KIMEP University


KIMEP University is an institution of higher education in Almaty, Kazakhstan. KIMEP is a private, non-profit university offering credit-based, North American-style bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degree curricula. Most classes are taught in English.

History

KIMEP was founded in 1992 under the instructions of Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev. KIMEP's campus in south-central Almaty occupied the premises of the former Central Training School of the Communist Party of Kazakhstan. It was among the first private institutions of higher education founded in the former Soviet Union. Nazarbayev appointed Chan-Young Bang, his former economic advisor president, as the institute's first executive director.
The first MBA and MA in Economics programs were launched in 1992 and the MPA program began enrolling students in 1993. The first class, consisting of 81 MBA and MA students, graduated from KIMEP in 1994.
In 1998 the International Executive Center was created with the help of McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. In 1999 KIMEP introduced its first four-year bachelor programs in Business Administration and Social Sciences. 424 students enrolled in the undergraduate program.
In 2001 KIMEP became the first institution in Central Asia to implement an American-style course credit system for all academic programs. This system gives students flexibility to choose their courses and instructors.
Over the course of the decade, KIMEP launched new master's degrees, a Doctor of Business Administration program, a leadership certificate and many professional programs. Enrollment increased by a factor of ten. The campus saw significant renovation, including a new library, new academic building and gym.
In 2000, Chan-Young Bang became president of KIMEP, a position he holds today. In 2004, KIMEP became a private, non-profit educational institution, with a 60% stake held by Dr. Bang and a 40% held by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan.
On 2 April 2008, President Nazarbayev visited the KIMEP campus, toured the newest buildings and met with students. In 2008 the institute awarded nearly 600 bachelor's degrees and 152 master's degrees.
In 2011, the Bang College of Business received regional accreditation from the . According to a statement on KIMEP's website, "the award confirms that KIMEP is two to four years from achieving the ‘gold standard’ of global business school accreditation – AASCB and EQUIS. This is in line with KIMEP's own strategy to achieve this recognition in the next three years."
On February 8, 2012, KIMEP received confirmation from the Ministry of Justice of the Republic of Kazakhstan that its status has been changed. The institute would now operate under the name KIMEP University. This change was effective January 26, 2012, when the ministry officially accepted the new charter of the university and issued a new certificate of state registration.

Admissions

The KIMEP Admissions Department accepts applications to all its academic programs on a rolling basis. Undergraduate admissions decisions are based on the KIMEP entrance exam, which is held throughout the year in cities across Kazakhstan. The Admissions Department also considers students’ academic performance at previous institutions and the results of the KIMEP English Examination Test. A decent level of English is required for admissions, but most students do not obtain full proficiency until after they begin their studies.
KIMEP's financial aid has rapidly grown since 2004. In 2010–2011, KIMEP offered nearly four million dollars in combined internal and external scholarships. Internal funding amounted to 2.3 million dollars. 100 percent of applicants for the 2010-2011 year who applied for aid and demonstrated need and academic achievements received financial assistance.
Another 60 million Kazakhstani tenge is given to students who work on campus as office assistants. Another form of financial assistance at KIMEP is placement in the KIMEP Dormitory, which offers highly favorable rates to students from outside Almaty.
Financial aid is available to undergraduate and graduate students. Merit scholarships are granted to students in all degree programs.

Academics

Divisions and programs

KIMEP has four academic colleges and two learning centers:

Colleges

The Bang College of Business, named after President Chan-Young Bang, offers a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration, a Master of Business Administration and a PhD in Management, Marketing, Accounting and Finance areas. The dean of BCB is Dr Jay Hoyoung Lee, Associate professor of Marketing, former Chief Finance Officer of Samsung C&T.
The College of Social Sciences offers bachelor's and master's degrees in four fields: Economics, Public Administration, International Relations, and International Journalism. The dean of CSS is Dr Gerald Pech, Associate Professor of Economics. His fields of specialization are game theory, public economics and the economic analysis of institutions.
The School of Law offers a Master of Laws in International Law and an undergraduate LLB law course, which launched in 2011–2012. The dean of Law school is Dr Fred Mitchell Isaacs. He was a commercial litigation associate in two large law firms, a federal judicial law clerk to one district and three appellate court judges, and spent 18 years as a business law professor before moving to Kazakhstan.
College of Humanities and Education, a newly created college in 2019, former Language Center. This college offers three Bachelor degree courses in Foreign Language, Translation Studies, Cognitive Science, and two Master degree courses in Foreign Languages, and MA and PhD programs in Education policy and Management. The dean of the college is Juldyz Smagulova, PhD. Dr. Smagulova teaches graduate courses Introduction to Second Language Acquisition, Second Language Acquisition Research, Introduction to Sociolinguistics, and Introduction to Bilingualism as well undergraduate Academic English courses. She provides consulting in the areas of language planning and policy and conducts trainings for language teachers.

Learning Centers

The Language Center administers the English language foundation course, which most students must take upon entry to KIMEP. The Language Center teaches courses in English, Russian, Kazakh, Chinese, Korean, German, French, Spanish, Turkish and other languages. It offers a master's degree in teaching English to speakers of other languages. First-year undergraduates at KIMEP take interdisciplinary courses from the Language Center as a part of the general education program.
In addition, KIMEP has an Executive Education Center, which offers dozens of certificate courses and professional development programs to adults and professionals in Almaty. It offers courses to high school students preparing them for the KIMEP entrance examination, delivers KIMEP's Leadership Development Program, and coordinates KIMEP's Executive MBA with BCB.

Rankings

In 2019, the Independent Quality Assurance Agency of Kazakhstan named KIMEP the best humanitarian-economic university in Kazakhstan.
This followed a strong showing in rankings from the National Accreditation Center of the Ministry of Education and Science of RK, where five KIMEP Bachelor programs came in first, and five came in second:
KIMEP Master programs:
KIMEP has a license to offer academic programs from the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan. The last visit of an attestation commission from the Ministry was in 2013, which KIMEP passed successfully. After a while the State attestations have been cancelled.
KIMEP is in the process of applying for accreditation at international accreditation agencies. The Bang College of Business has received regional accreditation from the Asian Forum on Business Education, making KIMEP the first academic institution in Central Asia to receive this honor. The Department of Public Administration received unconditional accreditation from the European Association for Public Administration Accreditation, another first for Central Asia. The American Communication Association granted conditional accreditation to KIMEP's journalism and communication programs, with full program accreditation a possibility following a one-year review.
In 2018 KIMEP received International Accreditation for all programs from Foundation for International Business Administration accreditation until 2023.
In 2019 the University received an Institutional Accreditation from FIBAA until 2025.
KIMEP has the following specialized memberships:
KIMEP's campus in south-central Almaty occupies the premises of the former Central Training School of the Communist Party of Kazakhstan.
It includes three main academic buildings, a library, sports center, dormitory, various fields, benches and other facilities.

Library

The Olivier Giscard d'Estaing Library, named after the founding dean of INSEAD and supporter of KIMEP throughout its early years, has the largest English-language collection in Central Asia in addition to large Russian and Kazakh collections. The main collection specializes in publications on business, social sciences, law and languages. It offers KIMEP students access to dozens of major electronic libraries and electronic resources. The library has space for studying, an electronic resources laboratory and a large computer room. OGEL librarians have created a major database of reference materials on Central Asia, which they continually update.

Sports Center

In November 2010, KIMEP opened a new Sports Center. The 325-square-meter facility includes a basketball court, two fitness rooms and a yoga studio. All the technology is state-of-the-art and imported from South Korea. Beginning in 2011, the Sports Center offered a variety of curricular and extra-curricular courses to students. Students have free access to the facility, which will be open six days a week.

ExxonMobil Media Center

In October 2009, KIMEP launched a media laboratory for its journalism students. The facility was named the ExxonMobil Media Center after ExxonMobil Kazakhstan, which donated US$44,000 to pay for the center's equipment. The digital equipment enables students to work with internet publications, digital photography, cinematography, sound, editing, and advertising.

Student life

About 3,000 students enroll to KIMEP each semester. The average age of enrolled bachelor's degrees students was 19.5. Roughly 50% of KIMEP students come from outside Almaty. There are students from more than 25 countries, including the United States, Spain, South Korea, Tajikistan, India, China, Peru, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
The KIMEP Students Association is a student-elected body to represent the interests of students to the administration. The KSA participates with full voting rights on all management committees, typically holding around 30 percent of seats on each committee. The KSA is also responsible for organizing and providing funding for all student clubs at KIMEP. Madi Tanatarov is the president of KSA in 2019-2020.
There are more than 30 student clubs at KIMEP, including the Kimep Fashion Industry, eClub, KIMEP Times, Kimep Voice, Future Business Group, KIMEP Film Society, Intellectual Debate Club, Math Club, Luca Accounting Club, Zhas Kenes Charity Group, CrEAteam and KVN. In addition, there is a weekly English Club run by native speakers.
The Leadership Development Program invites guest lectures from the business, politics and academia in Kazakhstan and around the world to speak to students about personal development, leadership and other issues. The certificate-granting program gives students the chance to hear speakers such as Keith Gaebel, the managing partner of Central Asia and Caucasus at Ernst & Young, Ilya Urazakov, Kazakhstan broadcaster and businessman, and Karel Holub, general manager of Nokia Corporation for the South CIS.

Housing

A citywide survey in 2010 awarded KIMEP for having the best dormitory in Almaty.

Alumni

So far KIMEP has graduated more than 12,000 alumni. The KIMEP Alumni Association organizes events and networking for alumni of all programs. KIMEP alumni tend to work in the private and public sectors. According to a 2019 study, nearly 96% of KIMEP graduates had full-time employment within three months of graduation.
Notable alumni include:
KIMEP has over 200 faculty members coming from more than 40 countries. KIMEP has 84 instructors with terminal degrees, 77 of which have PhDs. This is the highest such concentration of any institution in the CIS. KIMEP professors come from a wide variety of background and their combined research output has steadily increased over the past few years.
KIMEP espouses “student-centered” education. All instructors maintain office hours during which they are available to meet personally with students. Classes are meant to include class discussion and critical analysis of subject matter.
Research focuses on issues critical to Central Asia's long-term development. Last year, KIMEP faculty members attended more than 100 conferences and published more than 110 articles and books.
Notable faculty members include:
KIMEP has active partnerships with more than 95 universities. One third of these universities are ranked in the top 100 by the Times Higher Education Supplement. Last academic year, 175 KIMEP students enrolled in study abroad programs, while KIMEP hosted more than 300 international students. Some of KIMEP's partner universities are:
CountryCollege or University
CanadaLaval University
GermanyUniversity of Applied Sciences in Schmalkalden
GermanyHumboldt University
PolandCollegium Civitas
SpainUniversitat Internacional de Catalunya
SwedenUppsala University
United StatesDickinson State University
United StatesGeorge Mason University
United StatesSoutheast Missouri State University
United StatesTexas State University
United StatesUniversity of Northern Colorado
United StatesUniversity of San Francisco
United StatesUniversity of Wyoming
United StatesKeuka College

CountryCollege or University
Hong KongHong Kong Baptist University
South KoreaEwha Womans University
South KoreaHankuk University of Foreign Studies
South KoreaKorea Cyber University
South KoreaKorea University Business School
South KoreaUNIST
South KoreaKyung Hee University
South KoreaPai Chai University
South KoreaBusan University of Foreign Studies
South KoreaSookmyung Women's University
South KoreaSungkyunkwan University
Hallym International School-
TaiwanChing Yun University
SingaporeSingapore Management University
TajikistanTajik State University of Commerce

KIMEP has established several dual degree programs with leading universities outside of Kazakhstan. This includes:
In 2006 certain former faculty members published letters accusing the university of corruption and cronyism. In a letter to the Chronicle of Higher Education, the former faculty members claimed contracts and salaries were "compromised" at the institution. Former faculty published another letter in the opposition newspaper Respublika which accused several administrators of professional misconduct and lack of qualifications. The letter addressed the awarding of KIMEP tenders to USKO, a company chaired by Dr. Bang.
Responding in the same newspaper, Bang claimed that the accusations by the former faculty were not true. He noted that in 2006, 95% of KIMEP employees said they would recommend the school as a good place to work. He said four faculty members were regrettably fired because "their actions did not correspond to the mission and goals of the institute". He noted that those faculty members who left KIMEP voluntarily usually did so for personal reasons or because their time in Kazakhstan had come to a scheduled end. The letter also pointed out that out of eleven on-going or recently completed construction projects at KIMEP, only two were done by USKO, and that all such projects at KIMEP are examined by an independent committee.
In September 2010, the Ministry of Education and Science issued a decree showing an intention to suspend KIMEP's license for six months. The Ministry cited technical issues such as student-teacher ratio, classroom sizes and the templates of diplomas for the suspension. KIMEP filed an appeal against the suspension in Astana and continued to operate. Observers pointed out that the university had been operating for almost two decades and suggested that the sudden emergence of this problem after such a long period was politically motivated. Two weeks later, the Ministry fully reinstated KIMEP's license, stating that all violations had been resolved. Zhansit Tuimebayev, the Minister of Education and Science who had issued the suspension of KIMEP's license, was moved to a different government position and replaced by Bakhytzhan Zhumagulov.