According to calculations by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), the national Education Integrity Index (IIP) in 2024 reached 69.50 points.
This figure reflects the condition of Indonesian educational institutions, which generally are in the corrective stage. This means that efforts to improve integrity are underway, but implementation and supervision are not yet widespread, consistent, or optimal.
The KPK calculated the IIP based on survey results related to honesty, discipline, professionalism, accountability, and transparency of educational institutions.
The survey was conducted in 36,888 educational units, encompassing a sample of basic to higher education levels in 507 regencies/cities and 38 provinces in Indonesia.
The total number of respondents was 449,865, consisting of students, parents/guardians, teachers/lecturers, and educational unit leaders.
The survey results were then processed into a score on a scale of 0-100, with the following classification:
* Level 1 (score 0–62.50): Vulnerable integrity, poor governance
* Level 2 (score 62.51–72.50): Corrective integrity, improvement efforts are underway but not yet optimal
* Level 3 (score 72.51–82.50): Adaptive integrity, improved governance but still needs refinement
* Level 4 (score 82.51–92.50): Strong integrity, good governance
* Level 5 (score 92.51–100): Resilient integrity, very good governance
When the assessment is broken down by region, Southeast Sulawesi has the highest education integrity index among the 31 provinces. Following are Aceh, Yogyakarta Special Region, South Kalimantan, and East Java, with index scores as shown in the graph.
Although varied, the IIP scores of the 31 provinces are all in Level 2 or corrective, meaning that integrity still needs strengthening.
Jakarta and 6 provinces in Papua Island are not included because their index calculation methods differ.
Generally, the provincial-level IIP is measured from survey results at the senior high school/equivalent level, the results of which are shown in the graph above.
However, in Jakarta, the measurement involves surveys from all levels of basic and secondary education. With this special method, Jakarta's IIP score is 71.78, still in Level 2 or the corrective category.
As for Papua Island, the measurement was only conducted at the regency/city level, so the provincial-level IIP score is not available.