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29 mars 2015

It’s time for a resit on draft of EFSI regulations

By Kurt Deketelaere. The countdown for the approval of the draft regulation on the European Fund for Strategic Investments, or EFSI, will start after the Easter holiday period. More...

29 mars 2015

Education has never mattered more, so why won't the UK invest in it properly?

http://static.guim.co.uk/static/c55907932af8ee96c21b7d89a9ebeedb4602fbbf/common/images/logos/the-guardian/news.gifBy . Instability of funding for teacher training combined with the looming retirement of UK’s top education researchers may result in universities pulling out of the subject altogether. More...

29 mars 2015

Towards a future proof system for higher education and research in Finland

http://www.minedu.fi/export/system/modules/fi.wmdata.opm/resources/images/header-spirite.pngBy Göran Melin, Frank Zuijdam, Barbara Good, Jelena Angelis, Johanna Enberg, Derek Jan Fikkers, Jaana Puukka, AnnaKarin Swenning, Kristel Kosk, Jesse Lastunen, Stijn Zegel.
Recommendations

While the reflections above contain conclusions, ideas and some suggestions for change that we think would deserve to be further discussed and explored, and seriously considered, we present a set of distinct recommendations in the following. The International Panel has arrived at a set of recommendations after having concluded their part of the project and authored their report. The Panel’s recommendations are found in the Panel’s report (Appendix A). These recommendations have been taken into account when we have formulated the overall recommendations below.
Based on relevant previous literature, national and international statistics and the empirical findings from this study, including the International Panel’s review, we recommend the Finnish governmental authorities to take adequate measures related to the following points:

  • Treat the universities and the universities of applied sciences in a similar way. This would mean comparable external funding opportunities and quality assessment criteria. The reformed funding structure for UAS is a step in the right direction. Both universities and UAS should have possibilities to grow and develop their operations and profile themselves. This means that UAS should be just as eligible to conduct research and apply for research funding as the universities. There is no reason why different quality assessment criteria should be applied to UAS than to universities. Those institutions that do not live up to the expected standards or fail to attract sufficient funding need to reconsider their situation, and should get the government’s advice and assistance in doing so. HEIs that show budget deficits or insufficient scientific quality cannot continue to operate as before.
  • The quality of both teaching and research should be the emphasis of the UAS rather than the regional role. There is a strong regional role for them to play but the UAS are first and foremost knowledge producing organisations and it is as strong knowledge producing organisations that they can play a better regional role in the future. This means that both universities and UAS have the same fundamental raison d’etre.
  • Remove any barriers towards increased and improved communication and cooperation between UAS and universities. This includes the possibility to form institutional alliances and even to merge for those HEIs that wishes to do so. In most cases the improved cooperation will result in harmonised study programmes and the development of joint study programmes, for instance. There is also a matter of increased research collaboration. The HEIs should be free to make their operations more relevant and efficient through increased and intensified cooperation in both education and research, with other HEIs and with business and society, and by reducing the number of parallel and partly competing programmes or subjects. It is up the HEIs to undertake the rationalisation and profiling changes that they want, but it is the government’s responsibility to ensure that there are no legislative barriers towards such undertakings.
  • The difficulties for students to transfer between study programmes and courses at universities and UAS need to decrease. There are possibilities to transfer today but we have heard repeated witness that it is troublesome and time consuming. The system is perceived as inflexible and rigid, creating obstacles instead of opportunities for young people who wish to transfer in order to shape their own study profile, or simply want to change between the two tracks for any other reason. The separation between study programmes at universities and UAS is too strong and the mental and organisational distance between them need to shorten.
  • Voices are raised for the need of rapid progress regarding modernisation of teaching and learning methods, including digitalisation. Innovative and alternative ways of providing higher education ought to be explored. This is mostly a matter for the HEIs themselves, but we recommend the governmental authorities to consider any initiative that can support and speed up such a process.
  • There are strong indications that Finnish higher education and research are in great need of strengthened internationalisation. There are many aspects to this, and it is a matter for stakeholders on several levels in the system. For instance, the relatively low level of internationalisation seems to be a question of general openness towards the surrounding global academic community, as well as a question of more concrete opportunities and support measures aimed towards individuals and institutions to engage in international exchange and interaction. We strongly recommend the ministry and other governmental authorities to consider any action that could help transforming the Finnish academic community towards a more internationalised character. Some of the efforts to increase the level of internationalisation could be specifically aimed at the young generation; first and foremost PhD students but also young researchers on postdoctoral level. Changing the attitudes towards international contacts and concrete international collaboration including mobility is an essential part of a long term transformation of the system’s openness towards the international community and willingness to involve in more international collaborations. The ministry should ensure that there are good opportunities and also strong expectations on PhD students to spend part of their training, one or two semesters, at a foreign institution. A specific support scheme should be set up by any of the Finnish funding organisations. We recommend that the scale of such a scheme or scholarship programme is sufficient enough to have real impact on systems level; this probably means that at least one hundred PhD students should get the opportunity to spend time abroad every year. The ministry or any other governmental authority should furthermore evaluate if additional support besides what is available today needs to be provided for postdoctoral researchers in order to increase the available funds for a postdoctoral period abroad and create an expectation that such a period is a more or less mandatory step for anyone who wants to pursue an academic career. When it comes to reformed recruitment behaviour, it is a matter for the HEIs themselves, but the ministry should clarify its strong expectation that they swiftly revisit their own recruitment policies and make necessary changes in direction of increased transparency and external, and international, advertisement of positions.
  • The ministry should consider in what way FINEEC could be used more in the transformation and development of the system. For instance FINEEC could get the mandate to evaluate relevance and innovation capacity in the HE system, besides its current tasks. Our impression is that today, FINEEC does not have very much of an opinion of what can be improved with reference to entrepreneurship and relevance of the education. FINEEC needs to sharpen its instruments and its approach so it can contribute to real quality improvement and a quality safeguarding mentality at the HEIs. Now the focus seems to be too much on the plain quality of education but without taking into account what the education leads to.

Download Towards a future proof system for higher education and research in Finland.

29 mars 2015

Students occupy art school over cuts plan

By . Students have occupied a London art school in protest over cuts to foundation courses. More...

29 mars 2015

e-MEL: e-Media Education Lab

Résultat de recherche d'images pour "open education europa"e-Media Education Lab is an european project co-funded by the European Union through the Erasmus+ Programme. It aims to support the development of media education in Europe by strengthening the skills of teaching professionals through their initial and vocational training. More...

28 mars 2015

Postgraduate education

HEFCE logo

By . During 2014-15, we have been running a pilot Postgraduate Support Scheme to test ways of stimulating progression to taught postgraduate education, supporting 20 projects across the country.  A common theme arising from this and our previous work is the centrality of finance (though not only finance) in decisions about whether to progress to postgraduate study and the potential for clearly communicated support arrangements to address this. More...

28 mars 2015

REF 2014 impact submissions: part of a cultural shift?

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By . In the run-up to November 2013, universities across the UK prepared submissions for the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2014. For the first time, this included an assessment of the impact, or wider societal benefits, resulting from research. This mechanism for examining impacts from previous UK-led research complements the Research Councils UK’s requirements for researchers to describe how they will facilitate impact from future research. More...

28 mars 2015

HEFCE allocates £3.97 billion to universities and colleges in England for 2015-16

HEFCE logo

The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) will allocate £3.97 billion to 130 universities and higher education colleges and 214 further education and sixth form colleges for the academic year 2015-16.
This funding is allocated for the following key areas and activities:

  • £1,558 million for research
  • £1,418 million for teaching
  • £160 million for knowledge exchange
  • £603 million in capital grants
  • £130 million for national facilities and initiatives
  • £52 million in transitional funding for research
  • £50 million for the Postgraduate Support Scheme.
Further details are given in ‘Recurrent grants for 2015-16’ (HEFCE 2015/05). More...
28 mars 2015

ACA European policy seminar, Brussels, Belgium (19 March 2015)

LogoAcademic Cooperation Association (ACA) is organising a seminar on 19 March 2015 in Brussels on ‘Ideas, tools, resources and a big picture — all you need to know in alumni engagement’. Michael Gaebel, Director, Higher Education policy, EUA will also be speaking at the event.
For more information on the programme and to register, click here. More...

28 mars 2015

EUA arguments on EFSI taken up by European Parliament

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EUA’s Investment Plan campaign has entered a new phase following the publication of the draft report of the European Parliament’s committees on Economic and Monetary Affairs and on Budgets regarding the European Fund for Strategic Investments (EFSI).
The European University Association last week issued a statement welcoming the decision of the committee rapporteurs to take into account the arguments and concerns put forward by the university sector. More...

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