Transcript Slide 1

Its emergence and application in selected
European countries
Mari Elken (UiO/NATED)
Poznan, 03.09.09
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policy in a multi-level and multi-centered setting, involving
large numbers of actors, institutions and processes (Olsen
2005)
increasingly difficult to differentiate between European and
national policies => understanding the integration
processes also offers a key to the change processes within
higher education in Europe , but European level has not
replaced other levels of governance (Gornitzka et al 2007)
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Mismatch in definitions, understandings and
interests, but ->
”Strong convictions and weak evidence” (Olsen &
Maassen 2006)
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A qualification is a formal outcome of an
assessment and validation process which is
obtained when a competent body determines that
an individual has achieved learning outcomes to
given standards (European Commission 2008).
From being a national responsibility to European
policy discussions
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NQF as ‘a practical solution to real political, economic
and educational problems /…/, and the often unrealistic
expectations about what the introduction of an NQF
will achieve.’.
Difference between ‘general idea of a single
qualifications framework that is common to a country
or group of countries and the very different ways in
which the idea of a framework has been taken up in
different countries.’
(Young 2002)
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a basis for the measurement of private provision
and the regulation and control of public provision
(Allais 2007)
A tool for creating trust (Ministry of Technology
and Education, Denmark)
Developments started on national level
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processes of recognizing vocational qualifications started
already with the Treaty of Rome in 1957
In 1975 - CEDEFOP, in 1985 a process of establishing
comparability of qualifications was started -> few results
at the time.
1998 European Forum on Transparency of Qualifications
2002 – The Europass initiative started, established 2004
(Bouder 2008, Paulsen 2007)
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During the last ten [now almost 20] years, has
been a call for more mutual recognition,
transferability and transparency of qualifications
(Brennan & Shah 2000a).
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Bologna as a first remote step towards
overarching qualifications framework?
National and international initiatives followed
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2005 Bergen meeting
Emphasis that it should not be standardized,
national ownership
QF-EHEA as a meta-framework
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Copenhagen process and VET as a starting point
but...
it grew larger.
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”a translation device”
The EQF was signed on 23rd of April in 2008
“promote citizens’ mobility between countries
and to facilitate their lifelong learning”
(European Commission 2008)
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8 levels
Knowledge - theoretical and/or factual.
Skills – cognitive (involving the use of logical,
intuitive and creative thinking) and practical
(involving manual dexterity and the use of
methods, materials, tools and instruments).
Competence – responsibility and autonomy.
L1
Basic general knowledge
L2
Basic factual knowledge of a field of work or study
L3
Knowledge of facts, principles, processes and general concepts, in a field of work or study
L4
factual and theoretical knowledge in broad contexts within a field of work or study
L5
comprehensive, specialised, factual and theoretical knowledge within a field of work or
study and an awareness of the boundaries of that knowledge
L6
advanced knowledge of a field of work or study, involving a critical understanding of
theories and principles
L7
- highly specialised knowledge, some of which is at the forefront of knowledge in a field
of work or study, as the basis for original thinking and/or research
- critical awareness of knowledge issues in a field and at the interface between different
fields
L8
knowledge at the most advanced frontier of a field of work or study
and at the interface between fields
L1
basic skills required to carry out simple tasks
L2
basic cognitive and practical skills required to use relevant information in order to carry
out tasks and to solve routine problems using simple rules and tools
L3
a range of cognitive and practical skills required to accomplish tasks and solve problems
by selecting and applying basic methods, tools, materials and information
L4
a range of cognitive and practical skills required to generate solutions to specific
problems in a field of work or study
L5
a comprehensive range of cognitive and practical skills required to develop creative
solutions to abstract problems
L6
advanced skills, demonstrating mastery and innovation, required to solve complex and
unpredictable problems in a specialised field of work or study
L7
specialised problem-solving skills required in research and/or innovation in order to
develop new knowledge and procedures and to integrate knowledge from different fields
L8
the most advanced and specialised skills and techniques, including synthesis and
evaluation, required to solve critical problems in research and/or innovation and to
extend and redefine existing knowledge or professional practice
L1
work or study under direct supervision in a structured context
L2
work or study under supervision with some autonomy
L3
- take responsibility for completion of tasks in work or study
- adapt own behaviour to circumstances in solving problems
L4
- exercise self-management within the guidelines of work or study contexts that are usually
predictable, but are subject to change
- supervise the routine work of others, taking some responsibility for the evaluation and
improvement of work or study activities
L5
- exercise management and supervision in contexts of work or study activities where there is
unpredictable change
- review and develop performance of self and others
L6
-manage complex technical or professional activities or projects, taking responsibility for decisionmaking in unpredictable work or study contexts
- take responsibility for managing professional development of individuals and groups
L7
- manage and transform work or study contexts that are complex, unpredictable and require new
strategic approaches
- take responsibility for contributing to professional knowledge and practice and/or for reviewing the
strategic performance of teams
L8
demonstrate substantial authority, innovation, autonomy, scholarly and professional integrity and
sustained commitment to the development of new ideas or processes at the forefront of work or
study contexts including research
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No legal commitment, voluntary
No explicit rhetorics of harmonization
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Optimism and scepticism, as always
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European level ideas and capabilities
European ambitions meet national realities
(Gornitzka et al 2007)
Need to understand the interaction between the
two, no simple adaptation
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European level analysis
Case studies and cross-country comparisons of
selected European countries (Norway, Ireland,
Estonia)
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What were the necessary conditions, the rationale and
ambition behind the emergence of EQF? Who were the key
actors in this process and what was their role?
The role and legitimation of EC in the process
Implementation/effects - recommendation vs regulation?
How does the process fit into the broader context of
europeanisation?
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What is the relationship between national policy
agendas (various internal actors) and European
initiatives?
How are the National Qualifications Frameworks
being developed? (process, actors, negotiations,
dynamics)
What is the role of EC (EQF) vs Bologna (QF-EHEA)
in the national policy developments?
Thank you!