Compatibility of NQFs with QF-EHEA: Analysis of Verification Reports

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Compatibility of NQFs with QF-EHEA: Analysis of Verification Reports Bryan Maguire 2 nd Regional Meeting of Ministers of Education Strasbourg, 22-23 November, 2012 [email protected]

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Compatibility of NQFs with QF-EHEA: Analysis of Verification Reports. Bryan Maguire 2 nd Regional Meeting of Ministers of Education Strasbourg, 22-23 November, 2012 [email protected]. Countries with joint EQF/ QF-EHEA referencing reports. Malta Estonia Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Austria. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Compatibility of NQFs with QF-EHEA: Analysis of Verification Reports

Page 1: Compatibility of NQFs with QF-EHEA: Analysis of Verification Reports

Compatibility of NQFs with QF-EHEA: Analysis of Verification Reports

Bryan Maguire2nd Regional Meeting of Ministers of EducationStrasbourg, 22-23 November, 2012

[email protected]

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Countries with joint EQF/QF-EHEA referencing reports Malta Estonia Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Austria

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Other national situations

Portugal – report published but not listed on ENIC-NARIC website

France – EQF referencing completed without higher education qualifications

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Latvia

8 levels referenced/certified in one process led by NARIC

College qualifications at level 5Binary: professional and academic

bachelors and masters National credit system 2:3 ECTSPre-Bologna (USSR) qualifications also

referenced to NFQ

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Lithuania

Legal/conceptual problem around definition of “qualification” identified in self-certification led to change in law

National descriptors, not just EQF/DublinBinary in first cycle only: professional

bachelors“Empty shelf” at EQF level 5Very little implementation of ECTS

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Estonia

Joint referencing/certification report, led by ministry of education, with no separate chapter for QF-EHEA

Occupational qualifications as well as HE qualifications at EQF levels 5-8

Analysis of distinctive features in Estonian HE descriptors – teamwork, language, interdisciplinarity, teaching

Misread procedure on NARIC website

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Self-certification Processes

No two self-certification processes are identicalDiverse initiators, governance, methods, participants, report formats, follow-upLow level of oversight at European levelPhenomenon is not adequately studied

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Expectations rising

Expectations of partner countries are rising – frameworks should be implemented, QA should be operating, learning outcomes should be used

Verification of QF-EHEA and referencing of EQF-LLL can proceed as a single process but this can be quite complex, technically and politically

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Process challenges

International experts critical to credibility but do not seem to limit national diversity (see Baltic criteria)

Process leadership requires technical and political competence/authority

Engaging in (high stakes) development/ reform of education/qualifications simultaneously with verification challenges neutrality/objectivity of self-certification

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Stakeholders

Stakeholder involvement variesRelatively low in early countries with

“settled” NQFs- high in simultaneous development/verification

International dimension can throw new light on domestic issues such as level and profileTraditional perceived status differences

may be challenged where not justified by learning outcomes

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European networked national actors (E4)

QA agencies have stated roles in criterion and verification process and are supported by ENQA to carry out these roles

ENIC/NARIC centres also have stated roles and their networks discuss the significance of self-certification

HEIs have access to EUA/EURASHE sharing/support

ESU supports student union participation

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Never-ending Story

Self-certification is a station on the way, it is not a terminusMalta's revised report is an example“empty” short cycles (EQF L5) in LT, EE &

CZ. BE(fl) new short cycle since verification

Quality assurance becomes more critical after initial technical design of NQF

HEIs have a generational task ahead to move to student-centred pedagogy and

assessment, based on learning outcomes

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Is self-certification worth it?

Domestic information/reformation is (properly) the primary purpose of NQFSelf-certification is incentive to do this well

International reputation is enhancedJoining the green space on EHEA map

European inter-national goals Transparency (reports used by ENIC/NARIC)Pathfinder group on automatic recognition

Global attractiveness (e.g. IE-NZ, ASEM)