1 / 15

Internal Quality Assurance in Higher Education in Europe

Internal Quality Assurance in Higher Education in Europe. Tia Loukkola 6 December, 2010. The structure of the presentation. European Quality Assurance Framework Presentation of the selected key findings based on the survey conducted in spring 2010

mab
Download Presentation

Internal Quality Assurance in Higher Education in Europe

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Internal Quality Assurance in Higher Education in Europe Tia Loukkola 6 December, 2010

  2. The structure of the presentation • European Quality Assurance Framework • Presentation of the selected key findings based on the survey conducted in spring 2010 • Further reflection and areas for further development

  3. European Quality Assurance Framework • The Berlin Communiqué in 2003 marked a major turning point by stating that “consistent with the principle of institutional autonomy, the primary responsibility for quality assurance in higher education lies with each institution itself” • European Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance adopted in 2005 • Simultaneously EUA has been working to promote the development of institutional quality culture rather than merely QA processes

  4. Examining Quality Culture: presentation (1) • An on-going project led by EUA • Project partners German Rectors’ Conference and QAA Scotland • The project period Oct 2009 – Oct 2011 • Co-funded by EC’s LLL programme

  5. Examining Quality Culture: presentation (2) • Aims to • Identify internal quality assurance processes in place in HEIs, particular interest to how the institutions have implemented the part of the ESGs part I. • Discuss the dynamics between the development of institutional quality culture and quality assurance processes. • Identify and present good practices in a final report in order to disseminate them. • Two phases of implementation • Survey to map internal QA processes • Interviews for more in-depth discussion -> This presentation is based on the survey

  6. Results:Strategies and QA structures • 90% have institutional strategic document or equivalent document • 2/3 have a separate institutional QA policy statement • 1/4 have its quality statement included in the strategic plan • Large variety of organisational structures, no typical solution • QA system in teaching and learning, in particular: • 2/3 institution-specific but follows national QA frameworks and guidelines • 1/4 tailor-made to the institution's needs and does not apply any ready-made model • whereas less than 10 % mentioned that it applies a ready-made model such as ISO, EFQM, and CAF

  7. Result: Introducing QA system or equivalent

  8. Results: Coverage • Activities covered by quality assurance processes: • Teaching and learning nearly 100% • Research 80 % • Service to society50 % • Student support services75 % • Governance and administration of the institution66 % • Tendency not to recognise all QA related processes within a HEI as quality assurance processes (may be a quality culture)

  9. Results: Responsabilities and stakeholders’ involvement • In 66% the senior leadership takes the lead in the process • In those cases 33% where the leadership was not leading the process, it still somehow follows-up the process. • Half of the respondents have no committee responsible for quality assurance • Curriculum design often responsibility of a working group or committee • When such committee exist, they involve students in 50% of cases

  10. Results: The feedback loop • 70% of respondents use student surveys as one of the means to monitor students’ perceptions of the teaching they receive. Among them: • 90% take the results into account in the assessment of teaching staff. • 60% of the respondents state that students who participated in a survey are informed about the outcomes and the resulting actions taken • 5% make the information on teachers’ aptitudes and performance publicly available.

  11. Results: Information systems • 95 % have a centralised information system in place • Student progression and success rates: 90% • Teacher-student ratio per faculty/department/institute or in the respective faculty/department/institute: 65% • Tracking graduates' employment: 40% • Students' satisfaction with their programmes: 50% • Profile of the student population (e.g., age, gender, education background, socio-cultural background...): 80%  • Available learning resources and, when applicable, their costs:45% • Other (such as the institution's own performance indicators):10%

  12. Results: Teaching and Learning • The curriculum typically designed by a committee or a working group. • A variety of processes for monitoring it exist. • More than 90% of HEIs have developed learning outcomes, but they do not all make them publicly available. 40% measure the student workload needed to reach the described learning outcomes through student surveys. • Student assessment methods and criteria are usually made transparent to students. • HEIs offer learning resources, but they do not all systematically monitor or evaluate them.

  13. Further reflection • Trends, key perceptions • QA systems are largely in place • developing a quality culture takes time and effort • Participation of all stakeholders still demands attention • HEIs seem to have more information available on the input and on what is offered, than on the output • Promoting a better and more efficient use of it may better contribute to strategic planning and foster continuous improvement. • Thus, institutions have been responding to the increased demand for quality although, it is still work in progress

  14. Areas for further development • an all-encompassing approach to QA • the development of explicit feedback loops • the participation of all relevant stakeholders • Communication strategy in general; in particular information on strategic goals and results

  15. Further information • The publication includingcomprehensiveresultsavailable on EUA web-site: www.eua.be Thank you for your attention

More Related