38 results
Search Results
2. Higher Education and the Reform Process in Central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
-
Rupnik, Jacques
- Abstract
The problems of higher education in central and eastern Europe are discussed, including the processes of reform and the communist past; the need to both rebuild elites and expand participation; the role of the university between state and market; the relationship between research and teaching; and priorities for cooperation between western and eastern Europe. (DB)
- Published
- 1992
3. On Instantly Consumable Knowledge and Snake Oil.
- Author
-
Neave, Guy
- Abstract
This article looks at vocationalism in higher education in terms of three stages of vocationalism in western Europe. It also examines the shifting legitimacy toward vocationalism, new forms of stratification in the academic profession, and vocationalism as a response to "massification" of higher education. (DB)
- Published
- 1992
4. On Preparing for Markets: Trends in Higher Education in Western Europe 1988-1990.
- Author
-
Neave, Guy
- Abstract
The last few years have seen an acceleration in "the drive toward the market" as the principal element underlying higher education policy in western Europe. The trend, seen in historical perspective, is more than just another example of higher education policy as crisis management. (MSE)
- Published
- 1990
5. Quality Culture: understandings, boundaries and linkages.
- Author
-
HARVEY, LEE and STENSAKER, BJØRN
- Subjects
CULTURE ,HIGHER education ,QUALITY assurance ,TEACHING ,LEARNING ,LANGUAGE & languages ,NOUNS ,CIVILIZATION - Abstract
As part of the process of enhancing quality, quality culture has become a taken-for-granted concept intended to support development and improvement processes in higher education. By taking a theoretical approach to examining quality culture, starting with a scholarly examination of the concept of culture, and exploring how it is related to quality, quality improvement and quality assurance, the aim of this paper is to create a better understanding of how one can make sense of quality culture, its boundaries but also its links to the fundamental processes of teaching and learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Competing Higher Education Futures in a Globalising World.
- Author
-
LEFRERE, PAUL
- Subjects
EDUCATION & globalization ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,INFORMATION & communication technologies ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Globalisation, together with readier access to capability-enhancing technologies and to technological insights once restricted to a few leading economies, are resulting in greater competition within Europe, and more widely within the developed world, for influence of all kinds (not just influence over the choices that foreign students make about the Higher Education courses on offer to them from Europe, but also influence of a more overtly imperialist kind, extending to the policies, incomes and futures of others). This article looks at trends in one important market for European Higher Education, the Middle East (particularly the GCC countries), which has many providers from North America and Australia. As observed by the late Edward Said, the USA is particularly forceful in the Middle East. Its technological superiority is accompanied by fervour to introduce American methods and curricula, and strong belief in their merit, reminiscent of the belief of the old French empire that ‘France had a “mission civilisatrice”, to civilize the natives”. The danger, highlighted in a recent UNESCO report ‘New Ignorances, New Literacies’, is that the natives will not be listened to. Is Europe listening more or less than the USA, and is it being listened to? Despite attention-gaining initiatives such as the proposed European Institute of Technology, EIT, and the commitment of EU governments to the Lisbon goals on competitiveness, there are indications of a drop in the influence of European Higher Education institutions in the Middle East. This paper explores the kinds of issues that may be at work, and the implications for European Higher Education policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Common Standards for Programme Evaluations and Accreditation?
- Author
-
Hämäläinen, Kauko
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,EDUCATIONAL quality ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Analyzes standards, criteria and indicators used in program evaluation and accreditation in higher education in Western Europe as of September 1, 2003. Definitions of standards and criteria for evaluating the quality of education; Kinds of standards, criteria and indicators for program evaluation and accreditation; Evaluation of teaching and learning methods.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Recognition is Deserved, Qualifications are Merited. Where Does that Leave Fairness in Accreditation?
- Author
-
Gibbs, Paul and Armsby, Pauline
- Subjects
ACCREDITATION of Prior Experiential Learning (Great Britain) ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,PRIOR learning ,HIGHER education & state ,HIGHER education ,KNOWLEDGE management - Abstract
This article contextualises the use of accreditation for prior experiential learning (APEL) in European higher education by analysing the notions of desert and merit. We propose that the credentialising of certain types of knowledge can lead to a narrow definition of education which merely endeavours to serve consumer imperatives so as to market the individual in the work place rather than develop the essence of their being. The article advocates judgement not rules, codes or descriptors in making assessments of the worth of the personal and professional knowledge , experience and practices of claimants. We then argue that without such mechanistic criteria desert rather than merit should hold sway in the making of assessments. Moreover, we propose that desert more fairly represents an individual's achievements for the purposes of the owner of the achievement and for those would wish to make decsions based upon them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Invest for the Long Term or Attend to Immediate Needs? Schools and the Employment of Less Educated Youths and Adults.
- Author
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Santa Cruz, Inãki, Siles, Gregori, and Vrecer, Natalija
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL education research ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATION ,TRACK system (Education) - Abstract
For the past 20 years, researchers worldwide have shared a consensus that tracking leads to failure in school. But educational systems continue to use this practice for many reasons. One argument used to support the practice is that students who enter the vocational track early in their careers tend to enter the labour market more quickly. Data show, however, that when these people are in their 40s, they become the most vulnerable to poverty, especially during periods of economic recession. In addition to moving towards more comprehensive educational systems as the best long-term way to improve the chances of all future adults, our research demonstrates that schools can play a key role in preventing and reversing the risk of unemployment and poverty of low educated youth. The INCLUD-ED project has analysed effective actions in eight European countries (Slovenia, United Kingdom, Italy, Austria, Romania, Belgium, Finland, and Spain) that respond to the educational needs of those who have experienced tracking. These effective alternatives are vocational programmes that include an academic-type of curriculum and allow students to move to higher education, as well as adult education programmes in schools which meet families' training needs, improving their opportunities in the labour market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Bologna in Context: a horizontal perspective on the dynamics of governance sites for a Europe of Knowledge.
- Author
-
GORNITZKA, ÅSE
- Subjects
BOLOGNA process (European higher education) ,HIGHER education ,EXPERTISE ,POLITICAL agenda - Abstract
This article presents a horizontal perspective on the dynamics of governance sites currently active for the European of Knowledge and places the Bologna process in this wider European level context. It introduces two dynamics of change in political organisation: a) institutional differentiation and specialisation and b) the interaction between institutional spheres and sectors. Signs of sectoral differentiation are identified in the history of European integration that is relevant to the Europe of Knowledge. The argument is that the nature and sequence of the differentiation process are key to understand current governance processes. It is illustrated by showing how a horizontal dynamics has been played out in the case of the EU's Lisbon strategy and in particular the cooperation taking place in the framework of the EU's 'Education and Training 2010' work programme. The analysis shows how the Bologna process, although perpetuated as a sector internal governance site, has co-evolved and interacted with this strategy, partly as an object of emulation and source of support and partly as a competing governance site. A horizontal dynamics of change is also evident in the larger Lisbon strategy as it lifted research and higher education policy to the centre of the European integration project. It resulted in the development of several governance sites with different foci targeting European higher education. A more prominent place on the political agenda came together with demands that research and education should be integrated with the overall political and economic objectives of the EU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Qualifications Frameworks: the avenue towards the convergence of European higher education?
- Author
-
KARSETH, BERIT and SOLBREKKE, TONE DYRDAL
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,BOLOGNA process (European higher education) ,INSTITUTIONALISM (Religion) - Abstract
This article analyses one of the most important aspects of the journey towards the vision of a European Higher Education Area, namely the development of a 'new architecture' in which compatible qualifications frameworks are one of the main building blocks. The overall question addressed concerns how and whether signatory countries of the Bologna process, although committed to this 'new architecture', share the same understanding of the intentions of the qualifications frameworks. The article shows that, while the main policy documents of the Bologna process cling to the saga of successfulness with regard to the implementation of compatible qualifications frameworks at national levels, our analysis demonstrates major shortcomings which cannot be explained within a rational approach. Rather, our study indicates that the shortcomings are better understood as the lack of a shared epistemic as well as cultural understanding of the aim of a qualifications framework. By employing a theoretical lens based upon different perspectives on institutionalism and governmentality, we argue that qualifications frameworks can be understood as part of a rapidly-expanding myth of rationality which offers global scripts to follow. On the other hand, the translation process of the qualifications frameworks shows that there are different 'windows of opportunities' which offer the different countries a space to manifest national mindsets and institutional practices. This becomes evident when looking into the self-certifications reports on national qualifications framework of three countries. Finally, to understand what is at stake, the issue of power needs to be taken into account. As we suggest, it comes as no surprise that the countries in the 'leading group' of introducing national qualifications frameworks are all 'well-established' members of the European Union. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A Different View of the Bologna Process: the case of Turkey.
- Author
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YAĞCI, YASEMİN
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,BOLOGNA process (European higher education) ,EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
Since the beginning of the 20
th century, integration with the Western world has been a determining driver of higher education policies, as well as many other policy areas in Turkey. Becoming a signatory country of the Bologna Process in 2001 brought a new impulse to the higher education policies in this direction. The Bologna Process reforms introduced necessary changes and set new challenges. This article discusses the main implementation activities in the context of the Bologna Process in Turkey and the governance of the reform at the national level with a focus on the roles of the key national bodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Managing the Bologna Process at the European Level: institution and actor dynamics.
- Author
-
LAŽETIĆ, PREDRAG
- Subjects
BOLOGNA process (European higher education) ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,HIGHER education ,STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
This article analyses the work of the Bologna Follow Up Group as the main institution of the Bologna Process and the perceptions of the policy actors involved concerning the character of the process in terms of its functioning in contrast to similar multi-level multi-actor European processes, its modes of communication and consensus seeking, as well as its effectiveness in terms of policy formation and implementation. It argues that the Bologna Process is a unique multi-level multi-actor process shaped by its informality, the actors' political commitment and the participation of stakeholders. Its format seems to be more effective and suitable for purposes of policy formation than for those of policy monitoring or coordination of implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The US Response to Bologna: expanding knowledge, first steps of convergence.
- Author
-
ADELMAN, CLIFFORD
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,BOLOGNA process (European higher education) - Abstract
The roads of incoming information to the US higher education system about the Bologna Process are varied and numerous. They include not only the on-line and traditional trade press, but also conferences of national organisations. Whether anyone remembers much of that information, on the other hand, is an open question, as a limited survey undertaken by the author reveals. The mainstream media are not interested in Bologna, governance authorities are exclusively focused on internal issues, and the US research literature on Bologna, while growing, is still minimal. However, some of the research was picked up by the Lumina Foundation for Education, which sponsored the first US experiment with Bologna-related reforms through a Tuning project involving three state systems and six disciplines; and a second round of this venture should begin soon. Out of this effort came Lumina's sponsorship of the first rounds of discussions concerning the potential for a national degree qualifications framework. This evolution indicates another mode of communication in the US system: a combination of personal relations and private foundations with a bold enough agenda to elevate and move both Bologna knowledge and practice to the centre of US consideration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The Impact of the European Standards and Guidelines in Agency Evaluations.
- Author
-
STENSAKER, BJØRN, HARVEY, LEE, HUISMAN, JEROEN, LANGFELDT, LIV, and WESTERHEIJDEN, DON F.
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,STANDARDS ,GUIDELINES ,QUALITY assurance - Abstract
The emergence of the European Standards and Guidelines (ESG) for Quality Assurance has been seen as an important step towards realising the European Higher Education Area by creating more transparency and accountability in the area of quality assurance. The ESG also include standards as to how quality assurance agencies should be reviewed. In a meta-analysis of the reviews undertaken of quality assurance agencies, this article explores to what extent the ESG is having an impact on the reviews. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Challenges of Work-Based Learning in the Changing Context of the European Higher Education Area.
- Author
-
SCHMIDT, REINHARD and GIBBS, PAUL
- Subjects
COOPERATIVE education ,HIGHER education ,GLOBALIZATION ,AGING ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,BUSINESS & education ,EMPLOYABILITY - Abstract
The article discusses the features of the common European framework for work-based learning (WBL) of the project Developing European Work Based Learning Approaches and Methods (DEWBLAM). It highlights the point that education and training have the main role in responding to the challenges faced in Europe including globalization, an ageing population and emerging new technologies. It states that the European Union initiatives have brought changes in the structure, purpose, methodology, conduct and delivery of higher education in response to globalization. WBL is stated to possibly help higher education institutions to establish sustainable partnerships with workplace organizations, create more appropriate qualifications and improve employability.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. From Quality Assurance to Quality Enhancement in the European Higher Education Area.
- Author
-
GVARAMADZE, IRAKLI
- Subjects
QUALITY assurance ,HIGHER education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,INVESTORS ,STUDENTS ,BOLOGNA process (European higher education) ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,GUIDELINES - Abstract
This article focuses on recent trends in quality assurance initiatives, analyses how the European Higher Education Area promotes quality enhancement mechanisms and their implications for quality cultures in universities. It presents and discusses two approaches towards quality enhancement both at the institutional and programme level: 1. Quality Enhancement at programme level: the Tuning approach and 2. Scottish Enhancement-led Institutional Review. It also argues that current approaches towards quality culture are reorienting the focus from quality assurance towards contextual quality enhancement and that quality enhancement becomes the primary responsibility of universities and university stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. From Voluntary Participation to Monitored Coordination: why European countries feel increasingly bound by their commitment to the Bologna Process.
- Author
-
RAVINET, PAULINE
- Subjects
SCHOOL administration ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,DEBATE ,THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
Beginning in the year 2000, higher education policies all over Europe were transformed by the launching and evolution of the Bologna Process, otherwise known as the process of creating a European Higher Education Area (EHEA). Initially, this process was flexible and informal, which makes the rapidity and scope of the changes it brought about surprising: why did European governments commit themselves to achieving the Bologna Objectives, and why so quickly, when there was no legal obligation to do so? I will argue the following: to understand the development of such a sense of obligation, we must take into account the special interests at stake when Bologna objectives are implemented at a national level. We must also consider the legitimacy lent to the process by the Bologna ideals of a knowledge-based economy and society. These elements are present in other studies on this topic. However, and this is rarely considered, we also have to take into account the specific dynamics of the process of creating an institutional coordination and monitoring mechanism. This mechanism has a formal institutional structure and tools for evaluation and monitoring. Our analysis of the way in which it was developed and formalised enriches previous research on the topic and also sheds light on how a flexible European process of voluntary participation became a monitored system of coordinated national higher education policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Leadership and Strategic Management: keys to institutional priorities and planning.
- Author
-
TAYLOR, JAMES S., DE LOURDES MACHADO, MARIA, and PETERSON, MARVIN W.
- Subjects
LEADERSHIP ,POLITICAL planning ,FEDERAL aid to higher education ,SOCIAL services ,RESOURCE allocation ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Allocating and managing resources have always been important cornerstones of institutional leadership. Institutional resources include financial, physical and human components. Even in the best of times, it is a challenge to do this effectively. In times of diminished and shrinking resources, distributing these precious commodities across the institutions in the most equitable and productive manner is fraught with complications. As higher education funding streams expand and present more options, they also create new challenges. Leaders today must be well-versed in the emerging realms of philanthropy and entrepreneurialism. Beyond monetary resources, leaders and senior managers must monitor and understand the external environment in order to make discerning decisions about the viability of further infrastructure investments because of changing student demographics or the complexities of personnel within the dynamic culture of social organisations. This article will stress the need for leadership and an institutional planning process as essential prerequisites to effective resource allocations. Portugal will also be discussed as a case study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Cross-border Higher Education Collaboration in Europe: lessons for the ‘two Irelands’?
- Author
-
OSBORNE, ROBERT D.
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,EDUCATION research ,CURRICULUM ,STUDENTS ,TEACHERS - Abstract
This article examines three examples of cross-border higher education collaboration in Europe in order to throw light on one European region where such collaboration is only in its early stages of development. The main region examined is the Öresund region covering the Skåne area of Southern Sweden centred on Malmo and the Zealand region of Denmark which incorporates the Copenhagen region. Additionally, and more briefly, the Upper Rhine collaboration of the EUCOR universities and the ALMA collaboration (Netherlands, Germany and Belgium) are considered. Lessons from these examples are then used to assist in the assessment of existing collaboration between higher education institutions in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland and the possibilities for further collaboration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Research on Higher Education in Europe.
- Author
-
TEICHLER, ULRICH
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,EDUCATION ,ASSESSMENT of education ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,EDUCATIONAL quality - Abstract
Research on higher education grew in European countries from scattered individual activities towards a certain degree of visibility in the 1970s, largely as consequence of growing public problem awareness. In the 1980s, it experienced a set-back due to declining public interest in higher education as a key issue of societal policies. From the late 1980s onwards, research in this domain again drew attention and support in the wake of debates about the knowledge society, new modes of steering and management and the increasing internationalisation of higher education. However, growth and consolidation of this research were accompanied by a more rapid growth of policy-geared information collection and dissemination in the framework of evaluation, consultancy, expert commissions and the daily work of the growing number of higher education professionals. Research on higher education often does not have a solid institutional base and it both benefits and suffers from the fact that it is a theme-base area of research, drawing from different disciplines, and that the borderline is fuzzy between researchers and other experts on higher education. But a growth and quality improvement of research on higher education can be observed in recent years — certainly to some extent due to growing cooperation of researchers across Europe and to increasing cooperation in comparative projects. In the future, the first steps undertaken to establish study programmes for higher education experts could turn out be beneficial not only for the dissemination of research findings, but also for the quality of young researchers in this domain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Transparency of Qualifications: are we there yet?
- Author
-
DEANE, CYNTHIA
- Subjects
EUROPEAN communities ,LABOR mobility ,VOCATIONAL education ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Greater transparency improves the understanding and interpretation of qualifications and competences. This article asks whether transparency of qualifications has become a reality in Europe. It begins by outlining the three main strategies that were adopted at Community level between 1957 and 1999 to address the problem of transferring qualifications from one country to another. It then describes recent Community action on transparency and recognition of qualifications at both VET and higher education levels. The outcomes of the European Forum on Transparency of Vocational Qualifications are outlined, and in particular the new Europass framework for transparency of qualifications is described, and issues about its implementation are discussed. Some of the main tensions that are observed between the approaches to transparency in VET and in higher education are highlighted. Finally, there is a brief case study on the approaches that have been adopted in recent years to achieve transparency of qualifications in Ireland, against a background of extensive reform of the national qualifications system. In summary, the article is primarily a reflection on the practical aspects of making transparency of qualifications a reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. European Higher Education Graduates and Job Satisfaction.
- Author
-
MORA, JOSÉ‐GINÉS, VILA, LUIS E., and GARCÍA‐ARACIL, ADELA
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,JOB satisfaction ,JOB security ,QUALITY of work life - Abstract
Focuses on the relationship between higher education and job satisfaction in Europe. Increase in the explanatory power of the simple human capital earnings model as the non-wage variables were added to the earnings; Influence of education on quality of job; Analysis on monetary and non-monetary aspects of job satisfaction.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Almost Half-time in the Bologna Process — Where Do We Stand?
- Author
-
TAUCH, CHRISTIAN
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,ACADEMIC degrees ,PROFESSIONAL education ,REFORMS - Abstract
The article discusses implementation of comparable degrees in order to implement the Bologna process. Adopting a system of easily readable and comparable degrees, essentially based on two main cycles, was one of priorities of the Bologna Declaration. And to achieve this, governments and higher education institutes have to cooperate closely so that they can ensure that the implementation of the new degree structures is not done superficially but is accompanied by the necessary curricular reform, taking into account the ongoing European discussions on descriptors for Bachelor-level and Master-level degrees, learning outcomes and qualification profiles. It will also be essential that they elaborate national qualifications frameworks based on external reference points that are in tune with a common European Qualifications Framework.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Improving the Recognition of Qualifications in the Framework of the Bologna Process.
- Author
-
RAUHVARGERS, ANDREJS
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,SOCIAL institutions ,ORGANIZATIONAL transparency ,EMPLOYEES ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Whereas supra-national higher education policies in the past decade have been criticised for their possible harm to the national governments’ autonomy, the Bologna process — as an international agreement — has received much more positive reactions from national governments, at least in the rhetoric sense. Nevertheless, a variety of approaches of governments can be noted to do justice to the agreements made in the . In this article, we shall try to explain the (gradual) change from Euroscepticism to acceptance of harmonisation attempts in higher education. We shall furthermore exemplify this change process by looking at developments in a number of European countries: UK, Greece, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Austria and Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Quality and European Programme Design in Higher Education.
- Author
-
González, Julia and Wagenaar, Robert
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,EDUCATIONAL quality ,INTERNATIONALISM - Abstract
Focuses on the relationship between internationalization and quality in higher education and on the effect of European educational programs on its quality of education as of September 1, 2003. Need to improve European collaboration in the development of quality and effectiveness of education; Basis on which education quality should be compared; Reason for the difficulty in evaluating the contribution of internationalism to the quality of education.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Quality Assurance Before and After ‘Bologna’ in the Central and Eastern Region of the European Higher Education Area with a Focus on Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland.
- Author
-
Rozsnyai, Christina
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,EDUCATIONAL quality - Abstract
Focuses on quality assurances of higher education in Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland before and after the Bologna Declaration which was signed in June 1999 by European ministers to strengthen the institutional autonomy in teaching and in the curriculum of higher education in Europe as of September 1, 2003. Objectives of the Bologna Declaration; History of higher education in Europe; Quality assurance methods followed in Central and Eastern European Countries.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Ideas, Institutions and Policy Entrepreneurs: towards a new history of higher education in the European Community.
- Author
-
Corbett, Anne
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Focuses on the European Community (EC) policy-making in education and the conceptualization of policy processes in the creation and development of EC policy activity in higher education. Changes and development in EC Higher Education Policy from 1955-1987; Impact of the agreement between France and Italy on the principle of EC educational cooperation and on the European University issue; Development in the policy design for EC education from 1973-1976; Characteristics of the process launched by the EC at the meeting in Lisbon, Portugal in 2000.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Increasing or Widening Participation in Higher Education? — a European overview.
- Author
-
OSBORNE, MICHAEL
- Subjects
HIGHER education - Abstract
Presents a European overview of widening participation in higher education. Association of the purposes of initiatives to widen participation with economic instrumentation, social justice and pragmatism; Classification of higher education into four strata.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Editorial.
- Author
-
Askling, Berit and Jallade, Jean-Pierre
- Subjects
CONTINUING education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Introduces a series of articles about the implications of lifelong learning initiatives for universities in Europe. Obstacles and problems experienced by universities in adapting to lifelong learning policies; Changes in the concepts and organization of knowledge; Impact of lifelong learning on power relations and university structures; Interplay of international policies, national policies, and university practices.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Facilitating Progression to Higher Education From Vocational Paths.
- Author
-
Brown, Alan, Moerkamp, Trudy, and Voncken, Eva
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL education ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Examines progression from vocational education and training (VET) to higher education in the Netherlands and Great Britain. Discussion on the progression of senior vocational education (mbo) in the Netherlands; Success rates of mbo graduates in higher vocational education (Hbo); Skills needed to succeed in higher education according to mbo and Hbo teachers.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. New structures to reform higher education in Central and Eastern Europe: The role of distance...
- Author
-
Farnes, Nicholas
- Subjects
DISTANCE education ,EDUCATIONAL change ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Focuses on the role of distance education in the reform of higher education in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). Inherited structures of higher education; Relevance of reforms for distance education; Characteristics of higher education at different times in CEE.
- Published
- 1997
33. Quality in European higher education: recent trends and their historical backgrounds.
- Author
-
Maassen, Peter A.M.
- Subjects
HIGHER education - Abstract
Discusses the issue of the quality of European higher education and its evaluation from a historical and political point of view. Most important policy issues on the institutional and political agendas in Europe; Capability of higher education institutions to adopt to changes; Dominance of French and British universities in higher learning.
- Published
- 1997
34. On living in interesting times: Higher education in...
- Author
-
Neave, Guy
- Subjects
HIGHER education - Abstract
Looks at higher education in Western Europe between 1985 to 1995. Examination of higher education; Details on reunification of Europe's academic community; Information on growth of Western Europe; Information on factors that affect higher education.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Modular or general certification: Which system should be used for students in Europe?
- Author
-
De L'ain, Bertrand Girod
- Subjects
RATING of college students ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Discusses methods of evaluating and certifying university students in Europe. Reason why European authorities are trying to make higher education systems compatible; Credits being used as a model in France; Concurrence of German and English models on the evaluation of students; European universities with limited certifying power.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Power, enlightenment and quality evaluation.
- Author
-
Barnett, Ronald
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Focuses on quality evaluation in higher education in European countries. Contemporary forms of quality evaluation; Ownership and control of evaluation systems; Purposes and methods of quality evaluation; Power and enlightenment in quality evaluation; Change and responsibilities in quality assessment.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The politics of quality: Developments in higher education in Western Europe 1992-1994.
- Author
-
Neave, Guy
- Subjects
HIGHER education - Abstract
Examines the politics of quality of higher education in Western Europe from a historical, organizational and comparative perspective. Implications for higher education systems endorsing different models and procedures; Assessment, procedures and mechanisms that will allow the realization of quality according to Western European standards; International dimensions of quality.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Development of Effective Staffing Structures in Higher Education.
- Author
-
Absalom, Roger and Sutton, Clive
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,SCHOOL employees - Abstract
Discusses some of the common staffing features and pressures in higher education in Europe. Effect of the environmental changes on the traditional relationships between institutions and their academic, research and technical staff; Possible barriers to vertical and horizontal mobility of staff caused by worsening environment; Problem of value dissonance caused by intensive demands on academic staff.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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