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30 septembre 2012

25th annual CHER conference – current trends in HE research

http://uv-net.uio.no/wpmu/hedda/wp-content/themes/hedda/styles/blue/head-bg.jpgIn this post, Hedda associate Mari Elken collects some impressions from the latest CHER conference. What were the main themes that emerged and what were the highlights of the conference?
Earlier in September the 25th CHER (Consortium for Higher Education Research) conference was held in Belgrade, co-hosted the Centre for Education Policy (CEP) and the Centre for Education Policy Studies of the University of Ljubljana Faculty of Education (CEPS), and this year was themed “Higher Education and Social Dynamics”. Connected to this, the second ECHER (Early Career Higher Education Researchers) network was held, and the conference was ended with a post-conference symposium in Ljubljana.
CHER covers a wide range of topics and as a conference it aims to be a comprehensive one, covering various aspects of higher education research. While this was also the case in Beograd, one can notice that there is a relative skewness towards policy, governnace and organisational topics. When commenting on the impressions on main themes, Dominik Antonowicz, a researcher from Poland, highlighted two: autonomy and internationalisation, and he was pleased that the latter is ”no longer seen as a process of “universities becoming more international” but internationalisation is more like a way to sell  normative political and institutional order“.
However, issues such as teaching and learning in higher education tend to gain less focus, which can be argued to be somewhat of a downside, provided that conferences also have an important role in knowledge sharing and the lack of focus on one of the core activities of universities means that a piece of the puzzle might be missing and some important connections between research agendas will be lacking. This is by no means the fault of the organisers, but a wider question of turfs and territories and the unfortunate division between various disciplinary traditions.
As the conference took place in Western Balkans, this as also an opportunity to set the region in the research agenda. Dominik thought that this was exactly that happened during the conference “the research spot is in now on Western Balkans. A number of presentation concerned issues in this region. Lots of topics, researchers, questions to address. Clearly, it deserves better attention and I am personally glad that because there is a wide range of similarities between CEE and WB“. A separate panel was held on the large project focusing on the region led by CEPS, and a number of other papers in various sessions focused on the region, covering topics from the civic mission of universities to the academic profession, to internationalisation aims and impacts of European ideas. A large number of these papers were presented by researchers from the region, something Hedda associate Martina Vukasovic also put forward as one of her highlights of the conference.
The conference also featured three keynote speeches, amongst these Hugh Lauder from University of Bath, highlighted by another Hedda associate Romulo Pinheiro as the highlight of his conference. Lauder set a critical view on knowledge economy as a concept and assumptions of human capital theory, where learning=earning. Highlighting empirical data from a large project focusing on transnational companies he gave insights how increasing human capital and skill levels has not meant a general reduction of povery, thus shaking the assumptions of ‘trickling down’ and spillovers. And not only that, the wage premium for increased skills is not there in broad terms. As such, he called for a more active approach and opposition towards what he called the “knowledge capitalism”. The other keynotes included Srbijanka Turajlić who highlighted the issues of employability in the  region and Maarten Simons who examined university education as a collective/public practice.
Looking back  at the conference and not least the post conference symposium, one sits with an impression that a large amount of self reflection took place with a common concern about higher education research and its future – concerns that have their origin in the implications of funding and resources, disciplinary connections and methodology.
There seems to be an aknowledgemenet that there is a new reality for higher  education researchers, a reality imbued with policy ambitions of various national or supranational bodies, and where research is increasingly done in multiple knowledge production centres outside traditional research practice (i.e. consultancy firms). In a tighter funding situation where some funding either comes from agencies with strong normative implications, or implies cooperation with consultancy firms, this requires a new set of skills from the researchers. There is little doubt that this can be seen as an unfortunate development, perhaps leading towards a more superficial account on what kind and how certain knowledge research can be produced, in addition to the implications of this to basic research. Where researchers are modest, ambiguous and uncertain, there seems to be a need for certain and bold evidence that assures and supports the necessary success of new policy ambitions.
Nevertheless, it is also the responsibility of the researchers to highlight the issues with this, rather than sit back and complain to each other about the dire state of affairs. This means there is a necessity to be more active in the public debate about the types of expert knowledge higher education researchers have that cannot be gained from other sources. By higher education being so central in the knowledge economy, the research expertise that higher education researchers have is unique and necessary, also raising questions on how this competence should be organised internationally and what are the possible routes for collaboration and coordination. What the correct answer is, is of course up for debate, but the defeatist doom and gloom scenarios do not really help.
Another concern that was highlighted during a number of presentations, panels and the symposium was the role of disciplines. Higher education being a field with no disciplinary core of its own, the shaky feet of the knowledge domain were a topic for debate. Thus themes linked to the role of disciplines, whether we have higher education specialists or generalists, and the general question of identity were high on the agenda. This was further highlighted by the calls for more methodological rigour in higher education research with link to the core disciplines. While this is to an extent the case, one could also argue that in social sciences there is at least some common platform for methodology, and it is also possible to do methodologically rigorous research in a multidisciplinary context. As such, the issue of methodology and issue of disciplines should perhaps kept separate, while both of them being important.
While focus on strenghtening the disciplines seemed to gain support at CHER, one should note that despite there being a number of higher education researchers with linkages to political science, for instance  last years large ECPR (European Consortium for Political Research) conference only had a few of them present. While the situation might be  somewhat different for sociology or some of the other disciplines, it seems that the unfortunate tendency is that at the higher education conferences such as CHER there is a yearning towards the disciplines (but without sufficient activity from the researchers themselves), and at the large disciplinary conferences there is an impression that there is no research on higher education. Perhaps it is time to stop talking and start doing and showing that higher education research can play ball on  both sides and how the two do not contradict but complement. And yes, there are those who do this already, but perhaps more should follow.
Despite the usual doom and gloom stories of the future, some positive things also emerged. Also noted by Martina Vukasovic as being the second of her conference highlights, there is a large number of young researchers, both as members of larger research teams, but also as presenting their work independently and actively engaging in the debates. As a follow-up to the initiative started in Iceland, the network for early career researchers (ECHER) provided a platform for some good discussions. Still in its infancy the ECHER workshop debates this time to a large extent focused on the purposes of such network and potential activities. However, they also included also presentations from experienced researchers, for instance a presentation from Jussi Välimaa on how to publish in the Higher Education journal, and presentations from Christine Musselin and David Hoffman on the potential outlooks of such network. More activities can be expected during upcoming higher education conferences, both CHER and others (and, if you are an early career researcher and not a member yet - click here!!).
Last but not least, the organisers deserve a sincere gratulation. The well planned event, smooth organisation and inclusive atmosphere was to be felt throughout – and not to forget the wonderful food. And since we on the Hedda blog, perhaps we should mention that it was a graduate of the Hedda master programme, Jelena Brankovic, who was responsible for the academic coordination of the conference. Congrats, and thanks to you and your whole team!
18 septembre 2012

Colloque RUMEF 2013

Colloque RUMEF Universités et métiers de la formation - transformation(s) et reconnaissance(s)
Après le colloque d'Avignon (2011), le Réseau des Universités Préparant aux Métiers de la Formation propose de poursuivre la réflexion engagée sur la place et les évolutions (en cours et/ou attendues) des métiers de la formation et de ses acteurs (connaissance des publics concernés, parcours des formés, évolutions des formations, évolutions des partenaires universitaires...).

L'Université de Lorraine accueillera le prochain colloque RUMEF, à Nancy, les 11 et 12 avril 2013.


L'appel à communications est disponible sur le site du colloque.

Le réseau RUMEF

Liste des membres.

Référentiels d'activités et de compétences des métiers de la formation (format pdf).

Colloque RUMEF 2011 - Avignon

Site web dédié.
Les pré-actes du colloque (format pdf)
Compte-rendu du colloque 2011 dans la revue Savoir (format pdf)
Compte-rendu du colloque 2011 dans l'Info de Centre Inffo (format pdf)

8 septembre 2012

JOCAIR - JOurnées Communication et Apprentissage Instrumentés en Réseau

JOCAIR - Colloque International Journées Communication et Apprentissage Instrumentés en RéseauJOurnées Communication et Apprentissage Instrumentés en Réseau 6, 7, 8 septembre 2012
La première édition du colloque JOCAIR, en 2006, a inauguré une série d’échanges scientifiques pluridisciplinaires entre les sciences de l’information et de la communication, les sciences de l’éducation et l’informatique en se centrant sur les problèmes posés en éducation et formation par la diffusion des outils de communication à distance comme les forums, les courriels, les chats, les wikis ou encore les blogs.
Au cours du temps, plusieurs types de problématiques vives ont été proposés: les utilisations des applications dites « collaboratives » ou relevant du « Web 2.0 » en 2008, les « objets communicants » en 2010.
Depuis deux ans, un certain nombre d’évolutions se sont poursuivies dans la société, en éducation et en formation, dont toutes n’ont pas encore fait l’objet de recherches publiées.
De nouvelles plates-formes d’échange et de diffusion sont venues sur le devant de la scène, contribuant indéniablement à une dynamique de changements politiques et économiques. Certains usages d’outils de communication semblent moins centraux (il en va ainsi des forums). La domination de grands groupes multinationaux sur le marché de la recherche d’information s’est confirmée. Les pays du Sud, longtemps parent pauvre de l’Internet, commencent à faire l’objet de raccordements aux réseaux mondiaux de fibre optique qui sont susceptibles de créer une dynamique du changement important, au moins dans les grandes villes des pays connectés.
Dans le monde éducatif français, la vague des environnements numériques de travail, lancée au début des années 2000 par les pouvoirs publics nationaux semble s’essouffler dans le second degré mais avoir une nouvelle actualité à l’université et dans l’enseignement primaire.
On constate par ailleurs un fort intérêt quant à l’utilisation des tablettes et des smartphones, à la fois en classe et hors la classe, conduisant à inventer de nouvelles activités de formation, tirant parti de la géolocalisation et de la mobilité, en association avec de nombreux discours vantant l’apprentissage qualifié d’informel. Pour leur part, les jeunes semblent s’être appropriés les plates-formes à la mode et ces différents instruments, sans qu’on sache très bien d’ailleurs quels en sont les impacts éventuels sur les apprentissages.
Enfin, le modèle coopératif/collaboratif voire libertaire de diffusion de ressources libres s’est heurté à des logiques économiques, à des évolutions juridiques et des décisions de type commercial qui posent des défis importants aux tenants du libre.
Cette 4e édition du colloque JOCAIR visera à faire le point sur sa thématique fondatrice de la communication et des apprentissages instrumentés en réseaux en se focalisant sur cinq grandes thématiques:
    Utilisation des technologies numériques dans les sphères éducatives: enjeux politiques et économiques, réseaux d’acteurs
    Place et utilisations des environnements numériques de travail
en milieu institutionnel, qu’il s’agisse de l’école primaire et secondaire, de l’enseignement supérieur ou des formations d’adultes
    Apprentissages liés aux jeux en ligne
    Prises en compte éducatives des instruments facilitant la mobilité
selon différents contextes d’apprentissage
    Usages se développant dans des contextes économiques difficiles
Pour chacun de ces axes sont attendues des contributions originales de recherche.
Le colloque visera également à faire le point sur les méthodes utilisées en recherche dans le domaine de la communication et des apprentissages en réseaux, des initiatives de partage de données de recherches et des outils d’analyse. Des recherches et analyses nouvelles portant sur des corpus de données déjà analysées selon une ou plusieurs perspectives de recherche sont particulièrement souhaitées.
Prs M. Sidir, E. Bruillard et G-L. Baron.

JOCAIR - Διεθνές Συμπόσιο Ημέρες Ενόργανη επικοινωνίας και της μάθησης στο Δίκτυο Ενόργανη επικοινωνίας και μάθησης Ημέρες Δίκτυο 6, 7, 8 Σεπτεμβρίου 2012
Το πρώτο συνέδριο JOCAIR το 2006, εγκαινίασε μια σειρά από διεπιστημονική ανταλλαγή μεταξύ της επιστήμης πληροφορίας και της επικοινωνίας, της εκπαίδευσης και της επιστήμης υπολογιστών, εστιάζοντας στα προβλήματα στον τομέα της εκπαίδευσης κατάρτιση και διάδοση των μέσων επικοινωνίας, όπως η εξ αποστάσεως φόρουμ, emails, chats, wikis ή blogs.

Πάροδο του χρόνου, έχουν πολλά είδη των προβλημάτων που έχουν προταθεί έντονα: οι χρήσεις των εφαρμογών που ονομάζονται "συνεργασίας" ή κάτω από το "Web 2.0" το 2008, τα «έξυπνα αντικείμενα» το 2010.

Για δύο χρόνια, μια σειρά από εξελίξεις συνεχίστηκαν στην κοινωνία, την εκπαίδευση και την κατάρτιση, τα οποία δεν έχουν ακόμη δημοσιευθεί έρευνα
. Περισσότερα...
22 août 2012

Let’s build transformative knowledge to drive social change

http://www.guninetwork.org/guni.conference/DateIBCHE2013.png/image_previewHE Conference 2013. 6th International Barcelona Conference on Higher Education. The Conference will take place in Barcelona, from 13 to 15 May, 2013.
Be knowledgesiastic*!

The Conference is organized by the Global University Network for Innovation (GUNi) and will take place at the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, in Barcelona, from 13 to 15 May, 2013.
The GUNi Conference is an international forum for debate on the challenges facing higher education. Each edition of the Conference deals with an emergent issue in higher education, which is the subject also chosen for the Report. Held in Barcelona and attended by renowned experts, researchers, university leaders, academics, policymakers and practitioners from all over the world, the Conference addresses innovative proposals and ideas, as well as the results of the latest research on each subject.
This edition will explore the critical dimensions in our understanding of the roles, and potential roles, of higher education institutions (HEIs) as active player in contributing to the creation of another possible world. Within this context the Conference looks to answer the call of the challenges of our time, while maintaining an eye towards the future regarding the role of knowledge and HEIs.
*Knowledgesiastic: Having, showing and actively encouraging enjoyment about transformative knowledge.
16 août 2012

The 7 Annual Conference of Experts, Moscow, 2012

http://www.ncpa.ru/history/images/2009Dec.bmpThe 2012 Conference of Experts in Higher Education, an annual event co-organized by the National Centre of Public Accreditation (NCPA) and the Russian National Guild of Experts in Higher Education will be held in Moscow, Russia, on 9-10 November 2012.
The conference is open to representatives of quality assurance agencies, researchers, academics, policy makers, administrators and educators who are invited to take part in the event by submitting their proposals for a presentation or a poster (in Russian or in English) during the Conference, as well as by participating in the discussions of most urgent quality assurance issues.
The Seventh Annual Conference of Experts in Higher Education "Implementation of the European Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance Systems" will be held on 9-10 November 2012, Moscow, Russia.

The 2012 Conference of Experts in Higher Education, an annual event co-organized by the National Center of Public Accreditation (NCPA) and the Russian National Guild of Experts in Higher Education will be held in Moscow, Russia, on 9-10 November 2012.
The conference is open to representatives of quality assurance agencies, researchers, academics, policy makers, administrators and educators who are invited to take part in the event by submitting their proposals for a presentation or a poster (in Russian or in English) during the Conference, as well as by participating in the discussions of most urgent quality assurance issues.
Further Information and the programme will be available soon at the NCPA website.
2 août 2012

Les colloques de la CPU

 

http://www.cpu.fr/typo3temp/pics/f7e30c0123.jpg

2012 : L’université pour l’avenir, avenir des universités
Marseille, les 8, 9 et 10 février 2012
> téléchargez le Mag’
2011 : Une ambition : la licence

Toulouse, les 11, 12 et 13 mai 2011
> téléchargez les actes
2010 : Doctorat, doctorants et Docteurs
Nancy, les 31, 1er et 2 avril 2010
> téléchargez les actes
2009 : L'université, acteur économique
Brest, les 25, 26 et 27 mars 2009
> téléchargez les actes
2008 : Les Universités Européennes : nouvelles frontières, nouvelles perspectives
Bruxelles les 2, 3 et 4 avril 2008
> téléchargez les actes
2007 : L'Université: une chance pour la France
Metz, les 14 et 16 février 2007
> téléchargez les actes
2006 : Internationalisation et politique internationale des universités
Nantes, 15, 16 et 17 mars 2006
> téléchargez les actes
2005 : L'Université: acteur majeur dans l'Europe des formations supérieures
Lyon, les 17 et 18 mars 2005
> téléchargez les actes
2004 : L’avenir de la recherche publique
Bordeaux, les 19 et 20 février 2004
> téléchargez les actes
2003 : Les personnels dans l’Université du XXIè siècle: missions, métiers, partage des responsabilités
Poitiers, les  20 et 21 mars 2003
 > téléchargez les actes
2002 : L'étudiant dans l'université du XXIè siècle
Mulhouse, les 21 et 22 mars 2002
> téléchargez les actes
2001 : Autonomie des universités
Lille, les 22 et 23 mars 2001
> téléchargez les actes
2000 : La recherche universitaire dans l'espace européen
Bordeaux les 16 et 17 mars 2000
> téléchargez les actes
1999 : L'accueil et l'insertion des étudiants à l'université
Rennes, 1er décembre 1999
> téléchargez les actes

http://www.cpu.fr/typo3temp/pics/f7e30c0123.jpg

2012: The university for the future, future of universities
Marseille, 8, 9 and 10 February 2012
> Download the Mag '
2011: An ambition: the license
Toulouse, 11, 12 and 13 May 2011
> Download actions
2010: PhD, PhD students and Doctors
Nancy, 31, 1st and 2nd April 2010
> Download actions
The university, economic actor. More...

28 juillet 2012

Keynote speakers for the EAIE Conference are revealed!

Polar explorer, Robert Swan; Nobel Peace laureate, Leymah Gbowee; innovative business entrepreneur, Christian Stadil: what do these high profile figures have in common? They’ve all given uplifting keynote speeches at recent EAIE Conferences, and this year’s speakers promise to be every bit as inspirational!
We are very excited to announce the keynote speakers who will be joining us in Dublin for the 2012 EAIE Conference: Sugata Mitri and Caroline Casey.
Sugata Mitra
The Opening Plenary, taking place on 12 September, serves as a kick-off to conversations about the conference theme: ‘Rethinking education, reshaping economies’ and we are honoured to have Sugata Mitra, an individual whose notable achievements in education embody this theme.
Well-known for his ‘Hole in the wall’ project, Sugata’s experiments take a new perspective on the relationship needed between the educator and the student. In 1999 he dug a hole in a wall bordering an urban slum in New Delhi, installed an internet-connected PC and left it there (with a hidden camera filming the area). He then observed kids from the slum playing around with the computer and in the process, learning how to use it and then teaching each other.
Replicated in other parts of India, both urban and rural, with similar results, this project demonstrated that even in the absence of direct input from a teacher, an environment that encourages inquisitiveness, self-instruction, and peer-knowledge can generate incredible learning.
Sugata is credited with a number of other inventions and first-time applications in the areas of Cognitive Science, Information Science and Education Technology. He is currently Professor of Educational Technology at Newcastle University and Visiting Professor at MIT in the United States.
Caroline CaseyCaroline Casey

Closing the conference on 14 September, the Closing Plenary keynote speaker, Caroline Casey, is sure to motivate you to look beyond limits. One of Ireland’s own, Caroline Casey is a social entrepreneur whose leadership and vision is changing the way people think about disability.
Since she set up Kanchi (formerly The Aisling Foundation) in 2000, Caroline continues to deliver a deeper level of engagement with society, business, media and politics to affect change through positive solution-based thinking.
In 2004, Caroline launched the O2 Ability Awards to establish best practice for the employment and inclusion of people with disabilities within business. The success of this initiative has spurred international interest and created the opportunity for a corresponding programme in Spain.
Caroline is also co-founder of the London based charity, Elephant Family, as well as a board member of Sightsavers International.
Check out the Dublin conference programme and view the details of over 200 other engaging activities available at the 2012 EAIE Conference. If you haven’t done so already, be sure to register for the conference by the 22 August deadline!
See also EAIE keynote speaker in Nantes in 2010 wins 2011 Nobel Peace Prize.
8 juillet 2012

ACA Annual Conference 2012 - Tying it all together

Can there be such a thing as an academically strong, socially inclusive, well-funded and internationally-oriented university? This was the key question behind this year’s Annual Conference of the Academic Cooperation Association (ACA). The conference’s main conclusion, expressed by final keynote speaker Sir Peter Scott, was that internationalisation, academic excellence, solid funding and social responsibility do not naturally occur together. To make them all happen at the same time in one and the same institution requires political will and interventionist policies, as well as abandoning higher education systems which are only or mainly market-driven.
The ACA Annual Conference 2012 took place in Helsinki, between 10 and 12 June, and was jointly organised by ACA and its Finnish member CIMO. The University of Helsinki hosted the event, which drew an audience of close to 300. ACA had once again succeeded in engaging top-level experts, among them Jamil Salmi (formerly World Bank), Sijbolt Noorda (ACA President), Joan Dassin (Ford Foundation/IIE), Rolf Hoffmann (Fulbright Germany) and Ulrich Grothus (Deputy Secretary General of DAAD). Most participants were highly pleased. One enthusiastic delegate, who had brought along many colleagues, highlighted the different “perspectives on internationalisation” which the “fantastic speakers” provided.
Next year’s ACA Annual Conference will be jointly organised with the NUFFIC and take place in The Hague, from 9 to 11 June. On this occasion, ACA will also celebrate its 20th anniversary.
The next ACA European Policy Seminar will be organised on 12 October 2012 in Brussels. It is devoted to “higher education in 2030”.
27 juin 2012

GUS 2012 - 5e sommet mondial des universités - Developing Talent to Drive Innovation in a Global Society

http://www.cpu.fr/fileadmin/img/bandeau_newsletter.jpgPour la 5e année consécutive, un an après la réunion organisée en France sous l’égide du Pres Bourgogne France Comté et de la CPU, le sommet mondial des universités (Global University Summit) s’est réuni dans la ville de Chicago (Illinois, Etats-Unis) du 29 avril au 1er mai derniers, en présence des présidents français Sophie Béjean, Université de Bourgogne, Vincent Berger, Université Paris Diderot, Jean-Pierre Finance, Université de Lorraine et de Jean-Pierre Gesson, Université de Poitiers.
Créé à Sapporo au Japon en 2008, ce Sommet réunit chaque année un nombre croissant d’universités du monde entier pour débattre de sujets liés à la ‘durabilité’ de l’enseignement supérieur au XXIe siècle. Le sommet 2012 à Chicago a mis l’accent sur le dialogue entre les chefs d’établissements, le gouvernement américain et le secteur privé, notamment la société civile.  La Déclaration finale signée par 70 dirigeants d’universités de plus d’une trentaine de pays répartis sur les 5 continents lance un appel aux chefs d’Etat du G8 pour, notamment, favoriser:
- la reconnaissance des innovations issues des universités qui contribuent à la durabilité mondiale,
- l’identification de stratégies à long terme pour soutenir et encourager l'innovation,
- le développement de réseaux internationaux et de programmes d'échanges destinés à soutenir l'innovation dans les politiques publiques.
- le développement de nouveaux modèles de financement avec des sanctions efficaces et durable et issus d’une collaboration entre les universités et les partenaires du secteur privé.
Le 6e Sommet mondial des universités devrait se réunir en Grande-Bretagne au printemps 2013.
Voir aussi The Global University Summit 2011 (6-7 May 2011), La CPU organise les prochains sommets mondiaux des universités, G8 University Summit.

http://engagement.illinois.edu/globalsummit2012/images/globalsummitlogo.jpgThe University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the Committee on Institutional Cooperation will be hosting the 5th Global University Summit in Chicago from April 29 to May 1, 2012. Presidents and senior officials representing more than 80 leading research universities from the U.S. and around the world will be attending. Held in parallel with the events of the G8 Summit taking place at Camp David, Maryland, in May 2012, the Summit's aim is to engage university leadership at the highest levels with the major global social challenges facing higher education in the 21st century.
This Summit brings together leadership of major research universities and industry from across the world to deliberate upon critical issues facing higher education globally in the 21st century. The theme for 2012 is "Developing Talent to Drive Innovation in a Global Society."
Our world today is more interconnected than it has ever been. We are witnessing unparalleled levels of collaboration among institutions of higher education across national boundaries. While technology and economic development have made it easier for unprecedented numbers of people access education, we often grapple with quality education issues and how to best harness our creative energies and craft the innovations needed to respond to the challenges of the 21st century. The 5th Global University Summit will provide a forum for exploration of these issues and for development of new partnerships among universities.
Higher education depends heavily on government support in every country. Therefore, Global University Summits are always held in conjunction with the G8 Summit to draw the attention of world leaders to the needs of higher education and its vital role in helping us deal with the challenges of the present and the future. The 2012 G8 Summit will take place at Camp David from May 20 to May 21, 2012.
The Summit presents participants with an unparalleled opportunity to engage university leadership at the highest levels. The 5th Global University Summit is sponsored by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the Committee on Institutional Cooperation.
27 avril 2012

The annual circus of international HE conferences

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Hans de Wit. In the past two months I have attended three large annual international education conferences.
One was hosted by the Association of International Education Administrators (AIEA) in Washington DC, took place from 20-22 February and had more than 800 participants. There was the “Going Global” conference organised by the British Council in London from 13-15 March, with more than 1,200 participants, and the conference of the Asia-Pacific Association for International Education (APAIE), which was held in Bangkok from 4-6 April with more than 800 people attending.
Together with the annual Australian International Education Conference of the IDP and the International Education Association of Australia (IEAA), which will be held in Melbourne from 2-5 October and which will probably have a similar number of participants to “Going Global”, these three conferences are in terms of the number of people they attract, among the world’s leading international education conferences. They draw more participants than other international education conferences such as those of the Canadian Bureau of International Education (CBIE), the Mexican Association for International Education (AMPEI) and the International Education Association of South Africa (IEASA) – to mention just a few that attract between 200 and 500 participants each.
In that same category are also more specialist conferences, such as the one by the Forum on Education Abroad and the Council on International Educational Exchange in the US, and the conference run by the Academic Cooperation Association (ACA) in Europe. They are, however, lagging far behind the conference held by the European Association for International Education (EAIE), which will be held in Dublin this year from 11-14 September and will attract more than 4,000 people, and the NAFSA annual conference, which will have over 8,000 participants at its conference in Houston from 27 May to 1 June.
International education has become an industry
Every month there appear to be at least two international education conferences somewhere in the world, although most are still held in Europe and the US. And, crisis or not, all these conferences have seen an increase in the number of participants and exhibitors taking part. This is a clear reflection of the fact that international education has become an industry. Some interesting and critical observations can be made about this annual circus of international education conferences.
In the first place, only two of the international education associations are regional ones: APAIE and EAIE; the others are national. There is no overarching global association – although there is a Council of International Education Associations, it is not very active. As for those taking part in the conferences, NAFSA, EAIE and increasingly APAIE and AIEA have in addition to their national or regional constituency a global audience of between 20% and 30%. This is also true for their exhibitions.
Surprisingly, other conferences, including the Australian one, have a far more limited international presence. In the case of APAIE in Bangkok, I was shocked to find that non-Asian participation was at least equal to Asian participation, and in the sessions and presentations few Asians were present. Participation from China, Japan and Indonesia was negligible. At the “Going Global” conference, though, Asians were rather more present as they are increasingly at NAFSA and EAIE. At international education conferences you see many Australians and Europeans, and increasingly participants from Asia, Latin America and the Middle East.
Americans tend to go predominantly to their own conferences and, if they go abroad, to the EAIE's conference. They are far less present at international education conferences in Latin America, Africa and the Middle East. The dominance of the NAFSA conference may explain this attitude, but in my opinion it is a dangerous development. It is important that there is much more travel between the continents. NAFSA occasionally organises its conferences in Canada. There are joint seminars such as between AIEA and EAIE as well as between EAIE and IEAA, and there is the Council of International Education Associations. And yet there is surprisingly little global cooperation and leadership in the field of international education.
NAFSA, given its size and the international participation at its conference, could be expected to take the lead, but the association is nearly exclusively focused on its national advocacy role and does not show much interest in more global advocacy for international education. A positive exception are essays and blogs by NAFSA senior fellows John Hudzik, Madeleine Green and Kristopher Olds, who provide a positive contribution to the global debate on internationalisation. At the global level, it is not the Council of International Education Associations but the International Association of Universities (IAU) that takes the lead in the debate on rethinking internationalisation (although representatives of several associations take part in its expert panel).
Time for a re-think
In my opinion, it is time that the different international education associations rethought their role and how they cooperate with each other. Here are some suggestions, for what they are worth. Maybe it would be a good idea if the International Education Association of South Africa represented Southern Africa. Attempts to develop a Latin American International Education Association should be supported. On the other hand, APAIE might limit itself to Asia or South East Asia.
And it might be an idea to organise, every three or five years, a global international education conference of all the different associations, linked to one of the existing conferences, with it being held not in the US or Europe but on one of the other continents. And when such a conference is held, position papers on global international education could be prepared and discussed.
It is time to really internationalise international education conferences.
* Hans de Wit is director of the Centre for Higher Education Internationalisation (CHEI) at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore in Milan, and professor of internationalisation of higher education at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences. He is co-founder and past president of the EAIE.
Email: J.w.m.de.wit@hva.nl
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