IPB University

IPB University[2][3] (Indonesian: Institut Pertanian Bogor, lit.'Bogor Institute of Agricultural', abbreviated as IPB) is a state-run agricultural university based in the regency of Bogor, Indonesia.

IPB University
Institut Pertanian Bogor
Other name
Bogor Institute of Agricultural (lit.); Bogor Agricultural University (pre-2019)
MottoInspiring Innovation with Integrity
Motto in English
Inspiring Innovation with Integrity in Agriculture, Ocean, Biosciences for a Sustainable World
TypeState university
EstablishedSeptember 1, 1963
RectorProf. Arif Satria, S.P., M.Si., Ph.D.
Location,
6°33′14.6″S 106°43′24.3″E
CampusBoth urban and rural total 6,651,635 m2
AffiliationsASAIHL[1]
Websitewww.ipb.ac.id
IPB University is located in West Java
IPB University
Location in West Java
IPB University is located in Indonesia
IPB University
IPB University (Indonesia)

History

The institute began as an agricultural school formed by the Dutch colonial regime in the early 20th century. After independence it was part of the University of Indonesia before becoming an independent institute on September 1, 1963.[4][5] Prof. Dr. Arif Satria, S.P., M.Si. serves as its director.[6]

The entrance gate of the IPB University, Bogor, Indonesia
The Middelbare Landbouwschool Buitenzorg in the 1920s

The first school in Bogor was established in 1876 under Rudolph Scheffer, under the name landbouwschool te Buitenzorg (agriculture school).[7] New schools for different fields were opened in the following years for Native Indonesians. The institute started in the early 20th century as a veterinary medicine and agricultural school.[4] Before World War II, the institutions were known as Middelbare Landbouwschool (secondary agricultural school), Middelbare Bosbouwschool (secondary forestry school) dan Nederlandsch Indiche Veeartsenschool (veterinary school).[4] H. J. Lovink's appointment as department director of agricultural education in 1910 marked a curriculum shift toward training for the government and private sides of colonial agribusiness, including basic biology classes augmented with practical education about cultivation techniques and technologies.[8] Lovink argued that department officials in the Ministry of Agriculture "needed to familiarize themselves with Javanese farming practices."[8]

The Nederlandsch Indiche Veeartsenschool in the 1920s

In 1940, the Dutch government founded an Institution of Agricultural Higher Education in Bogor with the name Landbouw Hogeschool, which later on 31 October 1941 was called Landbouwkundige Faculteit (Agronomy Faculty). However, the school was closed down during the Japanese occupation (1942-1945). The Nederlandsch Indische Veeartsenschool remained in operation, but its name was changed to Bogōru jūigakkō (ボゴール獣医学校) (Bogor Veterinary School).[4]

After the declaration of independence in 1946, the Ministry of Social Welfare of the new Republic of Indonesia upgraded the Veterinary School in Bogor to the College of Veterinary Medicine (PTKH).[4]

The Netherlands returned to Indonesia and retook control of the institution in 1947, thus Landbouwkundige Faculteit was reopened as the Faculteit Voor Landbouw-Wetenschappen, which had majors in Agriculture and Forestry. In 1948 the PTKH or College of Veterinary Medicine was changed to Faculteit voor Diergeneeskunde under Universiteit van Indonesië (later the University of Indonesia).[4]

After Indonesia gained its independence in 1950, Landbouw-wetenschappen became the Faculty of Agriculture of the University of Indonesia, with three departments — Socio-Economics, Physical Sciences, and Forestry. In 1957 the Department of Land Fishery was formed. Meanwhile, Faculteit voor Dieergeneeskunde became the Faculty of Veterinary Medicines and Animal Husbandry.[4]

IPB was founded on September 1, 1963 by the decision of the Minister of Science and Higher Education No. 92/1963 and was approved by President Sukarno's decree No. 279/1965.[5] At the time, the two faculties of University of Indonesia which is in Bogor were separated into an independent institution. The new university (IPB) has five faculties: Agriculture, Veterinary Medicine, Fisheries, Animal Science, and Forestry. In 1964 the Faculty of Technology and Mechanization of Agriculture was added.[5]

Recent events

On December 26, 2000 the Indonesia government changed IPB's autonomy status to a state-owned university.

In 2005, IPB applied the minor and major system instead of the national curriculum system.[9][10] This allow IPB students to take more than one department field.[9]

Symbol and flags

Logo and philosophy

The logo consist of "Institut Pertanian Bogor" text, a tree with three branches and five leaves, and an open book which are all lined by a white circle on a blue background. The logo reflects IPB as an academic institution, source of knowledge and technology, with the "Tridarma Perguruan Tinggi" obligation.

The basic blue color symbolizes IPB as a science and technology university, the open book symbolizes IPB as a source of knowledge, the circle symbolizes that science has no limits and always growing, the three branches growing from the book symbolize Tridarma Perguruan Tinggi (IPB's three commitments: Education, Research, and Community Service), and the five leaves represent the first five faculties of IPB and symbolize Tridarma Perguruan Tinggi which is based on Pancasila.[11]

Flags

The Institut Pertanian Bogor main flag is yellow with IPB emblem in the middle. Each faculty has its own logo and flag based on the IPB logo and flag.[11]

  • Diploma Program: black.[11]
  • Faculty of Agricultural Engineering and Technology: red.[11]
  • Faculty of Agriculture: green.[11]
  • Faculty of Animal Science: brown.[11]
  • Faculty of Economics and Management: orange.[11]
  • Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science: light blue.[11]
  • Faculty of Forestry: grey.[11]
  • Faculty of Human Ecology: tosca green.[11]
  • Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Science: white.[11]
  • Faculty of Veterinary Medicine: violet.[11]
  • School of Business: maroon.[11]

Faculties have a white IPB emblem in the middle, except the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Science. The Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Science have a blue colored IPB emblem in the middle.[11]

Campuses

  • IPB Baranang Siang Campus[12]
  • IPB Cilibende
  • IPB Dramaga Campus[12]
  • IPB Gunung Gede Campus[12]
  • IPB Taman Kencana

Faculties and departments

Graha Widya Wisuda, the hall of the Dramaga Campus. A cheering march of students from Faculty of Agricultural Engineering and Technology is seen here, celebrating their fellows' graduation.

Institut Pertanian Bogor has agricultural, livestock, veterinary, and life science studies.

IPB consist of nine faculties providing an undergraduate program.[13] Graduate and postgraduate programs are managed by a separate graduate school. In 1972, IPB implemented a four-year undergraduate curriculum and, in 1975, opened the first graduate school in Indonesia.

IPB undergraduate new students are required to pass a Common First Year Program (Tingkat Persiapan Bersama (TPB)) or know well-known as General Competency Education Program (Program Pendidikan Kompetensi Umum (PPKU)) before entering any faculties or department although they are enrolled as a student of specific faculties and department.[14] They are also required to live in dormitories during the first year.

Institut Pertanian Bogor has a diploma program that is separated from the faculties and managed under the Directorate of Diploma Program. Unlike the undergraduate students, a common first year program is unavailable for diploma program students.

Faculty of Agriculture

  • Agronomy and Horticulture
  • Landscape Architecture
  • Soil Science and Land Resources
  • Plant Protection

Faculty of Veterinary Medicine

Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science

  • Aquaculture
  • Resources Management Living Aquatic
  • Marine Science and Technology
  • Fisheries Resources Utilization
  • Aquatic Product Technology

Faculty of Animal Sciences

  • Nutrition Science and Feed Technology
  • Animal Production and Technology

Faculty of Forestry

The Faculty of Forestry in 1963 consisted of two departments: Forest Management and Exploitation; and Forest Products Processing. Which later became the Department of Forest Products in 1969 and then the Department of Forest Products Technology in 1983, when Department of Forest Resources Conservation was formed. In 2005, Faculty of Forestry developed into its present four departments:

It offers bachelor's and master's degrees and doctorates in forest management science, fiber and composite technology, forest product quality improvement and engineering, tropical biodiversity, ecotourism and environmental services management, and tropical silviculture.

Faculty of Agricultural Engineering and Technology

Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences

Faculty of Economics and Management

  • Economics
  • Management
  • Agribusiness
  • Resource and Environmental Economics

History

The Faculty of Human Ecology (FEMA) is the youngest faculty in IPB; it was established on August 2, 2005 by the Rector's decree no. 112/K13/OT/2005. his establishment was IPB's answer to changes that were taking place toward the era of higher education autonomy (IPB BHMN) which granted the university the power to form new study programs, departments, and faculties.

The roots of FEMA IPB were the former Department of Community Nutrition and Family Resource (GMSK) of Faculty of Agriculture; Study Program of Agriculture Extension and Communication of Socioeconomy Department, Faculty of Agriculture; and socioeconomic study programs of all the other faculties in IPB.

The Department of Community Nutrition and Family Resource (GMSK) of Faculty of Agriculture was developed into Department of Community Nutrition (GIZ) and Department of Family and Consumer Sciences (IKK). While the Department of Agricultural Socioeconomy (SOSEK) of Faculty of Agriculture was transformed into Department of Communication and Community Development (KPM), Department of Agribusiness, and Department of Environmental Resource Economy (ESL). Furthermore; through the clustering process; the Department of Community Nutrition (GIZ), the Department of Family and Consumer Sciences (IKK), and the Department of Communication and Community Development (KPM) merged up to become the Faculty of Human Ecology (FEMA).

FEMA IPB is the first and only faculty of its kind in Indonesia and it is one of the three faculties of human ecology throughout South East Asia. The others are in the College of Human Ecology University of Philippines at Los Banos (UPLB) and the Faculty of Human Ecology, Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM).

Departments

  • Community Nutrition
  • Family and Consumer Science
  • Communication and Community Development Science
Community Nutrition

Mandate:

To develop human nutrition science and its application in individual, family and community that involves agriculture, food, nutrition, and health.

Sections:

  • Basic Nutrition
  • Applied Nutrition
  • Food and Environmental Health Management
  • Food and Nutrition Policy
  • Faculty of Human Ecology
  • Community Nutrition
  • Family and Consumer Science
  • Communication and Community Development Science

School of Business

  • Business

Seed Center

The university plans develop a Seed Center at Leuwikopo, Dramaga, Bogor due to Indonesia has to import seeds so far and facing a problem of seed supply. The center will develop agricultural seeds, plantation seeds, animal husbandry and fishery.[16]

Green Campus

Starting on September 1, 2015 no ordinary fuel-vehicles are allowed to enter Green Campus Area. The authority provides 1,500 rental bikes, 44 electric cars and 20 gas-fueled buses. Electric cars and buses should have their fare paid electronically.[17]

Ranking

University rankings
Global – Overall
QS World[18]449 (2023)
Regional – Overall
QS Asia[18]112 (2022)

The QS Asia University Rangkings 2022 has ranked Bogor Agricultural University as number 112. In 2023, Bogor Agricultural University was ranked 449th worldwide according to the Top QS World University Rankings 2023, as well as ranked 112th in the Top QS Asian University Rankings 2022 (fifth in Indonesia after Gadjah Mada University, Bandung Institute of Technology, University of Indonesia and Airlangga University).

Student organizations

  • The Student Consultative Assembly (Majelis Permusyawaratan Mahasiswa / MPM): student consultative body only available at university level.
  • The Student Representative Council (Dewan Perwakilan Mahasiswa / DPM): student legislative body at university level and faculty level.
  • The Student Executive Board (Badan Eksekutif Mahasiswa / BEM): student executive body at university and faculty level.
  • The Student Activities Unit (Unit Kegiatan Mahasiswa / UKM): several organizations purposed to aid developing students' hobby, talent, or interest.
    • Spirituality: Islamic Students Spiritual Agency (BKIM, Badan Kerohanian Islam Mahasiswa), Fellowship of Christian Students (PMK), Indonesia Catholic Student Union (KEMAKI), Buddhist Student Union (KMBA), and Hindu Dharma Student Union.
    • Sports: Soccer, Futsal, Basket Ball, Badminton, Volleyball, Table Tennis, Tennis, Chess, and Archery.
    • Martial Arts: Pencak Silat, Aikido, Karate BKC, Tae Kwon Do, Sin Lam Ba, and Thifan Po Khan.
    • Arts: Agria Swara Student Choir, Sundanese Art Environment "Gentra Kaheman", and Musical Art "Music Agriculture X-pression".
    • Specialized activities: Student Regiment, Scout, Nature Lovers "Lawalata", PMI Voluntary Corps, and Center of Entrepreneurship Development for Youth (Century).
    • Academics: International Association of Students in Agriculture and Related Sciences-Local Committee IPB (IAAS-LC IPB), Fauna Conservation Union (UKF), Scientific Studies Forum (FORCES-IPB).
    • Journalistic: Gema Almamater, and Campus Newspaper.

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. Association of Southeast Asian Institutions of Higher Learning Official Website Archived July 4, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Prasetia, Andhika (2019-01-30). "IPB Kini Rebranding Jadi 'IPB University', Apa Alasannya?". detiknews (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2019-03-09.
  3. Media, Kompas Cyber (2019-01-30). "Nama Baru Janji Baru, IPB Berganti Nama Menjadi IPB University". KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2019-03-09.
  4. History of IPB Embryonal Step (1941-1963)
  5. History of IPB Growth phase.
  6. History of IPB - Rectors retrieved September 1, 2013
  7. "Scheffer, Rudolph Herman Christiaan Carel". National Herbarium of the Netherlands. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  8. Goss, Andrew (2011). The Floracrats: State-Sponsored Science and the Failure of the Enlightenment in Indonesia. United States of America: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-299-24864-2 via Open Edition.
  9. IPB Undergraduate system.
  10. IPB Undergraduate system evaluation.
  11. "Symbol and Flag" (Press release). IPB. 25 September 2013. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  12. "Lokasi Kampus IPB" (Press release) (in Indonesian). IPB. 20 April 2010. Retrieved 20 June 2010.
  13. "Faculties and Departments" (Press release). IPB. 25 September 2010. Archived from the original on 24 August 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  14. "Visi dan Misi". Tingkat Persiapan Bersama IPB. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  15. Departement of Mechanical and Biosystem Engineering history retrieved on 30 August 2013
  16. "IPB prepare to launch Seed Center". ANTARA News. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  17. M. Sidik Permana (September 1, 2015). "IPB Bans Oil-fueled Vehicles".
  18. "Bogor Agricultural University".
  19. "ndonesian Coffee Board Officially Formed (translated)". Republika Online. Republika Online. March 2018. Retrieved 21 September 2018.
  20. "Respond to AGM Confusion, Three Pillar Employees (AISA) Convey ..." Tribun Jambi. Tribun Jambi. Retrieved 21 September 2018.
  21. "Indonesian rice executive arrested over mislabeling scandal". Nikkei Asian Review. Nikkei Asian Review. Retrieved 21 September 2018.
  22. "Ex minister launches memoir". Jakarta Post. 2008-12-01. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  23. "Never too late for Hasjrul to get doctorate degree". Jakarta Post. 2004-01-20. Archived from the original on 2014-03-02. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  24. "Iqbal Assegaf, Ketum PB PMII dari Labuha" [Iqbal Assegaf, Chairman of PB PMII from Labuha]. Indonesian Islamic Student Movement official website (in Indonesian). 12 February 2015. Archived from the original on 10 May 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  25. "Tokoh PMII dari Masa ke Masa" [Chairman of PMII from time to time]. PMII Country (in Indonesian). 18 March 2018. Archived from the original on 6 July 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  26. "Nur Mahmudi campaign pledges draw criticism". The Jakarta Post. 18 October 2010. Archived from the original on 19 October 2010. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  27. "Like the last lot". The Economist. 24 October 2009. p. 73.
  28. Jayasuriya, Sisira and Peter McCawley in collaboration with Bhanupong Nidhiprabha, Budy P. Resosudarmo and Dushni Weerakoon, The Asian Tsunami: Aid and Reconstruction after a Disaster, Cheltenham UK and Northampton MA USA: Edward Elgar and Asian Development Bank Institute, 2010.
  29. "Mustafa ready for unpopular policies". The Jakarta Post. 27 October 2009.
  30. Rizal (27 October 2014). "Siti Nurbaya Menteri Lingkungan Hidup dan Kehutanan Sudah Terbiasa Pulang Malam". Poskota Online. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  31. Biography of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono Archived 25 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  32. Kompas
  33. Woodrich, Chris (2013). "Lilis Suryani's 'Gang Kelinci' as a Reflection of Social Realities in Indonesia (1957–1965)". Diglossia. 4 (2).
  34. Teeuw, A. (1967). Modern Indonesian literature. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. pp. 253–254. OCLC 462738753.


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