The Recommendations
of the European Students Concerning the Bologna Process
Dear
Students,
Dear Ministers of Education,
Dear Organizers,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
First
I would like to thank the ministers, their representatives and the
organizers for giving me, as the chairperson of ESIB, the opportunity
to present the recommendations of the European students concerning
the Bologna Process. But who is ESIB to present the students' view?
ESIB
is the umbrella organization of National Unions of Students. At
the moment we have members coming from 36 countries, from all over
Europe. These countries are as far apart as Iceland from Georgia,
Cyprus to Ireland and Finland to Portugal. In June 1999, ESIB and
its members had to invite themselves to the ministerial meeting
on "A European Higher Education Area" in Bologna.
A lot
has changed since Bologna because since then, ESIB has been visibly
and actively involved in the construction of the European higher
education area. There are two reasons for this.
First, ESIB thinks that by principle the whole of the higher education
community should be involved in shaping the European higher education
area. Since students are part of this community, they should be
treated as equal partners.
Second,
ESIB simply welcomes the emergence of a European education area.
ESIB would, however, like to raise some awareness about issues that
are of great importance to students. Over 120 student representatives
from all over Europe gathered in Göteborg in the end of March
2001 to prepare their input to this meeting, and they agreed on
the following principles.
First
I will set out in brief our objectives and the means. To conclude
I will raise two important issues of concern.
I.
OBJECTIVES
1.1.
Introduction
ESIB
sees the Bologna process as the crucial step towards achieving the
objective of a Europe without boundaries for its citizens. A European
higher education area should include all European students on an
equal basis. The creation of this area is a common responsibility
of all European countries and should take into account the political
and socio-economic differences in Europe.
But
students will have to be able to benefit from the other advantages
this integrated European higher education area can bring them. And
this brings us to the tension between this integration and the objective
of preserving diversity.
1.2.
Diversity
The
Bologna Declaration can give an added value to the European Higher
Education. This implies that the result of the whole Bologna Process
cannot be the disappearance of the richness of the current systems.
While converging towards a European higher education area, this
diversity can be safeguarded as an invaluable asset. This asset
is part of the European educational culture in which higher education
of a high quality has always been an important goal.
1.3.
Quality
The
word 'quality' however is only mentioned once in the Bologna Declaration.
Not even quality as such, but in the context of quality assurance:
"
the promotion of European co-operation in quality assurance
with a view to developing comparable criteria and methodologies."
According
to ESIB, quality is a distinguishing characteristic guiding students
and higher education institutions. Quality improvement and quality
assurance feature high on the agenda of ESIB and its member unions
all over Europe, and therefore more attention should be paid to
improving and certifying this quality.
1.4.
Mobility
The
Bologna Declaration mentions mobility of students and teachers.
In order to build the "European Higher Education Area,"
mobility should become a right for all students. The fear that the
mobility experience will only create a new student elite is, however,
firmly alive in ESIB. Therefore ESIB would like to add a third dimension
to this: the mobility of the study finance system.
Most
of the students in Europe are not able to receive grants and/or
loans when they study abroad. This measure of course limits the
possibility for students to study abroad, to become mobile. ESIB
wants all forms of domestic financial and social support to students
to be fully transferable abroad. This way, mobility will be opened
up to a wider population of the European students.
1.5.
Access
Everybody
must have equal access to higher education. By this, it is understood
that everybody with the capacity to study in higher education has
the opportunity to enter higher education institutions. Even the
European Community Memorandum on Higher Education emphasizes the
political need to achieve "equal opportunities regarding the
access to all forms of education."
Thus
the Bologna Declaration cannot be a legitimization for any kind
of access restrictions, be it tuition fees or cutting on higher
education funding.
1.6.
Conclusion
To
repeat for a moment: the students want a European higher education
area in which diversity is guaranteed and in which they have access
to both high quality education and to mobility.
II.
MEANS
The
means to establish this kind of European higher education area should
evolve around the following focal points:
To
ensure that all programs of higher education institutions are compatible
and exchangeable, a system of credits based on workload should be
implemented in the whole of Europe.
To
guarantee and improve the quality of higher education, a strong
European cooperation of the national quality assurance systems is
needed. Quality assurance is a pre-condition to accreditation, and
therefore internal and external quality-assurance systems should
be in place everywhere in Europe before accreditation is implemented.
Concerning
accreditation, a common European framework of criteria for accreditation
and a compatible system of degrees is needed, in order to make sure
that credits accumulated in different countries or at different
institutions are transferable and lead to a recognizable degree.
A two-tier
degree system should guarantee accessibility and access for all
students and should not lead to the exclusion of students on other
than academic grounds.
III.
ISSUES OF CONCERN
3.1.
Introduction
I have
now presented the students' objectives and, in brief, the means.
Now we would like to raise some issues of concern. These issues
are very important for the students because they are decisive for
the positive or negative attitude students all over Europe have
towards the Bologna Process.
3.2.
The Social Dimension
Although
the Bologna Declaration pointed out the basic aspects of the European
dimension in higher education, it failed to address the social implications
the process has on students. This social dimension includes accessibility,
study finance systems and their mobility, student welfare and, also,
the use of languages. We know that these are all under the competency
of your governments. But so is the rest of the Bologna Process,
and therefore, these are issues that can be addressed in the Bologna
Process.
As
you all know this is really an important problem for students. A
lot of countries have experienced negative reactions and protests
against the Bologna Process because of the lack of any social dimension.
ESIB has been the only actor in the Bologna Process addressing the
social issues, and we would really like the ministers to recognize
this.
3.3.
Education as Public Good
The
term "education market" in itself already forms a distorted
picture of education. ESIB strongly opposes the handling of education
as a common market commodity. Education is an investment by society
and should be beneficial for both the individual and the society
alike. ESIB demands that education preserves its task as a contributor
to social equality in society.
Higher
education must therefore remain accessible to all students. Transnational
education provision must not jeopardize this.
The
Bologna Declaration should open new dimensions for the students.
It should open doors that were closed before or only open to the
happy few. This of course means that closing down publicly funded
higher education or pure privatization is out of the question. Publicly
funded higher education must remain the main form of higher education
in the future.
ESIB
strongly supports the idea of higher education as a public good
because higher education must aim to meet the needs of society as
a whole. This however does not mean that all higher education institutions
should be public. Even private higher education can be a public
good.
This is especially important in light of the current negotiations
on the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). If Europe
doesn't act, GATS can eventually lead to free trade in education
and, thus, a total privatization of higher education.
We
are not saying it will eventually lead to this. It can if the commitment
of all the governments in Europe to their education system is not
strong enough, and if they don't take up their public responsibility
for education.
Linked
to this is also the emergence of pure economical thinking into the
language used by the higher education community. ESIB has had to
react several times during the international Bologna seminars.
Students are not just clients.
Education is not a product.
A higher education institution is not a supermarket.
Students
are an equal part of the higher education community. In this respect,
students must be seen as partners and not as clients. Seeing students
as just clients would imply that only financially well-off students
would be able to buy high quality education. Therefore we, the students
in Europe, would like to be referred to as students and not as clients.
IV.
CONCLUSION
So
what are the students trying to tell you? We're trying to tell you
that this is a moment for European higher education to reinforce
itself and provide the European students with the education they
deserve.
But
the Bologna Process is not so much a European process. It's a national
process in which the main actors are the governments and the higher
education community consisting of higher education institutions
and students. Therefore we ask you, the ministers responsible for
higher education, explicitly to write a social dimension into the
implementation of the Bologna Declaration and to preserve higher
education as a public good.
For more information on the Prague summit, go to: www.esib.org/prague/index/htm.
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