Title:
1Trends IVMain findings and conclusions
- Sybille Reichert, Christian Tauch
- EUA Convention Glasgow
- 31 March 2005
2Methodology Data collection analysis
- Institutions at the centre of the 2004/2005
exercise - 62 site visits to universities (incl. 14 Coimbra)
7 other HEIs, variety of profiles, but all
institutions which have started implementation - for 29 of 40 Bologna countries
- interviews with multiple institutional players
- by teams of 2 persons (1 internat., 1 from
national RC) -
- Analysis of institutional responses, progress
priorities - concentrating on the 3 Bologna mid-term
priorities (structures, recognition, quality)
research - taking account of the European national
contexts - through a questionnaire sent to Rectors
Conferences - through re-analysis of Trends III data
3Bologna From national commitment to
institutional reality -- 2003
- It takes concerted action on all levels to make
the European Higher Education Area a reality
national commitment
national legislation
national incentives/ support
institutional leadership/ policy
instit. communication deliberation decision
instit. reality
only half have provided some funding 75 of HEIs
clear financial incentives needed
46 of HEIs nat.legisl. undermines auton.
decision-making
little more than a third have a Bol. coordinator
role of academics? (less than half reasonably
aware, 30 not very aware) students not
included enough at dep- level
4Bologna From national commitment to
institutional reality -- 2005
- It takes concerted action on all levels to make
the European Higher Education Area a reality
national commitment
national legislation
national incentives/ support
institutional leadership/ policy
instit. communication deliberation decision
instit. reality
Only 6 countries have provided some funding for
implementation at institutional level
Majority of HEIs still find that nat.legisl.
undermines auton. decision-making
Bologna reforms have become an integral part of
inst. strategy
Role of academics investing lots of extra time,
taking up the challenge students involvement
depends strongly on national context
5Degree Structures Implementation of BaMa at
national level
- Almost all countries have by now introduced the
two cycles system. Few HEI were still waiting for
more detailed governmental regulations, some
governments plan amendments. - Need for reforms is perceived very differently by
the various disciplines and faculties e.g.
humanities, regulated profess. - Only medicine generally still excluded in most
countries, but also teacher training and other
disciplines still cause problems - Need for examples of good practice, especially in
the difficult disciplines, at national and
European levels. - In some countries subject-specific coordination
groups or pilot projects were considered very
helpful for curricular development.
6Degree Structures Attitudes in the HEI towards
Ba/Ma
- Most HEI today see the advantages of the two
cycles system. - Especially in Northern Europe few problems were
reported. - In most HEI staff supported the underlying ideas
of problem-based learning, a student-centred
approach etc., even if they were critical of
various aspects of the implementation. - Still a challenge reorientation of curricula,
focussing of contents. - Only in few HEI academics complained Bologna was
imposed on them, by the institutional leadership
and/or by the ministry. - Rather frequent criticism of strong focus of
Bologna on teaching greater rigidity of
curricula (Ba), less time for research. - The introduction of Ba/Ma, modularisation, ECTS,
etc. often implies a lot of extra work also for
administrations -gt - Even pro-Bologna staff ask for incentives,
extra funding.
7Degree Structures The Bachelor level 1
- Misconception that Bologna prescribes in any
way 32. - Many professors doubt that 3 y -degrees can be
academically valid and relevant to labour market
lowering of academic standards. - However, the 3 y model has been adopted and
accepted in many countries and disciplines
examples of good practice. - Discussion still centred on nominal duration, not
outcomes Some universities dont want to award
same degrees as profess. sector. - Content of traditional 4 (or 5) y programmes
often compressed into 3 y students fail and
professors see themselves confirmed. - Justified concern about one size fits all
approach taken by many national laws in imposing
3 y Bachelors Some disciplines argue that 3
years are too short for a meaningful first degree
and request more autonomy in designing their
degree programmes.
8Degree Structures The Bachelor level 2
- Ba graduates labour market or Ma-studies? Huge
differences between countries. In UK, Ireland,
Latvia, Lithuania, Turkey Ba are well accepted by
labour market. - In many HEI students felt badly informed about
value of a Ba and plan to go for a Ma., often
supported by professors. - Universities in some binary systems fear
competition from polytechnics Poly-Ba can be
more attractive to employers (practical
experience). These univ. see Ba-degrees as a
formality, or at best a platform for
re-orientation towards a Ma-programme. - Polytechnics are quite confident that their
Ba-graduates will be more than competitive on the
labour market. - HEI and governments should intensify dialogue
with employers to give the Ba more credibility,
and in particular - Governments should urgently give clear examples
of value of Ba regard. public service employment
(career, service grades,salary)
9Degree Structures The Master level
- In spite of Bologna-Consensus (300 ECTS) huge
variety - Duration 18060 ECTS not seen as internationally
competitive - 300 ECTS programmes continue to be popular in
some countries (PL, HG) and disciplines
(medicine, engineering) - In IE and SC examples of new 5 y integrated Ma.
- Some HEI still waiting for guidelines for
Ma-level. - Tendency to create too many Ma-prog no
institutional strategy - Ma progr. often designed with narrow focus on
preceding Ba programmes. Vertical mobility as a
threat, not opportunity -gt - Stand-alone Ma still the exception.
- Many HEI welcome interdisciplinary Ma.
- Students worried about (lack of) public funding
for Ma level. - Almost all Ma degrees give access to doctoral
studies (Berlin).
10Degree Structures Joint Degrees
- Legal situation regarding JD is slowly improving.
In most countries JD are now legally possible (at
least not explicitly excluded), the others will
amend their legislation. - Trends III had revealed that the level of
interest in Joint Degrees was medium to low.
This has changed for the better in most
countries, also due ERASMUS Mundus programme
Only in a few countries the level of interest
remained unchanged or has even decreased in the
last two years. - Existing programmes information and exact
figures are available only in some countries. - One of the biggest practical problems with JD is
quality assurance/accreditation hopefully
European consensus on standards and guidelines
will help.
11Degree Structures Modularisation and Learning
Outcomes
- No European template for Mod very different
interpretations. - Many HEI have modularised their programmes (ECTS,
TUNING) - Ba curricula seem often more rigidly structured
than traditional ones (many compulsory subjects
and contact hours). - Students welcome the concept of modularisation
but complain it often has been done
superficially, not leading to more flexibility. - Many HEI are fully or largely familiar with the
concept of LO, have implemented them and consider
them a helpful tool. - In some HEI only vague notions of LO exist (esp.
prof., students) - Very few HEI voiced explicit criticism or
reservations against LO. - Context of LO Very positive reference to
qualifications frameworks (QF) in DK and UK
(curricular dev., recognition) - Berlin Communiqué called for national QF little
has happened.
12Access to higher education, progression through
the system
- More and more HEI want to select students that
correspond to their institutional profile and
quality standards. - Access to Ba programmes in many countries no
real selection is possible all holders of formal
qualification have to be admitted .Some HEI are
worried that this will weaken their
competitiveness at the European level. - Access to Master programmes
- Most HEI can select candidates but even here
some constraints can be found. - Admission to doctoral level
- In most but not all HEI left to the discretion
of the faculty. - However, in a small group of HEI no selection
seems to be possible at any point, neither at Ma
nor at PhD level.
13Recognition Trends in Mobility
- Incoming European M. increased in many countries
since 1999. - Worries over decreasing outgoing M. Reasons
language, funding, jobs, students more
risk-conscious, finish on time. - Major obstacle to M. academic calendars across
Europe-gt Agreement on end of first/beginning of
second semester helpful. - Some HEI expect more, some less M. through Ba/Ma.
- Consensus better preparation, guaranteed
recognition needed. - Using stay abroad for practical work, formal
inclusion in curricula - Few HEI use vertical M. strategically specific
Ma programmes. - Long-term mobility of academics in Europe
important element of EHEA but very few data
available.
14Recognition Diploma Supplement
- Most HEI will be able to issue the DS to every
graduate in the course of 2005. Some had already
introduced it before. - In relatively few HEI students/academics were
unaware of DS. - Only one HEI of those visited plans to charge a
fee for the DS. - All HEI plan a DS in English, some also in the
national language. - Frequent difficulties the student record system
doesnt contain the necessary information, the
national student data software has not yet been
adjusted to Bologna, the DS requires a big IT
effort because of the complexity of study
itineraries, high costs - especially for
translations. - Major challenge for many HEI how to include
learning outcomes in the DS to make it a truly
informative document. Otherwise the DS may be
technically correct but will fail in the
essential regard to provide information on a
graduates profile.
15Recognition of exchange mobility and ECTS
- A majority of HEI have implemented ECTS and use
it both for accumulation and transfer. - HEI that apply ECTS, in particular the learning
agreement, report few or no problems with
recognition of exchange m. - Occasionally reservations were expressed
regarding ECTS standards and levels and the ECTS
grading scale. - Moving from contact hours to student workload
(how to assess workload) is still an issue in a
number of HEI. - Very few HEI dont take responsibility for
students seriously, occasionally refuse
recognition, in spite of signed LA. - Many called for a more European implementation
of ECTS to preclude inconsistencies. - More important than ever ERASMUS principle of
mutual trust and confidence. HEI should compare
the defined learning outcomes, not search for
contents identical to their own.
16Recognition of non-formal/non-academic
qualifications
- Berlin Com recognition of prior learning must
become an integral part of higher education
activity. - Debate on qualifications frameworks, on the
Lisbon agenda give APL and APEL more visibility. - Trends IV shows that it is not yet perceived as
an important topic in many institutions. - Several HEI have no provision at all for this
kind of recognition. - Others indicated that, while there are no
provisions yet, discussions have started,
legislation will be changed. - Only few countries and HEI have explicit
strategies for the recognition of non-formal or
non-academic recognition (mostly for mature or
disadvantaged students, applicants with
non-standard secondary education, e.g in
architecture, medicine, sports sciences and fine
arts.)
17Recognition of national and foreign degrees
- Rec. of nat. degrees legally regulated/automatic
in most countries. - Unknown difficulties might arise with the
recognition of Ba/Ma degrees greater variety of
curricula -gt - IE and SC qualif. framework helpful tool for
rec. of national deg. - Foreign degrees many HEI (compared to Trends
III) referred to their NARIC as a source of
information and support. - HEI in some countries have relative/full autonomy
in the recognition of foreign degrees. - In other countries this is still done by
ministries through rather cumbersome procedures
(naturalisation or homologation). Ministries
should grant their HEI more autonomy in rec.
decisions. - The Lisbon Recognition Convention was quoted
several times as a frame of reference for
recognition of foreign degrees.
18Quality Enhancement Putting Quality Assurance
into Context
- Quality Enhancement gt Quality Assurance
- Quality Enhancement Sum of many methods of
institutional development - Ex Added value of Bologna reforms
- Opportunity to reflect and review curricula
- Opportunity to reform teaching methods (student
centred learning, continuous assessment, flexible
learning paths) - Strengthening horizontal communication and
institutional transparency - Most limiting factor for quality enhancement is
not nature of internal or external QA but limits
to resources when room for improvements
identified.
19Internal Quality Development
- Level of activity in internal qual. dev.
processes has risen - Focus largely on teaching and learning (all
inst.), some attention student support services - Research quality emphasis on external review,
only a third of inst. have some form of internal
res. review - Internal qual. dev. of administration and support
services less developed (less than a sixth of
inst.) and more ad hoc - Lack of coherence reg. qual. development
processes -- only few inst. pursue a systematic
institutionalised approach to qual. development - Institutional autonomy systematic approach to
qd, at least on the extremes
20Internal Quality Development Teaching,
Learning, Services
Institutional organisation of qd, especially feed
back
Synergies between qual. dev. of different
functions
Instruments (e.g. student questionnaires,
discussion on curricula in committees)
Institutional Autonomy ? External QA
Processes? National Quality (Dis-) Incentives?
21Internal Quality Development Research
Internal incentives salary, promotion, res. funds
Recruitment and re-election
Peer review of research units
IndividualsSubmission of papers and grant
proposals
22Internal Quality Development Research
Importance of National Conditions
Internal incentives salary, promotion, res. funds
Recruitment and re-election
Degree of institutional autonomy and processes of
external research review
Peer review of research units
IndividualsSubmission of papers and grant
proposals
23Relation of Internal and External QA
- External QA more appreciated in build-up of
internal QA - Institutions find that internal qual. processes
are more improvement oriented and more attuned to
institutional goals. - an advanced internal quality culture should
be mirrored in a light external quality control.
Positive Impact / Effectiveness of External QA
Degree of Advancement of Institutional Qual.
Development
24Impact of Bologna Reforms on Research and
Research Training
- Impact of new programmes on research exposure at
the different levels - Impact of new structures and reinforced focus on
teaching quality on research training at doctoral
level - Impact of strengthened institutional
communication on internal research cooperation
interdisciplinary programmes - Shifting time resources from research to teaching
(teaching more time intensive, not compensated)
25Research Exposure
- Most institutions offer some res. exposure to
Bachelor students, but often only limited, dep.
on subj. Area - Often concentrated on the last year of long
degree - Shift of research experience from Bachelor to
Master level - 3 years of Ba-programmes regarded as too short
for appropriate res. experience Master level
primary level for research in action (although
some more professional) - Often less time for independent research in new
programmes due to compressed continuously
assessed programmes - Research skills of working population if Bachelor
dominant degree?
26Research Training at Doctoral Level
- Too early to judge impact
- Many reform plans reg. doctoral training
(majority) - Quality of supervision (student log books, doct.
committees) - Embedding doctoral research in wider contexts
such as doctoral schools and graduate schools
(interdisciplinary, social integration, critical
mass, synergies reg. additional offer, career
networking) - Wider perspectives for research careers (skills
training, intersectoral mobility) - Generally little attention to doctoral
researchers careers and dominant focus on
academic career (by PhD cand. / acad.), also
reflected in skills training - Plea for more transparency but maximum degree of
flexibility and focus on individual researchers
needs widen the angle, enhance quality but
dont overregulate
27Strengthening the Institutional Level
- Noticeable impact of Bologna reforms on
institutional communication, new bridges between
units - Some institutions used Bologna as part of their
positioning, but rarely in relation to research
strengths (only a minority had identified
strategic res. priorities at institutional level
in relation to intern. markets) - Research and education are separately managed at
most institutions, development comes together at
level of individual/ department but not of
institution - Scepticism regarding idea of research priorities
in terms of overarching themes
28Resources for Education vs.Resources for
Research ?!
- Enormous time investment for Bologna reforms,
esp. if used as opportunity for deeper reform - Even in the long run, greater time investment
bec. Of more counselling, tutoring, assessments,
individualised attention - Vast majority of institutions were not in a
position to hire new staff (no additional
resources from gvmts) - Research resources particularly problematic in
some countries, many Eastern European countries,
Italy, Greece - T (r) T (e) C per person. Note that few
univ. were in a position to hire additional
staff. Universities Enhancing the quality of
teaching in Europe should not have to be paid
with a decrease in the quality of research!
29Implementing BolognaSuccess Factors
- Success factors
- Other ongoing reforms
- Problem awareness
- Institutional communication between units and
leadership - Open dialogue with external stakeholders
- Dialogue and willingness to include key actors in
design of reform (institutional / national) - Timing
- National financial support for Bol. Reform only
granted in small minority of countries - Autonomy in half of BP countries can
institutions decide autonomously over key
elements of reform (liberal or prescriptive)
- Transforming
- top-down reforms
- into an
- bottom-up agenda of institutional change
30Institutional Success Factors
- Other ongoing reforms
- in a third of the countries, B. ref. form an
integral part of a wider review of the entire HE
system, according to national rectors
conferences - Internal Communication (especially horizontal)
- Added value more transparency (also for resource
distribution), opportunity to develop new
interdisciplinary programmes at master level,
better link to research - Leadership, institutional coordination and
guidelines - Timing
- Balance between enough internal deliberation and
keeping the momentum to move forward - Two thirds of institutions decided to adopt the
B. reforms as their own reform agenda
31National Success Factors
- Institutional autonomy balance between national
regulation/ coordination and institutional leeway - Many criticisms of wrong mix of little guidance
and information but (often rushed) overregulation - Examples of good practice exist, e.g. in Finland,
Denmark, Norway, Ireland, Switzerland, some parts
of Germany - Not just governments but sometimes accreditation
bodies can limit the institutional autonomy
significantly - National financial support
- Only 6 countries provided support to institutions
for the implementation of the Bologna reforms - A few others provided a little incentive money
for a few projects or funds for national level
coordination (but none for implementation at
institutional level) - The majority did not interpret their commitment
as having a financial dimension.
32Bologna Reforms as Systemic Challenges
- Move to student-centred learning in a majority of
countries - More compact programmes, more time pressure, more
assessment, more efficiency, less time for
independent study? - Blurring differentiation between universities and
other HEI - Employability at Bachelor level, former
competitive advantage of other HEI new
definition of differentiating profiles needed - Retreating State Funding
- Retreating from full funding of the Master level?
- Not paying for move to more individualised
learning paths? - Not increasing institutional grants paying for
quality enhancement of teaching out of research
resources
33Conclusions
- HEI have adopted the Bologna reforms and accepted
ownership. The reforms have revealed and in some
cases even strengthened the institutions
capacity for change. - According to HEIs, the Bologna Reforms have
already brought a considerable array of added
values and multiple opportunities for enhancing
the quality of HE in Europe. - But, if seen in the light of its aims of
enhancing the quality, attractiveness and
competitiveness of HE in Europe, many
opportunities for improvements are still waiting
to be used, often on hold for lack of available
resources. - Many institutions are ready to move forward and
have identified priorities for change. Some
national contexts are providing very good
conditions to help them along. - How can we push for such conditions to spread to
more regions in Europe? Or will we have to accept
a EHEA or ERA with very unequal opportunities for
institutional development of excellence, even in
the longer term?
34Thank you to the following HEIs
- Institutions participating in Trends IV site
visits - University of Salzburg, Austria
- Fachhochschule Vorarlberg, Austria
- Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
- HEC Liège, Belgium
- University of Ghent, Belgium
- University of Veliko Turnovo, Bulgaria
- University of Split, Croatia
- Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic
- University of Copenhagen, Denmark
- University of Tartu, Estonia
- University of Helsinki, Finland
- Helsinki Polytechnic Stadia, Finland
- Université de Lyon 1, France
- Université dAix Marseille 3, France
- University of Konstanz, Germany
- University of Bremen, Germany
- FH Oldenburg/Ostfriesland/Wilhelmshaven, Germany
- University of Ioannina, Greece
- University of Algarve, Portugal
- University of Aveiro, Portugal
- Babes-Bolyai University, Romania
- Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia
- University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
- Universidad de Barcelona, Spain
- Universidad de Cantabria, Spain
- Umeå University, Sweden
- University of Stockholm, Sweden
- Universität St. Gallen, Switzerland
- Université de Fribourg, Switzerland
- Istanbul Technical University, Turkey
- Sakarya University, Turkey
- York St. John, United Kingdom
- University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
- University College London, United Kingdom
- University of Cardiff, United Kingdom
- Contributing Coimbra Group Network institutions