THE CHANGING HIGHER EDUCATION LANDSCAPE AND THE ROLE FOR QUALITY ASSURANCE

Similar documents
National Academies STEM Workforce Summit

Department of Education and Skills. Memorandum

Introduction Research Teaching Cooperation Faculties. University of Oulu

Summary and policy recommendations

Students with Disabilities, Learning Difficulties and Disadvantages STATISTICS AND INDICATORS

The Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC) provides a picture of adults proficiency in three key information-processing skills:

Twenty years of TIMSS in England. NFER Education Briefings. What is TIMSS?

Overall student visa trends June 2017

Impact of Educational Reforms to International Cooperation CASE: Finland

PROGRESS TOWARDS THE LISBON OBJECTIVES IN EDUCATION AND TRAINING

The Rise of Populism. December 8-10, 2017

HIGHLIGHTS OF FINDINGS FROM MAJOR INTERNATIONAL STUDY ON PEDAGOGY AND ICT USE IN SCHOOLS

The European Higher Education Area in 2012:

International House VANCOUVER / WHISTLER WORK EXPERIENCE

SOCRATES PROGRAMME GUIDELINES FOR APPLICANTS

DEVELOPMENT AID AT A GLANCE

TIMSS Highlights from the Primary Grades

The recognition, evaluation and accreditation of European Postgraduate Programmes.

Challenges for Higher Education in Europe: Socio-economic and Political Transformations

Welcome to. ECML/PKDD 2004 Community meeting

Universities as Laboratories for Societal Multilingualism: Insights from Implementation

PIRLS. International Achievement in the Processes of Reading Comprehension Results from PIRLS 2001 in 35 Countries

The development of national qualifications frameworks in Europe

May To print or download your own copies of this document visit Name Date Eurovision Numeracy Assignment

Science and Technology Indicators. R&D statistics

international PROJECTS MOSCOW

The development of ECVET in Europe

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. TIMSS 1999 International Science Report

RELATIONS. I. Facts and Trends INTERNATIONAL. II. Profile of Graduates. Placement Report. IV. Recruiting Companies

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. TIMSS 1999 International Mathematics Report

DISCUSSION PAPER. In 2006 the population of Iceland was 308 thousand people and 62% live in the capital area.

How to Search for BSU Study Abroad Programs

Advances in Aviation Management Education

The International Coach Federation (ICF) Global Consumer Awareness Study

qwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmq wertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqw ertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwer tyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwerty

Rethinking Library and Information Studies in Spain: Crossing the boundaries

SECTION 2 APPENDICES 2A, 2B & 2C. Bachelor of Dental Surgery

Teaching Practices and Social Capital

Improving education in the Gulf

Interview on Quality Education

UPPER SECONDARY CURRICULUM OPTIONS AND LABOR MARKET PERFORMANCE: EVIDENCE FROM A GRADUATES SURVEY IN GREECE

IAB INTERNATIONAL AUTHORISATION BOARD Doc. IAB-WGA

ESTONIA. spotlight on VET. Education and training in figures. spotlight on VET

Business Students. AACSB Accredited Business Programs

UNIVERSITY AUTONOMY IN EUROPE II

Supplementary Report to the HEFCE Higher Education Workforce Framework

REFLECTIONS ON THE PERFORMANCE OF THE MEXICAN EDUCATION SYSTEM

The development of ECVET in Europe

Tailoring i EW-MFA (Economy-Wide Material Flow Accounting/Analysis) information and indicators

National Pre Analysis Report. Republic of MACEDONIA. Goce Delcev University Stip

JAMK UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES

MODERNISATION OF HIGHER EDUCATION PROGRAMMES IN THE FRAMEWORK OF BOLOGNA: ECTS AND THE TUNING APPROACH

STAGE-STE PROJECT Presentation of University of Seville (Partner 44)

06-07 th September 2012, Constanta Romania th Sept 2012

15-year-olds enrolled full-time in educational institutions;

TERTIARY EDUCATION BOOM IN EU COUNTRIES: KEY TO ENHANCING COMPETITIVENESS OR A WASTE OF RESOURCES?

GREAT Britain: Film Brief

Financiación de las instituciones europeas de educación superior. Funding of European higher education institutions. Resumen

HAAGA-HELIA University of Applied Sciences. Education, Research, Business Development

Measuring up: Canadian Results of the OECD PISA Study

OCW Global Conference 2009 MONTERREY, MEXICO BY GARY W. MATKIN DEAN, CONTINUING EDUCATION LARRY COOPERMAN DIRECTOR, UC IRVINE OCW

University of Trento. Faculty of Law. Bachelor s Degree in Comparative, European and International Legal Studies.

ehealth Governance Initiative: Joint Action JA-EHGov & Thematic Network SEHGovIA DELIVERABLE Version: 2.4 Date:

State of play of EQF implementation in Montenegro Zora Bogicevic, Ministry of Education Rajko Kosovic, VET Center

Eye Level Education. Program Orientation

GHSA Global Activities Update. Presentation by Indonesia

EQE Candidate Support Project (CSP) Frequently Asked Questions - National Offices

Information needed to facilitate the clarity, transparency and understanding of mitigation contributions

INSTRUCTION MANUAL. Survey of Formal Education

HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE. October 1-2, 2014

OECD THEMATIC REVIEW OF TERTIARY EDUCATION GUIDELINES FOR COUNTRY PARTICIPATION IN THE REVIEW

CONSULTATION ON THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE COMPETENCY STANDARD FOR LICENSED IMMIGRATION ADVISERS

ANALYSIS: LABOUR MARKET SUCCESS OF VOCATIONAL AND HIGHER EDUCATION GRADUATES

Target 2: Connect universities, colleges, secondary schools and primary schools

OHRA Annual Report FY15

An Example of an E-learning Solution for an International Curriculum in Manufacturing Strategy

Master s Degree Programme in East Asian Studies

Academic profession in Europe

Educational system gaps in Romania. Roberta Mihaela Stanef *, Alina Magdalena Manole

Language. Name: Period: Date: Unit 3. Cultural Geography

Pharmaceutical Medicine as a Specialised Discipline of Medicine

CHAPTER 3 CURRENT PERFORMANCE

The Junior Community in ALICE. Hans Beck for the ALICE collaboration 07/07/2017

Ten years after the Bologna: Not Bologna has failed, but Berlin and Munich!

Financing of Higher Education in Latin America Lessons from Chile, Brazil, and Mexico

CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES RECOMMENDATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL

Mandatory Review of Social Skills Qualifications. Consultation document for Approval to List

Information Session on Overseas Internships Career Center, SAO, HKUST 1 Dec 2016

Quality in University Lifelong Learning (ULLL) and the Bologna process

International Branches

International Perspectives on Retention and Persistence

Lifelong Learning Programme. Implementation of the European Agenda for Adult Learning

Teacher Education and Co-Operation with Enterprises and Industries

A comparative study on cost-sharing in higher education Using the case study approach to contribute to evidence-based policy

TESL/TESOL Certification

Macromedia University Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) Programme Information

COST Receiving Site Locations (updated July 2013)

2001 MPhil in Information Science Teaching, from Department of Primary Education, University of Crete.

HIGHER EDUCATION IN POLAND

Transcription:

THE CHANGING HIGHER EDUCATION LANDSCAPE AND THE ROLE FOR QUALITY ASSURANCE Dirk Van Damme OECD/EDU

HIGHER EDUCATION 2

divergence HIGHER EDUCATION convergence 3

divergence HIGHER EDUCATION convergence 4

divergence HIGHER EDUCATION EHEA ESG convergence 5

GLOBAL CONVERGENCE 6

International research collaboration 7

Globally connected networks in research 8

Higher demand, more qualifications Below upper secondary Upper secondary Tertiary 60 50 47 40 30 20 10 0 26 Relative share of attainment levels, 25-34 y-olds, OECD 2000-2020 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 9

Education Attainment Gini by region Source: (Wail, Said & Abdelhak, 2011) 10

Engines of convergence Research collaboration Common qualification frameworks, credit transfer Converging demand for higher education; internationalization; mobility Integrated higher education areas (EHEA); common quality assurance and recognition arrangements Global rankings fostering mimetic behaviour and shared notions of excellence 11

Qualifications embody the power of convergence Qualifications have a common language to enable their readability across systems, especially within the EHEA Quality assurance (should) guarantee their more or less similar quality Qualifications also hold the promise of more or less the same skills equivalent 12

BUT IS MORE OF THE SAME THE ANSWER? 13

Sweden Estonia Norway Denmark Finland Greece Belgium New Zealand Australia Korea Italy Canada Latvia Netherlands Switzerland Japan Spain United Kingdom Austria France OECD average Luxembourg Israel Poland Ireland Germany Turkey Portugal Czech Republic Slovak Republic Slovenia United States Lithuania Hungary Mexico Costa Rica Colombia Chile Brazil The monetary value of tertiary qualifications are still high to a varying degree among countries Index 250 Earning disadvantage of adults with below upper secondary education Earning advantage of adults with tertiary education 225 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 14

but might be inflated by crowding out the mid-skilled on the labour market (polarization) Low skill Middle skill High skill 10 5 0-5 -10-15 Southern Europe Northern EuropeWestern Europe Total North America Japan Central Europe 15

Employability patterns change Employment opportunities by typical education requirements of occupations, historical and projected, in OECD- EU countries Shares of employment growth Source: OECD calculations based on CEDEFOP (2017), EU-CEDEFOP database: Employment trends 16

WE ARE QUALIFYING MORE PEOPLE, BUT THERE ARE ALSO MORE DOUBTS ABOUT QUALITY AND RELEVANCE OF THE SKILLS WE DELIVER 17

Despite massification, between 90s and 2010s levels of foundation skills have slightly decreased Level 4-5 Level 3 PIAAC Level 2 IALS Level 1 and Below 0 0,05 0,1 0,15 0,2 0,25 0,3 0,35 0,4 0,45 0,5 18

also very clearly among higher educated 19

In several countries tertiary education does not protect against low foundation skills 20

ARE WE SEEING A MISMATCH BETWEEN WHAT EDUCATION PROVIDES AND THE SKILLS THAT SOCIETIES NEED? 21

Japan Finland Netherlands Sweden Australia Norway Flanders (Belgium) England/N. Ireland United States Czech Republic Average Poland Canada Austria Germany Ireland France Denmark Estonia Slovak Republic Korea Russian Federation Spain Italy Qualifications do not deliver on the skills equivalent they promise Proportion of 25-64 year-olds scoring at PIAAC numeracy level 4 and 5, by educational attainment of the population 40 Tertiary education % 35 Below upper secondary education 30 Upper secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary education 25 20 15 10 5 0 22

Qualifications do not deliver on the skills equivalent they promise 330 Tertiary Less than upper secondary Upper secondary 310 290 270 250 230 210 Skill proficiency by attainment level, 25-34y olds 190 23

Risks of over-qualification Italy Netherlands Flanders (Belgium) Cyprus¹ ² Poland Finland Slovak Republic Denmark Sweden United States Norway Czech Republic Austria Korea Average Spain Germany Estonia Canada Ireland Australia England/N. Ireland (UK) Japan PIAAC, 2012-15 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 24

Discrepancies between qualifications and skills Mean numeracy score among adults with ISCED 5A or 6, by selected qualification match or mismatch among workers (PIAAC, 2012 or 2015) Mean score 340 ISCED 5A or 6 degree working in a job needing the same level of qualification (well matched) ISCED 5A or 6 degree working in a job needing ISCED 3 or below (overqualified) 330 320 310 300 290 280 270 260 250 240 25

Variations in the degree of specialisation of jobs relate to differences in foundation skills 0,47 Increased median worker specialisation 0,465 0,46 0,455 Chile Turkey England/N. Ireland (UK) Greece United States Russian Federation Lithuania Italy Spain Ireland Slovak Republic Poland Canada Flanders (Belgium) Israel Korea France Australia Netherlands Slovenia Singapore New Zealand Japan Denmark Sweden Austria Germany Norway Estonia Finland Czech Republic 0,45 210 240 270 300 Median literacy score Source: Survey of Adult Skills (2012, 2015) 26

Variations in the degree of specialisation of jobs tertiary graduates are employed in Finland Czech Republic Austria Germany Norway Estonia Denmark Japan Flanders (Belgium) Australia Singapore United States Slovenia New Zealand Netherlands Sweden Poland England/N. Ireland (UK) Korea Slovak Republic France Canada Chile Turkey Israel Italy Ireland Lithuania Spain Greece Russian Federation 0,45 0,455 0,46 0,465 0,47 more specialised Tertiary Upper secondary or post-secondary nontertiary Below upper secondary 27

The broken promise 28

CONVERGENCE QUALIFICATIONS DIVERGENCE SKILLS 29

Globalization also generates inequalities and exclusion. Is a global higher education system sustainable with important forms of inequality? How strong is the backlash against globalization among the excluded? 30

The global higher education system is one the most unequal systems Turkey 2% Canada 2% Germany 2% France 2% United Kingdom 3% Mexico 3% Italy Saudi Arabia Argentina 1% Poland 1%Australia 1% 2% 1% Spain Other 2% 6% Brazil 4% Share of global graduates 2013 Korea 4% Indonesia 4% Russian Japan Federation 6% 10% China 17% United States 14% India 14% Hong Kong 2,0% Korea 2,2% Sweden 2,6% Share in perceived academic excellence THEWUR 2012 Japan 2,5% Switzerland 3,5% France 3,0% Other 8,4% Australia Canada 4,3% 4,3% United States 43,2% United Kingdom 13,8% Germany 4,3% Netherlands 6,0% 31

The balance between global and domestic economic value differs among countries 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Domestic value added share of manufactured exports Foreign value added share of business services exports Foreign value added share of manufactured exports 32

Bottom 25% Top 25% Changes in skills development of countries are related to changes in participation in global value chains Increasing participation in global value chains JPN Changes in participation in global value chains and in skills OECD countries, 2000-2015 ISL TUR POL CHL USA KOR DEU HUN SWE AUT AUS BEL CAN NLD SVK MEX GBR DNK GRCFRA CHE ESP IRL CZE LUX SVN NOR EST ITA ISR PRT Bottom 25% Top 25% Developing skills to face the challenges of global value chains 33

Engines of divergence Institutional diversification of missions, student populations, programme orientation, etc. Maintenance of inequalities, power differences and hierarchies in global National, regional and local contexts and policies higher education system, resistance against level playing field General political and social resistance against globalization, internationalization and migration National and regional differences in skills development, skills use and skills management 34

Divergence in skills is related to choices and policies of countries participating unevenly in global value chains, impacting on skills development and skills use Aligning skills output to what countries really need (in the future) is an important task of higher education Mismatches are an important issue, as well as de-skilling as a consequence of low skills use 35

DIGITALIZATION WILL AFFECT BOTH THE DEMAND OF SKILLS AND THE SUPPLY OF QUALIFICATIONS 36

Less digital workplaces lead to skills obsolescence more digitalization fosters skills Expected problem solving skills 290 280 most digital workplace (above median in both non-routine and ICT intensities) 270 less digital workplace (below median) 260 250 0 2 4 6 8 10 Years since leaving education Source: Survey of Adult Skills (2012, 2015) 37

Digitalisation drives the need for further learning Share of workers reporting needing further training for their job by education level (%) 50 40 highly digital environment 30 20 poorly digital environment 10 0 Lower secondary or less Upper secondary Post-secondary, non-tertiary Tertiary professional degree Tertiary bachelor degree Tertiary master / research degree 38

Alternative ways and channels of learning SHARE OF INDIVIDUALS IN EUROPEAN UNION (28 COUNTRIES) Reading online news sites/newspapers/news magazines Participating in social networks Seeking health information Consulting wikis (to obtain knowledge ) Online learning material other than a complete online course Communicating with instructors or students using educational websites/portals Doing an online course 0 20 40 60 80 39 100

New credentials: open badges, nanodegrees, micro-credentials, etc. 40

Some important effects of digitalization and AI Digitalization will gradually undermine the value and life-span of qualifications But it will drive learning and skills development Across the life-cycle of people lifelong learning It will generate new forms of recognition of learning It will require universities to adapt, much beyond integrating ICT in the delivery process 41

SOME QUESTIONS AND CONCLUSIONS 42

Some questions about the future of HEd Will assessment of students/graduates move away from institutions to the other side? Will digital badges and portfolios gradually become as or more important than qualifications? Will qualifications lose the battle with skills? Will qualifications remain a kind of insurance mechanism for those who lose out on skills? Will alternative modes of learning and skills development become dominant? 43

Some challenges Higher education is affected by convergence as well as divergence and the power struggle between both forces Global inequalities, power and reputation differences and a uneven playing field will remain The conflict between qualifications and skills is a systemic risk for the sector and might lead to loss of social trust in qualifications and the end of credentialism 44

What does this mean for QA? The skills demand in the environment is as relevant for quality than the global standards associated with qualifications Finding the middle between Absolutism: universal quality standards valid for all qualifications across the globe/region/area Relativism: quality standards with sole reference to narrow skills demands 45

What does this mean for QA? To keep qualifications relevant and trustworthy the external world need to have trust in the mechanisms that guarantee their quality and relevance The recent institutional turn in QA might be useful for institutional purposes, but risks to devalue its external functions of transparency, accountability and trust-building in the public domain 46

Thank you! dirk.vandamme@oecd.org www.oecd.org/edu twitter @VanDammeEDU 47