the portuguese system for quality assurance in higher

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Quality Culture in Higher Education

CRUP / EUA Conference Portuguese Higher Education: a view from outside

Reasons for Rationalising the Course Portfolio

Lisbon, 19.February.2013

Sérgio Machado dos Santos A3ES

Quality culture in Higher Education

QA fundamental underlying principle

“Consistent with the principle of institutional autonomy, the primary responsibility for quality assurance in higher education lies with each institution itself and this provides the basis for real accountability of the academic system

within the national quality framework” [Berlin Communiqué]

“Providers of higher education have the primary responsibility for the quality of their provision and its assurance” “There should be encouragement of a culture of quality within

higher education institutions” [ENQA - ESG]

European trends on QA in the last decade

The influence of the Bologna Process

The adoption and transposition of the ESG to the national legal frameworks

- impact on HE systems and HEIs •

The influence of ENQA

- membership criteria - cooperation / capacity building •

The adoption of programme accreditation in Western Europe (emphasis on accountability!)

Lack of trust on HE institutions

European trends on QA in the last decade

Concerns with accountability-led QA processes

Difficulties in conciliating accountability and enhancement

Emphasis on accountability may induce conformity rather than improvement

Cases have arisen where there has been a movement away from accreditation of programmes or at least where this has been discussed, towards the adoption of approaches at an institutional level which are less intrusive

(2008 ENQA Survey) 

Stronger emphasis on internal QA systems

A Shift in Purpose

From Accountability to Quality Enhancement

The added-value of accreditation

-

Unquestionable, in the official recognition of qualifications

-

In an effective improvement of quality in higher education?

Little added-value in repeating a round of programme accreditation

HEIs are becoming more responsible and transparent -

Significant progress in the development of internal QA systems

-

Embedding of a quality culture within the academic communities •

Tendency towards less intrusive external QA mechanisms -

More in line with the autonomy and self-responsibility of HEIs

-

More appropriate to stimulate the emphasis on quality enhancement •

But: a social climate of trust on HEIs and on the quality of teaching is needed!

The Portuguese QA System

New system set up in 2007

New degree programmes need previous accreditation

ex-ante accreditation – initiated in 2009/10 (yearly)

Degree programmes in operation to be regularly assessed and accredited (every six years)

ex-post accreditation launched in 2010; evaluation procedures started in 2011

Main process: Programme accreditation

Full round of assessment/accreditation: 2011/12 to 2015/16

Any visible rationalisation effects on institutional portfolios?

Portfolio rationalisation through self-regulation DEGREE PROGRAMMES IN FEBRUARY 2010 Programmes in operation (officially recognised)

Submitted to preliminary accreditation Cancelled by HEIs

5.262

4.379

883

DEGREE PROGRAMMES IN FEBRUARY 2013 Programmes in operation that were accredited

Programmes with preliminar accreditation Accredited after on-site visit

Programmes that were cancelled

Cancelled by HEIs With a negative decision on accreditation by A3ES

3.691

3.384

307

1.571

1.457

114 70,1%

↓ 29,9%

27,7% 2,2%

New programmes accredited by A3ES 664 ↑

12,6%

Quality culture within HEIs

Development of internal QA systems

Development of QA instruments

Participation of students / feedback from stakeholders

Cases of external certification

(ISO 9001) •

Main problem: comprehensiveness (insufficient coherence/ no holistic vision)

Need for some guidance

Quality culture within HEIs

Guidance by A3ES

Study on European practices and trends, open to public discussion

Set of reference points aligned with part 1 of the ESG

(in terms of statements characterising a sound and well developed IQAS) •

Meetings with coordinating bodies and Seminars with HEIs

Development of an Audit model to assess and certify IQAS - Experimental exercise in 2012 involving 5 HEIs - Now open to all HEIs

(voluntary participation)

Quality culture within HEIs

Motivation for an Audit process in Portugal

To support HEIs in the development of their internal QA systems

(discussion, definition and dissemination of standards) •

To stimulate HEIs in assuming the main responsibility for the quality of their educational provision

To contribute

(under previously specified quality standards)

to simplify programme accreditation processes in the next accreditation round.

A “lighter-touch” approach

Building trust on HEIs

Certification of internal quality assurance systems

Performance of institutions in the assessment/accreditation round 2012-2016

“Risk-management” approach

Programme accreditation to stay - but less intensive (e.g., by sampling) in the case of excellent or above average quality HE Units

Model to be discussed with the HEIs.

“Quality (...) must remain the prime criterion of course viability”