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Core curriculum elements - what courses about standards need to address

Core curriculum elements - what courses about standards need to address. The work of the European Standardization Organizations. Klaus Ziegler ICES - Conference on academic standardization education and research Hangzhou, 27-29 June 2011. CEN European Committee for Standardization

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Core curriculum elements - what courses about standards need to address

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  1. Core curriculum elements - what courses about standards need to address The work of the European Standardization Organizations Klaus ZieglerICES - Conference on academic standardization education and research Hangzhou, 27-29 June 2011

  2. CENEuropean Committee for Standardization Covers a lot of sectors CENELECEuropean Committee for Electro-Technical Standardization Covers mainly the electro-technical sector ETSI European Telecommunications Standards Institute Covers mainly telecommunication and electronic communication networks and services European Standardization Organizations 2

  3. Joint WG on Education about Standardization (JWG-EaS) • A joint Group of the three European Standardization Organizations, CEN and CENELEC members/ETSI Secretariat • The JWG-EaS is there to foster best practice in education about standardization in Europe • The JWG-EaS aims to help members: • increase peoples’ fair and positive knowledge of standardization • improve the understanding of the necessity of standardization amongst government officials, business executives and academia • increase the competency of participants in standards-making

  4. Why? • “We are always part of/involved in the same circles, talking to the usual suspects, while Europe is moving forward without really considering standards as we know them” • “Very interesting event, very interesting people, lots of policy related discussions, real business talk, zero knowledge about standards (us)” • Quotes from results of CEN-CENELEC innovation team meetings with industry stakeholders

  5. Europe Needs Action • The paradox: • CEN alone boasts 60.000 experts • Standardization really is a multi-million (billion?) business • Yet it is hardly ever taught as a discipline • Business people see it as obscure technical stuff • Experts’ age profiles are increasing, so is “private standardization” • Other countries are devoting a lot of attention to this • 2008 Council Conclusions on standardization and innovation • The Joint Working Group has drafted a policy for us and our members to improve education about standardization • We have prepared model higher-education curricula, we’re working on one for vocational training/LLL • Challenge – to get academia to respond

  6. Targets for our Policy Several specific target areas: • Educational establishments and students – • should ensure that all levels of formal education include elements of standards and standardization in the curriculum • Business, industry, governments and public authorities - • should enhance the knowledge and use of existing standards, recognizing their importance as a strategic tool and their impact on organizational effectiveness • should be given appropriate understanding to enable them to participate in standards making processes • Standards makers - • need to achieve a level of overall competency, be familiar with the tools available to them and be capable to impart this information to others

  7. The Policy Elements • ESOs and their members should provide: • Model standardization curricula (or at least a checklist of topics) for specific education levels • Arguments to help convince academia to include standardization in curricula • Easier information provision for students and teachers • Best practices in training industry and federations in the art of standardization • Audience-specific communication initiatives • Certification of competency?

  8. Towards a Core Educational Curriculum • After the work of Henk De Vries and Dong Geun Choi • Draft provided by Alberto Simeoni (UNI) • The Joint WG has assessed member requirements • Main challenges: • Very different educational systems in different European countries • Difficulty to persuade educational authorities to add material to well-established curricula • Post-formal training about standardization poses different issues (and JWG is dealing separately with the vocational aspects)

  9. An Educational Partition • Primary education (up to 10/11 years old) • Secondary education (up to 16/18 years old) • Vocational education • Higher education (colleges and universities) • Post-formal education

  10. Six Modules • Modules 1 and 2 provide basic contents and are considered part of any level of education: • Module 1: examples in every day life to raise a general awarenessabout the existence and importance of the standards (e.g. paper sizes, country codes, book codes, credit cards, exc.) • Module 2: factual/fundamental contents to raise a general understanding of main concepts (more detail…)

  11. Modules 3 and 4 • Modules 3 and 4 are normally provided by higher education even if some simplified contents are present in secondary education: • Module 3: Academic/theoretical aspects to learn and develop academic aspects of standardization, particularly standardization within disciplines such as business administration, law, engineering (more detail…) • Module 4: Case studies to learn about the impact of standardisation in business practice (e.g. ISO 9001 quality management, ISO 14001 environmental management implementation, standards enabling compliance with legal requirements, etc.)

  12. Modules 5 and 6 • Modules 5 and 6 provide advanced contents and can be generally associated to the post-formal education, even though, especially for module 6, some references can be included also in higher education curricula: • Module 5: Skill related contents to learn how to carry out astandardization-related task. They mainly provide communications skills about chairing and moderating a meeting, and managing consensus and negotiation also across different cultures • Module 6: Application of specific standards to learn how to implement or use specific standards (more detail…)

  13. Module 2 in detail – fundamentals to learn

  14. Module 3 in detail – standards topics (1)

  15. Module 3 in detail – standards topics (2)

  16. Module 6 in detail – application of specific standards Note: simplified overview could be used in other Modules

  17. Framework matrix (after Dong Choi/De Vries)

  18. Thanks! www.cen.eu www.cenelec.eu www.etsi.org For further information: Secretary, JWG-EaS: Christine Tack (ctack@cencenelec.eu)

  19. Klaus Ziegler European Standardization Expert for China CEN – CENELEC – ETSI – EU – EFTA Room C319, Beijing Lufthansa Centre 50 Liangmaqiao Road, Chaoyang District 100016 China Tel: +86 10 6462 2087 Fax: +86 10 6462 2067 Email:klaus.ziegler@eu-standards.cn Websites – SESEC: www.eu-standards.cn Standards Information Platform: www.eu-china-standards.eu CEN: www.cen.eu / CENELEC: www.cenelec.eu / ETSI: www.etsi.org 19

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