Title: Australias Transnational Education Quality Strategy
1Australias Transnational Education Quality
Strategy
International Forum on Online Education(IFOE
2006) Quality Assurance October 14-15, 2006,
Beijing, China
- Anne Forster President
- Open Distance Learning Association of Australia
2Five key points
- Online learning is integrated in all forms of
delivery in Australia with parity of esteem in
qualifications - The link between Quality and perceived value
creates multiple perspectives and QA approaches - Australias dependence on cross border education
trade is reflected in increasing rigor of QA
processes - Australias TNE Quality strategy is aimed at
enhancing learning outcomes, improving practice
and growing market share in both Vocational
education and higher education - Professional development and shared resources to
improve practices and integrity of TNE
established in key centres of excellence eg AII,
IDP, IEAA and TNEF
3Online-learning? Interaction and independence,
getting the mixture right
4Globalisation, the knowledge economy and education
- World-wide flow and integration of people,
knowledge and money - Participation as a basic human right
- Access, affordability, lifelong learning
- Elite and mass education divide
- Quality based on brand/price/research rankings
- Quality based on performance outcomes to fit the
purpose
5TEACHING LEARNING
PRICE
CONTENT/ LEARNING RESOURCES
PRODUCT
ACCREDITATION
VALUE
QUALITY
E-COMMERCE
Buyer Individual, family, corporation,
government?
CUSTOMER SERVICE
LEARNER SUPPORT
(adapted from source Standing Stones Consulting
Ltd, 2000)
6COMPLEXITY
Delivery process
7A quality framework for technology and learning
processes CEN/ISSS Workshop on Learning
Technologies
- Strategic Planning
- Program framework,
- blueprint
- Course development
- infrastructure,
- design,
- pedagogy,
- Motivation
- materials,
- assessments,
- student support,
- evaluation
- Marketing and student recruitment strategy and
processes - Induction and orientation
- Realisation/implementation
- Cooperation with experts, sponsors, instructors,
industry - Student support
- Teacher support
- Evaluation
- Central database
8Selecting a quality system
- CEN model for the classification of quality
approaches in eLearning CWA 15533 (2006) - European Committee for Standardisation
There is a diversity of quality approaches
ELearning is complex and context specific
- Analyse quality needs
- Analyse different quality approaches
- Select best fit
- Adapt, apply and recycle
9Context and diversity
- Elite online
- protect competitiveness
- Closed re intellectual property
- Brand Research rankings
- Income
- Mass online
- protect effectiveness efficiency
- Open education resources
- Access, affordability, equivalence
- Learning Outcomes
10Top 100 research universities 2005 data from
Shanghai Jiao Tong University Institute of Higher
Education
Others Israel, Finland, Denmark, Austria,
Norway, Russia, Italy each 1.
Source Simon Marginson
11Mega Universities (lt100,000 students)
12Impact of brand rankingsref Marginson 2006
- Rankings perpetuate biases,
- favour English-speaking science-strong
universities - Rankings use data based on student choice
- financial inputs
- Research publications/citations
- student-staff ratios
- Data does not reveal
- the quality of teaching or
- professional preparation
- Rankings reflect and manufacture university
reputation. - They are self-reinforcing
- They block genuine merit and upward mobility
13A culture of quality
- QA survey of mega universities (Jung, 2005)
- An institutional culture that
- Promotes internal QA system
- Values capacity building for implementing QA
- Stresses link between QA and public
accountanbility - Focuses on learning rather than teaching
- See also Commonwealth of learning www.col.org
14Institution program level Accreditation
quality processes
- CHEA Council for Higher Education Accreditation
(USA) - Reviews Q of Distance (online) Learning through
the accreditation process - External review of institutions programs
- Diverse approaches
- EFMD CEL European Foundation for Management
Development Accreditation of eLearning enhanced
management courses - Programme strategy stakeholder relevance of ICT?
- Pedagogy added value of ICT to the learning?
- Economics efficient and effective?
- Organisation appropriate systems?
- Technology functionality and accessibility?
- Culture Change and innovation considerations?
15Australias QA Culture
- AQF articulates vocational education and HE
- Parity of qualifications independent of mode of
delivery - Universities are self-accrediting subject to
external and internal QA - Government QA through research and teaching
performance fund - External audit agencies (AUQA) and professional
accreditation - Alignment with international standards and
approaches, eg Bologna process
16Transnational education defined
- UNESCO and OECD guidelines for Quality Provision
in Cross-Border Higher education - when students follow a course or programme of
study that has been produced, and is continuing
to be maintained, in a country different from the
one in which they are residing
17Exporters of cross-border degrees 2003 OECD data
18Largest Australian providers
19Australias Commitment to Quality in the Global
Education Market
- Preserving Australias competitive position.
- Australia is the third largest exporter of
education in the world. - Education is Australias sixth largest export
earner (5.7 billion in 2004). - Australias commitment to quality and to the
integrity of its transnational education
provision, is upheld by Federal and State
governments and by all 44 approved providers.
20Australias trading position
- Current focus on capacity to sustain competitive
position in the elite market - Global future will depend on capacity to shift to
being a mass supplier - Leverage existing capacity
- Scale design of programs
- Develop cost effective distribution and support
systems - Manage partnerships
21Australias TNE strategykey areas for action
- better communication of Australias QA
arrangements to all stakeholders - increased access to data and information
- strengthened national quality framework.
22Identifying good practice
- Industry-led projects commissioned by the
Australian Vice-Chancellors Committee - Good practice in quality delivery of education to
students residing outside Australia. - selection and management of partners
- determining the equivalence of the student
experience - delivery in languages other than English and
- staff development and training.