This is a private institute of higher learning in Phnom Penh.
In a previous post I had pointed out the different characteristics of colleges
in Cambodia as compared to the West.
Since the secondary education in Cambodia is rather poor, to
say the least, and which is evidenced by the poor results of the high school
diploma examinations where only about 53% pass and finally graduate, the
colleges have to compensate for the lack of rather basic knowledge. Students
have to attend a compulsory foundation year, which is nothing else but lessons
that are part of the Western high school curriculum, which usually is a
prerequisite for college admission.
Panasastra is one of the institutions with a rather good
reputation. How it earned that is not quite known. If you go to college ranking
websites worldwide it hovers somewhere in the 3000s They do offer morning,
afternoon, and evening classes. Tuition is similar to the Royal University of
Cambodia, and which is ranked much higher in the 600s. But ironically, the word
among students is that the right thing to do is to go to Panasastra. They
believe a degree from there will give you better job opportunities upon
graduation.
However, Panasastra suffers a chronic shortage of adequate
teachers. Normally, students take four courses per semester but it can happen
that Panasastra just happens to be short of a teacher for one course.
Consequently the student ends up with only three courses. He/she will have to
take it the next semester, which naturally results in prolonging the entire time
needed to get that degree. If this happens 3 or 4 times, and it quite often
does, this will mean at least one additional semester, and it can quickly
become an entire year just for lack of proper college management.
Some teachers also have a way of not showing up for class
without any explanations. If it is a long holiday weekend some tend to extend
it by a day or two. Of course, student attendance is mandatory and counts
towards the grade.
Morale among teachers is reputedly not the best. The
fluctuation of faculty staff is quite high. That is not good for the quality of
courses at a college. Pay is supposedly not that great either, so it is no
wonder they don’t attract enough teachers. Still, they have a huge student
body, particularly in the English language department.
Another particular and peculiar feature in Cambodia is the
fact that students normally do not receive their diploma upon graduation.
Sometimes they have to wait 1 year, in some cases even 2, to receive them since
there are not enough graduates for a ceremony.
So, if I had to decide again where a son or daughter should
go, it would not be Panasastra.
1 comment:
Most schools treat students as paid customers.
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