MoscowTimes... A state education watchdog has revoked the accreditation of a prestigious Russian private university in what critics fear could further erode independent education in the country.
Founded in 1995 as a project to bring British and Russian education models together, the Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences, also known as Shaninka, reportedly boasts some of Russias highest-earning graduates and is highly competitive among management students. Its the second privately-run university to face high-profile censure by education authorities in the last two years. Read More A Billionaire Is Trying to Ignite a Revolution in Russian Education
Russias education watchdog Rosobrnadzor ordered the schools education accreditation be revoked this week after it said inspections this spring found 11 of its master's and bachelors programs in violation of state education standards.
The schools rector Sergei Zuyev assuaged fears of a shutdown in an online statement, saying a withdrawal of accreditation doesnt mean a suspension of educational activity.
Accreditation gives the university the right to issue state diplomas, reported Russian business website The Bell, which Shaninka has only had for the past decade.
The Bell quoted a senior administrator at Shaninka as saying that geopolitical tensions with Britain and security services concern about its connections abroad could have influenced the watchdogs decision to withdraw accreditation.
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There was an impression that the FSB considered the school too independent and too often in contact with foreign universities, a real hotbed of liberalism, the anonymous source told The Bell. Other university sources dismissed this concern as a conspiracy theory.
The move comes two years after Rosobrnadzor stripped the European University in St. Petersburg, one of Russias leading private post-graduate schools for the social sciences and humanities, of its license over building code violations. The move narrowed the universitys educational scope primarily to research, rather than teaching.