Title: Laura Carrigan Deirdre Stritch
1Laura Carrigan / Deirdre Stritch National
Qualifications Authority of Ireland1 October
2008
2 Roles
- Laura Carrigan (lcarrigan_at_nqai.ie)
- Manager of qualifications recognition service
- Day to day responsibility for operations
- Working in conjunction with wider team to develop
the service - Deirdre Stritch (dstritch_at_nqai.ie)
- Project Officer
- Responsible, with colleagues, for implementation
of the National Framework of Qualifications - Responsible, with colleagues, for development and
enhancement of qualifications recognition
service.
3The National Qualifications Authority of Ireland
(NQAI)
- Established under the Qualifications (Education
and Training) Act 1999 - to develop and maintain a national framework of
qualifications - a system for coordinating comparing awards
- to promote access, transfer and progression
incl. arrangements for credit accumulation and
transfer
4Purpose of the Qualifications Act
- The Qualifications Act sought to address inter
alia - Difficulties in recognising qualifications
- Irish learners travelling abroad
- Holders of international qualifications
travelling to Ireland
5Development and Role of National Framework of
Qualifications
- NFQ introduced in 2003 as a system of ten levels,
based on standards of knowledge, skill and
competence incorporates awards made for all
kinds of learning, wherever gained. - A system for coordinating and comparing awards
- Greatly assists the process for recognition of
qualifications - Acts as a reference point for assessing broad
comparability of qualifications - This level of comparability may be sufficient for
purposes of entry into labour market or entry
into education
6The National Framework of Qualifications
award-types and awarding bodies
7Qualifications Recognition - Role of NQAI
- Qualifications recognition service facilitates
the recognition of foreign qualifications in
Ireland and provides information regarding
foreign education systems using the Framework
as the basis for comparison - Provides information on Irish education and
training system, promotes recognition of Irish
qualifications abroad - On behalf of State, represents Ireland on
European network of centres ENIC/NARIC (higher
education) - Acts as National Reference Point (NRP) for
Vocational Education and Training
8Qualifications Recognition Role of NQAI cont.
- Qualifications Authority facilitates recognition
of qualifications - for academic purposes access to further
learning - for access to unregulated work
- Issues comparability statements to applicants -
advice not legally binding - education institutions establish own admission
requirements, but the service may assist
providers in determining if an applicant holds
the qualifications deemed necessary for entry - Qualifications pertaining to professions where
professional practice is regulated i.e. medicine,
law, teaching etc are directed to the relevant
Competent Authority - list is available from
www.qualificationsrecognition.ie
9Qualifications recognition - policy approach
- Broad policy approach, captured in National
Policy Approach to the Recognition of
International Awards in Ireland (June 2004) - National Action Plan published in 2006
- Ireland a signatory to the Lisbon Convention
qualifications recognition service aims to
operate within the spirit of the convention - a fair recognition of qualifications is a key
element of the right to education and a
responsibility of society - Where a direct comparison cannot be made with an
Irish award type or level on the Framework, as
much information as possible is provided on the
qualification in question.
10Application process / comparability basis
- Service available to individuals, public bodies
and employers free of charge - Applicant completes an application form and
submits necessary documentation - Parchment / Certificate in original language
- Translation of same
- Complete list of transcripts in original language
- Translation of same
- Evidence of undergraduate qualification if
applicable - Evidence of name change if applicable
- Authority evaluates award, or refers to existing
comparison, and establishes comparability
11Application process / comparability basis
- Service is non-discriminatory
- Procedures in place to assess the qualifications
of refugees, even in cases where the
qualifications obtained cannot be proven through
documentary evidence. - Status of the applicant not disclosed in advice
issued.
12Application process / comparability basis (cont.)
- Deal with applications on a case-by-case basis
- 12 week time period
- Applicants are issued with a statement of
comparability which compares their award to an
Irish award-type, e.g. - is comparable to an Honours Bachelor Degree
which is placed at Level 8 on the Irish National
Framework of Qualifications - Comparisons are not made on basis of grading or
classification within award
13Demand for Recognition Service
- Aprx 15 of Irish labour force from outside
Ireland and rising - Volume of applicants steadily increasing
- 320 recognition applications in 2003 and 500
queries ? 1800 applications in 2007 and approx.
7,700 queries - In 2007
- 60 of applications from within EU
- Approx. 13 from Asia
- approx. 11 from Russian Federation and rest of
Europe and - Approx10 from Africa
14Breakdown of 2008 figures
- So far in 2008, processed 1,592 applications and
commented on 1,149 of these - 76 of applications received relate to higher
education awards - 14 relate to further education awards
- 6 relate to school awards
15Breakdown of figures
- Of the higher education applications received
nearly 50 were seeking recognition for the
purposes of employment - 24 intended to continue studying
- The remaining applications either concerned
salary increments, grant applications or did not
specify a reason for recognition - The majority of awards related to the following
areas Economics, Teaching and Engineering
16Qualifications recognition developments to date
- Many specific comparabilities already established
/ advice on comparability of qualifications
provided to date available on www.qualificationsre
cognition.ie - Qualifications can cross boundaries, a guide to
comparing qualifications in the UK and Ireland - Currently developing country education profiles
which will be published on our website - Developments in qualifications recognition
agreements with other countries (alignment with
New Zealand qualifications system has commenced)
17Developmental areas for qualifications
recognition service
- To make increased, and more detailed, information
regarding foreign education and training systems
and qualifications systems accessible online 14
countries published to date - To make all comparability statements, which have
been established to date, publicly available - To build up external resources to inform the
service - There has been increased communication between
the NQAI and higher education admission officers
with the aim of working towards a consistent
national approach to recognition. Hosting
conference 21 November to address this topic. - To increase communication / awareness of service
e.g., workshops in November 2008
18European Developments
- Irish Framework does not stand alone or in a
vacuum. European meta-frameworks developed in
order to inter alia - Facilitate recognition of qualifications
- Promote mobility of learners and workers
- Framework for Qualifications of the European
Higher Education Area (est. by European Higher
Education Ministers in Bergen in May 2005 the
Bologna Framework) - Bologna Framework and NFQ aligned November 2006
- European Qualifications Framework for Lifelong
Learning (EQF) recommendation approved by
European Council and Parliament April 2008 - Anticipated EQF and NFQ aligned spring 2009
19Why two meta-Frameworks?
- Distinct but complementary purposes
- Bologna Framework represents adoption of
Framework concept into Bologna process to build
European Higher Education Area by 2010 - Builds upon existing thinking on comparability
of qualifications in EHEA and upon existing
thinking on credit - Cycles ECTS credit
- Confined to higher education, but extends beyond
EU - EQF strongly linked into Lisbon process
- An attempt to bring Bologna (Higher) and
Copenhagen (Vocational) processes together - Extends beyond higher education, but confined to
EUA - Both meta-frameworks function as translation
devices or common languages to describe and
compare qualifications across Member States
diverse education and training systems
20European Meta-Framework Summary
- In both cases
- Primacy of the National Framework of
Qualifications - Quality assurance required in national
arrangements - Qualifications relate to national frameworks and
frameworks talk to each other through
meta-frameworks - a dialogue based on commonly understood notions
of learning outcomes - Countries self-certify the link of their national
frameworks to European frameworks following
established criteria and procedures
21Alignment of Frameworks
22EQF
Country A
Country B
Qualifications (A)
Qualifications (B)
23Future Opportunities
- the establishment of the Office for Integration
and the appointment of the Minister has provided
a welcome opportunity for the qualifications
recognition activities of the Qualifications
Authority to be effectively integrated with other
parallel activities providing services to migrant
learners and workers. - Looking forward to continue working with the
Office of the Minister for Integration to
communicate relevant information about
qualifications recognition to all
foreign-national groups.
24Further Information
- National Qualifications Authority of Ireland
www.nqai.ie - National Framework of Qualifications www.nfq.ie
- Qualifications recognition service
www.qualificationsrecognition.ie