Title: The Polish Benchmark Paper
1The Polish Benchmark Paper
2History of tertiary educationin Poland
- After regaining independence in 1919, Poland had
five universities (Cracow, Lvov, Poznan, Warsaw,
and Vilnius), two technical universities (Lvov,
Warsaw) and the Academy of Veterinary and
Medicine in Lvov, the Central School of
Agriculture in Warsaw, and the Mining Academy in
Cracow. - All these institutions had the status of State
universities, with extensive autonomy and
self-government powers. - There were also private tertiary education
institutions the Catholic University of Lublin,
the Academy of Fine Arts in Cracow and the High
School of Commerce. - In 1938 it was together 47,700 students in Poland.
3Tertiary education under socialist regime
(1945-1989)
- The number of TEIs grew from 54 (1946) to 97
(1989), and the number of tertiary students grew
from 86,500 to 378,000 respectively. - After 1975, a record-breaking year when the
number of students reached 468,100, including
283,200 full-time students. - Only long-cycle programmes, open to holders of
the secondary school leaving certificate, which
last between 9 and 12 semesters and lead
directly to the Masters degree (magister).
4Today's numbers
- At present (2005), Poland has 130 public HEIs and
315 non-public HEIs, with a total number of
1,900,000 students, including 1,300,000 at public
HEIs and 600,000 at non-public HEIs - The total number of foreign students was only
8,829 - The total number of doctoral students was 33,040
5Field of study vs. number of students
- Management and marketing 46 440 students
- Pedagogy 41 913 students
- Computer science 27 386 students
- Law 24 979 students
- Mathematics 14 532 students
- Biology 11 783 students
- Chemistry 9 408 students
- Biotechnology 7 712 students
- Psychology 7 001 students
- Physics 7 490 students
- Technical Physics 4 340 students
- Astronomy 494 students
ful-time programmes (daily)
6Definitions
- Tertiary (higher) education institution
(TEI/HEI) a school providing degree programmes,
established in accordance with the procedure laid
down in the 2005 LoHE. - Public tertiary (higher) education institution
(established by the State) - Non-public tertiary (higher) education
institution (established by a natural person or a
corporate body) - University-type tertiary (higher) education
institution (at least one organizational unit
(Faculty) is authorized to confer the doctoral
degree). - Non-university tertiary (higher) education
institution.
7Category of HEIs
- Universities
- Technical universities
- Pedagogical universities
- Economic universities
- Agricultural universities
- Medical universities
- Academies of physical education
- Artistic high schools
- Maritime and military higher schools
- State higher vocational schools
8The numbers of students enrolled in individual
types of HEIsNovember 2005
- Universities 563,100
- Technical universities 331,100
- Agricultural universities/academies 107,700
- Academies/universities of economics 407,800
- Teacher education universities/academies 111,800
- Medical universities/academies 48,800
- Physical education academies 28,200
- HEIs for art studies 15,400
- Theological HEIs 10,400
- Other HEIs 79,500
- Non-university HEIs 224,700
9International aspects of tertiary education
- At present, there are two main co-existing types
of student mobility - completing a full degree programme in another
country or - completing a period of study in one country and
continuing studies in another country. - After 1990, the first type of mobility is still
common, but the second type is rapidly
developing. - In the academic year 2003/2004, over 8,100
students were enrolled in full degree programmes,
including mainly students from Ukraine, Belarus,
Lithuania, Russia, as well as the USA, Canada and
Germany.
10Non-nationals in tertiary education institutions
in Poland Full degree programmes
- Total 8 106 (students in 2003/2004)
- Belarus - 1171
- Lithuania 543
- Norway 451
- Ukraine 880
- USA 545
- Germany 182
- Canada 152
- ..
- France 32
- Laos 30
11Student and staff mobility in the framework of
the SOCRATES-Erasmus Programme
Academic year Number of outward student flows Number of inward student flows Number of outward/inward academic staff flows
1998/99 1426 220 -
1999/00 2813 466 -
2000/01 3691 614 678/488
2001/02 4322 750 800/573
2002/03 5419 996 947/749
2003/04 6278 1459 1394/1026
2004/05 8390 2332 1741/1440
2005/06 9974 gt 4000 -
Most Polish students go to study in Germany,
France, Spain, Italy and UK and students coming
to study in Poland are mostly form Germany,
France and Spain.
12- CONCLUSION
- The main features characterizing the past period
of transformations are as follows - High rate of growth in the number of students in
degree programs 4.7 times increase in the number
of Bachelors and Masters degree students and 12
times increase in the number of doctoral
students) - Conflict between the quantitative development
trend and the need to maintain quality standards - Growing difficulties in the financing of public
TEIs which have led to partial commercialization
of educational services provided (the
introduction of tuition fees for some forms of
study) - Development of the sector of non-public TEIs
offering additional supply of places in first
cycle programs (tuition fees are charged) in
response to the growing demand.
13Governmental and academic institutions - national
level
- Ministry of Science and Higher Education
- General Council for Higher Education,
- State Accreditation Committee
- Conference of Rectors of Academic Schools in
Poland (CRASP), - University Accreditation Commission
- Forum of Deans (Physics Faculties)
- 10 years of activity,
- not formal,
- opinions, criticism, studies, proposals of
changes - growing influence
14New system
- New ACT of 27 July 2005 Law on Higher
Education and relevant implementing regulations
to the Act, which are a legal basis in
particular for - the establishment of a three-cycle structure on a
compulsory basis in all higher education
institutions - the issue of the Diploma Supplement
- the introduction of a credit transfer and
accumulation system - the provision of joint study programmes and the
award of corresponding (double or joint)
diplomas - the provision of degree programmes in
macro-fields of study and interdisciplinary
programmes
15Implementation of the Bologna Declaration
- The process of introducing two-cycle programmes
began in Poland in the mid-1990s. - Two-cycle programmes must be introduced (from
2007) in 100 of all 106 fields of study. - In the remaining 6 fields (law, psychology,
pharmacy, medicine and dentistry, medicine,
veterinary medicine), only long-cycle Masters
programmes may be offered.
16First-cycle
- The first level includes first-cycle programmes
which are open for holders of the secondary
school leaving certificate, and lead to the
Bachelors degree (licencjat), lasting between 6
and 8 semesters (for licencjat) or between 7 and
8 semesters (for inzynier), depending on the
field of study.
17Second-cycle
- long-cycle programmes, open to holders of the
secondary school leaving certificate, which last
between 9 and 12 semesters and lead to the
Masters degree (magister), - open to those who hold at least the Bachelors
degree, lasting for 3 or 4 semesters, and leading
to the Masters degree (magister). The total
duration of the first-cycle followed by
second-cycle programmes or of long-cycle
programmes may not be shorter than 9 semesters.
18Structure of the study
field of study a distinct area of study student
declaration during 1st year of study.
19Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan
- Fields of study (gt 50)
- administration, acoustics, archaeology,
astronomy, biology, biotechnology, chemistry,
artistic education in the field of musical art,
artistic education in the field of fine arts,
ethnology, philology (languages Croatian,
Serbian, Bulgarian, Danish, German, Korean,
Lithuanian, Norwegian, Russian, Hungarian,
Vietnamese, Thai, Japanese, Chinese, Turkish,
English, Spanish, French, Italian, Arabic),
Russian-Ukrainian philology, New Greek philology,
Classical philology, Slavonic philology, applied
linguistics, linguistics and scientific
information, European social communication,
ethnolinguistics, Polish philology, philosophy,
physics, geography, geology, spatial economics,
history, history of art, computer science,
cultural studies, mathematics, musicology,
protection of goods of culture, environmental
protection, pedagogy, special education,
political science, law, psychology, sociology,
international relations, theology, tourism and
recreation, management and marketing.
20Field of study
- Degree programmes in a HEI shall be provided
within fields of study - a student shall be enrolled on a degree programme
in a specific field of study not later than after
the end of the first academic year,
21- The minister responsible for higher education
shall specify by regulation - the names of fields of study, including the names
of fields of study for degree programmes while
having regard to the existing fields of study and
demands of the labour market - the degree programme requirements for each field
and level of study, including educational
profiles of graduates, framework curriculum
contents, duration of degree programmes and
practical placements, requirements for each form
of study,
22The benchmarking of academic standards
- Subject benchmark statements provide a means for
the academic community to describe the nature and
characteristics of programmes in a specific
subject. - They also represent general expectations about
the standards for the award of qualifications at
a given level and articulate the attributes and
capabilities that those possessing such
qualifications should be able to demonstrate.
23Subject benchmark statementstime-sharing for 1st
level study
General contents Fundamentalcontents Field of study contents Specialized contents
10 20 15 55
common for all fields of studies common for the group fields of studies peculiar to the given field of study peculiar to the given specialization
24Subject benchmark statementstime-sharing for 2nd
level study
Fundamentalcontents Field of study contents Specialized contents
10 25 65
common for the group fields of studies peculiar to the given field of study peculiar to the given specialization
25Field of study Physics1st cycle
- The first cycle of study takes no less than 6
semesters, the number of hours of lectures and
classes should not be lower than 2000 (contact
hours), while the ECTS score should not be lower
than 180. - Group of general contents (subjects), min. 180
h, 14 ECTS - IT, English, Humanistic contents, Protection of
intellectual property - Group of fundamental contents (subjects), 360 h,
41 ECTS score - Mathematics, 150 h
- Physics, 180 h
- Astronomy, 30 h
- Group of the field of study contents (subjects),
300 h, 35 ECTS score - Electrodynamics
- Fundamentals of quantum physics
- Physical Laboratory
- Classical and relativistic mechanics
- Thermodynamics and statistical physics
- Group of specialization contents (subjects), gt
1160 h, 90 ECTS score
26Field of study Physics2nd cycle
- The second cycle ends with getting a degree of
Master of Science (Magister). The second cycle of
study takes no less than 4 semesters, the number
of hours of lectures and classes should not be
lower than 1000, while the ECTS score should not
be lower than 120. - Group of fundamental contents, 90 h, 10 ECTS
score - Physical Laboratory
- Group of the field of study contents, 240 h, 27
ECTS score - Theoretical physics
- Physics of condensed matter
- Quantum physics
- Group of specialization contents, gt 670 h, 83
ECTS score
27The most popular specializations
- Experimental Physics
- Theoretical Physics
- Computational Physics
- Physics of materials
- .
- Teaching of physics
28The most promising specializations
- Nanoscience/Nanotechnology
- Molecular Biophysics
- Medical Physics
- Dispensing optics/Optometry
- Acoustic
29Future challenges
- New fields of study related to Physics
- Acoustic (only in Poznan)
- Sound Engineering
- Prosthetics of hearing
- Biophysics (only in Poznan and Cracow)
- Technical Physics
- Biomedical engineering
- Nanotechnology (only in Cracow)
Macro-field of study an area of study combining
fields of study which have similar degree
programme requirements Interdisciplinary
programme a degree programme provided jointly in
various fields of study by one or more higher
education institutions
30Faculty of PhysicsAdam Mickiewicz University
31(No Transcript)
32Field of study Acoustic1st cycle study
33Field of study Physics1st cycle study
34Field of study Physics2nd cycle study
35Graduates' numberfull time, long-cycle programmes
- Acoustic 50
- Astronomy 2
- Biophysics/ Dispensing optics/Optometry 25
- Biophysics/ Medical Physics 25
- Physics/Theoretical physics 3
- Physics/ Experimental physics 10
- Physics/ Teaching of physics 10
- Physics/ Nanotechnology 25
- Physics/ Applied Computer Science 75
36Conclusions
- Advantages
- Implementation of three-cycle degree system 324
- much less structural barriers between cycles.
- increasing the compatibility and comparability of
our higher education system, - students' better mobility (between fields of
study and between different faculties and
universities) - qualifications better suited to the labour
market, compulsory practice - Progress towards the EHEA
- Disadvantages
- ???
- ???
37The strategy for increasing RDexpenditure to
achieve the Lisbon Strategy objectivesthe
Council of Ministers, March 2004
- The Polish priority for research and development
activities include four groups of activity - Info
- Techno (Nano)
- Bio
- and Basics.
38Form of study
- Full-time programmes a form of study in which
the curriculum comprises courses requiring direct
participation of academic staff and students,
with the course load defined in the degree
programme requirements for this form of study.
Such programmes are free of charge (formerly used
term regular or day-time programmes). - Part-time programmes a form of study other than
full-time programmes complying with the degree
programme requirements defined for this form of
study, and specified by the senate of a TEI
(HEI). This form of study is paid it formerly
covered evening, extramural and extension
programmes.
39- In the entire period between 1990/91 2003/04,
the number of students in Poland increased 4.7
times, whereas the number of academic teachers by
42.
Academic teachers account for 55.9 of all
employees in tertiary education 55 of all
employees in public TEIs and 60.9 in non-public
TEIs.
40Demography in Poland
Size of age group 19-24 years