1 / 44

Quality Entails Access

Quality Entails Access. Michael Cooper European Access Network. Structure: Points of departure Defining access and quality The importance of access Potential incompatibility with quality Examples of good practice Conclusions. Access has a positive effect on quality.

teryl
Télécharger la présentation

Quality Entails Access

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. Quality Entails Access Michael Cooper European Access Network Michael Cooper - SPACE

  2. Structure: • Points of departure • Defining access and quality • The importance of access • Potential incompatibility with quality • Examples of good practice • Conclusions Michael Cooper - SPACE

  3. Access has a positive effect on quality Michael Cooper - SPACE

  4. Access has a positive effect on quality Access has a negative effect on quality Michael Cooper - SPACE

  5. What do we mean by access and why are we interested in it? Michael Cooper - SPACE

  6. What do we mean by access and why are we interested in it? - Providing an opportunity for all groups to complete appropriate and relevant higher education Michael Cooper - SPACE

  7. Why access? • There are three arguments: • Intellectual – diversity of ideas • Moral – the idea of an egalitarian society • Pragmatic – good for business Michael Cooper - SPACE

  8. What do we mean by quality? Michael Cooper - SPACE

  9. What do we mean by quality? - Quality is always relative to something. Students, staff, curricula, institutions are always measured against a norm. Thus quality involves standards, either perceived or imagined. Sometimes it is simply in the eye of the beholder. Michael Cooper - SPACE

  10. Access v quality Why do some claim that the two are incompatible? Michael Cooper - SPACE

  11. Access v quality Why do some claim that the two are incompatible? - Access means alternative admission requirements, lower standards, more academic support, longer study periods Michael Cooper - SPACE

  12. Result: • - Perception of an erosion of quality • - Reputation suffers • Ranking level drops • Institution attracts fewer students • Institution loses income Michael Cooper - SPACE

  13. Is this true? Michael Cooper - SPACE

  14. Is this true? • - Quality becomes ranking Michael Cooper - SPACE

  15. Is this true? • Quality becomes ranking • Reputation becomes a stand-in for excellence Michael Cooper - SPACE

  16. Is this true? • Quality becomes ranking • Reputation becomes a stand-in for excellence • The ranking system becomes the standard Michael Cooper - SPACE

  17. Two false assumptions: Michael Cooper - SPACE

  18. Two false assumptions: • - There is no distinction between entry quality and exit quality Michael Cooper - SPACE

  19. Two false assumptions: • There is no distinction between entry quality and exit quality • - One ranking system fits all. Michael Cooper - SPACE

  20. U-Multirank: Multi-dimensional Global ranking of Universities;a feasibility project http://www.u-multirank.eu/ Michael Cooper - SPACE

  21. Access In, through and out Some examples of good practice Michael Cooper - SPACE

  22. In – Outreach activities (1) A question of attitude – also of language Michael Cooper - SPACE

  23. In – Outreach activities (2) • Primary School Children: • University of Liverpool, UK – Professor Fluffy (www.liv.ac.uk/educational-opportunities) • European Children’s University Network (http://eucu.net) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  24. In – Outreach activities (3) • Primary School Children: • Student mentoring – Nightingale Project at Malmö University, Sweden • (www.mah.se/naktergalen) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  25. In – Outreach activities (4) Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) One example of many – Open University of the Netherlands Michael Cooper - SPACE

  26. In – Outreach activities (5) • Targeting specific groups • Providing Educational Opportunities for • New Communities – Glyndŵr University, Wales (www.glyndwr.ac.uk) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  27. Through – Retention (1) It is not enough merely to admit the students into the institution Michael Cooper - SPACE

  28. Through – Retention (2) • Curriculum – Content and Structure • Bridging and foundation programmes • - Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (www.vu.nl) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  29. Through – Retention (3) • Curriculum – Content and Structure • Practice-based learning – University of South Australia (www.unisa.edu.au) • WACE – World Association for Cooperative Education (www.waceinc.org) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  30. Through – Retention (4) • Support Services • Language and communication training – Oslo University College (www.hio.no) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  31. Through – Retention (5) • Staff training • Preparing academics to meet different types of students – Technische Universität Berlin (www.tu-berlin.de/zek) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  32. Out - Employability (1) Employability depends on what you know Michael Cooper - SPACE

  33. Out - Employability (2) Employability depends on what you know but also on who you are Michael Cooper - SPACE

  34. Out - Employability (3) Partnerships and work placements as a pathway to employment – Södertörn University, Stockholm (http://webappl.web.sh.se/) Michael Cooper - SPACE

  35. What does this really mean? Michael Cooper - SPACE

  36. It means working in various ways to: - Develop and maintain a proactive approach to the community Michael Cooper - SPACE

  37. It means working in various ways to: • Develop and maintain a proactive approach to the community • - Change the culture of the campus and university Michael Cooper - SPACE

  38. It means working in various ways to: • Develop and maintain a proactive approach to the community • - Change the culture of the campus and university • - Provide academic and social services adapted the needs of the students Michael Cooper - SPACE

  39. It means working in various ways to: • Develop and maintain a proactive approach to the community • - Change the culture of the campus and university • Provide academic and social services adapted the needs of the students • - Provide students with the guidance needed to access the labour market Michael Cooper - SPACE

  40. In other words, we need to change the mission of the university to incorporate a social dimension in everything it does in recruitment, teaching, student support, research, cooperation with the community, career guidance etc Michael Cooper - SPACE

  41. And the hindrances to achieving this: - Attitudes in: - Politicians - Academics - The community - The market - Lack of resources Michael Cooper - SPACE

  42. Higher education is a public good of value to the community, the individual and the educational institution. Michael Cooper - SPACE

  43. For further information: www.ean-edu.org Michael.Cooper@telia.com Michael Cooper - SPACE

  44. Thank You Michael Cooper - SPACE

More Related