Title: Pr
1 FTA Seminar 2006 FUTURE OF THE EU
UNIVERSITYPreliminary design for a Foresight
ExerciseAntoine SCHOEN (JRC-IPTS)antoine.schoe
n_at_cec.eu.int
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
2Exogenous trends
- Some of the changes that have the mightiest
impacting on EU University system are largely
exogenous - Demographic changes university is no more a
growth industry. The need for adaptation should
be analysed in the context of a greying of
European societies, - A wide reform of the public sector universities,
like hospitals, need to cope with the rise of new
public management - Newly reformulated role of scientific and
technological research for helping shape a
knowledge society.
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
3Five thematic dimensions
- The analysis of the driving trends which are
shaping five complementary and partially
overlapping folds of the University fabric - Funding patterns and costing structures
- Human resources
- Academic outcome
- Third mission.
- Governance and strategy
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
4Funding Trends
- 90s seem to have been a rather favourable
period. Real increase in the total funds of all
between 1995 and 2002 and a real increase of
revenues per student. - Stabilisation of the number of students due to
demographics change and flattening of the
enrolment rate is a core factor in the long term
universities will lose a key mechanism for their
growth - Regarding the composition of funding, it can be
stated that funding structures are diverse
(national, regional budget subsidies EU,
national, regional grants, fees) both across
countries and inside countries (old and new
mechanisms co-exist). But the composition of
funds did not change dramatically either in the
last 10 years.
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
5Human Resources Trends
- marketisation the competitive to access to
scarce resources - researchers, funds and
students. - managerialisation - academic work organisation is
submitted to growing accountability requirements
concerning the control of Universitys main
resources academic work time. - flexibilisation career paths are getting more
diversified. Recruitment criteria is no more
exclusively limited to academic visibility.
Teaching excellence and knowledge transfer
experience are already explicitly proposed as
alternative criteria to fill position.
internationalisation of higher education makes
research more international as well. Attracting
foreign students is crucial in order to make
academic labour market international. Mobility is
therefore a very important issue.
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
6Academic Outcome Trends
- Differentiation is one strategic option for
European universities facing an increasingly
competitive environment an alternative option
would be to develop homogenous curriculum and
research portfolio all over European regions. - Differentiation may be horizontal, alongside the
vocational vs. academic dimension of
institutions main mission. - Differentiation may also be vertical, alongside a
disciplinary specialisation vs. generalist
orientation. - A lack of horizontal and vertical differentiation
prevails in the EU University.
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
7Third Mission Trends
- Universities have social and economic roles they
are economic and political forces. - They are usually important employers in their
region and are stakeholders for urban planning,
collective transport. - Transfer of knowledge has gained a stronger
exposure among the Universities missions, adding
without substitution a new techno-economical
dimension in the set of requests for performance.
Universities are also providers of services. - Teaching outcome qualified brain workers is
the bulk of Universitys third mission.
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
8Governance Trends
- There is more monitoring of output and fulfilment
of duties of academic staff. - It is still regarded as difficult into intervene
into the core of academic affairs and make them
an object of management. - Competition within universities, in particular
among departments, has increased. - Traditional collegial governance is reduced in
favour of managerial and thus more hierarchical
decision-making also including an increasing
number of external stakeholders (through boards).
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
9EU University a system of systems
- Two traits of the EU University raise specific
difficulties for shaping a Foresight exercise. - The EU University is a system of systems Each
university should be analysed in the relevant
national innovation system (NIS), which should be
analysed as a systemic component of the European
Research Area. University are therefore bound to
evolve in a multiple layer system of governance. - European universities face a double layer of
public policies at the Member States and at the
EU levels
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006
10Reducing the complexity
- Focus on institutions. The Foresight exercise
will focus analytically on the intra
institutional complexity of universities, and
simplify the policy makers and stake holders
scene, relying on experts to deal with multi
level embeddedness of universities in NIS and
in ERA. - Start working on a set of ideal types of
universities. In order to reflect the diversity
of European universities, the Foresight exercise
will use a virtual sample of stylised
universities, with well specified
characteristics, to develop scenarios according
to the identified key trends which are shaping
the EU University.
FTA Seminar Seville 28-29 September 2006