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Title: OECD Thematic Review of Tertiary Education


1
  • OECD Thematic Review of Tertiary Education
  • www.oecd.org/edu/tertiary/review

Education and Training Policy Division Directorate
for Education
Korkeakoulujen rakenteellisen kehittämisen
yhteistyöseminaari Lappeenranta,
Suuomi 21-22.8.2006
2
Tertiary Review Country Participation
  • Country Visit (13 countries)
  • China Croatia Czech Republic Estonia
    Finland Iceland Japan Korea Mexico the
    Netherlands New Zealand Norway Poland
  • Analytical Review (11 countries)
  • Australia Belgium (Flemish Com.) Chile
    France Greece Portugal Russian Federation
    Spain Sweden Switzerland United Kingdom
  • Some key issues examined include
  • Financing--Sustainability, adequacy, and equity
  • Steeringhow countries ensure wider public
    objectives are met while providing institutions
    with the autonomy needed to perform effectively
  • System structure--How much diversification, of
    what sort, do countries use to accomplish
    national policy goals?

3
Why create diversified tertiary education systems?
  • Effectiveness
  • Can one institution (or type) perform at a high
    standard in meeting social obligations of
    tertiary educationpromoting social inclusion,
    producing world-class frontier research,
    providing high-quality professional education,
    and working closely with small and medium
    enterprises, among others?
  • Efficiency
  • A traditional Humboltian university with
    strenuous career requirements and long courses of
    study may be too expensive for one-half of an age
    cohort.

4
Countries vary in how much and what kinds of
diversification they view as suitable to their
national circumstances. 
  • Low diversification
  • Czech Republic
  • Limited and fixed diversification
  • Netherlands (limitedtwo types of institutions
    fixedinstitutions are not permitted to change
    mission/profile)
  • Extensive and fixed diversification
  • Japan
  • Extensive and flexible diversification
  • UK ended binary system in 90s. The result not
    a unitary system rather, marked by extensive and
    flexible diversification.
  • Extensive -- 4 or 5 kinds of higher education
    institutions that differ across a number of key
    dimensions, and institutional groupings formed
    around these
  • FlexibleInstitutions make strategic choices to
    manage/change mission/profile

5
How do governments create and manage diversity
that is both extensive and flexible?
  • The tools available include
  • a. Price
  • b. Student Selection
  • c. Degrees awarded
  • d. Programmes Offered (Programme Approval)
  • e. Research Funding
  • f. Funding Methodologies for Operating Budgets
  • Capital Funding
  • Performance contracts
  • UK price differentiation is just authorised, and
    resident tuition fees have a low cap, so almost
    no variation now exists. Differentiation chiefly
    the result of other factorsB. and E.

6
Preliminary observations
  • Institutional drift doesnt exist. Rational
    institutions act within policy frameworks set out
    by government. Wrong actions? Govt. hasnt
    created right mix of incentives.
  • Extensive and flexible diversification may
    provide countries with a wider capacity to
    address varied national needs than a system of
    limited and fixed diversification. 
  • Applied research relevant to regional economies
    undersupplied in a binary system in which some
    institutions have strong incentives to engage in
    frontier research and the others have little or
    no research capacities/resources?
  • Extensive and flexible diversification permits
    (requires?) a sort of resourcefulness and
    strategic approach to leadership that is less
    frequently found in systems with fixed and
    limited diversification.

7
Seen in this light, might the appropriate
question may be
  • How much diversification, of what sort, in which
    regions of the country, is best-suited to meeting
    the needs of students and the wider society?
  • John Davies, who served as rapporteur of our
    review team, will share some thoughts about this,
    based upon his wide international experience.

8
General Context of a Finnish H.E. System of
Evolving Maturity
  • Shift away from Humboldtian model of a
    university growing confidence of polytechnic
    sector
  • diversification of funding
  • a system of accountability/autonomy based on
    trust and mutual respect
  • recognition that a more entrepreneurial model of
    institutions may become increasingly appropriate
    for Finland within a transparent framework
  • some evolution in the conceptualisation of the
    relationship between a planned and market system
  • evolution from international benchmarking to HEI
    becoming serious international players in
    education and RD
  • willingness to experiment and encourage devolved/
    decentralised/differentiated solutions at
    institutional and regional levels

9
The Shape And Configuration Of The Tertiary System
  • there remains the general commitment by most
    parties to the HE system that duality should be
    preserved
  • But, the Ministry is clearly intent on some
    institutional concentration and rationalisation
  • There is some ambivalence and ambiguity about
  • the degree of connectedness of effort across HEI
    student mobility between sectors human
    resource utilisation cooperative RD
    multi-disciplinarity
  • the ability of Bachelors and Masters students
    in polytechnics to move to Masters and doctoral
    programmes in universities
  • the role of polytechnics in respects of Masters
    degrees and research
  • the nature of competition as an instrument for
    increasing quality within a system which is
    essentially differentiated and collaborative.

10
The review team nonetheless detected some
convergence between the two sectors along two
dimensions
  • In terms of respective profiles
  • the professional academic differentiation is
    conceptually blurred
  • Mode 2 knowledge production and utilisation
    increasingly transcends both sectors
  • polytechnics are accredited for Masters degrees,
    and may wish to be for professional doctorates
    also
  • the Bologna academic architecture could well,
    over time, even out the different credit
    structures
  • each sector is clearly well into Third mission
    (community oriented) activity and regional
    engagement
  • employment destinations of students from the two
    sectors were by no means as differentiated as the
    rhetoric would suggest

11
In terms of institutional self interest,
particularly on a regional level/or city level
  • the sustainability of units in the wake of shaky
    enrolments and demographics
  • the desirability of achieving critical mass in
    key areas
  • ensuring good comprehensive geographical
    provision of subjects and locations
  • student marketing especially internationally
  • effective resource utilisation.

12
We suggest models of engagement which are not
simply university to university, or polytechnic
to polytechnic.
  • Dimensions of Cooperation between Universities
    and Polytechnics (Examples)
  • ACADEMIC e.g.
  • Joint Courses Normal Adult Edn.
  • Credit Transfer/Recognition
  • Student Mobility
  • IT Based Joint Delivery
  • Joint International Recruitment
  • RESEARCH/RD e.g.
  • Joint Projects
  • Joint (Spin-Off) Companies
  • Joint Science/Business Parks
  • Cooperative Consultancy Services
  • Cooperative Inward Investment

13
Dimension of cooperation, continued
  • SUPPORT SERVICES e.g.
  • Cooperative Housing
  • Linked Student Support
  • Library Provision
  • ADMINISTRATIVE e.g.
  • Joint Office for QA
  • Joint International Office
  • Joint Continuing Education Office

14
Paradigms of Institutional Relationships within a
Regional Setting
  • A variety of different arrangements/paradigms are
    possible to govern relationships
  • Loose
  • Competition
  • Regulation
  • Voluntary Cooperation Arrangements
  • Consortium
  • Federation
  • Full Merger
  • Tight
  • Critical Factors in determining positions
  • Scale
  • Breadth and Diversity
  • Quality
  • Distribution
  • Economic Efficiency
  • and Political forces/preferences/authority of
    actors at various levels

15
Paradigm 1 Competition Model
  • Limited amount of business and money
  • Students Research Continuing Education etc.
  • Competition for Market Share
  • Quality and Quantity
  • Price
  • Niches
  • Delivery
  • Customer Care
  • Marketing
  • Self-Interested Strategic Alliances Cartels
  • Inside Region
  • Outside Region (e.g. Distance Learning)
  • To give market advantage

16
Paradigm 2 Regulation
  • Typical of Mature State Systems
  • Precise definition of Institute Role and
    Positioning
  • Functions HEI Licensed to deliver
  • Conditions under which HEI operate
  • Mechanisms for Quality/Accreditation
  • Hierarchy of Institutions
  • Resource allocation mechanisms
  • Related to HEI profile
  • Definition of areas not covered by regulation
  • Regional machinery may be surrogate for market
    forces in terms of
  • Estimating demand and supply
  • Interpreting trends
  • Buying services

17
Paradigm 3 Voluntary Co-Operation
  • Arrangements freely made by one or more HEI to
    satisfy mutual interests in a variety of fields,
    e.g.
  • Joint Research
  • Joint Teaching Programme
  • Joint Marketing
  • Joint Use of Others Resources/Expertise
  • Arising from
  • Govt. Encouragement
  • Basic Unit Initiatives
  • Belief in Synergy
  • Better Resource Utilisation
  • Self Interest
  • No fundamental surrender of autonomy, no
    specific organisational structure, lateral cash
    flows
  • May involve management by contract
  • Franchises
  • Buying into Higher Status HEI
  • Institutional Development

18
Paradigm 4 Consortia
  • Formal Organisations which exist apart from, but
    because of HEI which constitute their membership,
    tend to be
  • Separately Incorporated
  • Have Identify
  • Have Assets/Budget
  • Management Structure Participatory
  • Usually Limited in Scope and Functions
  • Provide Integrated Services
  • Likely services
  • Programme
  • Library
  • Credit Transfer
  • RD Company
  • Membership voluntary exit possible
  • Consortium relies heavily on members

19
Paradigm 5 Federation
  • A formal organisation of HEI where jurisdiction
    is distributed between two levels federal and
    institutional
  • Each participating institution is relatively
    autonomous
  • Own Assets
  • Admissions
  • Appointments/Employment
  • Resource Management
  • Marketing
  • Support Services (Academic/Non Academic)
  • Membership provides
  • Institution-wide Degree
  • Expansion of Academic Diversity at Low Cost
  • Student/Staff Mobility
  • Access to HEI Resources (Library)
  • Status

20
Federation, continued
  • Membership involves some surrender of authority
  • Degree Awarding Rights
  • Consistency in Scholarly Credentials
  • Academic Accountability
  • Financial Flows from Govt.
  • Some Federal Regulation
  • Tensions
  • Role of Principal Members
  • Academic Freedom
  • Supporting Minimum Standards (Finance)
  • Redistribution
  • Fee Harmonisation
  • Federation Unlikely to Offer Cost Reductions
  • Size of Central Organs Decision Culture

21
Federation, continued
  • May generate wholly owned subsidiary ancillary
    operations e.g.
  • Commercial Units (presses, residences, RD)
  • Museums, Art Galleries
  • Conservatories
  • Issues of
  • Institutional Expertise of Specialist Units
  • Debt and Subsidy
  • Joint Sponsors/Guarantors
  • Privatisation/Outsourcing
  • May generate closures of Units, Programmes in
    former HEI absorbed, or outsourcing of services
  • Which Paradigms may best suit different Finnish
    regional settings?

22
Paradigm 6 Full Merger
  • An Organisation with one legal identify
  • Unitary Management/Govt. structure
  • Unitary Budget
  • Common Academic Mission and Policy and
    Procedures
  • Common Personnel Arrangements
  • Control of All Assets
  • Justifications/Genesis
  • Economies of Scale
  • Academic Synergy Critical Mass
  • Increased Diversity
  • Asset Stripping
  • Increased Number of Delivery Points
  • Enhanced Status, Positioning and Influence
  • Involves loss of autonomy for 1 members but
    depending on size, subsequent decentralisation
    possible, to confer authority on former
    autonomous parts or newly configured second tier
    units A merger which behaves like a federation

23
Full Merger, continued
  • Characterised by
  • De Factor Semi Autonomy, especially in
    Geographically Dispersed HEI
  • Responsibility Centre Budgeting
  • Full Allocation of Costs/Revenues
  • Incentives
  • Abandonment of Line-Item Budget
  • Freedom to Spend within Limits
  • Central/Overhead/Tax
  • Link of Unit Plan and Budget

24
Ministry facilitation of the process
  • The Ministry has provided basis for creative
    dialogue at institutional and regional levels,
    but still wider scope for incentives, such as
  • adjusting mechanisms for bids to TEKES and the
    Academy, and for other Ministry initiatives in
    order to encourage and reward joint submissions
    from HEI, especially across the binary line.
  • stimulating inter-disciplinary degrees,
    consistent with Mode 2.
  • encouraging multi-institutional Graduate Schools
    (not necessarily regional, of course).
  • devising new mechanisms for quota allocations,
    funding formulae, cost sharing,
    interdisciplinarity, related to performance
    agreements for entities rather than single HEI.
  • incorporating in the next appropriate round of
    performance agreements, the obligation for HEI to
    produce concrete proposals.

25
Ministry facilitation
  • encouraging HEI to intensify cooperation at
    regional level, in parallel with the
    re-configuration process, in terms of e.g.
  • cooperative strategic planning and performance
    agreements
  • resource utilisation
  • student mobility and credit recognition,
    especially on a trans-binary basis
  • joint marketing.

26
Planning, Governance, and Institutional Management
  • Both sectors in the dual system seem to have
    reasonable degrees of autonomy at present, but
    opportunities for wider autonomy to encourage
    entrepreneurialism exist, including
  • diversify the economic base of the university
  • university share buying
  • vary overheads
  • spend surpluses in strategic areas
  • own property
  • increase productivity creatively at a devolved
    level, especially in terms of staff utilisation
  • use new salary structures flexibly
  • have greater scope for personnel (re)deployment
  • direct investments in areas of strategic
    significance to the

27
Opportunities for wider autonomy, continued
  • switch resources across academic areas in
    relation to patterns of varying demand, decline
    and growth
  • charge fees and full-cost pricing at appropriate
    levels for commercial and other services.
  • Some of the above call for changes in procedure
    and regulations others for change in legal
    status

28
Polytechnics and accountability
  • Accountability is split between the Ministry and
    the municipality, and, in some cases, more than
    one municipality, which does complicate the
    autonomy accountability balance.
  • The motivation for more autonomy in the
    polytechnic sector springs from the need to
    become entrepreneurial
  • the possibilities of creating quite distinctive
    institutional profiles
  • the desire for the greater and discretion
    efficiency which should follow from devolution,
    especially speed of decision-making
  • the desire to manage property assets properly
  • the desire to use surpluses for strategic
    investment.

29
Governance and Institutional Status
  • Closely related to the above is the question of
    institutional status, which at present is very
    much that of a unit of the Civil Service, with
    all this means in terms of adherence to budget
    legislation, operating freedoms etc.
  • Whilst there is emerging consensus that more
    autonomy is desirable, there is concern as to
    whether HEI will be able to manage it
    effectively, and this raises issues
  • It seems very appropriate to redefine the HEI
    (both polytechnics and universities) as so-called
    Legal persons, rather than as civil servant
    units. Within this approach, there are
    alternatives for institutions
  • As corporations
  • As foundations

30
Governance and Institutional Status
  • However, whichever avenue was followed, the
    assumptions would be that
  • ownership of all assets would revert to the
    legal person
  • the local authorities would cease to be the
    controlling agency in respect of polytechnics,
    but would need to be intimately involved in any
    governance arrangements. This would apply to
    multiple municipal control and potentially ease a
    currently complex situation
  • polytechnics and universities are an important
    tool in regional development hence the
    importance of the involvement of municipalities
    in governance (certainly of polytechnics, but of
    universities too) and their continuing financial
    support of polytechnics.
  • By definition, the legal person would assume
    significant devolved responsibility from
    government over a range of domains e.g.
    investment, property, share-buying etc

31
Governance and Institutional Status
  • In the event of the adoption of the legal
    person principle, it would be necessary to
    establish a governing body or board of trustees
    for each type of HEI accountable to government
  • The purpose of such a body would be to operate at
    a strategic level, interacting with stakeholders,
    improving the institutional infrastructure, but
    not interfering in institutional management or
    the academic domain
  • To allay concerns regarding the capability of the
    institution to manage autonomy and to realise its
    entrepreneurial/societal potential, it would
    probably be necessary to
  • conceptualise the rectorate as a senior
    management group with defined portfolios,
    executive authority

32
Governance and Institutional Status
  • ensure that Senate and its committees exercise a
    strong strategic and quality assurance role.
  • recast deans as executive deans rather than
    collegial deans with minimal authority.
  • evolve the institutional culture to one which was
    reasonably entrepreneurial.
  • revisit personnel policy in the light of the
    above.
  • determine how the institution level strategic
    planning processes should be evolved.
  • conceptualise the nature of internal devolution
    to larger basic units and faculties, consistent
    with a more entrepreneurial and creative need.
  • The autonomy accountability relationship will
    have shifted somewhat in the light of the above

33
Governance and Institutional Status
  • Adjustments to performance agreements necessary.
    This, in principle, seems admirably suited to the
    proposed new scenarios and proposed legal
    person status and, moreover functions across
    both sectors, to general satisfaction.
  • Monitoring processes and data (KOTA/AMKOTA) are
    the principal means of monitoring system
    effectiveness and efficiency (in addition to the
    data delivered by Statistics Finland), though
    various aspects might be improved.
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