or formalities-only review, though they would not begin to publicly confirm this change until the [DECADE]s.
Changing conditions in Kiravian higher education during the post-Kirosocialist era have altered the role of the monstration at the [Degree 1] and [Degree 0] level. Enrollment at degree-granting institutions, particularly public ones, saw massive growth after post-liberalisation economic growth set in, with much of this enrollment in new disciplines such as business management, for which there were not yet settled standards for evaluating monstrations, and for which some faculty questioned the relevance of the practice. Moreover, under the Kiravian Union, ''amderen'' in most disciplines had been judged according to a fairly standardised set of rubrics heavy with [[Kiravian Marxist philosophy|Kiro-Marxian]] ideological strictures, and so the displacement of Kirosocialist and Analytical Shaftonist ideological orthodoxy from the academy left the standards used to evaluate theses in economics, political studies, history, philosophy, and the humanities deprecated. Under [[The Deluge|the deluge]] of submissions from an enlarged candidate pool and a lack of consensus as to how to evaluate ''amderen'',  most public universities quietly discontinued substantive examination of undergraduate theses, granting [Degree 1] after cursory or formalities-only review, though they would not begin to publicly confirm this change until the [DECADE]s.


Today, the evaluation of ''amderen'' varies by rule and from institution to institution. While a few flagship (University of Ykraine) state universities (mostly in Taństan-speaking states) or individual departments perform cursory examinations as a matter of course, most flagship and all second-tier (Ykraine State University) public universities no longer examine undergraduate monstrations on the merits by default. Students seeking consideration for honours must specially request substantive examination and pass a cursory review before proceeding further.  
Today, the evaluation of ''amderen'' varies by rule and from institution to institution. While a few flagship (University of Ykraine) state universities (mostly in Eshavian-speaking states) or individual departments perform cursory examinations as a matter of course, most flagship and all second-tier (Ykraine State University) public universities no longer examine undergraduate monstrations on the merits by default. Students seeking consideration for honours must specially request substantive examination and pass a cursory review before proceeding further.  


At other types of institutions, especially private ones, ''amderen'' are still examined on the merits. Some such institutions (or departments) require an oral defence, or an epistolary defence involving two or three rounds of written responses to challenges from the examining faculty.  
At other types of institutions, especially private ones, ''amderen'' are still examined on the merits. Some such institutions (or departments) require an oral defence, or an epistolary defence involving two or three rounds of written responses to challenges from the examining faculty.  
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==Selected List of Institutions==
==Selected List of Institutions==
 
*[[University of Belarus]] - [[Cities of Kiravia#Belarus|Belarus]], [[Kastera]]
*[[Pontifical University Nív-Tomáus]] - Tharaka, [[Hanoram]]
*[[Universitas Codicis]] - Tandhurin, Valēka - Literary and scientific academy established by the [[Oligarchia Grammaticorum]].
*[[Southern Islamic University]] - Avisinna, [[Issyria]]
*[[Coscivian Culture University]] - Sviathasar, [[North Æonara]]
*[[Saint Crunathan's Subterranean Confraternity of Esoteric Erudition]] - County Clúr, [[Kiorgia]] - Almost certainly the largest institution of higher learning located completely underground.
*[[Saint Crunathan's Subterranean Confraternity of Esoteric Erudition]] - County Clúr, [[Kiorgia]] - Almost certainly the largest institution of higher learning located completely underground.
*[[Kiravian Military University]] - Ēsvelter, Kaviska - {{wp|Military academy}} preparing cadets for service in the [[Kiravian Armed Forces|Kiravian Army]], including the Army Marine Corps but excluding the Army Aircorps and [[Kiravian Strategic Space Force|Space Corps]].
*[[Devahoma Agronomic & Mineral University]] Kōstrinver, Devahoma - Formerly Carlos Marx University
*Cascada Management University - Saar-Hūriviln, [[Cascada]] - Autonomous, publicly-funded university specialising in business management, economics, and allied fields.
*[[University of Duniver]] - [[Cities of Kiravia#Duniver|Duniver]], [[Kaviska]]
*[[Founding Fathers' University]] - Élite independent university in the nation's capital, reviled nationwide for the army of lawyers and politicians it has spawned.
*[[Founding Fathers' University]] - Élite independent university in the nation's capital, reviled nationwide for the army of lawyers and politicians it has spawned.
*[[Fāstervon Jesuit University]] - Xarbasar, [[Valēka]] - Jesuit school, alma mater of [[Andrus Candrin]].
*[[Fāstervon Jesuit University]] - Xarbasar, [[Valēka]] - Jesuit school, alma mater of [[Andrus Candrin]].
*[[University of the Holy Cross]] - [[Bérasar]], [[Fariva]]
*[[Kastera State University]] - Largest Kiravian university by number of undergraduates for 11 years in a row.
*[[Kiravian Military University]] - Ēsvelter, Kaviska - {{wp|Military academy}} preparing cadets for service as commissioned officers in the in the [[Kiravian Armed Forces|Kiravian Army]], Kiravian Marine Corps, and Kiravian Territorial Defence.
*Cascada Management University - Saar-Hūriviln, [[Cascada]] - Autonomous, publicly-funded university specialising in business management, economics, and allied fields.
*[[Southern Islamic University]] - Avisinna, [[Issyria]]
*[[Pontifical University Nív-Tomáus]] - Tharaka, [[Hanoram]]
*[[Kirav Wesleyan University]] - West Valēka, Valēka - Most prominent Protestant university in Kiravia, with its largest non-Islamic {{wp|dry campus}}.
*[[Kirav Wesleyan University]] - West Valēka, Valēka - Most prominent Protestant university in Kiravia, with its largest non-Islamic {{wp|dry campus}}.
*[[Universitas Codicis]] - Tandhurin, Valēka - Literary and scientific academy established by the [[Oligarchia Grammaticorum]].
*[[Devahoma Agronomic & Mineral University]] Kōstrinver, Devahoma - Formerly Carlos Marx University


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