overview of the 2002 developments in the recognition field

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EAIE Annual Conference, Porto, September 12-14, 2002 Overview of the 2002 developments in the recognition field Dr. Andrejs Rauhvargers, Secretary General, Latvian Rectors’ Council All documents mentioned in presentation are available at: http://www.aic.lv/ace links to each document: http://www.aic.lv/ace/porto201 .html

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Overview of the 2002 developments in the recognition field. Dr. Andrejs Rauhvargers, Secretary General, Latvian Rectors’ Council All documents mentioned in presentation are available at: http://www.aic.lv/ace links to each document: http://www.aic.lv/ace/porto201.html. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

EAIE Annual Conference,

Porto, September 12-14, 2002

Overview of the 2002 developments

in the recognition field

Dr. Andrejs Rauhvargers,

Secretary General,

Latvian Rectors’ Council

All documents mentioned in presentation are available at:

http://www.aic.lv/acelinks to each document:

http://www.aic.lv/ace/porto201.html

Page 2: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

2002 Directions of Developments in Recognition

• From creation of legal framework to implementation (ACE session 2.07)

• Recognition and Bologna process– cooperation with quality assurance – recognition of joint degrees– ECTS and recognition– Recognition for the labour market and

recognition of LLL qualifications – developments along subject lines –

Tuning – Descriptors - a framework for recognition

when moving to assessment of learning outcomes and competencies?

• Recognition and GATS – the role of the Lisbon Convention

Page 3: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Recognition-related events I

Recognition and quality assurance

• 10-11 Sep 2001, ParisUNESCO Expert Meeting on the Impact of Globalisation on Quality assurance and Recognition

• 12-13 March 2002offic

Amsterdam Conference “Working on the European Dimension of Quality”

• 17-18 Oct 2002, ParisUNESCO Global Forum Meeting on Quality assurance and Recognition

Page 4: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Recognition-related events II

Recognition and Bologna process

• 11-12 April 2002 offic, LisbonCoE conference “From Lisbon to a European Higher Education Area”

Recognition and the use of credits

• 11-12 October 2002 offic

EUA/Swiss conference on ECTS – The Challenge for Institutions

• Jun 2003 offic

Seminar on Recognition and Credit Systems for HE in the Context of LLL, Prague

Page 5: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Recognition-related events III

Degree structure and development of joint degrees

• 30-31 May 2002 offic

Stockholm seminar on Joint Degrees within the framework of the Bologna Process

• 20 Sep, 2002EUA Joint Masters’ Project launch conference, Brussels

• 14-15 March, 2003 offic

Helsinki Seminar on Master Degrees

• Spring 2003 offic

Seminar on Integrated Programmes, Italy (curriculum development& joint degrees)

Page 6: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

From Lisbon to European Higher Education area, 11-12 Apr, 2002

Topics covered

• State of the art of implementation of the Lisbon Convention,

• Overview of the recognition issues in Bologna process,

• Recognition for labour market: view of employer,

• Progress in assessing learning outcomes and non-traditional qualifications

• Role of information• recognition of transnational qualifications:

implementation of Code• External dimension of Bologna process,

UNESCO Global forum on international QA, Accreditation, Recognition

Page 7: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Cooperation with quality assurance

HE institutions

IR Admissions services

QA Improving and maintaining quality standards (quality improvement, accountability)

Students IR Evaluation of credentials; information on: - status of institutions/programs, their recognition possibilities - qualifications systems of other countries

QA (Information on status of institutions/ courses)

Graduates, professionals

IR Evaluation of credentials; information on qualifications systems of other countries

QA ?

Government agencies

IR Evaluation of credentials, information on: - procedures of professional recognition (regulated professions) - qualifications systems of other countries

QA Improving and maintaining the QA system (accountability, public protection)

Employers IR Evaluation of credentials; Information on qualifications systems of other countries

QA via IR?

Nationally: indirectly by running the QA system (public protection)Across borders through IR: information on status of institutions or courses

Page 8: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Descriptors of Bachelor and Master degrees

 

• the descriptors for Bachelor and Master degrees areeveloped by the “Joint quality initiative”

• descriptors are generalised for all bachelor and all master degrees

• descriptors can help to see qualifications in the categories of learning outcomes

• descriptors can help credential evaluators to determine whether there are substantial differences between the level of the foreign qualification compared to the home prototype

Page 9: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Descriptors of Bachelor and Master degree superimposed

Bachelor Master

knowledge and understan-ding

- builds upon secon- dary education, - supported by advan- ced textbooks

- but some aspects require knowledge of the forefront of the field of study

- extends/ enhances that of Bachelor’s level,

- provides a basis for originality in developing/ applying ideas,

- often within a research context

applying of knowledge

- professionality in work/ profession,

- competences demon- strated by devising & sustaining arguments & solving problems in own field

problem solving in - new/ unknown environ- ment, - wider/ multidiscipliniary context

analysis ability to gather and analyse data in own field

ability to integrate knowledge and handle complexity, formulate judgements with incomplete or limited information

Page 10: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Descriptors of Bachelor and Master degree superimposed II

Bachelor Master

communi-cation

can communicate information, ideas, problems and solutions

can communicate their conclusions and the underpinning knowledge and rationale in both specialist and non-specialist audiences clearly and unambiguously

learning abilities

have developed those skills needed to study further with a high level of autonomy

studying in a manner that may be largely self-directed or autonomous

Page 11: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Tuning project outcomes

• A methodology for tuning European higher education structures

• A set of learning outcomes in 7 subject areas

• A methodology for measuring student workload

• Identification of obstacles to convergence

• Platform for discussion with professional bodies

• Final report based on experience gained

• Recommendations for use in a wider context

Page 12: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Recognition and GATS

• To be accepted in the higher education sector, it is essential that GATS respects the existing mechanisms in international higher education, in particular the Lisbon Convention

• Among signatories of the Lisbon Convention there are 4 major exporters of educational services

Page 13: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Basic principles of Lisbon Convention relevant to GATS

• Holders of foreign qualifications shall have adequate access to an assessment of these qualifications

• Each country shall recognise foreign qualifications ... unless it can be shown that there are substantial differences

• Recognition of a higher education qualification issued in another country shall have one or both of the following consequences: – access to further higher education

studies, – the use of an academic title. – in addition, it may facilitate access to the

labour market

Page 14: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Principles of Code relevant to GATS

• academic quality and standards of transnational education programmes should be at least comparable to those of the awarding institution as well as to those of the receiving country,

• awarding institutions as well as the providing institutions are accountable and fully responsible for quality assurance and control,

• awarding institutions should be responsible for issuing the qualifications resulting from their transnational study programmes, providing clear and transparent information on the qualifications, in particular by using the Diploma Supplement.

Page 15: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field
Page 16: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Conclusions - Joint degrees

• Efforts to establish joint degrees are relevant to most Bologna objectives : joint quality assurance, recognition across the EHEA, transparency / convergence of HE systems, mobility, international employability, attractiveness.

• Effect of a programme is greater than the sum of its parts.

• Most Bologna countries have started JD.

• JD are most common in: economics/ business, engineering, law, management, European studies/political science.

Page 17: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Conclusions - Joint degrees

• More common at doctoral and Master levels.

• ECTS is widely used.

• Languages: usually those of the partner countries and/or English.

• Lack of national legislation creates problems for the award of joint degrees.

• Award of a joint degree in the name of several institutions is still legally difficult.

• “real” joint degrees fall outside both national and international legal framework for recognition.

Page 18: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Recommendations - Joint degrees

• Common definition of a JD is needed

• National legislation should be amended to ensure

– development of joint programmes award of degrees

– removing indirect obstacles.

• International legislation should be amended to extend the scope of the Lisbon Convention to JD (ENIC and NARIC)

• Even wider use of ECTS and the Diploma to ensure transparency

• Common mechanisms for the quality assurance of joint degrees are neded (EUA, ENQA).

• JD in professional fields, particularly regulated ones, should be strongly encouraged.

• Additional funding should be sought

Page 19: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Executive summary - Master degrees

• There is a dominant trend towards Master level degrees that require 300 ECTS credits

• The suggested definition of a Master degree in the EHE: it requires normally 300 ECTS credits, of which at least 60 should be obtained at the graduate level in the area of the specialisation con-cerned.

• This would allow for:- Bachelor 180 + Master 120 credits ; - Bachelor 240 + Master 90 - 120 credits (of which up to 30 or 60 may be waived) - 300 credits Master (integrated progr.)

• Medicine and related disciplines require a different scheme in most countries but this is not in contradiction.

• Extremely long “undergraduate” courses of 5–6 years are clearly out of line with the international definitions of “undergraduate“ and “(post)graduate“.

Page 20: Overview  of the 2002 developments   in the  recognition field

Executive summary - Master degrees

• Courses that are too short may find it very difficult, if not impossible, to get transferable accreditation when it is generalised in Europe.

• Differentiation between “academic” and “professional” Master degrees – some countries do and some don’t .

• Generel access requirement is Bachelor, but many countries allow access of equal qualifications and provide more bridges between the sectors of HE.

• ECTS and DS – being used or introduced in most countries

• Few HEI seek accreditation from foreign agencies, as national and regional are developing rapidly