European Agenda For Change For Higher Education in XXIst Century

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 9

Higher Education

in the Twenty-first Century


Vision and Action
UNESCO
Paris
5-9 October 1998
A European Agenda for Change for Higher Education
in the Xl&t Cen fury
Palermo, Italy, 24 - 27 September 1997
Results of the European Region& Forum us u
Contribution to the UNESCO World Conference
on Higher Educution
ED-98ICONF.202ICLD.27
Tzi
ED-98iCONF.202iREF.4
Paris, July 1998
A EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR
HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE XXISf CENTURY:
RESULTS OF THE EUROPEAN REGIONAL FORUM
AS A CONTRIBUTION TO THE UNESCO WORLD
CONFERENCE ON HIGHER EDUCATION
(PALERMO, 24-27 SEPTEMBER 1997)
PREAMBLE
In the framework of the preparation of the 1998 UNESCO World Conference on
Higher Education, the Association of European Universities (CRE) and
UNESCOs European Centre for Higher Education (CEPES) organized the
European Regional Forum in Palermo that brought together almost 400 university
leaders, teacher representatives and students, representatives of public
authorities and the world of work, and intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations interested in higher education and its development. The
Conference was prepared on the basis of twenty case studies of how European
higher education institutions of different types and from different regions are
addressing the issues of teaching and learning, preparation for the world of work,
advancement of knowledge through research, and the transmission of cultural
values in a European and a global context, as well as of how they intend to deal
with these issues in the future.
A further input for the discussions was provided by a comparative analysis of
these case studies. The keynote address entitled Europe in a Period of Mutation
and Change -The Role of Higher Education focused on the future role of higher
education from the point of view of a large industrial concern, underlining the
importance of lifelong learning and the importance of graduates with both
professional skills and broad personal competencies. A panel of stakeholders
added its comments.
The discussions were based on these various inputs organized around the
four case study themes while taking into account the four main dimensions of the
World Conference on Higher Education, namely relevance, quality,
internationalization, and finance and management.
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE - MAIN DIRECTIONS
1. Mission
No chain being stronger than its weakest link, higher education should be a
strong part of a strong educational system, as well as play a key role in opening
new futures by contributing, in close collaboration with other partners, to the
innovation chain. Similarly, higher education institutions have a key role to play in
European society by contributing to equitable and sustainable development and
to the culture of peace. They should act critically and objectively on the basis of
rigour and merit, actively promoting intellectual and moral solidarity by serving
individual needs. In a world of in-depth transformations, higher education
institutions are expected to act responsibly and responsively. They are to foresee,
anticipate, and influence changes in all quarters of society and be prepared and
able to differentiate and to adapt accordingly.
II. Teaching and Learning
Genera/ Assumptions
Given the growing individual demand for higher learning and the resulting
pressures on higher education institutions, there is a need for ever more
institutional diversification, for new policies of access to higher education, and for
a structured development of lifelong learning. In order to better respond to the
needs of diversification, a wider and more imaginative institutional profiling is
expected to occur within higher education systems, thus leaving less room for
categorization of institutions. At the same time, more programmatic diversification
within the institutions is required.
Lifelong learning for personal and professional development, for career
change, transferable skills, and matching supply and demand for highly trained
personnel is essential. Higher education institutions must be able to offer
corresponding courses in continuing education and in alliance with employers
and other social partners so as to ensure that they are widely available and
contribute to a coherent system of higher education. Thus it is essential to define
the links in the overall educational chain and the relations between them so that
individuals can independently manage their learning at whatever level.
2
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
In response to this increasingly differentiated demand, coherence means
flexibility with regard to: access, content, breadth, depth, and duration of
programmes, means of delivery, examination, and validation. Thus, new policies
of access should be designed on the basis of merit and equal opportunities,
expanding student profiles, and reaching out to hitherto underprivileged groups of
society.
Higher education institutions should pay increased attention to promoting
strategies for the conceptualization and the management of educational
innovation, particularly with reference to organization of contents, learning
materials, teaching methods, and graduates personal profiles as a response to
the multiple challenges of their environments.
Required action
The shift from teaching to learning implies self-managed learning, a coaching role
for the teacher, professional support services, investment in new delivery, and
quality assurance mechanisms, especially in off-campus operations. It should
also lead to a new definition of scholarship balancing discovery and transmission
as well as the integration and application of knowledge. A crucial lever for change
is a creative and well-defined personnel policy which opens up teaching as a
career, supported by appropriate staff development programmes. Particular
attention should be paid to the promotion of opportunities for women, including in
top positions in higher education.
It also involves a new approach to curriculum development taking into
account multi- and interdisciplinarity and flexibility of choice, but in a coherent
system which allows for modularization, credit transfer, the validation of work
experience, and the organization of the academic year in semesters both at
national and international level.
Modern information and communication technologies have major
implications for the provision of education and training and require a fundamental
restructuring of the ways in which teaching and learning objectives are delivered.
Higher education institutions have a key role to play in exploiting, for themselves
and together with other partners, the potential of innovative information and
communication technologies for academic development.
Given the increased demand for higher education and its democratization,
there is a pressing need to share good practice and to ensure academic quality
3
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
standards by incorporating a culture of quality and the instruments for quality
assurance at both systemic and institutional level.
The new roles both of the teachers and of the students as well as the changing
relationship to government and world of work imply the definition of a new and
explicit educational contra& between the different partners, setting out rights and
responsibilities for all concerned. It will be especially important to ensure that the
voice of the students is heard at all stages of the learning process.
The paradigmatic shift from teaching to learning requires an investigation of the
desirability of establishing a European Centre for Teaching and Learning to act as
an observatory of good practice and innovation bringing together higher education
institutions and their stakeholders at local, national, and international level.
III. Research
General Assumptions
Research, seen as the process leading to the systematic development of new
knowledge, is central to the effectiveness of all higher education, while the type of
research and the resources and time allocated to its promotion may vary
according to the mission statement of the institution and its position within a
coherent system of higher education. Accordingly, uniformity of research
missions should give way to differentiated institutional policies focused on
achievable and competitive performances.
Research is important for the contribution of higher education to the
innovation chain, by a strategic mobilization of multilateral co-operation between
city and regional governments, higher education institutions, industry, and
business. In addition, it contributes to a constant supply of qualified young
researchers. At the same time, a strong link between research and teaching
opens opportunities for involving good researchers in the teaching process.
Multi- and interdisciplinary research is required more and more to solve
pressing societal problems, thus also contributing to sustainable human
development. There is, however, increasing concern about the ability of the
public purse to provide adequate finances to meet these escalating needs.
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
Required Action
To ensure continued high quality research, governments need to provide adequate
funding for basic research infrastructure, but within a competitive framework.
Research funding allocations should be based on quality criteria and transparent
auditing procedures. Care should be taken to avoid a mismatch between
stakeholders needs for interdisciplinary research and governmental/peer processes
of research, audit, and funding, which may be focused on single disciplines.
Research in the social sciences and the humanities should not be neglected.
Support mechanisms at national and international level to stimulate and
sustain research groups in less developed systems of higher education
should be strengthened in order to support institutional development rather
than exacerbating brain drain phenomena.
Institutions are encouraged to develop Codes of Practice together with
their partners for resolving questions of intellectual property regarding the
results of externally funded research. Similarly, Codes of Ethics for the
choice and conduct of research projects should be elaborated.
Strategies for diversifying funding sources should be actively sought.
Institutions attracting research funding in this way should ensure that their
services are realistically costed and priced and that a percentage of this
extra income is used to build up an internal development fund for emerging
projects or poorly funded areas.
Networking with corporate laboratories, multinational corporations,
especially at regional level, has a particular role to play in enhancing the
quality and scope of institutional research as well as its resource base.
IV. World of Work
Genera/ Assumptions
In a labour market which is dynamic and heterogeneous, universities should
not base their long-term orientations on labour market or manpower
planning, but on social demand. They therefore have to prepare their
students for meeting the challenges of an intrinsically uncertain labour
market. In addition to their professional qualifications, graduates require a
5
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
broad set of attributes in terms of personal and transferable skills and
competencies in order to increase their employability in a knowledge society.
Required Action
To sustain a well-rounded individual development, full participation of
stakeholders, in particular representatives of students, teachers, the world of
work, and public authorities in higher education policy formation, and
curriculum development is essential. As intelligent providers, higher education
institutions need to develop their knowledge of markets, anticipate needs, be aware
of competition, and invest in processes of quality assurance.
Students have to prepare for an increasingly diversified market, from
employment in large industrial concerns to small enterprises, from working in the
public sector to the service sector, and not forgetting individual entrepreneurship.
There is a special need for the promotion of more constructive relations of higher
education institutions to the world of small and medium size enterprises as the
sector employing the largest number of graduates.
Higher education institutions should provide systematic information in
schools and enterprises to guide student choices, provide placements as an
integral part of degree courses, and offer research training in a work
environment, as well as career guidance services at all times.
V. Transmission of Cultural Values in a European and Global Context
General Assumptions
Higher education institutions are as much concerned with the creation as
with the transmission of cultural values. Although it is misleading to speak of
European values per se, in the specific European context and in terms of
the European university tradition, a framework does exist in terms of cultural
unity through diversity. This means agreeing to disagree in order to pursue
open, critical, and constructive dialogue.
As a consequence, higher education institutions have a key role to play, not
only as centres, but also as incubators of cultural diversity and of multiracial
harmony and understanding. This means they have a particularly important role
to play in creating a civil society and in preparing young people for shaping and
6
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
living in a democratic society, a place where higher education plays an active role
in public debate on ethical and policy questions.
Required Action
These values should permeate all higher education curricula; their transmission,
especially as far as ethical considerations are concerned, should not be limited to
special courses. Special emphasis should be placed on language training, multi-
disciplinarity, and independent and critical learning associated with teamwork.
With the help of higher education institutions, this process should start in primary
and secondary education.
Attention should be paid to incorporating the European dimension as an
integral part of teaching and research and of sustaining the diversity of the
learning experience through student and staff mobility. This means strengthening
existing provision for the recognition of degrees and diplomas, in particular
through the implementation of the UNESCO/Council of Europe Joint Convention,
and supporting the further development of a coherent credit transfer system.
Furthermore, all efforts should be made to remove practical, administrative, and
legal obstacles to academic exchange at institutional, national, and international
level. In this respect, the importance of networking and true international
partnerships for co-operation in teaching, research, or service is paramount.
VI. Organizational Change and Development
A constructive partnership between government, business and industry, and
higher education institutions is a critical element in the implementation of an
Agenda for Change in Higher Education. The role of government is expected to
shift from bureaucratic control to policy steering, stable funding formulae, quality
monitoring, project-based investment, and providing a cushion against the wider
excesses of the demands of the free market. Business and industry should be
encouraged to define more clearly their needs as clients and to work together
with higher education institutions as training providers. Higher education
institutions should be entrusted with a greater institutional autonomy, thus
enhancing their capacity for change, for acting responsibly, effectively, and
entrepreneurially as learning organizations, while making them more
accountable in terms of performance. Inter-institutional alliances should be a
substantial lever for institutional change and development.
7
EUROPEAN AGENDA FOR CHANGE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
In view of the common assumptions on trends affecting future university
development in Europe, the growing systematization of institutional management is
a welcome development as is the corresponding awareness of the need for
internal strategic planning and rethinking, both for intrinsic reasons and in
response to initiatives from national higher education planners.

You might also like