1 / 10

Traditional educational models in Europe Diversities of educational systems

Traditional educational models in Europe Diversities of educational systems. Workshop: Boosting quality: International Credential Evaluation and Higher Education Quality Assessment in SSH (PHOENIX) Bishkek, 13-14 April 2006 Gunnar Vaht Estonian ENIC/NARIC.

uma
Download Presentation

Traditional educational models in Europe Diversities of educational systems

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. Traditional educational models in EuropeDiversities of educational systems Workshop: Boosting quality: International Credential Evaluation and Higher Education Quality Assessment in SSH (PHOENIX) Bishkek, 13-14 April 2006 Gunnar Vaht Estonian ENIC/NARIC

  2. Traditional general models of education • German model (Humboldt) • Anglo-Saxon model(Anglo-American) • French model (Napoleonic)

  3. German traditional model • Higher education system is binary - universities and professional higher education institutions • one long-cycle study (master-level) • research activities during initial studies • diversified secondary education

  4. Anglo-American traditional model • Academic and professional instruction is combined in the same programme (unitary higher education) • two-cycle education (undergraduate-graduate structure) • broad, general education on a high level • specialisation and research at second cycle • no diversified secondary general education

  5. French traditional model • Three-cycles or more in higher edcuation • Broad orientation in first cycle (2 first years) - DEUG • high selection criteria of students to the next cycle • high level central state regulations • Grandes écoles

  6. Differences in secondary education systems • Differences • types of institutions and programmes (general secondary, vocational, combined) • curricula (state curricula, school programmes, student choices) • subjects, content and amount • length of studies (10; 11; 12; 13 or 14 years) • central level examinations • marking system (pass grade) • FAIR RECOGNITION - based on the function of the qualification (access to higher education)

  7. Differences in higher education systems • Differences • access requirements • general secondary education; vocational qualifications, preparatory year; state examinations; Bachelor Doctor • degree structures • one-tier; two-tier; multi-tier structures • type of institutions • university-type; non-university type; combined; binary • nominal duration • credit systems/marking systems • names of degrees and other qualifications • same or similar name of degree may have different content and outcome • graduation requirements • FAIR ASSESSMENT AND RECOGNITION - based on assessment of learning outcomes

  8. Diversity of names of qualifications • Baccalaureat, Bachiller, Bakalaureus, Bachelor, Bacharel • Master, Maisteri, Maestro, Meester, Magister, Maitrise, Magistere, Mestre, Magisterexamen • Licencie, Licenciado, Licence, Lizentiat, Lisensiaatti • Kandidaat, Kandidaatti, Candidatus, Candidat, Kandidat nauk • Diplomado, Diplomirani, Diplom, Diploma di Specialista, Diploma Universitarion, Diploma de… • Laurea, Ptychio, Egyetemi oklevel, Gradue, Akademski, Doctorandus

  9. Terminology • academic (degree, education) • degree • university-type, non-university type • qualification • undergraduate-graduate-postgraduate • professional degree, professional doctorate • college, institute

  10. Recognition problems • Domination of assessment and recognition practices based on the name of degree • Bachelor, Baccalaureat, Bachiller etc are not corresponding degrees • Master, Maisteri, Maitrise, Magister are not equivalent qualifications • Misunderstanding or incorrect interpretation of levels • Bachelor-Master indicates the levels and does not mean the named degrees • undergraduate, graduate and postgraduate may have different meanings and vary in the systems

More Related