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Title: The OECD Thematic Review of Tertiary Education


1
The OECD Thematic Review of Tertiary Education
Synthesis Report
What have we learned?
  • Presentation by Paulo Santiago, Karine Tremblay
    and Ester Basri, OECD

Tertiary Education for the Knowledge
SocietyInternational Conference, Lisbon, 3-4
April 2008
2
Outline of Presentation
Part 1 Key features of the OECD Thematic Review
of Tertiary Education
  • Part 2 Focus on policy recommendations across a
    range of areas with some description of the
    analysis undertaken in the report
  • Governance
  • Funding
  • Equity
  • Links to the labour market
  • Academic career
  • Role in research and innovation
  • Quality assurance
  • Internationalisation
  • Policy development and implementation

3
Part 1 Key features of the OECD Thematic Review
of Tertiary Education
4
The OECD projects contribution
  • Objective
  • Recommend policies that ensure that capabilities
    of tertiary education contribute to countries
    economic and social goals
  • A collaborative, cross-national process to
  • Synthesise research-based evidence on the impact
    of tertiary education policies and disseminate
    this knowledge among participating countries
  • Identify innovative and successful policy
    initiatives and practices
  • Facilitate exchanges of lessons and experiences
    among countries
  • Identify policy options and the conditions under
    which they are successfully implemented

5
Key features of Review
  • A broad range of areas covered
  • Governance
  • Funding
  • Quality assurance
  • Equity
  • Role in research and innovation
  • Academic career
  • Links with the labour market
  • Internationalisation
  • Policy development and implementation
  • 24 participating countries
  • 14 of which hosted a country review visit

6
Key features of Review
  • A wide range of stakeholders involved
  • National Co-ordinators and Steering Committees
    in participating countries
  • 52 external reviewers from 22 countries involved
    in visits
  • About 140 institutions visited and about 4000
    persons interviewed
  • Other OECD units (STI, ECO, EDU - IMHE, CERI,
    IAD)
  • Links established with other international
    organisations and key stakeholder groups
    (business community, unions, students)
  • And a range of outputs
  • 24 Country Background Reports (CBRs)
  • 14 Country Notes (Publication series)
  • Expert/Background papers commissioned
  • Qualitative data collected
  • Final Synthesis Report
  • 4 Workshops of participating countries
  • 4 Visits to analytical review countries to
    discuss CBRs
  • Dissemination Conferences in countries (6
    already organised, a number planned)
  • International Conference in Lisbon on 3-4 April
    2008

7
Steering tertiary education setting the right
course
8
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 1 Governance of tertiary education
    concepts and dimensions
  • Nature of governance systems
  • Regulation
  • Dimensions of institutional autonomy
  • Market-type mechanisms in tertiary education

Section 2 Steering tertiary education
institutions patterns, trends and drivers of
change
Section 3 Structuring the tertiary education
system
  • Section 4 System Linkages
  • Linking secondary to tertiary education
  • Linking tertiary education to working life
  • Linkages within tertiary education system
  • Linkages with surrounding regions and
    communities.
  • Section 5 Institutional governance

9
Policy priorities
  • Strategy
  • Develop a coherent strategic vision for tertiary
    education
  • Devise a statement of strategic aims for tertiary
    education
  • Coherent vision in harmony with national social
    and economic objectives
  • Draw on a comprehensive advisory body to
    establish strategic aims for tertiary education
  • National Council or Forum of Tertiary Education
    to assist with the integration of strategic
    leadership, policy planning and co-ordination
    among the main actors

10
Policy priorities
  • Steering
  • Establish sound instruments for steering tertiary
    education
  • Ensure that the capabilities of Ministries keep
    pace with changing responsibilities
  • From administration to policy steering and
    performance evaluation
  • Develop steering instruments to establish a
    balance between institutional autonomy and public
    accountability
  • Instruments for steering that achieve
    accountability and link institutional performance
    to national purposes while also permitting a wide
    scope for institutional autonomy
  • Use student choice as a means by which to improve
    quality and efficiency

11
Policy priorities
  • Structure, diversification and coherence
  • Ensure the coherence of the tertiary education
    system within extensive diversification
  • Grasp the benefits of wider and more flexible
    diversification among tertiary institutions
  • In systems with vocationally-oriented sectors,
    ensure that mechanisms exist to discourage
    academic drift
  • Avoid the fragmentation of the tertiary education
    system

12
Policy priorities
  • System linkages
  • Build system linkages
  • Ensure appropriate co-ordination between
    secondary and tertiary education systems
  • Review whether the tertiary education system is
    contributing effectively lifelong learning
  • Build linkages between different types of
    tertiary education institutions
  • Flexible learning paths and validation of
    previous learning experiences
  • Foster the engagement of institutions with
    surrounding regions and communities
  • Part of mission statement engagement of
    regional stakeholders

13
Policy priorities
  • Alignment of institutions to national strategy
  • Strengthen the ability of institutions to align
    with the national tertiary education strategy
  • Ensure the outward focus of institutions
  • Require institutions to establish strategic plans
  • Basis for general accountability to be
    published intrinsic value
  • Examine how best to widen the scope of
    institutional autonomy
  • Create a national policy framework that gives
    institutions the means to effectively manage
    their wider responsibilities
  • External representation in institutions
    governing bodies

14
Matching funding strategies with national
priorities
15
Aspects under analysis
Section 1 Trends in funding tertiary education
  • Section 2 Why do governments intervene in and
    subsidise tertiary education?
  • Efficiency concerns (externalities, imperfection
    of human capital markets, incomplete information)
  • Equity concerns
  • Section 3 Why should students (or graduates)
    contribute to the costs of tertiary education?
  • Forms of and trends in cost-sharing in countries
  • The case for cost-sharing
  • There is a need for other-than-governmental
    revenue
  • Those who benefit should contribute to the costs
  • Public savings from ind. contributions can be
    channelled to improve equity
  • Tuition fees might improve efficiency
  • Practical issues with and arguments against
    cost-sharing
  • Impact of cost-sharing

16
Aspects under analysis
Section 4 Overall country approaches to funding
tertiary education
Section 5 Tuition fees
Section 6 Allocation of public subsidies to
institutions
Section 7 External sources of institutional
funding
Section 8 Funding institutional infrastructure
Section 9 Impact of funding approaches on the
supply of tertiary education
Section 10 Funding for students
Section 11 Efficiency of funds use by
institutions
17
Policy priorities
  • Strategic Approach
  • Develop a funding strategy that facilitates the
    contribution of the tertiary education system to
    society and the economy
  • Making funding approach consistent with the goals
    of the tertiary education system
  • Goals might include expansion, excellence,
    relevance, equity, social mobility,
    institutional capacity.
  • Ensure that the funding approach embraces a
    number of desirable features
  • Transparent, flexible, predictable, fair
  • Ensures public accountability
  • Permits freedom to innovate
  • Sensitive to institutional autonomy
    demand-driven
  • Recognises the missions and profiles of
    individual institutions
  • In some circumstances, is open to private
    institutions.
  • Articulate a long-term strategy

18
Policy priorities
  • The principle of cost-sharing
  • Use cost-sharing between the State and students
    as the principle to shape the funding of tertiary
    education
  • Provide public subsidies for tertiary education
    subsidies, regardless of sector of provision
  • Charge tuition fees to students, especially if
    limited public funding either
  • rations the number of students
  • jeopardizes levels of spending per student or
  • restricts financial support for disadvantaged
    groups.
  • Countries with little tradition of fees should
    launch a public debate on the consequences of an
    heavy reliance on public money for funding
    tertiary education
  • Consider tuition fee stabilisation policies to
    ensure cost containment and moderation
  • Allow institutions to differentiate tuition fees
    across courses

19
Policy priorities
  • Basis to allocate public subsidies
  • Publicly subsidise tertiary programmes in
    relation to the benefits they bring to society
  • Implications
  • the public funding of educational activities
    which generate educational externalities
    (benefits to others not appropriated by the
    individual receiving the education) to the
    benefit of society as a whole, irrespective of
    the nature of the provider
  • levels of public funding which reflect the
    magnitude of educational externalities relative
    to private benefits
  • Difficulty assess educational externalities
  • Possibilities
  • differentiate by type of programme (shortage
    areas, if it responds to labour market needs,
    foster innovation or serve communities
    aspirations)
  • approval of new programmes to be preceded by an
    assessment of relevance
  • interconnectedness with quality assurance

20
Policy priorities
  • Institutional Funding
  • Institutional funding for instruction should be
    formula-driven, relate to both input and output
    indicators and include strategically targeted
    components
  • Block grants should rely on transparent formulas
    based on a balanced array of input and output
    indicators
  • Performance-based funding mechanisms should be
    carefully implemented
  • A possible model is a contractual relationship
    between institutions and the State
  • Institutional funding to include targeted
    development programmes
  • Institutional funding to be adjusted to the
    particular mission of the institution
  • Institutions to be autonomous in the use of their
    block grants
  • Funding to offer some stability for long-term
    development
  • Sources of institutional funding to be
    diversified
  • Complementary streams for the funding of capital
    infrastructure

21
Policy priorities
  • Institutional cost effectiveness
  • Improving cost-effectiveness possible
    responses
  • More funding on the basis of graduation rates
  • Reduction of public subsidies for students who
    remain too long in the system
  • Conversion of loans into grants if students
    graduate within nominal time
  • The elimination of low enrolment and/or
    duplicated programmes with possible redeployment
    of academics across education programmes
  • Rationalizing faculty to respond to student
    contractions
  • Increasing use of shared facilities
  • Increasing student mobility between institutions

22
Policy priorities
  • Student Support
  • Back the overall funding approach with a
    comprehensive student support system
  • Aim for a universal student support system with
    two major components
  • A loan system with income-contingent repayments
  • A means-tested grants scheme.
  • Grants scheme to be based on assessed need
  • Loans system to be universal with
    income-contingent repayments and means-tested
    subsidies
  • Student aid entitlements to cover living costs
  • Students who attend private institutions should
    benefit, under the same conditions, from the
    student support system
  • Creation of an agency to manage the student
    support system

23
Achieving Equity
24
Aspects under analysis
Section 1 Defining equity in tertiary education
  • Section 2 Contextual developments affecting
    equity in tertiary education
  • Inequities in tertiary education are, to a great
    extent, dictated by inequities in preceding
    levels of education
  • Expansion and diversification of tertiary
    education have had implications for equity
  • Section 3 Trends in equity in tertiary education
  • Little information to assess the extent of
    inequities in tertiary education
  • There is strong evidence that access to and
    participation in tertiary education is associated
    with the socio-economic background of students
  • More disadvantaged students are overrepresented
    among those students who are not eligible to
    access tertiary education
  • When gaining access to tertiary education, more
    disadvantaged students enrol in greater
    proportions in lower status institutions and more
    vocationally-oriented institutions

25
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 4 Factors affecting equity in tertiary
    education and country policy responses
  • Funding-related factors
  • Family background
  • School factors
  • Peer effects
  • Articulation between secondary and tertiary
    education
  • Organisation of tertiary education
  • Selection procedures

26
Policy priorities
? Assess extent and origin of equity issues
Systematic collection of data.
? Making tertiary education more equitable
requires policy to intervene much earlier
? Career guidance and counselling services at the
school level are instrumental in improving
equity of access
? Provide opportunities for tertiary education
study from any track in upper secondary school
? Strengthen the integration of planning, policy
and analysis between secondary and tertiary
education systems
? Diversify the supply of tertiary education to
accommodate a more diverse set of learners
27
Policy priorities
? Consider alternative types of provision to
account for the cultural diversity of the
population Development of institutions with
diverse cultural foundations
? Improve the access to tertiary education in
remote areas by expanding distance learning and
regional learning centres
? Diversify criteria for admission and give a say
to institutions in entrance procedures
? Consider positive discrimination policies for
particular groups whose prior educational
disadvantage is well identified
? Consider alternative ways of acquiring
eligibility for tertiary education
28
Policy priorities
? Improve transfers between different types of
institutions within tertiary education
? Provide incentives for tertiary education
institutions to widen participation and provide
extra support for students from disadvantaged
backgrounds Special financial incentive for
institutions to attract less represented groups
positive discrimination studies progression
support (e.g. tutoring services) adapting the
learning environment to account for the diversity
of the student body.
? Encourage institutions to be more responsive to
the needs of adult learners
29
Policy priorities
? Sustain efforts to improve gender parity at all
levels of tertiary education and address gender
stereotyping in subject choice
? Grant special provisions for students with
disabilities - Targeted support accessibility
to the buildings resources for institutions to
provide special support special entrance
procedures targeted grant schemes. - Account
for special rhythms. - Avoid stigmatisation. -
Life course perspective. - Distance learning
opportunities.
? Place more emphasis on equity of outcomes
30
Strengthening ties with the labour market
31
Aspects under analysis
Section 1 Labour market outcomes of tertiary
graduates
Section 2 The skills and abilities of graduates
Section 3 Aligning tertiary education supply
with labour market demand Student
demand Steering by public authorities The role of
other actors in tertiary education National
qualifications frameworks and quality assurance
systems
32
Policy priorities
  • Co-ordinate Labour Market and Education Policy
  • Better integration between these two policy
    domains integration of education, training,
    and employment, through the institution of
    cabinet-level committee for human capital
  • More attention to be devoted to labour market
    concerns (e.g. provision of lifelong learning
    opportunities flexible study options).
  • Improve data and analysis about graduate labour
    market outcomes
  • Lack of data on LM outcomes impairs student
    adaptation to labour market signals the
    capacity of authorities to adapt resource
    allocation to labour market needs and the
    ability of institutions to respond to LM needs.
  • Better data and analysis equally necessary in
    systems that rely upon central allocation of
    study places.
  • Increase the capacity of institutions to respond
    to demand
  • Funding methodologies must create incentives for
    institutions to respond to enrolment demand,
    including the reallocation of resources within
    the institution.

33
Policy priorities
  • Enhance provision with a labour market
    orientation
  • Engagement with employers and professional
    organisations.
  • Creation of vocationally-oriented institutions.
  • Provision of short-cycle programmes.
  • Avoid academic drift.
  • Strengthen partnerships between institutions and
    the business sector internships for students,
    dedicated liaison offices in institutions.
  • Strengthen career services at secondary and
    tertiary educational levels
  • Involve labour market perspectives and actors in
    policy development and institutional governance
  • - In the formulation of national tertiary
    education policies through advisory bodies
  • - Widen their participation in the bodies
    responsible for the strategic governance of
    tertiary education institutions.
  • Encourage TEIs to play a greater role in
    lifelong learning
  • Explore the potential of a National
    Qualifications Framework

34
Academic career adapting to change
35
Aspects under analysis
Section 1 Developments within the academic
workforce - Academic workforces are ageing in a
number of countries - Gender inequalities remain
within the academic profession - Some countries
reveal difficulties in the recruitment of
high-quality academics - Countries have different
traditions of within-country academic mobility -
Cross border academic mobility is increasing
  • Section 2 The changing roles of academics
  • The nature of academic work has been affected by
    a number of trends in tertiary education
  • Expansion (greater diversity of student
    body/programmes)
  • Growing share of private funding
  • Focus on accountability and performance
  • There are new expectations and demands on
    academics
  • Increased workload
  • Challenges for research activities
  • A new relationship with institutional governance
  • Traditional academic values challenged

36
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 3 Features of the academic profession
  • Responsibility for the management of the academic
    career and employment status of academics
  • Centralised versus decentralised approaches
  • Employment conditions and career structure
  • Contractual arrangements
  • The debate on academic tenure
  • Career structure
  • Appointment and promotion
  • Multiple employment
  • Compensation and rewards
  • Salary setting
  • Salary differentiation
  • Range of tasks performed by academics (including
    research vs teaching)
  • Career management
  • Formative assessment
  • Responses to underperformance
  • Professional development

37
Policy priorities
  • Give institutions ample autonomy over the
    management of human resources, to include
  • Faculty and staff to be formal employees of
    tertiary education institutions
  • Institutions with broad discretion over the
    setting of academic salaries
  • Institutions with the freedom to create academic
    positions in agreement with the strategy defined
    by their governing authority
  • Institutions to determine the range of career
    structures which better reflect the distinct
    roles academics play within them
  • Institutions to be given the responsibility to
    design promotion systems, assessment systems and
    professional development strategies

Manage the academic career in a flexible manner -
Flexibility on the roles and workloads of
academics within institutions - Career
structures should reflect the diversity of roles
and missions of institutions - Within broad
direction provided by institutional leadership,
academics to assume responsibility for shaping
their role and profile - Flexibility with types
of employment contracts - Debate the merit of
long career ladders
38
Policy priorities
  • Reconcile academic freedom with institutions
    contributions to society in practice, could
    translate into academics
  • - pursuing their objectives while accounting for
    institutional goals
  • - being provided with support and conditions to
    meet what the institution and society expect
    from them
  • - being autonomous in the design of the courses
    they teach
  • - benefiting from freedom to select research
    topics and approaches to research, possibly
    within priorities defined collectively either at
    the institution or system level
  • - not being constrained in their interpretation
    of research results and of the knowledge conveyed
    to students
  • - not being prevented from publicising the
    results of their research or the outputs of
    their service to the community
  • - being held accountable for the outcomes of
    their academic activities

Enhance the attractiveness of the academic
career - Target larger salary rises to particular
groups - Provide a dynamic knowledge-rich work
environment, opportunities for career growth,
prospects for a stable career, formal mechanisms
to recognise the work of academics and
opportunities for mobility and collaboration
with external organisations.
39
Policy priorities
Improve the entrance conditions of young
academics - Well structured induction schemes,
effective recruitment processes, prospects for a
stable and rewarding merit-based academic
career - Supporting environment upon entry into
the academic career e.g. reduced teaching load,
availability of mentoring by senior academics,
special funds to create research groups, and
availability of training programmes to help young
academics familiarise with a number of key
processes - Probationary process
Strengthen management processes and leadership -
To provide the framework for linking individual
academic work to institutional strategic goals -
Needs to demonstrate the advantage of change,
establish a systematic forward- looking
assessment of organisational direction, and
define the requirements and workloads needed to
achieve the desired profile.
40
Policy priorities
Evaluate and reward the accomplishments of
academics - Put in place mechanisms which grant
feedback to academics and reward their
accomplishments - Performance management to
define expectations for staff and provide
feedback and development opportunities - More
emphasis on rewarding accomplishments of
academics in areas other than research -
Consolidate mechanisms to reward academics for
exemplary performance
Integrate professional development throughout the
career - Lifelong learning approach to the
academic career - Professional development
entitlement-based incentive-based
institution-based - Centres for teaching and
learning - Opportunities for experiences outside
academic organisations
41
Policy priorities
Develop mechanisms to support the work of
academics - Support the work of academics and
recognise the wide variety of tasks that
academic work actually entails - Protect
academics from excessive demands e.g.
administrative units teaching and learning
centres offices to advise students
  • Enhance the capacity for collaboration and
    encourage mobility
  • Mutual recognition of academic career structures
    across institutions portability of entitlements
    to leave and retirement benefits
  • Recognition of skills and experience acquired
    outside academia provision of flexible re-entry
    pathways to the academic profession
  • Forms of collaboration such as Centres of
    Excellence
  • Steps to limit in-breeding'

Provide more flexible employment conditions for
senior academics - Attractive working
environments for older academics e.g. prof.dev.
activities tailored to meet their needs more
flexible working arrangements new roles.
42
Enhancing the role of tertiary education in
research and innovation
43
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 1 The role of TEIs in research
    innovation
  • Building knowledge bases and capabilities
  • Developing human capital
  • Knowledge diffusion and use
  • Knowledge maintenance
  • Section 2 The tertiary education research
    innovation environment
  • RD trends
  • Scientific and technological output (publications
    and patents)
  • Human resources for science and technology (HRST)
  • Linkages knowledge transfer
  • Intellectual property rights and
    commercialisation

44
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 3 The governance of TEI research
  • Development of overarching national strategies
  • Involves inter-ministerial councils,
    institutions etc.
  • Priority setting
  • Selecting and defining complex. Difficult to link
    priorities with the ST system
  • Funding research
  • Balance between allocation mechanisms changing
  • Evaluating research
  • Important to ensure efficiency, but difficult to
    assess impacts
  • Creating critical mass
  • Identifying critical mass across different fields
    unclear


45
Policy priorities (1)
  • Knowledge diffusion
  • Improve knowledge diffusion rather than focusing
    on commercialisation
  • Role of TEIs is to create and diffuse knowledge
    but commercialisation requires secrecy
  • Results of success are skewed
  • Innovation requires access to knowledge
  • Widen channels of interaction
  • Improve linkages, particularly with SMEs
  • Foster mobility
  • Inter-sectoral mobility between TEIs, firms and
    public research institutions
  • International mobility (but this is not a
    substitute for domestic supply)

46
Policy priorities (2)
  • Developing human resources
  • Improve research career prospects
  • Career opportunities limited job insecurity,
    salaries, work dissatisfaction etc
  • Improve data on human resources
  • Demand for the highly skilled increasing
  • Mismatches unknown
  • Innovation requires a variety of skills
  • Vocational training
  • Non-technological innovation
  • Traditional research careers changing


47
Policy priorities (3)
  • Building capabilities
  • Maintain adequate research infrastructure
  • Basic resources
  • Large scientific facilities may require
    collaboration
  • Use TEIs to foster the internationalisation of
    RD
  • Success in the global economy largely depends on
    national capabilities
  • Measures to improve research capabilities will
    increase attractiveness for RD investment

48
Policy priorities (4)
  • Enhancing the system (1)
  • Improve methods for priority selection
  • Lack of systematic approach
  • Tends to focus on high-technology rather than
    national technological specialisation
  • Need to consider emerging areas, social sciences
    and humanities
  • Broaden assessment criteria and monitor impacts
  • Some performance measures have had unintended
    impacts on research quality
  • Shift towards more project-based funding may also
    have unintended impacts
  • Broad range of performance indicators required

49
Policy priorities (5)
  • Enhancing the system (2)
  • Ensure policy considers long-term perspective
  • Knowledge production often involves long
    time-lags between discovery and application.
  • Evaluate and co-ordinate policies across the
    whole system
  • TEIs integral part of the research and innovation
    system
  • Policies need to be coherent and evaluated as
    part of the wider system

50
Assuring and improving quality
51
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 1 Introduction
  • What is quality assurance (QA) and why does it
    matter?
  • Can be broadly defined as the systematic,
    structured and continuous attention to quality in
    terms of quality maintenance and improvement
  • ? Both Accountability and Improvement dimensions
  • Interest in QA driven by several factors
  • Massification rise NPM approach in public
    service provision ? insight into
    cost-effectiveness accountability
  • Development private provision
    internationalisation ? consumer protection
  • Advent of New Economy ? demands for quality
    tertiary education
  • New models of governance (distant steering
    autonomy with accountability)
  • Different forms of QA
  • Accreditation ? Pass/Fail
  • Assessment ? Grade
  • Audit ? Qualitative
  • But a common puzzle the ambivalence of purposes
  • Section 2 Current practices in QA systems
  • Diversity in approaches
  • In terms of level of evaluation (TEI vs
    programme), scope (territorial, type of TEI),
    initiation, frequency, actors involved,
    instruments used, outcomes, follow-up and
    consequences

52
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 3 Issues at stake and policy challenges
  • Designing an effective QA framework
  • Is it possible to combine accountability and
    improvement?
  • How many QA agencies and what scope for their
    activities?
  • Implications of internationalisation cooperation
    and comparability
  • Should performance indicators be used and how?
  • Building consensus and trust with various
    stakeholders
  • Ensuring successful implementation different
    conceptions of QA, resistances and implementation
    gap
  • Building internal ownership and trust
  • Enhancing the cost-effectiveness of the QA system
  • Costs of evaluations, links with research
    evaluations
  • Addressing the implications of internationalisatio
    n for QA
  • Transparency towards international actors
  • International standards and guidelines (ESG),
    European Register (EQAR)
  • Maximising impact of the QA system
  • Difficult measurement (teaching, learning,
    institutional management)
  • Avoiding undesired outcomes (intellectual
    diversity, acccreditation mills, insufficient
    preparedness of users)

53
Policy priorities
  • Design of the QA framework
  • Build consensus on clear goals and expectations
    of the QA system
  • Expectations from QA aligned to overall tertiary
    education strategy
  • Reconcile different perceptions of quality to
    build national commitment to QA
  • Distinguish accountability and improvement to
    build consensus
  • Ensure that QA serves both improvement and
    accountability purposes
  • Find the right balance between them
  • Revisit this balance periodically ? move to audit
    once baseline standards are met
  • Combine internal and external quality assurance
    mechanisms
  • Most effective to address the different purposes
    of QA
  • Specific mechanisms according to traditions and
    level of QA development
  • Build capacity and secure legitimacy
  • QA agency independant from Ministry, trust of
    TEIs
  • Involve academic community in external teams

54
Policy priorities
  • Design of the QA framework (ctd)
  • Make stakeholders visible in the evaluation
    procedures
  • Students and employers in external teams,
    graduate surveys
  • To build legitimacy
  • Increase focus on student outcomes
  • Shift focus from inputs to learning and labour
    market outcomes
  • Develop and publish indicators of teaching
    quality, cognitive outcomes
  • National qualification frameworks, LM indicators,
    graduate perspectives in QA
  • Enhance the international comparability of the QA
    framework
  • Convergence mutual recognition of national QA
    systems, international guidelines
  • Involve international experts, publish results in
    English

55
Policy priorities
  • Strengthen internal evaluation
  • Develop a strong quality culture in the system
  • Make internal QA systems mandatory, incentives
    (e.g. publish quality-related info)
  • Builds-up over time
  • Put more stress on internal QA mechanisms
  • Less costly and more effective than periodic and
    comprehensive external reviews
  • Role of QA agency technical assistance, promote
    dialogue and best-practice
  • Ensure that internal accountability is guided by
    some key principles
  • Avoid burdensome processes
  • Delegate responsibility for QA to those able to
    effect changes
  • Support peer observation but separate it from
    probation/promotion processes
  • Undertake the external validation of internal QA
    systems
  • E.g. involve external examiners

56
Policy priorities
  • Improve external evaluation
  • Commit the external QA to an advisory role as the
    system gains maturity
  • Role of QA agency to evolve towards research,
    benchmarking indicators, research, best-practice
  • but retain strong external components in
    certain contexts
  • E.g. early stages of development, large
    expansion, large private sector
  • Implement adequate follow-up procedures and view
    QA as a continuous process
  • Necessary condition to have an impact.
    Consequences must be clear
  • Concentrate improvement efforts on institutions
    most in need
  • Allow for selected assessments to be initiated by
    an external QA agency
  • Flexibility for ad-hoc evaluations, e.g. in case
    of problem, specific topic
  • Avoid direct links between results and public
    funding decisions
  • Prefer ex-ante links with funding (e.g. to be
    eligible for funding) to ex-post links
  • Limit financial rewards to better assist
    low-performing institutions

57
Policy priorities
  • Methods
  • Align QA processes to the particular profile of
    institutions
  • E.g. more focus on LM relevance in tertiary
    vocational institutions
  • Improve co-ordination between the evaluation of
    teaching and research
  • To avoid duplication burden
  • Innovation
  • Develop QA expertise in new areas
  • E.g. LLL, off-campus provision, use of
    value-added indicators in quality evaluations

58
Policy priorities
  • Practical arrangements for the QA system
  • Avoid fragmentation of the QA organisational
    structure
  • Better integration and coherence, spread best
    practice within system
  • More accountability with system-wide standards
    and more transparency
  • Avoid excessive costs and burdens
  • Transaction costs duplication QA activities,
    fragmented system with many TEIs
  • Improve quality information base
  • Improve information dissemination
  • E.g. Quality-related information on the web
  • As an incentive for improvement through student
    choices

59
Shaping internationalisation strategies in the
national context
60
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 1 Introduction
  • Process of integrating an international,
    intercultural or global dimension into the
    purpose, functions or delivery of tertiary
    education
  • ? Globalisation as the catalyst,
    internationalisation as the (proactive) answer
  • Many drivers
  • Globalisation of skilled LM ? demand for
    international skills
  • National skill development strategy
  • Foster exchange and co-operation
  • Bottlenecks in provision or inter-system
    complementarities
  • Trade value, economic implications
  • TEIs ? compensate for projected decline in
    enrolments, generate revenues
  • Different forms of internationalisation
  • Convergence of tertiary education systems and
    recognition arrangements
  • Internationalisation at home
  • Student and academic mobility
  • Institution and programme mobility ? usually
    different forms of transnational education in
    parallel

61
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 2 Trends in internationalisation of TE
  • Students and academics mobility
  • Dramatic growth in student mobility over past 3
    decades
  • Emergence of new players in recent years
  • No clear evidence of similar trends for
    academics, except short term
  • Other emerging forms of internationalisation
  • Internationalisation of curricula gained momentum
    over past decade
  • Bologna Process
  • We are at the beginning of the era of
    transnational higher education
  • A range of policy levers
  • Language of instruction, reputation, legislation
    on transnational education, immigration policy,
    marketing, course databases, poles of excellence,
    grants schemes, portability of public funding,
    tuition fee policy, mobility programmes
  • Section 3 Issues at stake and policy challenges
  • Policy coherence
  • Protecting students and safeguarding reputation
  • Transparency, comparability and portability of
    qualifications
  • Equity

62
Policy priorities
  • Overall strategy and steering of
    internationalisation policy
  • Develop a national strategy and comprehensive
    policy framework for internationalisation
  • Build on country-specific advantages/constraints
    ? resist replication
  • Improve national policy coordination
  • Inter-governmental committee to maximise
    synergies among policies
  • ? Immigration, ST, Labour, Foreign Affairs
  • Encourage institutions to become proactive actors
    of internationalisation
  • Framework conditions to make TEIs more responsive
    to internat. envt
  • ? int chapter in annual negociations, remove
    blockages, incentives
  • Promote sustainable strategies of
    internationalisation
  • Diversify activities, partners, distribution of
    internat. students within system
  • Create structures to assist TEIs in their
    internationalisation strategies
  • Provide adequate funding to implement
    internationalisation strategies

63
Policy priorities
  • Strengthen attractiveness and competitiveness of
    TE system
  • Create structures to promote the national
    tertiary education system
  • E.g. marketing agency, capitalise on diplomatic
    missions abroad
  • Enhance the international comparability of
    tertiary education
  • E.g. Bologna-compatible degree structures, credit
    transfer schemes
  • Develop alternatives to current global rankings
  • E.g. instruments accomodating the diversity of
    TE, measuring value-added and interactive for
    taylored rankings
  • Improve information to prospective international
    students
  • E.g. courses costs, accreditation, international
    recognition
  • Foster centres of excellence at postgraduate
    level
  • To showcase research achievements in areas of
    strength
  • Ensure quality provision in undergraduate
    cross-border education
  • Coordination between agencies dealing with QA and
    int, support for int. students, OECD/UNESCO
    guidelines, cooperation with foreign QA agencies

64
Policy priorities
  • Strengthen the internal dimension of
    internationalisation
  • Develop on-campus internationalisation
  • From equity perspective, efforts should focus on
    internat on campus
  • E.g. revisit HR pensions policy to ease
    recruitment of foreign academics
  • Encourage the mobility of domestic academic staff
    and students
  • Students ? inform on benefits of study abroad,
    credit transfer schemes, means-tested mobility
    grants/loans, portable public financing
  • Academics ? include mobility in promotion
    criteria
  • Optimise internationalisation strategy
  • Inform policy-making in the area of
    internationalisation
  • Take advantage of international complementarities
  • Target public support for degree-mobility to
    post-graduate level and undergraduate programmes
    not available at home
  • Manage the migration impact of internationalisatio
    n

65
Policy design and implementation
66
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 6 (chapter Governance) Developing
    tertiary education policy
  • Challenge of designing sound tertiary education
    policies
  • Establishing objectives for the system and
    devising a strategy to reach them
  • Informing policy diagnosis and recommendations
  • Building on best practices elsewhere the
    importance of international perspectives
  • Using research evidence
  • Need for policy coherence across governmental
    departments
  • Economic, political, social and regulatory
    trade-offs
  • Challenge of political feasibility and
    implementation
  • ? Chapter implementation

67
Aspects under analysis
  • Chapter implementation
  • Section 2 The complexity of policy
    implementation
  • Wide range of stakeholders and views on TE policy
  • Difficult consensus-building over policy
    initiatives
  • Diverse forms of policy failure
  • Abandon in Parliament, implementation gap,
    partial implementation
  • Section 3 Lessons from success stories
  • Context for policy reform
  • International pressure and competitive
    environment
  • Consensual nature of policymaking
  • Trust between stakeholders can be built over
    time
  • Clear objectives/purposes of policy reform
  • Process of policy development
  • Magnitude of TE reform
  • Consensus-enhancing patterns of policy
    development

68
Aspects under analysis
  • Section 4 Understanding failure and overcoming
    obstacles to TE reform
  • Rationale behaviour political economy of reform
  • Winners and losers
  • Distribution of costs and benefits and political
    mobilisation
  • Satisfaction of median voters towards
    re-election policy makers agenda
  • Information imperfections and asymetries
  • Psychological factors insufficient ownership and
    social acceptance
  • Overcoming obstacles to maximise impact
  • Rationale for compromise cost of reform vs cost
    of inaction
  • Bargaining processes in TE reform
  • Side policies to support implementation

69
Policy priorities
Development of TE policy reforms Establish
ad-hoc independent committees to initiate
tertiary education reforms and involve
stakeholders Allow for bottom-up policy
initiatives to be developed into proposals by
independent committees Recognise the different
views of stakeholders through iterative policy
development Develop an evidence basis to inform
policy making Widen consultation within
government to ensure coherence across policies to
support national tertiary goals Widen
consultation with those outside government to
ensure that voices other than those of
producers are heard
70
Policy priorities
Search for consensus or compromise over TE policy
reforms Use pilots and policy experimentation
when needed Favour incremental reforms over
comprehensive overhauls unless there is wide
public support for change Avoid reforms with
concentrated costs and diffused
benefits Identify potentials losers from
tertiary education reform and build in
compensatory mechanisms Create conditions for
the successful implementation of reforms Improve
communication on the benefits of reforms and the
costs of inaction Search for consensus or
compromise over TE policy reforms Implement the
full package of policy proposals Support
effective policy implementation
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