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Quality Assurance and Student Involvement

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Network of national agencies, members subject to peer review ... The process of review undertaken by the national agency should be cyclical. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quality Assurance and Student Involvement


1
Quality Assurance andStudent Involvement
Johan Almqvist ESIB Chairperson 2004 EURASHE 14th
Annual Conference, Cyprus 2004
2
ESIB Membership
3
ESIB Structures
43 National Unions of Students from 33
countries(full members)
Board(2 delegates/country)
Commissionon Internal Audit
Chair
SecretaryGeneral

Working Groups
Executive Committee
Expert Committees
Staff
4
Student involvement
  • Letting students run the university is like
    letting the lunatics run the asylum
  • But who are the inmates anyhow?

5
ESIB in the QA debate
  • Quality is a central theme for students
  • ESIB debate took off in 2001 (seminar) and 2002
    (policy paper)
  • General recognition of ESIB in Prague (2001)
  • Recognition of ESIB as a full partner in QAA
    debate in Berlin (2003)

6
ESIB in the QA work
  • Strong partnership with EUA (Quality Culture
    Institutional Evaluation)
  • ENQA Steering Group
  • E4 meetings with EURASHE, EUA and ENQA
  • Some national involvement (CNE/France)

7
ESIB policy development
  • Updated in autumn 2003 in reaction to the Berlin
    mandate
  • Specified at European level in spring 2004 in
    reaction to E4 discussions
  • Prepared by BPC and others
  • Ratified by BM (highest decision-making body)

8
ESIB policies
  • Accessible higher education that is not of high
    quality is worthless and high quality education
    that is not widely accessible is meaningless.

9
ESIB policies
  • Many different types of QAA agencies in Europe
  • Confusion between QA and Accreditation
  • In Accreditation in particular, the situation is
    chaotic and uncontrolled, which does not enhance
    the mutual trust between higher education
    institutions or benefit higher education in
    Europe and as such threatens mobility.

10
Quality Assurance
  • Definition
  • Quality Assurance is an ongoing process that
    ensures the delivery of agreed standards.
  • These agreed standards should make sure every
    educational institution, of which the quality is
    assured, has the potential ability to achieve a
    high quality of content.
  • Quality Assurance must not to be confused with
    accreditation.
  • The goal of Quality Assurance is to improve
    education and therefore it should take place on
    all levels (course, programme, and institution
    and its sub-divisions) and be a continuous
    process.

11
Accreditation
  • Definition
  • Accreditation is both a status and a process.
  • It should provide a public certification of
    acceptable minimum quality as well as the
    opportunity and incentive for self-improvement in
    the programs accredited.
  • The process of accreditation should provide
    higher education with an opportunity for critical
    self-analysis leading to improvement of quality
    for consultation and advice from persons coming
    from other higher education institutions.
  • Accreditation reflects the fact that in
    achieving recognition, the individual program is
    committed to self-study and external review. Not
    only to meet certain minimum standards but also
    to continuously seek ways in which to enhance the
    quality of education.

12
National Level
  • National Agency, publicly accountable and
    operationally independent from the ministry and
    HEIs
  • Primary function the assurance of quality at
    programme level.
  • Look at all aspects of the academic provision,
    including library and IT resources, tutor
    support, student participation etc.
  • Used by the institution to maintain and improve
    the quality of all programmes.
  • Because programme quality assurance is of the
    greatest importance for students, this cannot be
    substituted by a purely institution level
    approach to quality assurance.

13
Institutional Level
  • Ultimate goal of institutional quality assurance
    to develop an internal quality culture
  • Ensures that quality is a focus of the
    institution at all levels
  • Incorporated in the everyday work of the
    institutional management, academic and support
    staff as well as students and their
    representatives.
  • Institutional quality assurance and evaluation is
    primarily a responsibility of the higher
    education institutions.
  • First step of the process defining the goals and
    missions at institutional and faculty level.
  • The learning environment for the student should
    be at the core of these goals and missions

14
The European Dimension
  • To achieve transparency, comparability and
    compatibility of quality assurance systems,
  • Not to replace them, recognising that there is a
    variation in the background of the higher
    education systems in Europe and on the national
    perspective on quality assurance and
    accreditation.

15
European Dimension (II)
  • Co-operation on standards, procedures and
    guidelines
  • Network of national agencies, members subject to
    peer review
  • Thematic and regional accreditation cooperation
  • E4 discussions

16
but first the Global Level
  • Education is globalising
  • and so should QA, in the interest of students
  • UNESCO is ESIBs preferred framework
  • Peer review process!

17
Berlin Mandate
  • Co-operation on standards, procedures and
    guidelines
  • Network of national agencies, members subject to
    peer review
  • Thematic and regional accreditation cooperation
  • E4 discussions

18
Berlin Peer Review
  • Ensures that agencies conform to an agreed set of
    standards
  • Carried out not only by agencies, but also by
    students and HEI representatives
  • Public scrutiny and reporting
  • Recommendations to the agency under review
  • Report submitted to a wider board (social
    partners...)
  • Appeals of decision?
  • Link to ENQA membership?

19
Agency Criteria
  • An agency must have a clear legal basis, its own
    budget and professional staff with resources
    proportional to assigned tasks
  • The agency must be active in, at least, one of
    the countries within the Bologna Process
  • Review results must in all cases reflect the
    findings of the reviews and not be subject to any
    pressure from other sources
  • Terms of procedures (inc the terms of references
    and identification of experts) of evaluations
    must be defined by evaluation professionals of
    quality assurance agencies, in consultation with
    representatives of students and HEIs, not by
    other bodies
  • The section on internal quality assurance
    mechanisms of the agencies must also include an
    indication of no conflict-of-interest mechanisms
    in the selection of external experts
  • Reports by the national agency must be made
    public.
  • The process of review undertaken by the national
    agency should be cyclical.

20
Agency Criteria (contd)
  • Internal feedback mechanisms that includes
    procedures for reflections and subsequently
    revisions on processes and methods
  • Mechanisms that provide feedback from external
    expert panels
  • Mechanisms that ensure dialogue and feedback from
    stakeholders. The latter may be institutions or
    programmes that have been evaluated, stakeholders
    in general such as higher education institutions
    and should be students and student organisations,
    while bearing in mind representativity.
  • Present on the agency website a public (i.e. non
    confidential) quality policy, including agency
    goals, processes and methods and a description of
    their decision making processes and governance
    structures to enable transparency and
    accountability.

21
Berlin Standards, Procedures and Guidelines
  • European standards - or European reference
    points for these standards that are still
    outlined at the national and institutional
    level.
  • The Process of QA
  • Procedures and Guidelines
  • Specific standards
  • Generic standards

22
Generic Standards
  • Mission and goals of programmes and institutions
  • Quality of content of education
  • Quality of the education process
  • Relation between education and research
  • Results for graduates (satisfaction,
    employability)
  • Quality of the learning process (achievability)
  • Internal QA process of education
  • Internal QA procedures of teaching staff
  • Governance/leadership
  • Participation of students in all decision making
    bodies (on all levels)
  • Internationalisation
  • Educational facilities
  • Equality
  • Access provision
  • Use of funds
  • Guidance (academic and welfare)

23
Contact
  • ESIBAvenue de la Toison dOr 17A/boite 801050
    BrusselsBelgium
  • Phone 32-2-502 23 62Fax 32-2-511 78 06
  • Email secretariat_at_esib.orgwww www.esib.org
  • Thank you for your attention!
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