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Accreditation and quality assurance in Europe

Accreditation and quality assurance in Europe. Prof. Dr. Dirk Van Damme. Overview. The concept of accreditation Accreditation as merging of recognition and quality assurance Quality: shifting concepts and approaches Accreditation: the context and functions Accreditation: risks and questions.

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Accreditation and quality assurance in Europe

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  1. Accreditation and quality assurance in Europe Prof. Dr. Dirk Van Damme

  2. Overview • The concept of accreditation • Accreditation as merging of recognition and quality assurance • Quality: shifting concepts and approaches • Accreditation: the context and functions • Accreditation: risks and questions Dirk Van Damme

  3. The concept of ‘accreditation’ • ‘ad-credere’: giving credit, trust to someone, a service, … • norms of quality, security, safeness, … ’standards’ • on the basis of independent and expert review • public statement • market access (trustworthiness) and transparency (standardisation) Dirk Van Damme

  4. The concept of ‘accreditation’ • ‘Accreditation is a formal and public statement by an independent agency and on the basis of an external quality review, that specific, previously agreed standards are met by a programme or institution of higher education’ • consequences: ‘approval’, ‘recognition’, funding, state recognition of qualifications, … Dirk Van Damme

  5. The concept of ‘accreditation’ • components: • formal and public statement • of binary nature • by competent authorities • ‘ex post’ or ‘ex ante’ • previously agreed standards (basic or excellence) • after independent and expert quality review • of programme or institution (or intermediate) • restricted time validity Dirk Van Damme

  6. Accreditation: recognition x QA • Recognition in (continental) Europe • state recognition of institutions, programmes and qualifications • ‘a priori’ decision by Parliament or Government • input criteria: curriculum, qualified personnel, … • state recognition of ‘effectus civilis’ of qualifications, also giving access to professions in public sector Dirk Van Damme

  7. Accreditation: recognition x QA • Quality assurance • new regulatory system emerging since the late eighties • separate from recognition • focus on improvement, but with increasing importance of accountability function Dirk Van Damme

  8. Accreditation: recognition x QA • Quality assurance • external drivers probably more powerful than internal ‘autonomous’ demand • massification and concerns for a potential decline of standards • diminishing confidence of stake-holders in traditional academic quality management • increasing demand for more accountability • public demand for transparency (ranking) • pressures to increase cost-effectiveness Dirk Van Damme

  9. Accreditation: recognition x QA quality assurance accreditation regulation recognition time Dirk Van Damme

  10. Discipline Programme Institution Theme Evaluation 6 1 1 6 Accredi-tation 21 20 5 7 Audit 12 10 14 4 Bench-marking 10 0 1 4 Accreditation: recognition x QA Dirk Van Damme

  11. Accreditation: recognition x QA • still other forms of QA than accreditation • there are still recognition systems that do not rely on QA • but there is a growing interconnection and even merging of both regulatory systems • in this process, also the concept of quality itself has changed Dirk Van Damme

  12. Quality: shifting concepts and approaches • two dimensions: • low – high • absolute – externally/internally relative • four approaches • excellence standards • fitness for purpose • basic standards • consumer satisfaction Dirk Van Damme

  13. high excellence standards internally relative externallyrelative fitness for purpose consumer satisfaction absolute basic standards low Dirk Van Damme

  14. Quality: shifting concepts and approaches • Quality is a multi-dimensional concept • Changing definitions • Any particular definition of quality at a given time-space configuration is function of interaction of those four components • Importance of social context Dirk Van Damme

  15. Accreditation: the context and functions • Criticisms of first generation QA systems • externally imposed, not embedded in real institutional ‘quality culture’; still high tolerance for low quality in institutions • bureaucratic overload, impact on autonomy, cost • methodological weaknesses: benchmarking, self-referential teams, window-dressing, insufficient critical nature, role of disciplines, etc. • conservatism, ‘canonisation’ vs innovation Dirk Van Damme

  16. Accreditation: the context and functions • Changing environment provokes shift … • from egalitarian massification to a more competitive higher education market • from domestic focus to internationalisation and globalisation • towards differentiation in institutions and delivery modes • from meritocracy to lifelong learning, eroding the only left monopoly, degrees Dirk Van Damme

  17. Accreditation: the context and functions • towards next generation of QA arrangements • providing clear statements on an increasingly complex reality • guaranteeing transparency and convergence in a more diversified and international environment • broadening focus while keeping up same concept of ‘academic quality’ • emphasizing external functions while stressing autonomy, self-regulation and inclusiveness Dirk Van Damme

  18. Accreditation: the context and functions • accreditation is expected to address some of the needs and to fulfil following functions: • guaranteeing that agreed standards are met • more independent, clear, sharp, benchmarked quality statements • strengthening international functions, transparent student information and accountability • linking QA to recognition and other regulatory systems Dirk Van Damme

  19. Accreditation: the context and functions • accreditation thus implies a shift in the triangle of power in HE towards market relations • but, accreditation still may be seen as a regulatory system in the middle of the power triangle Dirk Van Damme

  20. Accreditation State recognition accreditation quality assurance ranking Academia (Intl) Market Dirk Van Damme

  21. Accreditation: risks and questions • Still continuing debate on accreditation • do we need it in developed HE systems? • fixed standards in a complex, diversifying, dynamic reality? • rewarding mainstream and mediocrity; jeopardising improvement functions by stressing accountability? • additional bureaucratic burden to institutions and academics, sign of distrust? Dirk Van Damme

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