Title: Nincs diac
1Implementing the Bologna Process The Experience
of Hungary
Baku, 21 April 2005
2The National Context
- Achievements
- Thousands of students - expansion of higher
education - Excellent talents, prize winners
- Traditions of education and research
- New University Centers to serve regional needs
(mergers) - Weaknesses
- Higher education expansion is not accompanied by
emphasis on quality - The current course structure is inflexible and
does not support mobility - The financing system does not provide sufficient
freedom for competitiveness - The infrastructure is inadequate for the changing
demand - The current payment system does not provide
incentives for excellence - Funding for research is far below the EU average
3Number of students in Hungary 1990-2003
4Hungarian UNIVERSITAS Programme A long-term
strategy for reform and investment
- Objectives
- Provide high quality teaching and research,
competitive knowledge and skills also by
international standards - Increase support for students and international
mobility - Ensure equal access right
- Introduce performance based funding and payment
schemes for lecturers/researchers - Create the conditions for good quality teaching
and research also in the infrastructure - Strengthen links between higher education and the
economy
5Pillars of the Hungarian UNIVERSITAS Programme
(2004)a
- Joining the European Higher Education Area
- Extending students rights and financial support
for mobility - Institutional management and finance reform
- Infrastructure investment programme involving
private investors (PPP) - Research and Development Programme with increased
funding
6Implementing Bologna
- Legislative reform the Bologna objectives, new
steering and funding mechanisms (to provide both
for public and private institutions), new
governance structures for institutions - A large number of programmes and support schemes
- The latecomers symptom
- Student Participation
- National Follow-up Structure
- National Bologna Board
- Ministry of Education The Hungarian
Rectors Conference - National Accreditation Subject Specific
Steering Groups - Board Higher Education
Research - Council
- National Union of Students
7Aspects Vital to the Implementation of the
Bologna Process
- Degree structure Adoption of a system
essentially based on two main cycles - All Ministers commit themselves to having
started the implementation of the two cycle
system by 2005.() - Ministers encourage the member States to
elaborate a framework of comparable and
compatible qualifications for their higher
education systems, which should seek to describe
qualifications in terms of workload, level,
learning outcomes, competences and profile. They
also undertake to elaborate an overarching
framework of qualifications for the European
Higher Education Area. () First cycle degrees
should give access, in the sense of the Lisbon
Recognition Convention, to second cycle
programmes. Second cycle degrees should give
access to doctoral studies.() - Berlin Communiqué
8The two cycle system
- Duration and orientation of programmes which
subjects should not be covered by the new system - Employability the National Qualifications
Framework with an outcomes based approach may be
helpful - A unique opportunity to revise pedagogical
concepts (focus on the learner) - Qualification frameworks and their relevance to
curriculum development and recognition - Access to HE
- Progression from one cycle to the next
9The three cycle system(The new course structure)
6 semester/ 180 credit Doctoral studies (PhD)
3-4 semester/ 90-120 credit Master
Unified Programmes (unchanged)
6 semester/ 180 (30) credit Bachelor
4 semester/ 120 credit Higher Vocational
Programmes
10Implementing the new course structure
- Challenges for institutions
- Structural changes and quality
- The pace of reforms changeover from the old
system to the new - Dividing teaching content between Bachelor and
Master level - Extra administrative burden (e.g. implementing
ECTS) - The value of a Bachelors degree
- The binary system
- Some comformity is needed but NO Straightjackets!
- A national debate to prepare
- Students
- Staff
- Employers
- Tracing the career path of graduates
- National coordination groups to develop new
curricula at subject level
11Master Programmes
- Challenges
- Distinction between professional and research
Masters - One step at a time approach
- Too narrow fields a lot of specializations
- Consecutive approach
- Interdisciplinary programmes
- Funding
- Joint Degrees
- No legal obstacles growing interest among the
institutions (inter-university cooperation)
12Curriculum Reform
- Implementing learning outcomes the experience of
the Tuning Project - The National Qualification Framework yet
criteria are defined by the Accreditation Board
subject specific standards are still input
oriented
13National Frameworks of Qualifications
- Descriptors of qualifications and learning
outcomes - Dublin descriptors (generic)
- Knowledge and understanding
- applying knowledge and understanding
- making judgements
- communication skills
- learning skills
- Not subject specific
14Recognition
- Ministers underline the importance of the Lisbon
Recognition Convention, which should be ratified
by all countries participating in the Bologna
Process, and call on the ENIC and NARIC networks
along with the competent National Authorities to
further the implementation of the Convention.
They set the objective that every student
graduating as from 2005 should receive the
Diploma Supplement automatically and free of
charge. It should be issued in a widely spoken
European language. They appeal to institutions
and employers to make full use of the Diploma
Supplement, so as to take advantage of the
improved transparency and flexibility of the
higher education degree systems, for fostering
employability and facilitating academic
recognition for further studies.
15Student Mobility
- Measures to support and increase mobility
- State support for studies at European
institutions - New system of loans for students also for
foreign studies - A comprehensive programme for building new
infrastructure - ECTS
- The credit accumulation and transfer system has
been implemented (legal provisions) - Moving from contact hours to student workload is
still an issue - A further challenge is assigning credits to
courses in the new system. -
16The Diploma Supplement
- Legal basis the DS must be issued in Hungarian
and in English - the majority of institutions are able to comply
- a student record system on the institutional
level - new national student data software has been
developed - Issues
- DS needs strong ICT background
- comprehensive translation work
- centralized storing of student data
- Integrating learning outcomes into the Diploma
Supplement - Direct link between the DS, the correct
implementation of ECTS, the modularization of
programmes and a new style QF - Mutual trust and confidence there is no
identical content
17QUALITY Enhancement and Quality Assurance
- the quality of higher education has proven to be
at the heart of the setting up of a European
Higher Education Area. - the primary responsibility for quality assurance
in higher education lies with each institution
itself and this provides the basis for real
accountability of the academic system within the
national quality framework. The Berlin
Communiqué -
18Implementing Quality
- The Bologna Process as an opportunity to reflect
upon the quality of education, research and
services provided by HE - guidelines, criteria and processes in the QA
mechanisms - external QA processes - the practices of HE institutions (curricula,
teaching approach, staffing, etc.),
self-evaluation - resources and scope of autonomy - the
realization that greater autonomy brings about
better and more coherent QA practices - changes in the internal governance of the
institutions, granting autonomy - the participation of students (success rates,
drop out rates and career choices) - a set of measures to support quality
improvement e.g. part of any salary increase is
linked to performance, normative research funding
is tied to performance indicators - changes in the methodology of programme
accreditation (and not evaluation) from input
and structure to output - the debate between evaluation v. accreditation
and programme v. institutional focus -
19SUCCESS FACTORS
- Bologna and other higher education reforms (the
trigger effect - A synergy between top-down and bottom-up
approaches (an impetus to strategic planning) - The role of guidance, support and regulations at
national level - The timing and pace of reforms (speed and
fine-tuning) - The reaction of the labour market to the new
degrees - The future of the binary system
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