21 results
Search Results
2. 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
3. Distance Relationship as an Element of Policy.
- Author
-
Buachalla, Seamus O.
- Subjects
- *
DISTANCE education , *EDUCATION policy , *DECISION making - Abstract
As other papers have made clear, government interest in Distance Education is high and rising. There is therefore an inevitability that it will play a much larger part in future decision-making. In writing about this subject, Séamus Ó Buachalla has the advantage of much experience and greater insight. He has been a teacher, an inspector in the Irish Government Education Service, and is now a Professor in the Department of Teacher Education of Trinity College, Dublin. In addition he has worked for the Ministry as a planner and, outside Ireland, has done consultancy work for Unesco, the Council of Europe and the European Cultural Foundation. With that sort of varied experience, who better to write an informed and well-researched .paper on this important topic. As other papers have made clear, government interest in Distance Education is high and rising. There is therefore an inevitability that it will play a much larger part in future decision-making. In writing about this subject, Séamus Ó Buachalla has the advantage of much experience and greater insight. He has been a teacher, an inspector in the Irish Government Education Service, and is now a Professor in the Department of Teacher Education of Trinity College, Dublin. In addition he has worked for the Ministry as a planner and, outside Ireland, has done consultancy work for Unesco, the Council of Europe and the European Cultural Foundation. With that sort of varied experience, who better to write an informed and well-researched .paper on this important topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Key Issues in Distance Education: a government viewpoint (approaches by the European Commission and member states).
- Author
-
Fox, Nicholas
- Subjects
- *
DISTANCE education , *EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Governments tend to have strong opinions about education, largely because education eats up a large proportion of their budget. They do not always, however, have the opportunity to express those opinions in reasoned terms in learned journals. Here is the exception. Nicholas Fox has been seconded from the UK Training Agency to the COMETT Technical Unit. He thus has experience both of national and international governmental operations and an almost unique insight into the ways in which government decisionmaking takes place and the reasons why certain programmes are accepted while others fail. In this paper he gives an overview of European Distance Education programmes, and uses examples in the UK and France to illustrate national strategies in that field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Governing the Education Extended Enterprise as a Complex Adaptive System.
- Author
-
Edson, Robert and McGee, Sibel
- Subjects
EXTENDED enterprise ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL leadership ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The article offers information on the use of Complex Adaptive System (CAS) for the improvement of the governance of education system in Europe. Topics include the importance of improving and monitoring the education system performance, the formulation of governance strategies for the understanding of education systems, and the assertion regarding education systems as a form of CAS.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Does Europe Matter? A Comparative Study of Young People's Identifications with Europe at a State School and a European School in England.
- Author
-
Savvides, Nicola and Faas, Daniel
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,POSTSTRUCTURALISM ,NATIONALISM ,CURRICULUM ,SCHOOL decentralization - Abstract
This article explores the extent to which young people in predominantly middle-class environments identify with Europe and considers the influence of European education policy, school ethos and curricula. We compare data drawn from individual and focus group interviews with students aged 15-17 at a state school and a European School in England. The empirical analysis was informed by post-structuralism and found that young people at both schools developed multidimensional, multifaceted identities. Students at the European School, which has an ethos of developing both national and European identities, identified themselves more as European than their peers at the state school, which integrated students on the basis of a common British citizenship. The findings suggest that the policy on the European dimension in education contributes towards developing students' identification with Europe and to their knowledge of Europe, though not at the expense of their ethnic and national identities, which were stronger than their European identities. Lack of a European dimension in education (both in and out of school) seems to result in a lack of identification with and knowledge about Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Education and Social Transformation in Central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
-
Halász, Gábor
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL objectives ,EUROPEAN Union membership ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,CONTINUING education - Abstract
This article evaluates the outcomes of the efforts of Central and Eastern European ( CEE) countries to make their education systems more effective in enhancing broader social and economic goals. It focuses on those 11 Central and Eastern European countries which became members of the EU in 2004 or following this date. First, it presents a short analysis of how educational goals were connected with the broader goals of social and economic progress before and during the first phase of the transition period after the collapse of Communism. It then analyses the impact of the accession of these countries to the EU, including the impact of some European mechanisms that have contributed to the strengthening of linkages between education and social-economic progress. The third part of the article attempts to evaluate the outcomes of the relevant national education reforms, development programmes and policies, most of them generated by these mechanisms, in the light of a number of selected indicators. A key conclusion of the article is that the adoption of the lifelong learning approach of the EU has been a major engine to strengthen the role of education in social and economic development in the CEE region, but most countries still need further efforts to translate this approach into coherent and effective national policies and to implement them so that they produce relevant and significant outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Selective acquiescence, creative commitment and strategic conformity: situated national policy responses to Bologna.
- Author
-
Sin, Cristina and Saunders, Murray
- Subjects
BOLOGNA process (European higher education) ,HIGHER education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATION policy ,OPEN method of coordination (Government) ,EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,ACADEMIC motivation - Abstract
The non-binding nature of the Bologna Declaration and loose policy-making and implementation through the open method of coordination ( OMC) have led to varied national responses to the Bologna Process. The OMC has allowed countries room for manoeuvre to interpret Bologna policy and attach different degrees of importance to it. Looking at the interplay between agency and structure in policy implementation, this article aims to illustrate the localised character of Bologna policy implementation driven by national priorities and political agendas, a reflection of the 'policy as text' metaphor (Ball, 1994). The analysis is driven by an agentic understanding of the policy process, highlighting 'actors' perceptions, perspectives, preferences, actions and interactions' (Trowler, 2002). Three different country reactions are examined - England, Portugal and Denmark, described as selective acquiescence, creative commitment and strategic conformity to capture the essence of the cases in question. In analysing the countries' responses, the article considers national readings of Bologna, motivations behind responses to the Process, as well as its reception and implementation at national level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Teacher Competence Frameworks in Europe: policy-as-discourse and policy-as-practice.
- Author
-
Caena, Francesca
- Subjects
TEACHER effectiveness ,EDUCATION policy ,EFFECTIVE teaching ,EDUCATIONAL change ,TEACHER education ,TEACHER training ,TEACHING ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This article analyses the growing focus on teacher competences in European policy discourse against the backdrop of global convergences in education reforms. It traces key ideas, policy recommendations, peer learning and documents which underscore the relevance of teacher quality for education improvement, as recently stressed in the European Commission Communication and Staff Working Documents Rethinking Education. The intertwining of teacher competence frameworks with other areas of education policy is outlined - key competences in school education, the quality of initial teacher education, and the continuous professional development of teachers - teasing out reasons for their central role. Some insights from research and peer learning then explore key implications in the defining and implementing of teacher competence frameworks in national education systems. A comparative viewpoint further analyses current policy trends about teacher competences across European national contexts, in discourse and practice. In order to do so, a framework of analysis takes into account system features as key variables affecting national policy - roles and responsibilities of stakeholders, governance and education cultures, and the status of the teaching profession. Across the variety of policy practices, the analysis endeavours to trace some emerging patterns and trends, highlighting paradigmatic national examples, with some food for thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Review and Analysis of the EU Teacher-related Policies and Activities.
- Author
-
Stéger, Csilla
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,TEACHING ,TEACHERS ,TEACHER education ,TEACHER training ,TEACHER effectiveness ,EMPLOYMENT of teachers ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This article aims at raising awareness of the key role the EU already plays in matters of teacher policy. It takes stock of European teacher policy related documents and activities, such as relevant strategies, presidency priorities, Council Conclusions, Commission working documents, the activities of thematic working groups, of networks, of data gathering and research, and the available supports of the Lifelong Learning Programme and of the European Social Fund. Based on this, the article provides a clear picture of the labour market need-driven, pragmatic context of teacher policies and also the main shared European teacher policy concepts, such as teacher competence profiles, the continuum of professional development and the support of teacher educators. These fundamental concepts were shared, developed and fine tuned in the process of Member States peer learning, a crucial and highly effective method of cooperation, which is also presented in the article. The article concludes by identifying both sides of the two-way interaction process of Europeanisation taking place between Member States and the EU in teacher policy development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Editorial: conceptualising Early School Leaving.
- Author
-
Ross, Alistair and Leathwood, Carole
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION & economics - Abstract
A video abstract of this article can be viewed at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KEFSZYaNbzk [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Use of ICT in Education: a survey of schools in Europe.
- Author
-
Wastiau, Patricia, Blamire, Roger, Kearney, Caroline, Quittre, Valerie, Van de Gaer, Eva, and Monseur, Christian
- Subjects
INFORMATION & communication technologies ,EDUCATIONAL surveys ,SECONDARY schools ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
The Survey of Schools: ICT in education commissioned in 2011 by the European Commission took place between January 2011 and November 2012, with data collection in autumn 2011. This article presents the main findings of the Survey based on over 190,000 questionnaire answers from students, teachers and head teachers in primary, lower and upper secondary schools randomly sampled. The article details the analytical framework design and the survey methodology implemented. It then presents the main 'state of the art' indicators that have been built, concerning ICT infrastructure and access to it, frequency of students' ICT based activities during lessons, level of teachers' and students' confidence in their digital competences, their opinion about using ICT for teaching and learning, and the school strategies to support ICT integration in teaching and learning. The article also presents the main findings of the exploratory part of the analysis, introducing the concepts of digitally supportive school, digitally confident and supportive teacher and digitally confident and supportive student, estimating their respective proportion at EU level on average and by country and investigating whether high percentage of digitally supportive schools include high percentages of digitally confident and positive teachers and students. A few recommendations for policy making at European, national, regional/local and institutional levels conclude the article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Transformation of the European Educational Discourse in the Balkans.
- Author
-
Zmas, Aristotelis
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,DEMOCRATIZATION ,MODERNIZATION (Social science) - Abstract
The transfer of the European educational discourse to particular nation-states is a complex process. The outcomes following this transfer are unclear. This article examines the transfer of the European educational discourse in the Balkans and proposes its richer description through the consideration of the processes of educational democratisation and modernisation over the last 40 years in this area. These processes have facilitated the transfer of the European discourse to each of the Balkan countries, which today is achieved largely through participation in European Union programmes, the voluntary signing of common declarations, and financial backing through European funding. At the same time, there seems to be the general impression that the spread of the European discourse has similar effects on the reform of all the Balkan educational systems. As research interest now focuses almost exclusively on the transfer of the European educational discourse to the Balkans, one can easily surmise from this that the reform of the educational systems of the various countries in the region has a common ideological foundation. However, taking into account the concept of discourse transformation, it is argued here that the European educational discourse is influenced by the implementation of the various national policies. In one way or another, the European standards and brand names have to be filtered through the existing economic, sociological, political and cultural structures of each of the Balkan countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Assessing Key Competences across the Curriculum - and Europe.
- Author
-
Pepper, David
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL standards ,LEARNING ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
The development of key competences for lifelong learning has been an important policy imperative for EU Member States. The European Reference Framework of key competences (2006) built on previous developments by the OECD, UNESCO and Member States themselves. It defined key competences as knowledge, skills and attitudes applied appropriately to contexts. Now most Member States have incorporated key competences, or similarly broad learning outcomes, into their school curriculum frameworks. This is a necessary but insufficient step towards implementation; for the effective development of learners' key competences, assessment must also change. This article focuses on the challenge of assessing cross-curricular key competences in primary and secondary education. It is based on a major study for the European Commission (Gordon, et al., 2009), which drew on information gathered and validated with the help of experts in each of the 27 EU Member States. The study's typology of assessment provides a basis for reviewing some recent developments in Member States. Present challenges and innovative responses are addressed, including 'unpacking' key competences, 'mapping' them to contexts and 'accessment' of their full scope and range. Policy developments are considered in the context of the author's work with the European Commission's Thematic Working Group on the assessment of key competences. The article concludes with considerations for policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Key Competences in Europe: interpretation, policy formulation and implementation.
- Author
-
Halász, Gábor and Michel, Alain
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,VOCATIONAL education ,TRAINING of vocational teachers ,LABOR market - Abstract
The evolution in Europe towards more competence-based curricula in the last ten years or so is the result of several exogenous factors and a determined European policy. The Reference Framework of Key Competences for Lifelong Learning, a Recommendation approved by the European Parliament and the Council in 2006, and the work carried out within the Open Method of Coordination as well as by European research bodies have had a significant impact on Member States' curriculum reforms. This article shows that some terminology issues, both conceptual and practical, may explain, together with other causes, the diverse formulations of key competences and the way in which they are being integrated into the compulsory education curricula by the Member States or at intra-national levels. The focus of the article is on cross-curricular competences because these are the key competences which require the most significant innovations in teaching and learning practices, on assessment tools and procedures, and school organisation. The analysis illustrates the main differences and convergences in policy formulation and implementation strategies among the EU Member States. It also identifies key obstacles that must be overcome for an effective implementation before suggesting some policy recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Inspection of Home Education in European Countries.
- Author
-
Blok, Henk and Karsten, Sjoerd
- Subjects
HOME schooling laws ,EDUCATIONAL quality ,EDUCATION policy ,PARENT participation in education ,ASSESSMENT of education - Abstract
In many European countries and in North America, home education is a viable alternative for education at school. Parents who want to home school their child are legally allowed to do so, although some countries impose rather strict conditions. This article concentrates on the way authorities supervise or inspect the quality of home education. A comparison is made of inspection regulations in 14 European countries. Substantial differences were found, regarding among other things the function of inspection, inspection methods and the outcomes. Most countries do not have data on the effectiveness of inspection. It is recommended that governments screen their procedures for the inspection of home education using criteria such as transparency, consistency, and efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Learning Spaces: an ICT-enabled model of future learning in the Knowledge-based Society.
- Author
-
PUNIE, YVES
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL technology ,INFORMATION & communication technologies ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,PROGRESSIVE education ,INFORMATION technology ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
This article presents elements of a future vision of learning in the knowledge-based society which is enabled by ICT. It is not only based on extrapolations from trends and drivers that are shaping learning in Europe but also consists of a holistic attempt to envisage and anticipate future learning needs and requirements in the KBS. The ‘learning spaces’ vision puts learners at the centre of learning, but, at the same time, conceives learning as a social process. The potential of ICT-enabled learning spaces can only be realised, however, if it is embedded in a social and institutional context that is open to innovation and supported by a favourable policy environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Student Life and the Roles of Students in Europe.
- Author
-
BIENEFELD, STEFAN and ALMQVIST, JOHAN
- Subjects
STUDENTS ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,SOCIAL conditions of students ,PART-time students ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Focuses on student life and the roles of students in Europe. Result of changing concepts toward students; Evaluation of differences in monetary support given by states to students; Assessment of social conditions; Determination of the percentage of part-time students; Prospects for the creation of a unified European Higher Education Area; Assertion on the need for modifications in terms of social and financial support afforded to students.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. 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
20. `Early leavers' from education and training in Ireland, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.
- Author
-
Hannan, Damian and Hovels, Ben
- Subjects
SCHOOL dropouts ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Examines early leaving from education and training in Ireland, Netherlands and Great Britain. Connotations of early leaving; Relationship between educational adequacy and operations of the labor market; Unemployment trends among early leavers; Comparison of changes in standards in the three countries; Policy responses.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Some Final Thoughts: vocational education policy in a European context.
- Author
-
Wolf, Alison
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL education ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Discusses the vocational education policy in a European context. Parity of esteem between academic and vocational awards; Challenges facing the educational systems of various European countries.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.