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Fifteen Universities, Four Thousand Students: The IT Education Landscape in Kyrgyzstan

Fifteen Universities, Four Thousand Students: The IT Education Landscape in Kyrgyzstan

In 2016, the Presidential Academy of the Kyrgyz Republic — the institution that trains civil servants and government managers — opened a master’s program in electronic governance and ICT in public administration. It is an unlikely place to start a story about technology education. The Academy is not a technical university, its students are not fresh school graduates, and its program occupies a corner of the curriculum rather than its centre. But the fact that an institution dedicated to public management decided, in 2016, to create an ICT-facing degree track is a small indicator of something real: by the mid-2010s, it had become difficult in Kyrgyzstan to build an education program in almost any field without encountering digital skills as a structural requirement.

This piece is drawn from a 2018 KG Labs survey of fifteen universities offering IT-related programs across Kyrgyzstan. The survey was part of a broader attempt to map both the supply side (what the education system produces) and the demand side (what the ICT enterprise sector actually needs) of the country’s technology talent market. What follows is the supply side: who is teaching IT, to whom, in what numbers, and in which programs.

Fifteen Institutions, Twelve Disciplines

The survey covered fifteen universities. Of these, nine are state institutions, one (the International University of Ala-Too) is a mixed public-private university, and two are private. Three of the fifteen — the State Academy of Physical Culture and Sports, the Institute of Social Development and Entrepreneurship, and the Kyrgyz Aviation Institute — reported no IT programs at all. The remaining twelve are the active education providers for the country’s ICT pipeline.

Across those twelve institutions, the discipline spread is wide. Programs range from Software Engineering and Applied Mathematics and Informatics through Business Informatics, Information Security, Computational Linguistics, and niche tracks including Healthcare Informatics, Nanoelectronics and Robotics, and IT in Public Administration. The breadth is real — but it does not mean depth is evenly distributed. Several programs outside Bishkek operate with cohorts of fewer than twenty students per year.

University by University: The 2018 Roster

Institution Type City / Oblast Key IT Programs Current Students (2018) Cumulative Graduates Int’l Certification
KGUSTA (Isanov University) State Bishkek IS&T, Applied CS, InfoSec, Applied Math+CS, Computational Linguistics, Software Engineering; Masters in 6 tracks ~390 undergrad; ~131 masters 575 undergrad (6 programs); 151 masters None
KNU (Balasagyn National University) State Bishkek IS&T, Information Technologies, Software Engineering, InfoSec, Business Informatics, Informatics and Computing; Masters in SE, BI, IT, IS&T 204+ (IS&T program alone, 2012 cohort) 804+ cumulative (IS&T program alone) Cisco lab since 2006
AUCA (American University of Central Asia) Private Bishkek Software Engineering (bachelor, since 2000) 148 (2014–2018 rolling) 171 (2018 cohort ongoing) Cisco + Microsoft
Ala-Too International University Mixed Bishkek Informatics & Computing Tech (since 1996), Applied Math+CS (since 2004), Nanoelectronics & Robotics (since 2004) ~213 (three programs combined, 2018–2019) ~398 (Informatics alone, 2000–2018) None
KNAU (Scriabin Agricultural University) State Bishkek Applied Informatics (by sector, since 2004) 134 (2018) ~549 (2008–2018) None
KЭУ (Kyrgyz Economic University) State Bishkek Applied Informatics by sector (specialist track, since 2009); Business Informatics (bachelor, since 2012) 34 specialist + 71 bachelor = ~105 35 + 35 = 70 None
BGU (Karasaev Bishkek State University) State Bishkek Business Informatics (bachelor, since 2015) 43 (2015–2018 rolling) First graduation 2019 2 certificates
Presidential Academy State Bishkek Masters in e-governance and ICT in public administration (since 2016); Bachelor track in IT in municipal administration (since 2012) ~20 masters/year; ~11–35 bachelor/year 26 bachelor (2016); masters first cohort graduated 2018 None
KGJUA (Kyrgyz State Law Academy) State Bishkek IS&T, Business Informatics, Applied CS, InfoSec (all bachelor); Vocational: Applied CS, InfoSec in automated systems ~29 (Applied CS); InfoSec programs at 0 enrollment in 2018 0 (new programs, first cohort 2018–2022) None
ИЭиФ (Institute of Economics and Finance) Private Bishkek Informatics; IT in financial management; IT in taxation; IT in economics (all bachelor, since 2016) 75 (2018) First graduation expected 2020 None
Naryn State University (Naamatov) State Naryn Informatics & Computing Tech, Applied CS, Healthcare Informatics (all bachelor) Data sparse (1,231 enrolled since 2007 in one program) Data incomplete Cisco (reported)
TalGU (Talas State University) State Talas IS&T (bachelor, since 2015); Healthcare Informatics (bachelor, since 2015) 16 (2016) None yet (programs opened 2015) None
Source: KG Labs 2018 university survey (ИТ программы в ВУЗах КР .xlsx). Osh Technological University data not extracted (source in PDF format). Three universities (ГКАФКиС, ИСРП, КАИ им. Абдраимова) reported no IT programs. Data as of 2018 academic year.

Current IT Students by Institution (2018, undergraduate)

.kg-bar-label{font-size:11px;fill:#1D1D1F;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif}.kg-bar-val{font-size:10px;fill:#555;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif}.kg-bar-note{font-size:9px;fill:#aaa;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif} KGUSTA ~390 Ala-Too ~213 KNU 204+ (IS&T program only) AUCA 148 KNAU 134 KЭУ ~105 ИЭиФ 75 BGU 43 TalGU: 16 | Presidential Academy: ~20 masters/yr | Naryn State: data incomplete | KGJUA: programs opened 2018

Source: KG Labs 2018 university survey (ИТ программы в ВУЗах КР .xlsx). KGUSTA total estimated across 6 bachelor programs. KNU figure is for the IS&T program alone; full enrollment across all KNU IT programs is higher.

Where the Pipeline Is — and Where It Is Not

The geographic picture is stark. Ten of the twelve active institutions are in Bishkek. Two are in regional capitals — Naryn State University and TalGU in Talas — and both operate with very small cohorts. TalGU’s IS&T program enrolled just eight students in its first year (2015) and eight again in 2016. Naryn State has been running longer but reported sparse enrollment data. The Osh Technological University was included in the survey but its data was only available in PDF format and could not be extracted. There are no institutions in Jalal-Abad, Batken, or Issyk-Kul oblasts in the survey.

This means a straightforward mismatch. About 60% of Kyrgyzstan’s population lives outside Bishkek and Chuy oblast, yet the overwhelming majority of IT education capacity is located in and around the capital. Regional students who want a serious IT education face a choice between relocating to Bishkek, attending a program with a very small cohort in their home region, or not studying IT at all. The pattern produces a graduate who is already in Bishkek by the time they finish their degree — which may help explain some of the capital’s concentration in the enterprise registry data.

Who Is Enrolled: The Gender Picture

One of the survey’s more striking findings is how unevenly gender ratios distribute across programs — and how the direction of that unevenness depends on which program you are looking at. The common assumption is that technology education is male-dominated across the board. The data complicates that assumption significantly.

Institution Program Female Students Male Students % Female
KGUSTA Computational Linguistics 182 25 88%
BGU Business Informatics (2015–2016 cohort) 6 7 46%
Presidential Academy IT in Municipal Administration (2012 bachelor) 17 18 49%
KGUSTA Applied Math and Informatics 99 121 45%
KGUSTA Applied CS (Applied Informatics) 103 216 32%
KGJUA Applied CS (bachelor, 2018) 9 20 31%
KGUSTA IS&T (Information Systems and Technologies) 33 128 20%
KGUSTA Information Security 83 236 26%
TalGU IS&T 2 (of 8) 6 25%
Source: KG Labs 2018 university survey (ИТ программы в ВУЗах КР .xlsx). Cumulative enrollment figures across all available years shown for KGUSTA; single-year cohort figures shown where only one year reported. Data incomplete for AUCA, KNU, KNAU, Ala-Too, and Naryn State.

Gender Distribution by Program — Selected Kyrgyz Universities, 2018

.kg-f{fill:#A1C623}.kg-m{fill:#3FA93C}.kg-gl{font-size:10px;fill:#1D1D1F;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif}.kg-gv{font-size:9.5px;fill:#555;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif} ← Female Male → CompLing (KGUSTA) 88% 12% IT Muni Admin (Pres. Acad.) 49% 51% Business Informatics (BGU) 46% 54% Applied Math+CS (KGUSTA) 45% 55% Applied CS (KGUSTA) 32% 68% InfoSec (KGUSTA) 26% 74% IS&T (KGUSTA) 20% 80%

Source: KG Labs 2018 university survey (ИТ программы в ВУЗах КР .xlsx). Programs sorted by female share descending. Data incomplete for AUCA, KNU, KNAU, Ala-Too, and Naryn State — those institutions not shown.

The Computational Linguistics program at KGUSTA is 88% female — an inversion of what most people picture when they think of a technology faculty. The Applied Mathematics and Informatics program at the same institution is nearly gender-equal. Business Informatics at BGU opened with a roughly even split. The programs that skew heavily male are the ones that carry the strongest engineering identity: Information Security (26% female), IS&T (20% female), Software Engineering. The pattern suggests that gendered enrollment in IT programs in Kyrgyzstan is not a function of blanket exclusion but of program identity — which programs are coded as technical and which are coded as applied or interdisciplinary.

The Program Opening Timeline

IT education in Kyrgyzstan is not new — Ala-Too’s Informatics and Computing Technologies program has been running since 1996 — but it has expanded significantly in recent years, with a cluster of new programs and institutions entering the space from 2012 onwards.

Year Institution Program Opened
1996 Ala-Too International University Informatics and Computing Technologies
1999 KNU Information Technologies; Informatics & Computing Tech (masters)
2000 AUCA Software Engineering
2004 Ala-Too Applied Math+CS; Nanoelectronics & Robotics
2004 KNAU Applied Informatics (by sector)
2006 KNU Cisco lab certification launched
2009 KNU Business Informatics; Informatics & Computing Tech
2009 KЭУ Applied Informatics (specialist track)
2010 KNU Software Engineering
2012 KGUSTA IS&T, Applied CS, InfoSec, Applied Math+CS, Computational Linguistics (all launched same year)
2012 KNU IS&T, InfoSec
2012 KЭУ Business Informatics
2012 Presidential Academy IT in Municipal Administration (bachelor)
2013 KGUSTA Masters in 5 programs (InfoSec, IS&T, Applied CS, CompLing, others)
2015 BGU Business Informatics
2015 TalGU IS&T; Healthcare Informatics
2016 Presidential Academy Masters in e-governance and ICT in public administration
2016 ИЭиФ Informatics; IT in finance, taxation, economics (four tracks)
2017 KNU Software Engineering (masters); IS&T (masters)
2018 BGU Healthcare Informatics
2018 KGJUA IS&T, Business Informatics, Applied CS, InfoSec (all new programs)
Source: KG Labs 2018 university survey (ИТ программы в ВУЗах КР .xlsx). Opening years derived from licensing dates and enrollment start years. KGUSTA’s 2012 cluster represents the single largest expansion of programs at one institution in any given year. Not all program launch years recoverable for all institutions.

The 2012 cluster is notable. KGUSTA launched five distinct bachelor programs in a single academic year, which coincides with a period of significant investment in technical education across the region. The post-2015 additions — BGU, TalGU, ИЭиФ, Presidential Academy masters — reflect a second wave in which institutions outside the traditional technology-faculty identity began integrating IT tracks into finance, law, economics, healthcare, and governance programs.

Certification: A Narrow Bridge to International Standards

International certification — Cisco, Microsoft, and comparable vendor programs — is the clearest indicator of a program’s connection to globally recognisable professional standards. The survey found only three universities offering it: AUCA (Cisco and Microsoft), KNU (Cisco, since 2006), and BGU (two certificates). Every other institution in the survey — including all the regional universities — operates without this bridge.

AUCA’s certification infrastructure is the most developed. Its Software Engineering program, running since 2000 and growing consistently (thirty students enrolled in 2007; fifty by 2018), has produced 171 graduates through 2018 and sits alongside its Cisco and Microsoft certification offerings. KNU’s Cisco lab, established in 2006 and offering certification to students who complete the full course, has generated 115 publications and 116 scientific works according to faculty records — a breadth of academic output that sits somewhat at odds with the lab’s primary professional-skills purpose. The pattern across both institutions is that certification exists and is functioning, but is not the centrepiece of how programs describe themselves.

For every other institution in the survey, the connection to internationally portable credentials runs through the quality of instruction and the job market rather than through formal certification systems. Whether that gap matters depends significantly on what employers — domestic and international — are actually looking for, and on how the enterprise side of the talent market is structured. That picture, from the enterprise registry data, is the subject of the companion piece.

Part of KG Labs’ 2018 ICT talent mapping research. Companion piece: An Industry of Individuals — What the Enterprise Registry Reveals →

Source: KG Labs 2018 survey of 15 universities (ИТ программы в ВУЗах КР .xlsx); Brief Analysis per KG Labs request (Краткий Анализ по отчету согласно запрос ОФ KG Labs.docx). Data as of 2018 academic year.

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