Title: University Reform in Finland
1University Reform in Finland
- 10th Baltic Seminar of University Administrators
- 14 May 2009
- Ilkka Turunen
- Special Government Advisor
- Ministry of Education, Finland
2Priorities in Finnish Higher Education, Research
and Innovation Policies
- Structural development of HEIs
- Action Plan on Structural Development adopted in
February 2008 - Aalto University in the field of technology,
business and art and design private foundation
(foundation capital public 500 Meuro private
donations 200 Meuro) - New Universities Act
- National infrastructure policy
- Strategic Centres of Excellence in STI (Energy
and Environment, Forest Cluster, the Metals and
Engineering Cluster, the Information and
Communication Industry and Health and Well-being
) - Research career system
- Internationalisation of HEIs
- Reform of sectoral research
- National innovation strategy
3Structural development of higher education
- According to the Government Programme, structural
development will continue - The reform forms part of the European higher
education reform - Communication of the European Commission
"Delivering on the Modernisation Agenda for
Universities Education, Research, Innovation" of
May 2006 - Development targets for higher education
recommended in the thematic OECD review - Internationalisation, clearer institutional
missions and positions, and diversification of
the funding structure
4Structural development of HEIs- main objectives
- Enhance the HE network in order to create more
prominent institutions with higher standards - Ensure the quality and effectiveness of HEIs
research and teaching - Allocate resources to top-level research and
strategic priority areas - Strengthen the role of HEIs within the innovation
system - Improve the prerequisites of HEIs to cooperate
with foreign partners and to compete for
international research and other funding - Strengthen the adult education function of HEIs
- Safeguard the availability of skilled workforce
in changing operating environment - Improve the position of HEIs in the international
education markets - Diversify the funding base of HEIs
- Improve HEIs attractiveness as a competitive
employer in order to recruit the best personnel
5The Finnish HE system
- An extensive network of institutions covering the
whole country - all institutions internationally oriented with
special regional features - University sector
- 20 research universities, including Universities
of Arts - Student enrollment 170 000
- all institutions are run by the state
- Polytechnic sector (established in the mid 1990s)
- 26 institutions
- Student enrollment 110 000
- Regional development tasks
- Bachelor degrees (vocational and professional
degrees) - (Professional) Masters degrees
- The whole HE system provides study places for
65-70 of a age group - Tuition free system
6Vision 2020
- No more than 18 polytechnics
- Intake in youth education 22,500
- Flexible and profiled higher education units and
structures - Strong and dynamic interaction with the region
and with the world of work - Well-established, high-quality RD in priority
areas - No more than 15 universities
- Intake 17 500
- Strong units and profiles clear priorities in
research - Internationalisation and world-class research
- Four to five strategic university-polytechnic
alliances - Secured access to education and diverse education
provision in the area - Joint RD and stronger (regional) impact
7The Finnish university network
8Polytechnics
9Universities Bill
10Aims of the university reform
- In order to give the universities a stronger
financial and administrative status, they will be
made independent legal persons and supplied with
sufficient capital. - As legal persons, the universities will be better
equipped to respond to their own needs and to the
expectations of society than as State accounting
offices. - As legal persons, the universities will be better
able to operate with the surrounding society. - Universities will be able to pursue their own
human resources policies, geared to their
specific features, independently of government
human resources policy.
11Means - status as legal persons
- The universities are legal persons separate from
the State, either as corporations under public
law or foundations under the Foundations Act. - Corporation under public law (public university)
- A legal person under the Universities Act whose
organs and their functions are laid down in
legislation. - Foundation under private law (foundation
university) - A legal person under the Foundations Act which is
assigned the university mission in the
Universities Act.
12University organs - public university
- The statutory organs of a university under public
law are the board, rector and university
collegiate body. - The board decides on the main aims of the
activities, the strategy and the principles
governing the steering of operations and adopts
the university regulations governing the
organisation of the university. - The board is responsible for the finances of the
university. - Half of the board members are elected from
amongst three different groups in the university
- professors,
- other teaching and research staff and other
personnel, and - students
- Half of the board members must be persons
external to the university elected by the
university collegiate body. The chairperson of
the board is elected from amongst the external
members.
13University organs - public university
- The rector leads the day-to-day operations of the
university, presents matters to the board, sees
to the implementation of the board decisions and
decides on the hiring of personnel. - The rector is elected by the board. The
qualification requirements for the rector are a
doctorate degree, competencies and professional
skills required to discharge the duties and
proven leadership skills. - The university collegiate body is an organ
composed of the university community as a whole. - The university collegiate body determines the
number of members in the board to be appointed
and its term of office elects the external board
members and approves the board members elected by
the university community relieves a board member
from his/her duties selects the university
auditors approves the financial accounts of the
university and decides on the board members' and
the rector's freedom from liability.
14University organs - public university
- The units set up for research and teaching in a
university under public law have multi-member
administrative bodies, which have the
representation of the university community
groups. - In its regulations the public university
determines independently its organisation, its
organs dealing with academic matters and
procedures.
15New Universities Act will change
- Autonomy will strengthen universities will have
an independent legal status (corporations under
public law or foundations under private law) - Universities will take the place of the State as
employers civil-service employment relationships
will become contractual employment relationships - Community relations will strengthen half of the
university senate members (including the
chairman) will be persons external to the
university community (professors, other
personnel, students) defined in the act - Greater latitude with finances donations, income
from capital and business activities - New universities Aalto university (HUT, HSE,
UIAH), University of Eastern Finland
(universities of Kuopio Joensuu) and the new
Turku University (University of Turku, TSE) - Performance agreement procedure will be lighter
- Charging tuition fees on a trial basis for
separate masters programmes from students from
outside the EU/EEA
16The proposal will not change
- The freedom of research, art and education
- Self-government and academic decision-making
- Research and higher education remain as the main
tasks of the universities - The State will guarantee core funding, taking
into account the development of costs external
financing will not decrease State funding - Education leading to a degree will continue to be
free of charge - Students will continue to be regarded as full
members of the university they are automatically
members of the students union and are
represented on the governing bodies.
17Timetable of the university reform
- The Government has submitted its Bill to
Parliament in February 2009. - The reform is projected to take effect on 1
August 2009. - After this, the public universities may organise
and set up the new organs of the legal person. - The current operations of universities as state
accounting offices will stop on 31 December 2009. - The personnel and students transfer to the new
universities on 1 January 2010.
18Innovation performance 2008
Colour coding matches the groups of countries
green are the innovation leaders, yellow are the
innovation followers, orange are the moderate
innovators, blue are the catching-up countries.
Average annual growth rates as calculated over a
five-year period. The dotted lines show EU
performance and growth.
19Global Innovation Scoreboard 2008
- Finland, Sweden, Switzerland, Japan, the US,
Singapore and Israel are the global innovation
leaders. - The group of next-best performers includes
Germany, Denmark, Netherlands, Canada, the UK,
Republic of Korea, France, Iceland, Norway,
Belgium, Australia, Austria, Ireland, Luxembourg
and New Zealand. - The group of follower countries includes the Hong
Kong, Russian Federation, Slovenia, Italy, Spain,
Czech Republic, Croatia, Estonia, Hungary and
Malta. - The group of lagging countries includes
Lithuania, Greece, China, Slovakia, South Africa,
Portugal, Bulgaria, Turkey, Brazil, Latvia,
Mexico, Poland, Argentina, India, Cyprus and
Romania.
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22Finnish innovation system/policy SWOT
- STRENGTS
- Education
- Commitment continuity
- Co-operation competition
- Industry share of RD investments
- Proactive and client-oriented public innovation
services (funding, expert) - Public RD funding with strong incentives for
co-operation and risk-taking
- WEAKNESSES
- Small absolute volumes in RD
- (3,5 GDP 5,5 bn , lt 1 global RD)
- Dependence on global developments
- Low foreign direct investments
- Low international researcher mobility
- Small number of growth-oriented enterprises
- Small venture capital volumes for start-up and
early growth-phases
- OPPORTUNITIES
- More coherent and strategic national policies
(foresight?insight?policy) - Stronger focusing of public RD resources
- Going beyond industrial innovation Promotion
of innovation in private and public services - Market-pulled innovation stimulation
- Active participation in major EU RD programmes
and platforms - Going beyond EU Active linkage with global
innovation hotspots
- THREATS
- Dominance of one sector (ICT) and one company in
business RD - Risk of declining business RD expenditure
- Businesses increasingly move their operations
abroad, including RD - Loosing focus Participation in too many projects
with scarce resources
23GOVERMENTS REPORT ON INNOVATION POLICY
- Sent to Parliament in October 2008
- Contains the views of the government as to the
future development of (knowledge-based) broadly
defined innovation activities - Focus on demand- and customer-driven innovations
- Ministry of Employment and the Economy occupies a
key role in preparing the implementation phase - The Science and Technology Policy Council was
renewed to a Research and Innovation Council - The Parliament debated on the Report in March
- Evaluation of the Finnish National Innovation
System to be completed in autumn 2009.
24National Innovation Strategy
- a more extensive, broad based approach to
innovation policy gt horizontality - non-technological and non-RD based innovations
gt a shift of focus in the research agenda
towards demand led and user driven innovation,
service innovation, low tech innovations,
learning by doing, using and interacting - open innovation environment
25Finlands Innovation Strategy 2008
- Drivers of change
- Globalisation ? the most favourable operating
conditions, competition for talent - Sustainable development ? climate chance, energy
and raw materials - New technologies ? ICT, bio- and nanotechnology,
huge potential - Aging of population ? Finland is one of the first
countries to face reducing workforce volumes
26Expanding innovation activities new interactions
between players and functions.
27Finlands Innovation Strategy 2008Ten key sets
of measures
- The central governments corporate steering will
be renewed for the purpose of becoming a
worldwide pioneer of systemic reforms. - Content-oriented and regional centres of
innovation driving renewal will be formed in
Finland. - The financing and service system promoting growth
entrepreneurship will be renewed into a clear
entity, operating with entrepreneur and investor
orientation. - New competitive and market incentives activating
enterprises and other communities in innovation
on a broad basis will be created and exploited. - The national ensemble of expert and financing
services will be updated to meet the needs of
demand- and user-oriented innovation activity.
- A learning environment motivating innovation on a
broad basis will be developed for Finland. - Finnish research and higher education system will
be developed into an internationally competitive
development environment for expertise and
innovations. - Personal taxation and other key factors
essentially weakening Finlands attractiveness
will be revised to a competitive level. - Finnish management training will be developed to
meet international top standards. - The strategies and operations of parties
implementing innovation policy will be adapted so
as to be in line with the basic choices of the
national innovation strategy.
28Higher education institution internationalisation
strategy 2009-2015
- Sets five primary aims for internationalisation
- A genuinely international higher education
community - Increasing the quality and attractiveness of
higher education institutions - Promoting the export of competence
- Supporting a multicultural society
- Promoting global responsibility
29Why now? (2007/2008/2009)
- A need for a change/adaptation (Challenge of
China and other emerging economies experiences
from the recession in 1990s) - Universities as a part of public sector gtThe
Finnish Competition State (New Public Management,
budgeting by performance, assessment, managerial
approach) - Continuity consolidation of profiles, structural
development centres of excellence, graduate
schools, strategic research, national innovation
system, Corporate Steering ("valtiokonserni") - Consensus (further investment in education and
RD, STPC resolution 2005, STPC Reviews 2006 and
2008) - Comparisons rankings, league tables, "world
class university", political peer pressure (MS,
European Council, Commission) - New types of networks University rectors and
civil servants (budget negotiations, steering)
30Why now? (2007/2008)
- Interim Review of the Lisbon Strategy reports
(André Sapir 2003, Wim Kok 2004, Esko Aho 2006)
gt Universities, ERC, EIT, JETs, Broad-based
Innovation Policy - Commission's Communications on Universities 2003,
2005, 2006 - Erasmus gt Bologna gt Education and Training 2010
and European Research Area - OECD work on tertiary education 2004-2008
Finnish Country note 2006gt autonomy,
internationalisation, broadening of financial
base, private investments - Education/Science Patriotism ltgt competitiveness,
self-confidence (benchmarks, Scoreboards,
comparisons, PISA) - New "blue-green" government (departure from
"old" market and customer driven innovation,
creativity, excellence) - Stimulus Aalto repercussions of the idea and
implementation of "private" innovation university
- Resources increase in RD budget
- Support of HEIs University rector's Red
Manifests gains of autonomy
31Thank you!
- ilkka.turunen_at_minedu.fi
- 358 40 5664716