Chair:Andrejs Rauhvargers, Lisbon Recognition Convention Committe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chair:Andrejs Rauhvargers, Lisbon Recognition Convention Committe

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Parallel session 3 Quality Assurance and Recognition in a Global Perspective Chair: Andrejs Rauhvargers, Lisbon Recognition Convention Committe – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chair:Andrejs Rauhvargers, Lisbon Recognition Convention Committe


1
Parallel session 3Quality Assurance and
Recognitionin a Global Perspective
  • Chair Andrejs Rauhvargers, Lisbon
    Recognition Convention Committe
  • Rapporteur Carolyn Campbell, UK Quality
    Assurance Agency For Higer Education
  • Speakers Maria José Lemaitre del Campo,
    Comision Nacional de Acreditacion, Chile
  • Nikki Heerens, ESIB

2
Quality assurance standards and guidelines
  • Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance
    in the European Higher Education Area have been
    developed in Bologna process
  • What are our expectations regarding ensuring
    trust
  • betwen the educational systems inside EHEA and
  • between EHEA and other regions
  • What effect will these recent developments in
    quality assurance have upon recognition of
    individual qualfications?

3
Quality assurance inside HEIs
  • While governments may regulate for quality and
    facilitate quality assurance, a culture of
    quality depends on the actions and attitudes of
    education practitioners.
  • How could we ensure the full contribution of
    educational staff and students in securing and
    developing quality in higher education?

4
Quality assurance
  • How should the developments in QA in Europe
    together with the recent attempts by OECD and
    UNESCO - be used to open Europe to bona fide
    crossborder education providers?
  • How could European developments in organising of
    HE quality assurance be perceived in other
    regions?
  • Are European developments in the organising of
    quality assurance in higher education
    transferable to other regions?

5
Quality assurance - capacity building
  • For many countries the challenges of managing
    and protecting national education policies and
    ensuring sustained quality in education are
    beyond current capacity.
  • What contributions can be made, and how should
    they be made, by the more established education
    sectors of Europe?

6
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
  • Globalised trade in higher education services
    already constitutes a significant segment of
    world trade in services.
  • It is important however that the questions of
    recognition and QA with respect to crossborder
    education be the focus of discussion, not the
    questions of trade policy which lie outside the
    education field.
  • In this perspective how could the Bologna
    Process help safeguard the special quality
    aspects of education -
  • specifically the interests of the weaker
    countries who are the potential victims of
    low-quality across borders?

7
Some impressions and recommendations from
outside Europe
  • taken from discussion at the seminar Improving
    the recognition system, Riga Dec 3-4, 2004
  • and further dialog

8
Dealing with EHEA or with individual countries?
  • while the emerging EHEA is major actor, the
    responsibility for recognition matters still
    falls on the individual States so the world will
    continue to deal with many individual national
    systems
  • There are differences in the degree to which
    individual countries reform their recognition
    processes, or engage in intra- or extra-European
    dialogue.This can and do affect post-Bologna
    interaction.
  • Educators in non-EHEA countries have difficulty
    in sorting this out.

9
European region or EHEA?
  • EHEA matters dominate the agenda of the UNESCO
    European Region
  • It is important but has the side-effect of making
    non-EHEA members of the European Region
    spectators offering occasional interventions
    rather than fully engaged partners.

10
Openness or restrictions?
  • Its time for further openness and cooperation,
    and for the spirit of Lisbon Convention to
    re-animate the European-U.S. relationship.
  • Old barriers of national restrictive practices
    should be truly removed, and not just replaced
    by a pan-European set of barriers defined by the
    borders of the EHEA.
  • First, however, there needs to be a basis of
    mutual understanding based on respect for the
    systems of higher education on each side.

11
Competition and attractiveness
  • Competition for students, resources, and prestige
    is not an Anglo-Saxon plot or a perversion
    introduced by the US. It is a consequence of
    needing to serve more students with limited
    resources, economic and social development.
  • Attractiveness of EHEA is just an elegant way of
    mentioning competition.
  • A dialog should allow to openly discuss issues
    but the outside partners should not have a
    feeling that while seeking own competitiveness,
    there is protectionism inside the EHEA

12
Credits
  • Issues to discuss how to compare credits based
    on contact hours or on workload, discriminating
    between lower/higher division subjects or not,
    taking grades into account in credit calculation
    or not,
  • It would be useful for U.S. and European experts
    to have a serious technical discussion about the
    comparability of credits, and to also refer to
    comparative calculations of other credit systems
    such as UMAP (University Mobility Asia-Pacific)

13
Degree Structures
  • U.S. bachelors degrees are required to be at
    least 120 U.S. credit hours (normally 4 years)
  • (Requirements by accreditation guidelines,
    institutional policy, federal law) This would
    mean that only EHEA bachelors programs with 240
    ECTS credits could be considered comparable
    unless additional factors were considered.
  • US bachelors have recognition problems in Europe
    because part of the credits are often regarded by
    European institutions as secondary education.
  • Switch to comparing learning outcomes seems
    necessary also in recognition between EHEA and
    outside...

14
Recommendations
  • EHEA higher education institutions should inform
    their non-EHEA partners about Bologna degree
    developments and
  • they together should actively seek to work out
    any issues and establish precedents that can be
    used to inform recognition policies
  • make every effort to bring EHEA and non-EHEA
    experts and leaders together. A North American
    EHEA interaction could be a separate activity

15
Work together to address concerns that are shared
by EHEA and non-EHEA systems alike
  • promotion of better international cooperation in
    quality assurance
  • developing new and workable solutions to quality
    assurance and recognition of non-traditional
    education
  • ensuring that the EHEA stays open to cross-border
    provision of education, partnerships, and
    mobility from outside
  • resolving recognition and mobility issues that
    arise when systems are differently organized and
    structured than is EHEA and
  • continuing to deal together with fraud

16
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17
Recognition of EHEA degrees outside Europe
  • Bologna process has initiated a number of
    reforms in the degree structures in the European
    countries with a view of making degrees easier
    recognised across the European Higher Education
    Area.
  • But how are the new European degrees perceived
    outside Europe?
  • And how should Europe promote understanding of
    the Bologna degrees?

18
Improving recognition
  • In the European region, the Lisbon recognition
    Convention is the main legal document. It
  • Stipulates applicants right to fair assessment,
  • Introduces principle of recognizing same level
    if no substantial differences are evident
  • Puts burden of proof on the assessing authority
  • Bases recognition on trust among Members States
  • Stipulates applicants rights to appeal.
  • 40 countries have ratified the Lisbon convention
    and 9 more have signed

19
Improving recognition - inside EHEA
  • Ratification of the Convention is just the first
    step.
  • The principles of LRC have to be embedded into
    the national legislation,
  • Information should be channelled to all levels of
    HEIs
  • Practical issues following ratification, there
    is little change in the behaviour of credential
    evaluators.
  • The burden of proof is not always switched from
    the student to the assessing institution.
  • There is often no change in mentality, procedure
    or outcome.
  • Much remains to be done in order to reverse
    attitudes to positively seeking to give
    recognition.
  • Ministers are likely to agree to draw up national
    plans in improving quality of the recognition
    process. What could be the contents of such
    plans?

20
UNESCO conventions of African, Arab, Latin
American, Asia-Pacific and Mediterranean regions
  • are well meant,
  • address more issues than recognition only,
  • deal with recognition for academic and
    professional purposes at the same time,
  • But
  • seek equivalence rather than recognition,
  • do not establish applicants rights for fair
    assessment and appeal,
  • do not clearly link recognition with mutual trust
    (or quality assurance),
  • admit the need to develop criteria and procedures
    rather than stipulate them

21
Improving recognition - globally
  • How well may the UNESCO conventions be suited as
    the framework for a global system of
    recognition?
  • What could be the European contribution?
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