Transcript
Page 1: The Bologna Process and Student Centered Learning

E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.ehea.info

Bologna Secretariat

The Bologna Process and Student Centered Learning

Ligia DECAHead of the 2010 – 2012 Bologna Secretariat

Page 2: The Bologna Process and Student Centered Learning

E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.ehea.info

Bologna Secretariat

16th of October 2010 www.ehea.info 2

Page 3: The Bologna Process and Student Centered Learning

E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.ehea.info

Bologna Secretariat

The Bologna Secretariat Main role: “...to provide neutral support to further the consolidation of the European Higher

Education Area under the exclusive authority of the BFUG and its Chairs and Vice-Chairs.”

Functions:• Administrative and operational support for BFUG, its sub-structures (WG and networks) and

the Board (minute-taking, background documents drafting, assisting chairs in planning the meeting, communication etc.);

• Create and maintain the EHEA permanent website (www.ehea.info) and electronic archives;• Act as an internal and external contact point for the EHEA, while ensuring external

representation on behalf of the Chairs or based on direct requests;• Organise the 2012 Ministerial Conference and Bologna Policy Forum.

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Bologna Secretariat

The EHEA unfoldedBologna action lines EHEA Objectives/ HE

priorities

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Pre-Leuven (as listed in the 2007-2009 Work Plan)

Post-Leuven (as listed in the 2009 – 2012 Work Plan)

MobilityDegree structure (?)EmployabilityRecognition (?)Qualifications frameworks (?)Lifelong LearningQuality Assurance (?)Third cycleSocial dimensionGlobal dimensionStocktakingBeyond 2010 (?)

Social dimension: equitable access and completionLifelong LearningEmployabilityStudent centered learning and the teaching mission of higher educationEducation, research and innovationInternational opennessMobilityData collectionMultidimensional transparency toolsFunding

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Bologna Secretariat

The Leuven and Louvain la Neuve SCL big bang

“Student-centred learning and the teaching mission of higher education

14. We reassert the importance of the teaching mission of higher education institutions and the necessity for ongoing curricular reform geared toward the development of learning outcomes. Student-centred learning requires empowering individual learners, new approaches to teaching and learning, effective support and guidance structures and a curriculum focused more clearly on the learner in all three cycles. Curricular reform will thus be an ongoing process leading to high quality, flexible and more individually tailored education paths. Academics, in close cooperation with student and employer representatives, will continue to develop learning outcomes and international reference points for a growing number of subject areas. We ask the higher education institutions to pay particular attention to improving the teaching quality of their study programmes at all levels. This should be a priority in the further implementation of the European Standards and Guidelines for quality assurance.”

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Bologna Secretariat

The Leuven and Louvain la Neuve SCL big bang

The Leuven SCL paragraph translated from policy speak:

1. SCL is important2. Curricular reform is essentially linked to

LO definition3. Empowering and supporting the learner,

as the center of the educational process4. Flexible and individually tailored learning

paths5. Improving the teaching quality -> link to

the ESG further implementation

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Bologna Secretariat

Policy trends as perceived by the speaker Move from policy making at the European level to focus on implementation at the institutional

level; More attention given to composite priorities (SCL, RPL, LLL), that need a certain level of “structural”

Bologna changes in place. “Flirting” with previously off-limits areas such as funding and transparency mechanisms; A certain political realisation of the fact that the implementation process has not been perfect over

the past decade and that things might need to be rethought or re-implemented:

“While much has been achieved in implementing the Bologna reforms, the reports also illustrate that EHEA action lines such as degree and curriculum reform, quality assurance, recognition, mobility and the social dimension are implemented to varying degrees. Recent protests in some countries, partly directed against developments and measures not related to the Bologna Process, have reminded us that some of the Bologna aims and reforms have not been properly implemented and explained. We acknowledge and will listen to the critical voices raised among staff and students. We note that adjustments and further work, involving staff and students, are necessary at European, national, and especially institutional levels to achieve the European Higher Education Area as we envisage it.” (Budapest and Vienna Statement 2010)

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Bologna Secretariat

BFUG Workplan

Working groups: International openness: The European Higher Education Area in a Global Context Mobility Qualification frameworks Recognition Reporting on the implementation of the Bologna Process Social dimension Transparency tools

Networks: EHEA Information and Promotion Network Network of NQF Correspondents NESSIE (Network for Experts of Student Support in Europe) Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) network

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Bologna Secretariat

Bologna Process/ EHEA and SCL• ECTS and Learning Outcomes• QF• Recognition/ Recognition of Prior Learning• Quality assurance• Mobility of Students and Staff• Social Dimension---------------------------------------------------------------------------• Reporting• Information provision on the different types of HE systems in EHEA – Transparency Mechanisms?• International Openess• Education, research and innovation (Knowledge Triangle)

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Bologna Secretariat

The Reporting Exercise

• An excellent basis for developing information on the measures and incentives stimulating student centered approaches;

• Clear and direct questions on:

the links between SCL and LO, SCL and QA training programmes for the academic staff with regard to SCL and LO flexible learning paths RPL.

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Bologna Secretariat

Role of SCL in the EHEA• Essential overarching umbrella for the in-depth institutional implementation of the

Bologna action lines and the EHEA priorities;

• Fires up the “real” debates on the integration of the EHEA reforms in a coherent reality within academic communities;

• Gives a new dimension to the student and a new, enhanced role to the teacher;

• Prelude to a dream.

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Role of SCL in the EHEA

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Bologna Secretariat

Thank you!

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