E N D
1. How to build an European Higher Education Area lessons learnt
Michael Gaebel
European University Association (EUA)
ASAIHL Conference Penang, 14 Dec. 2008
4. By the way:
Is it Europe or Europes?
Learning outcome 1:
Learn to distinguish:
Council of Europe from European Council
5. Council of Europe Strasbourg, France
1949
47 member states
Ministerial Council
Parliamentary Assembly
legal standards, human rights, democratic development, the rule of law and cultural co-operation + Education
Lisbon Recognition Convention (+UNESCO)
6. European Union (EU) political and economic union of 27 member states
1993 Treaty of Maastricht (before: European Economic Community)
mix of intergovernmental and supranational structures
single market through a standardised system of laws which apply in all member states, guaranteeing the freedom of movement of people, goods, services and capital
common currency - EURO (15 Member States)
common trade policy, agricultural and fisheries policies, and a regional development policy.
role in justice and home affairs, including the abolition of passport control between many member states (Schengen)
7. European Commission European Parliament (Brussels + Strasbourg)
European Council - EU Heads of State + EU President (Brussels)
? Council of Europe, Strasbourg
European Commission (EC - Brussels) – legislative and executive powers
a role in foreign policy, representing its members WTO, G8, UN
a mandate for vocational education – but supporting measures and policy development (Erasmus, European Qualification Framework etc.)
a mandate for research: FP7, European Institute of Technology
8. Learning outcome 2:
How to build a supranational Education Area
– no contracts, no central administration, no imposition of standards and no diminishing of cultural traditions
11. Bologna : a pan-European HE Reform Process Bologna – a voluntary process; 46 countries signed up
with no legal obligations
a tiny ‘Bologna’ Secretariat (2-4 people)
Website http://www.ond.vlaanderen.be/hogeronderwijs/bologna/
Joint Ministerial Meeting & Communiqué – every 2 years
A shared responsibility: governments, universities, staff & students = members of the Bologna Follow-Up Group
Increasingly stakeholder driven now that implementation is the priority
Agreement on 10 Bologna Action lines
12. 10 Bologna Actionlines Bologna Declaration of 1999:
1. Adoption of a system of easily readable and comparable degrees
2. Adoption of a system essentially based on two cycles
3. Establishment of a system of credits
4. Promotion of mobility
5. Promotion of European co-operation in quality assurance
6. Promotion of the European dimension in higher education
Prague Ministerial summit of 2001:
7. Focus on lifelong learning
8. Inclusion of higher education institutions and students
9. Promotion of the attractiveness of the European Higher Education Area
Berlin Ministerial summit of 2003:
10. Doctoral studies and the synergy between the European Higher Education Area and the European Research Area Now these are the 10 Bologna action lines – which have been agreed by Ministers of education since 1999 –
Post 2003, there have been further issues agree d – I get back to this.
If I look at them now the most important, central ones are probably
Life long learning
Qualiyt Assurance
Attractiveness
LLL comprises almost all
Bologna Declaration of 1999:
1. Adoption of a system of easily readable and comparable degrees
2. Adoption of a system essentially based on two cycles
3. Establishment of a system of credits
4. Promotion of mobility
5. Promotion of European co-operation in quality assurance
6. Promotion of the European dimension in higher education
Prague Ministerial summit of 2001:
7. Focus on lifelong learning
8. Inclusion of higher education institutions and students
9. Promotion of the attractiveness of the European Higher Education Area – international environment
Berlin Ministerial summit of 2003:
10. Doctoral studies and the synergy between the European Higher Education Area and the European Research AreaNow these are the 10 Bologna action lines – which have been agreed by Ministers of education since 1999 –
Post 2003, there have been further issues agree d – I get back to this.
If I look at them now the most important, central ones are probably
Life long learning
Qualiyt Assurance
Attractiveness
LLL comprises almost all
Bologna Declaration of 1999:
1. Adoption of a system of easily readable and comparable degrees
2. Adoption of a system essentially based on two cycles
3. Establishment of a system of credits
4. Promotion of mobility
5. Promotion of European co-operation in quality assurance
6. Promotion of the European dimension in higher education
Prague Ministerial summit of 2001:
7. Focus on lifelong learning
8. Inclusion of higher education institutions and students
9. Promotion of the attractiveness of the European Higher Education Area – international environment
Berlin Ministerial summit of 2003:
10. Doctoral studies and the synergy between the European Higher Education Area and the European Research Area
13. Clic pour faire afficher nicosie et continuerClic pour faire afficher nicosie et continuer
14. Bologna Achievement: Overall assessment Enormous progress since 1999:
83% of HEIs have the 3 cycle structure in place (Trends V, 2007) > 53% in 2003
ECTS for credit transfer + accummulation
Diploma supplement – in use in most countries
Joint diploma
European Dimension of QA
Global Dimension
Joint European discourse on higher education
17 new countries have joined since 1999
74% of institutions: « it is essential to make rapid progress towards the EHEA » (Trends V)
Employability of the Bachelor?
What is a European Master?
Joint diploma: sustainable? Socially exclusive? Feasible and useful?
50% of the institutions: Transfer credit recognition in some cases problematic
ECTS: workload or learning outcomes?
Diploma supplement: issued on demand
Mobility – obstacles in and beyond HE
Social dimension, LLL
Incentives for the Global Dimension
Countries at different pace
Europe or EU? Relation with the European Research Area
Beyond 2010?
15. Key challenges for the European Higher Education Area post 2010 2010 - less a deadline and more the start of a new phase?
some reforms are accomplished, others not yet
individual Bologna countries implement reform at a different pace
growing links between the EHEA, & the EU Lisbon Agenda goals/the European Research Area
Increasing awareness of the role of universities in building a knowledge society in Europe
The economic and social environment is changing e. g. demographic situation of Europe
Globalisation & the emergence of international education
16. Successful?
“So you have academic friends in Toulouse or Fribourg or Évora who think Bologna is a disaster; therefore, you think it’s a disaster?
For some real evidence, let’s look at the March 2007 Eurobarometer survey of 5,800 faculty and administrators in 31 European countries. Here’s what it found: Thirty-two percent said the old degree system was better, with considerable variation by country (53 percent of the German faculty versus 11 percent of the French, for example) and by field (42 percent of engineering faculty preferred the old system). So, disregarding the 9 percent who hadn’t made up their minds, roughly 35 percent of the European academic workforce preferred the pre-Bologna degree system—while 65 percent disagreed. In an election, we would call that a landslide”.
Chris Adelman, 2008, IHEP Policy Brief “Learning Accountability from Bologna: A Higher Education Policy Primer, A message to US academic policy makers who have friends in Europe who don’t like Bologna”
17. European Higher Education and Research Area- increasingly intertwined in a global setting European higher Education Area (EHEA) and European Research Area (ERA) cannot function in a vacuum
communicating and sharing the ‘processes’ is crucial
Different institutions and countries across the EHEA are at different phases of their ‘internationalisation’ process & have different priorities
Mobility is an international, & not simply an intra-European question
Attracting global talent: the changing role of the university as a service provider and an ‘exporter’
Demographic developments will play an increasingly important role
18. Learning outcome 3:
How to involve stakeholders into an intergovernmental reform process
– because top-down only would not work
20. Bologna Achievement – thanks to stakeholders Active contribution of stakeholder organisations:
European Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance http://www.eqar.eu/index.php?id=41
European Register for Quality Assurance Agencies EQAR www.eqar.eu
Inclusion of 3rd cycle (doctorates)
Strategy of Bologna Process in a Global Setting http://www.ond.vlaanderen.be/hogeronderwijs/bologna/documents/WGR2007/Strategy-for-EHEA-in-global-setting.pdf
European Lifelong Learning Charter http://www.eua.be/fileadmin/user_upload/files/Publications/European_Universities__Charter_on_Lifelong_learning.pdf
21. Learning outcome 4:
How to build a supra-national university association
22. Why Rectors/ University Associations? Change and change demands accelerated
Universities have to react – and to act
Autonomy: need buffer organisation between Gov. +university
Autonomy: building solidarity between universities
University associations:
indentify trends
Inform, mobilise universities (solidarity)
Facilitate discussions – with universities + stakeholders
Develop and disseminate best practices
Formulate universities’ position
Advocate and lobby (governments, media etc)
International “HE diplomacy”
23. EUA’s Mandate
Core task: Strengthen the European universities
Policy development at European Level
institutional development and dissemination of good practices
Informed dialogue – creation of knowledge and information on HE
European Mission: European Higher Education Area (Bologna/ Lisbon)
Internationalisation
Representation of European Universities
32 National Rector Conference
700 + universities
45 (very soon 46) European countries
Important to mention, as if I talk about international, not from the European Union perspective
Why does a European University Association require international contacts and collaborations?Representation of European Universities
32 National Rector Conference
700 + universities
45 (very soon 46) European countries
Important to mention, as if I talk about international, not from the European Union perspective
Why does a European University Association require international contacts and collaborations?
24. EUA Activities Thematic priorities – institutional perspective
Institutional development
Quality assurance
Research management and funding
Developing and disseminating good practices
International cooperation and exchange
Membership services
Surveys, projects – building knowledge -informed dialogue
Publications
Policy dialogue (universities, partners, governments);
25. EUA Flagships Trends Report – biannual report on the implementation of Bologna Reforms (800-900 Universities, 34 National Rectors Associations)
Joint Master programme Guidelines
Quality Culture + Creativity Project
Institutional Evaluation Programme
Recognised QA Agency
Voluntary evaluation
Fit for purpose: to strengthen university, support senior management
Pool of 80 rectors
More than 200 evaluations
Higher education systems report: Ireland, Portugal, Turkey, Slovakia
26. EUA + Autonomy Policy level: advocate Autonomy in Bologna Process
Key condition for institutional development
Responsiveness and responsiblity
Higher education as a public good
Diversity of institutional mission
Information: surveys on autonomy in Europe
Conferences, workshops, seminars, projects
Governance: sound governance and management
On QA – to ensure good accountability
Industry cooperation
Funding
institutions have to be sufficiently funded – full costing
diversity of funding sources
Tuition fees?
27. Good for Europe. What about the rest of the world? Learning outcome 5:
Higher education is international
28. EUA’s position: Internationalisation imperative Global challenges – global responses
Global problems: environment, energy, economy, demographics
Research is international
increased international mobility of people and programmes
Trends towards supranational coordination in HE-Regional integration?
Bologna Process
internationally recognised
Enhanced international cooperation
Autonomy – implications for international exchange and cooperation
Government to Government
University to University
University organisation to university organisation:
E.g: Joint statement of ACE, AUCC and EUA on GATS
Dialogue processes with partner organisations around the world
29. EUA’s International Goals dialogue, exchange and cooperation with partners based on the principle of equal partnership
Dialogue and solidarity with partner organisations
Internationalisation of « European » achievements
Promotion of European Higher Education Area, and the Bologna Process
Strenghten the European Universities
Complementary to activities of members
31. Conclusion/ Assumptions Autonomy, internationalisation and crossborder on the rise
Autonomy: diversity of missions
how to ensure self-reflection and advocacy of universities at national/regional level
how to ensure international representation and exchange at system level (previously role of gov.)
Internationalisation+crossborder:
Partnership and cooperation
Corporisation - Commercialisation
Situation of small(er) countries: Europe - larger entity
Competitiveness
Critical mass: Recognition / mobility