May/June
2001
Volume 14, Issue 3
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PRACTICAL
INFORMATION
Implementation
of the Bologna Declaration
Part III: Italy, Part IV: Austria
REGIONAL
NEWS
Africa
Americas
Asia-Pacific
Europe
Middle East
Russia
& CIS
FEATURE
The
Permanent Crisis of the Public University
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Regional
News
Commission
Adopts Technology Plan
The
European Commission has adopted a US$13.3 billion plan to improve
information technology skills and promote online education throughout
the European Union. The "eLearning
Action Plan" outlines a three-year program to build up
appropriate technological infrastructures at all European universities,
including access to digital television and satellites. Schools that
have not been able to afford the equipment to form campus networks
will be provided with EU funding, while others will be given greater
resources for research in their computer departments.
The
motivation for the plan comes from the commission's goal to equal
the United States in its information technology industry, an ambition
that necessitates an enhanced and more widespread distribution of
IT education. It is hoped that a network of European universities,
through which course content and education resources are available
in online classes, will help Europeans regardless of age or regional
constraints to gain computer literacy. To legitimize this education,
officials are exploring the possibility of IT diplomas, similar
to the recently introduced European
Computer Driving License, granted after the completion of courses
in Internet proficiency.
The
European Investment Bank eib.eu.int is expected to contribute heavily
to the financing of the plan, which will be implemented across all
education levels. The plan calls for the establishment of online-learning
platforms as early as 2002, accompanied by a broad drive to recruit
and train teachers in the specifics of administering online courses.
The Chronicle of Higher Education
April 27, 2001
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FRANCE
Many universities of the arts and social sciences have engaged in strikes
and demonstrations in protest of a lack of resources and funding. Students
and teachers from Metz University
picketed outside the Education Ministry in Paris, while students at the
University of Montpellier-III
went on strike in early March. Most universities specializing in the humanities
have complained of high student-to-teacher ratios and fiscal difficulties
in modernizing their facilities.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement
March 23, 2001
The Institute d'Etudes Politiques
in St.-Ouen, also known as Sciences
Po , has in recent years been the most influential institution of
higher education in the country, graduating such notables as President
Jacques Chirac, Prime Minister Lionel Jospin and Minister of Education
Jack Lang. But in a move that some found surprising, the elite school
recently started a new affirmative action program for students from neighborhoods
that are largely populated by poor North African immigrants.
The program
has caused an uproar along class and ethnic lines and engaged all types
in a dialogue about higher education. Many contend the unintentional consequences
of affirmative action will lead the general public to discount the achievements
of nonwhite graduates of the school. Programs in the United States, they
say, have already proven the faults of such a policy, and that this step
is just another in the lamentable invasion of American influence in France.
Traditionalists
maintain that a uniform entrance exam is the only way of determining intelligence
fairly, but a growing opposition contends that standardized exams favor
those with the economic means to better prepare for them. Applicants from
wealthy families have better schools, special programs and tutors at their
disposal. At Sciences Po, close to 85 percent of the students come from
more privileged strata of society, while only 2 percent have working-class
origins.
The applicants
to the new program at Sciences Po will be subject to a procedure similar
to college entrance applications in the United States, where the student
is interviewed, given tests and required to submit recommendations. The
diversity of applicants thus far, ranging from Senegalese immigrants to
the children of domestic workers, has pleased the school's officials,
as has the students' demonstrations of strong intellectual ability and
independent thinking. The program's 20 students will be selected from
7 eligible high schools in impoverished areas throughout Paris and will
attend Sciences Po beginning next school year.
New
York Times
May 4, 2001
GERMANY
Despite its national tradition of intellectualism and sophisticated scientific
research, Germany is facing a large faction of critics calling its system
of higher education bulky, impersonal and inefficient. As European countries
have opened up their systems to competition, German universities remain
inflexible, underfunded and overly bureaucratic.
Only 16 percent
of the population holds a university-level degree, while Britain, Holland
and the United States all boast highly educated populations of over 30
percent. Companies in Germany are suffering from a lack of innovation
and research, as many of the relatively few post-docs take on jobs in
the United States.
Federal Education
Minister Edelgard Bulmahn is questioning many of the fundamental tenets
of university organization in the country and is seeking reform. A major
part of the problem, according to Bulmahn, has been the extremely low
rate of private spending on education, as companies are hesitant to invest
in a "diplom" system that requires an average of six years.
Bulmahn has pondered the introduction of a three-year bachelor's degree,
which would immediately bolster the number of degree-holders and give
students more freedom to pursue a variety of subjects.
Within the
universities, there are no quality-checking mechanisms to evaluate professors.
Most receive pay based on their experience in the field, although they
often fail to update their teaching material or pay sufficient attention
to their students. Administrators at
Humboldt University in Berlin have attempted their own reforms by
training the staff to view the student as a customer, a radical departure
from the past. They hope that a greater consciousness of higher education
as a business will promote competition and self-improvement.
Wall
Street Journal
Feb. 28, 2001
HUNGARY
The European University Institute it has
agreed to allow Hungarian students to enroll on the same basis as European
Union citizens. The institute, based in Florence, Italy, is a research
center for the human and social sciences, formed in 1972 to provide a
pan-European cultural center of learning. Polish students were similarly
included at the institute after an agreement was reached last year.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement
March 23, 2001
LATVIA
The Technical University of Riga and
the University of Latvia are preparing
to open an international information technology college in fall 2002.
Officials anticipate high enrollments from all Baltic countries and are
seeking funding from sources outside Latvia. The college will offer a
three-year degree.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement
March 30, 2001
MACEDONIA
Tension surrounding a rebel group from the country's large ethnic Albanian
population has erupted into fighting in recent weeks, and the controversial
University of Tetovo has
subsequently received a great deal of attention. The university is the
only Albanian-taught school in the country, established in 1995 and still
unrecognized by the Macedonian government. Last year, the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe, comprised mostly of Western
European ministers, agreed to help fund the school to supplement the donations
it receives from private sources.
The organization
approved an additional US$4 million of funding for the university, despite
its intense political involvement in the recent conflicts. Twenty or more
faculty members and students have been arrested for violence in past weeks,
and some have allegedly expressed their support of the ethnic Albanian
National Liberation Army.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement
March 23, 2001
UNITED KINGDOM
Thomas Telford School in Shropshire
has enjoyed remarkable success in the sale of online information technology
courses. The school was set up as a city technology college in 1991 and
has emerged as a leader in online vocational training, with more than
820 schools eager to purchase their courses. Kevin Satchwell, head teacher
at Thomas Telford, says the school can expect returns of up to US$3.5
million this year, which will go toward the establishment of similar schools
throughout England.
"I believe
that, within the near future, many schools will consider entering into
commercial educational initiatives online, as it is a simple and effective
way of sharing quality learning materials," Satchwell said.
The school
sold its services to 40 schools in April 2000, but that number jumped
to nearly 500 schools by September. It will expand its services to 320
additional schools this fall.
BBC
Feb. 21, 2001
De Montford University in the Midlands
has announced that it will close its Kents Hill campus at Milton Keynes
in Burkinghamshire in 2003. The campus now serves 800 students. Luton,
another new university, also announced its intentions to restructure itself
around courses such as media, design and computing, at the expense of
more traditional academic subjects. The cutbacks will put more than 90
teaching and managerial jobs in jeopardy. Critics have blamed this trend
on a lack of sufficient government funding, which some say is particularly
unfair to new institutions.
BBC
Feb. 23, 2001
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