siswa.erlangga.com
What you actually get when you visit siswa.erlangga.com today
Right now, siswa.erlangga.com doesn’t behave like a normal, maintained Erlangga “student portal”. When I tried to open it, the page only showed a plain “Click here to enter” link, and following that link triggered a redirect that the browser tooling flagged as not safe (it attempted to send traffic to ww17.siswa.erlangga.com).
That pattern is common when a subdomain is parked, misconfigured, or no longer controlled the way it used to be. The key practical takeaway is: don’t treat siswa.erlangga.com as the official entry point unless Erlangga’s own official channels explicitly tell you to.
The “real” student-facing Erlangga sites people are using instead
In Erlangga’s current ecosystem, student learning/assessment access shows up under other domains that are actively maintained and have full navigation, help pages, and login flows.
One big one is Exam Siswa on siswa.erlanggaexam.com, which is positioned as an online practice and question bank platform (“latihan soal”) that students can use independently.
Erlangga’s own product listing for Exam Siswa describes the intent pretty clearly: pick a subject/subtopic quickly, do varied questions, choose difficulty, and use it for common school assessment rhythms (daily assessments, end-of-semester, end-of-year) aligned to curriculum structure.
Separately, Erlangga also has other digital properties that look like they’re part of the same family of services: a CBT-focused site (test.erlanggaonline.co.id) explaining computer-based test simulations and instant scoring/analysis, and a centralized sign-in portal (apps.erlangga.co.id/sso) that supports QR-based login via a mobile app.
So if your goal is “Erlangga student portal,” the current reality is: it’s distributed across services, not concentrated in siswa.erlangga.com.
How the Exam Siswa flow works (what you’d expect as a student)
Exam Siswa is built around a pretty standard student account flow:
- Register using name + email (they explicitly recommend using an active email, including
belajar.idaccounts). - Verify/activate via email. Their help center says email verification is used to protect privacy and confirm the user is a real student.
- Login with email + password, with “forgot password” sending a reset/new password to email.
What’s interesting is that the help center also references an “Aktivasi” step with an activation code (they mention KBES activation). That usually means some content is tied to a purchased product, voucher, or school-provided access code rather than being fully open.
From a user-experience standpoint, this matters because it splits students into two groups:
- students doing basic practice with a self-created account, and
- students unlocking specific packages via codes linked to books/programs.
What Erlangga seems to be building as a “product constellation,” not one website
If you look at Erlangga Online’s product navigation, it’s basically a directory of multiple digital products: Exam Siswa, AKM, Asesmen, eBook/e-Library, LMS (“Kelasku”), and others.
This is a big clue: Erlangga’s digital strategy isn’t “one portal to rule them all.” It’s more like a suite, where each tool has its own domain and UI, and sometimes its own login flow.
That’s also why the presence of a standalone SSO portal is notable. When companies start having many separate services, SSO becomes the glue. In practice, that can make life easier (one identity across products), but it can also create confusion if users are still searching for older/legacy URLs like siswa.erlangga.com.
Why the siswa.erlangga.com situation is risky (and what to do about it)
A domain/subdomain that only shows “Click here to enter” and then pushes you toward a questionable redirect is a red flag for a student audience. Students will often click through without thinking, especially if a teacher or friend shares an old link.
Here’s the sensible way to handle it:
- Don’t enter credentials on any page you reached from that redirect chain.
- Prefer entry from official Erlangga properties (the main corporate site, Erlangga Online product pages, or direct known services like Exam Siswa).
- If you’re a school admin/teacher: don’t distribute siswa.erlangga.com links. Use the current service URLs that are actively maintained.
This isn’t about blaming anyone; it’s just the reality of the web. Old subdomains get forgotten, DNS records expire, ownership changes, and suddenly what used to be a harmless shortcut becomes a liability.
What the website name implies vs what it delivers
The name “siswa.erlangga.com” implies:
- official Erlangga,
- student-focused,
- likely a primary portal.
But the current behavior doesn’t match that implication. Meanwhile, the actual student practice and testing experiences appear to live under:
siswa.erlanggaexam.comfor Exam Siswa (practice/question bank + activation flows),test.erlanggaonline.co.idfor CBT-style experiences and book-linked CBT collections,- and possibly other product-specific domains listed in Erlangga Online’s product menu.
So the most accurate description of siswa.erlangga.com today is: a legacy or misdirecting entry point that you shouldn’t rely on, especially for logins.
Key takeaways
- siswa.erlangga.com currently redirects in a way flagged as unsafe, so it’s not a reliable official portal entry point.
- Erlangga’s active student services show up under other domains, especially Exam Siswa (
siswa.erlanggaexam.com). - Exam Siswa uses a typical account + email verification flow and also supports activation codes for certain access/packages.
- Erlangga’s digital ecosystem is multi-product, and SSO exists (
apps.erlangga.co.id/sso), which suggests services are meant to interconnect even if URLs differ.
FAQ
Is siswa.erlangga.com an official Erlangga site?
It’s under the erlangga.com domain, but the current behavior is not what you’d expect from an actively maintained official portal. The redirect behavior is the bigger issue than the name.
What link should students use instead?
For online practice and question bank access, Exam Siswa at siswa.erlanggaexam.com is clearly active and documented (login, registration, help center).
How do I register for Exam Siswa?
You register with name + email, then activate via email verification. Their help center explains the steps and why activation is required.
What is the “activation code” mentioned in the help center?
It looks like a mechanism to unlock certain products/packages (they mention activating via an “Aktivasi” menu and entering a code). That’s typical for access bundled with books, vouchers, or school programs.
Does Erlangga have a single sign-on?
Yes, there is an Erlangga SSO portal (apps.erlangga.co.id/sso) and it even mentions QR-based sign-in via a mobile app, which suggests an identity layer across services.
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