Title: NUFU Conference' HE Impact
1A European Perspective on International Trends in
Higher Education
NUFU Conference. HE Impact 11-13 February
2009 Lilongwe - Malawi
Prof. Pierre de Maret Board Member EUA Former
Rector Brussels University (ULB)
2University in the world
3- Internationalisation is changing the world of
higher education, and globalisation is changing
the world of internationalisation. - -Jane Knight-
4A borderless, interconnected, interdependent
world. We can now jump daily from the local to
the global.
It is for this type of world that we should be
educating our students
5Force for Changes in HE
Globalization
- a borderless world of opportunities or the
triumph of deregulation ? - cross-border education / McDonaldization of HE,
- increasing prevalence of English,
- Anglo-saxon countries having a head start in the
international market, - imperative for institutions to internationalize.
A Flat New World.
6Local and/or global university
- Local universities seek excellence by serving
their local environments. - Global universities seek excellence by drawing
resources (students, staff, income,..) from all
over the world. - World Class Universities succeed in being both
excellent by international standards and deeply
committed to the development of their local
environments. They are glocal.
7Mobility
- Migratory flows
- Controversial research is geographically
constrained - Teachers / researchers are becoming nomads in
search of hotspots - University is less a stable and well defined
community and becomes more an ad hoc, ever
changing community of communicators and
researchers.
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9- Would national governments lose their influence
on HE ? - Would borderless education undermine HEs
capacity to contribute to social development and
cultural identity ? - What about the Brain Drain ?
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11UNIVERSITY THE PALACE OF PARADOXES
- Accessible and elitist?
- Challenging and fair?
- Autonomous and accountable?
- Public and private?
- Innovative and conservative?
- Engaged and secluded?
- Critical and respectful?
- Demanding and supportive?
12UNIVERSITY THE PALACE OF PARADOXES
- Creative and precise?
- Local and international?
- Specialised and interdisciplinary?
- Rational in the face of irrationality?
- Attract funds without losing credibility?
- Do more with less?
A difficult balancing act !
- The contradictions of todays world echo in the
University
13Excellence
- The range of expectations is ever increasing
- Multiple missions (teaching and education,
research and innovation, service to the society). - Flexibility in teaching (more students of
different types enlisted in different and
specialized training tracks). - Knowledge is exploding
- New services (health care, sport, culture,
elderly people). - At the same time, costs are rising and state
investment in education is decreasing. - Excellence implies strategic choices. It also
requires leadership, commitment, outstanding
people, organisational fit and adequate resources.
14Solidarity
- Excellence is not enough.
- The competition paradigm (survival of the
fittest) alone leads to unbearable disequilibria,
both at the individual level and at the
collective level. - It has to be complemented by the principle of
cooperation and solidarity (reliance). - Universities should contribute to a fairer and
more sustainable society - Social mobility, democracy
- Economic and social development ( North-South
dimension) - Mutual understanding between communities and
cultures -
15Emerging issues
16- Globalisation creates new issues for universities
- Issues are more systematically complex, such as
- Migration
- Global warming
- GMO
- Terrorism Tourism
- Epidemic
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18AGEQUAKE
- Changing demographics
- Unprecedented growth of students
- Replacement of retiring teachers ?
- How will different regions differentiate in a
global economy? - Increasing specialisation and delocalisation
19Attitude to internationalisation
Asia experiencing Americanisation Europe moving
away from isolationism Africa starting to
integrate regionally America becoming more
entrenched
20THE AMERICAN PARADOX Universities are highly
international in some ways and highly insular in
others
How much will they become involved in genuine
collaboration with the institutions in the rest
of the world?
21LOOKING AHEAD THE BIG PICTURE
A more interdependent and instable world
- Migration
- Energy crisis
- Depletion of natural resources
- Highly turbulent world economy
- Financial instability
- Global epidemics
- Increased inequality
- Exacerbated identities
- Renewed religious and spiritual quests
- Global trafficking
- Terrorism
? A more and more unpredictable and competitive
world.
22None of us can relax in this dog-eat-prof-world
23CONSEQUENCES AT THE UNIVERSITY LEVEL
MORE COMPETITIVE
- Competition on the rise - ranking
- - alternative provider
- The brains business
- Marketing
MORE INVOLVED
- Growing expectations
- Explosion of knowledge
- Lifelong Learning
- Stakeholders
- Shift in the town and gown relationship
- Internationalization
24CONSEQUENCES AT THE UNIVERSITY LEVEL
MORE DEPENDENT
- The State less investment, more interference
- Need to generate new revenue - student fees
- - entrepreneurship
- - fundraising
- - partnership
- Demand overload at every level.
- Increased fragmentation of institution at the
expense of its identity - Management tries to adjust
- Our public image is changing (Sacred place ?
Market place)
25In Europe and in the world, the responses to
those challenges have been
- research partnerships
- educational alliances and cooperation
- internationalization of teaching and learning
(studying abroad, languages skills)
26From nations to regions, the construction of
Europe A test case in internationalisation
27In the European context, the Bologna process and
the Lisbon strategy have been key engines of
change
28The Bologna Process
The Lisbon Strategy
2000 European Union currently 27
countries to make Europe the most competitive
knowledge based society. But also capable of
sustainable economic growth, with more and better
jobs and greater social cohesion also by 2010
1998/99 Currently joined by 46 European
countries Governmental push for system
convergence implementation in Universities across
Europe EHEA by 2010
46 Bologna Countries
27 Member States of EU
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30Higher education in Europe Shifting
responsibilities and contexts
- Higher Education remains predominantly a national
responsibility - Bologna process A large Europe (46 countries)
looking for convergence through common structures
and tools
- 3 years Bachelor 2 years Master
- European Credit Transfer System (ECTS)
- Diploma Supplement
- Quality assurance
Our common model with Bologna is a model of
cooperation and solidarity
31A UNIQUE CULTURE OF COLLABORATION
- The ongoing changes in Europe are based on over a
30 years old practice of partnership and
networking - In teaching J.S.P., ERASMUS, TEMPUS, ALFA,
ERASMUS MUNDUS, - In research PCRD, and now ERC, EIT, etc.
- And at every level
- Minister Biannual conferences
- Institution CRE, EUA, EURASHE, Coimbra, UNICA,
LERU, etc. - Student ESU
32PARTNERSHIP AND ALLIANCE ARE BECOMING KEY NOTIONS
- Universities can complement one another
- Universities can learn from one another
- Firms are increasingly dependent on external
source of knowledge - Increasing role of university networks in Europe.
FROM COMPETITION TO COOPETITION
33INTERNATIONAL INTEREST IN BOLOGNA
- Growing interest in the Bologna process across
the globe. - Demand for policy dialogue
- 3 cycle degree structure, how it articulates with
other regions - QA the interest already from non European
accreditors in the Register - Interest to link national/ regional HE systems to
Bologna. - Specific examples
- change in the attitude of US Graduate schools
towards Bologna graduates - Australia has launched a consultation process on
the impact of Bologna on Australian HEIs - Francophone Africa and the MEDA countries of the
southern Mediterranean adopt Bologna Reforms etc.
34Europes Universities Commitment towards
higher education dialogue and cooperation
with Europe partners
35- 34 national Rectors Conferences
- 770 individual universities
- Affiliated university networks organisations
- in 46 European countries
EUA the Voice of European Universities
EUA Membership - 2007
36- EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATION (EUA)
- Independent membership organization
- Secretariat in Brussels
- Goals Strengthen the European universities
- Representing the European university sector
- Shaping HE and Research policy at European
level - Institutional development (seminars, workshops,
publications on policy development
institutional good practices) - Supporting internationalization of European
higher education
37A Multi-layered approach
38A Multi-level approach
39International cooperation Multi-level approach
40EUA International Agenda
- Promote mutual understanding and transparency
- Solidarity advocating institutional autonomy and
higher education as a public good - Globalisation joint issues
- Quality culture and institutional development
EUAs experience in a diverse Europe - The European Higher Education Area in a Global
Setting strategy for more/better cooperation
41Institutional Evaluation Programme (IEP)
- Voluntary audit - based on self-evaluation and
peer review - Supporting individual institutional mission,
- Strengthening governance and managment
- Tailor-made response to institutional development
needs - Individual universities national higher
education systems - Over 250 evaluations conducted in 39 countries
- European programme, with international outreach
(Latin America, South Africa)
42EUA Council for Doctoral Education
- A recent membership service of EUA.
- Forum for cooperation and exchange of good
practices among doctoral programmes and schools
across universities in Europe. - Advancement and improvement of doctoral education
in all disciplines. - Doctoral education quality becoming an
international issue - Multilateral forum Banff principles
involving organisations from many parts of the
world (Australia, Canada, China, Europe, Latin
America, US) - Bi-regional initiative Europe-Asia Workshop on
Doctoral education, Beijing China Dec. 2008
43EU-Asia Higher Education Platform (EAHEP)
- European Commission funded under the Asia-Link
- Enhancement of mutual understanding and
inter-institutional cooperation - Capacity building for HEI in emerging countries
- Promotion of European Higher Education Area
- HE policy dialogue and exchange of good practice
via workshops, roundtables, symposia on doctoral
education, mobility programmes, governance and
management, regional QA approaches etc. - Impacting the governmental agendas (ASEM Rectors
submit recommendation to ASEM Education
Ministers participation of EUA in ministerial
and senior officials meetings) - Information portal and online discussion forum
for stakeholders www.eahep.org
44Access to Success Fostering trust and exchange
between Europe and Africa
- Funded under European Commissions Erasmus
Mundus - Examining widening access and equity as critical
issues of both continents - Institution-centred approach Questionnaires,
student focus groups and seminars - Inter-institutional and interorganisational
cooperation EUA meets Association of African
Universities - Building block for better mobility, cooperation
- How to impact governments and donors.
45Conclusions
46 The role of universities in a globalised
context is complex. The competitive forces
driving change in higher education are creating a
global marketplace. The risk is that our
institutions will be driven by the market rather
than by their own sense of higher purpose.
47The challenge we now face is for the different
nations and peoples of the world to agree on a
basic set of human values, which will serve as a
unifying force in the development of a genuine
global community -Aung San Suu Kyi- Nobel
Peace Price Laureate
48 How could the worldwide university community
contribute to this goal? What could be the
place of the university in the new global village?
49- The internationalisation of higher education
provides a unique opportunity for Universities
around the world - To contribute to the diversity and the dialogue
of civilisations - To engage in socially useful learning and
knowledge creation - To preserve a space where one is allowed to
debate and dissent - To promote development
50Universities around the world could use their
core values to contribute to a more democratic
and fairer globalisation based on their
cooperation and solidarity.