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Document 52014DC0029
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Report on Progress in Quality Assurance in Higher Education
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Report on Progress in Quality Assurance in Higher Education
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Report on Progress in Quality Assurance in Higher Education
/* COM/2014/029 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Report on Progress in Quality Assurance in Higher Education /* COM/2014/029 final */
TABLE OF CONTENTS 1........... INTRODUCTION....................................................................................................... 3 2........... TRENDS IN QUALITY ASSURANCE
SINCE 2009.............................................. 4 2.1........ How has QA supported the academic
community, students and other stakeholders in reaching quality goals?............................................................................................................................ 4 2.2........ How has QA helped institutions to
broaden access and ensure that students complete their degrees? 5 2.3........ How has QA supported HEIs in
providing students with high quality, relevant skills? 6 2.4........ Has QA supported study mobility
and internationalisation?....................................... 7 3........... CONCLUSIONS – EU SUPPORT FOR
QUALITY ENHANCEMENT IN HIGHER EDUCATION 9 REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE
AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Report on Progress in Quality Assurance in
Higher Education (Text with EEA relevance) 1. Introduction European higher education faces significant
challenges. The European Commission, in a series of recent strategy papers, has
highlighted these challenges – greatly expanding the student population,
raising quality and aligning teaching and learning more closely to wider
societal and labour market needs[1];
adapting to globalisation and the huge growth in higher education students and
institutions across the world, challenging Europe's position as a world leader
in education[2];
and improving and widening the delivery of higher education by harnessing new
technologies such as MOOCs and virtual or blended learning[3]. The PIAAC survey of
adult skills[4]
has pointed to differences in the levels of graduates' skills across countries.
In the face of these challenges, it is vital to maintain and enhance the
quality of higher education, developing modernised higher education
institutions (HEIs) that equip people with high level skills and drive economic
and social development, helping to achieve the Europe 2020 goals of better jobs
and stronger growth. HEIs have the ultimate responsibility for
the quality of their offering (setting, monitoring and renewing their quality
goals through 'internal' quality assurance). They are supported by external agencies
(QAA) which assess quality standards, evaluating institutions, accrediting
programmes or benchmarking performance against other HEIs ('external' quality
assurance). But public authorities have a duty to ensure that the quality of
individual institutions, and of their higher education system as a whole, are
fit for purpose. A framework of national and European tools and cooperation
enhances trust across systems. Quality assurance mechanisms are therefore essential
to help institutions and policy makers to make a success of their reforms. The present report follows the first
published in 2009[5],
responding to the invitation from the European Parliament and Council in 2006
to report on progress in quality assurance[6].
Building on the findings of the 2009 report - which identified the need to make
QA more efficient and transparent for users; to link it overtly to wider higher
education priorities; and to develop cross-border cooperation to improve
quality – and drawing on a wide range of sources, it highlights the potential
for quality assurance to play a more active role in supporting reform at system
and institutional levels and proposes EU actions to support institutions and
Member States. Quality assurance (QA) is often perceived
as focusing on process rather than content. But QA still has untapped potential
to support institutions in reaching their objectives. QA that is tailored to
each HEI’s vision and priorities will encourage greater diversity and
specialisation of HEIs and promote wider engagement with and accountability to
stakeholders, systematically feeding results back into strategic
decision-making, with an emphasis on continuous improvement. And change is
taking place. The remit of some QAAs is being extended to review broader higher
education objectives such as widening access, lifelong learning,
internationalisation, etc.[7]
In some cases, doctoral training[8]
and human resources strategies[9]
are also subject to quality reviews. There is an on-going shift, in external QA,
from the traditional focus on accreditation of individual programmes offered by
an institution to the evaluation of the entire institution. The large majority
(69%) of QA systems now focus on a combination of institutional evaluation and
programme accreditation and a growing minority have shifted to exclusively
institutional evaluation[10].
This is promising for the future direction of QA – institutional evaluation
empowers academics and HEIs to build curricula and to ensure their quality, avoiding
the need for formal, external accreditation of each individual programme and
allowing them to adapt provision rapidly to changing labour market needs and to
changes in the make-up of the student population. 2. TRENDS
IN QUALITY ASSURANCE SINCE 2009 2.1. How
has QA supported the academic community, students and other stakeholders in
reaching quality goals? The vast majority of HEIs have established
explicit QA structures and processes (in a 2010 survey only 5% had no quality
policy statement)[11].
Over 75% of HEIs have a public strategy for continuous quality enhancement and
in CZ, DK, ES, IT, FI, LU and NL this reaches 100%[12]. But institutions are
grappling with how to move away from process-orientation to establish a genuine
culture of continuous quality improvement[13].
Designing QA so that it creates a process of continuous feedback into an
institution's strategic orientation, with clear accountability at all levels,
remains a challenge[14].
Students' involvement in quality
enhancement is improving, according to the QUEST survey, with around 85% of
students having the chance to take part in student evaluations, and significant
numbers believing these impact on the quality of education[15]. Students are 'highly
involved' or 'equal partners' in QA in 17 countries in 2012, compared with 9 in
2009 – but their involvement varies not only across, but within, national
systems; in many HEIs it is limited to formal presence and observation.[16] Many countries have a formal requirement
that employers participate in external quality assurance (BE-fr, BG, CZ, DE,
DK, EE, EL, FR, IT, LT, LV, PT, UK-Sc). [17]
However, actively involving them in quality enhancement through participation
in institutional audits, for example, is not widespread: employers participate
in external review teams only in BE(fr), DE, EL, FI, LV (for professional
programmes), LT and UK (depending on institutions)[18]. Outside stakeholders are also more likely
to be involved at an information-sharing level rather than as active partners
in the institution’s own internal QA. Publishing QA results stimulates quality
enhancement and helps build trust and transparency, but the tendency to publish
positive evaluations only (BE-nl, CY, CZ, ES, FR, HR, LT, MT, PL, UK) is not helpful. In only 12 cases (BE-de, BE-fr, DK, EE, FI, HR, IE, IT, LU, LV, PT, SK) do more
than one quarter of institutions also publish their critical reports.[19] The information is
often not easy to understand or accessible, limiting its value.[20] At European level, the European Standards
and Guidelines (ESG), developed in 2005, have helped convergence of QA across
countries and provided a framework for cooperation between QAAs. However, their
current generic nature means that they are understood differently and applied
unevenly. At institutional level, their penetration and impact remains limited.
Only 12% of respondents to a EURASHE survey considered the ESG useful to
academics; only 10% considered them useful to students, alumni or employers[21]. Many HEIs consider
that although the generic frameworks exist, there is not enough practical
advice on how to develop a strong quality culture[22]. Students are largely
unaware of them (59.7 % reported having no knowledge at all; 23.9 % very
limited knowledge)[23].
The ESG are being revised, as requested by the Bucharest Ministerial conference
in 2012, to improve their clarity, applicability, usefulness and scope[24]. The revision is an
opportunity to reinforce the institutional response to challenges such as
widening participation, reducing dropout, improving employability etc., and to
ensure that QA encourages the development of a strong quality culture and the
genuine engagement of the academic community. 2.2. How
has QA helped institutions to broaden access and ensure that students complete
their degrees? To reach the Europe 2020 and national
targets to increase graduate numbers and so close the skills gap, Europe needs to attract a broader cross-section of society into higher education. QA needs
to support institutions in reviewing and strengthening the quality and impact
of their policies for recruiting students and how these impact on widening
access. However, initial research shows little evidence that QA agencies support institutions in widening
access through more innovative approaches to admission, for example, through recognition
of prior learning, allowing students to document and transfer credits from
programmes from which they have dropped out, or by developing access pathways
from VET and other education sub-sectors [25]. The quality of HEI strategies to prevent
dropout[26]
and stimulate retention, with indicators or targets to measure progress, influences
students’ chances of successful completion. Involving students in programme
design and curriculum development can lead to better outcomes for the students.
However, only 50% of HEIs do so, and only 40% use student surveys to measure
workload.[27]
Systems that track students' progress - as in BE-nl, DK, DE, IE and UK - can identify risk elements, targeting intervention to improve study success.
Monitoring completion targets, as do half of EU QA systems (BE de, BE-fr, BE-nl,
EE, EL, FI, IT, LT, HU, PT, SI, IS, LI, NO), or linking completion rates to
funding, as in a minority of countries (AT, BE-nl, CZ, DK, I, DE, IT, NL, SE,
UK-Sc)[28],
incentivises HEIs to monitor, and improve, their success in preventing dropout.
Currently only 40% of HEIs regularly
evaluate their support services for students.[29]
While almost all offer educational support such as tutors, mentors, guidance
and counselling, only just over half evaluate how well these perform. A similar
pattern can be observed for library, computing, or laboratory support. 2.3. How
has QA supported HEIs in providing students with high quality, relevant skills? The shift to student-centred learning is
one of the most challenging recent reforms. While most HEIs define study
programmes in terms of the intended learning outcomes for students, the
challenge remains of incorporating learning outcomes into teaching, learning
and assessment. QA can encourage HEIs to support academics in this task (e.g.
the compulsory training for academics in using learning outcomes provided by
AT, BE-fr, CZ, IE, LV, RO, UK)[30]
Applying QA to programme design can help academics to design and assess study
courses around clear and relevant outcomes and to award credits in a consistent
way. However, this is generally not done in external programme accreditation.[31] By ensuring the proper
application of other transparency tools based on learning outcomes – qualifications
frameworks, the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS), the
Diploma Supplement – QA can support learning outcomes as the building blocks of
higher education delivery – and so support also the better recognition of
academic qualifications from other countries[32]. Most HEIs use QA to evaluate and develop
teaching skills and qualifications, but research activity still tends to
outweigh teaching in academic promotion, and only one quarter of HEIs provide
compulsory training for their teachers[33].
QA can support the development of national and institutional strategies that
promote staff training; recognise teaching skills in career development;
promote teaching awards or fellowships; use student feedback; and incentivise
international experience[34]. New modes of delivery, such as blended
learning or massive open online courses (MOOCs), have the potential to change
how education is delivered. QA frameworks and institutions need flexibility to
support institutions in adopting different modes of innovative course delivery,
adapting their concepts of quality and developing new indicators to enable
these changes. Institutional evaluation should support institutions to plan and
allocate resources to developing their new modes, to enhance their
attractiveness, develop niche services, or reach learners outside formal
education. Some countries – ES, IT, NO – are currently investigating the
potential for QA bodies to assess MOOCs. Many institutions find it difficult to
involve employers systematically in curriculum design and delivery, for example
in ensuring that placements lead to clear learning outcomes. QA can support
institutions to involve employers in designing work-based learning around
relevant learning outcomes and assessment methods. In some countries (BE-fr,
BG, DK, EE, AT, NO, CH) HEIs must show that they involve employers in programme
development[35].
More systematic cooperation with vocational education and training, both by HEIs
and QAAs, can support this goal and help develop more flexible learning
pathways. To help ensure that graduates have the right
skills for the labour market and to reduce skills mismatches, QA can be used to
demonstrate that study programmes meet labour market needs. In BG, CZ, IT, AT
and SI, HEIs can be required to show that their programmes answer an existing
demand[36].
QA can also support HEIs to feed knowledge about graduate career paths into the
design and delivery of programmes – for example, linking graduate tracking to
funding (CZ, IT, SL, UK) or to (re)-accreditation (AT, BE-nl, BG, DE, DK, NL)
[37]. In several
countries (e.g. BG, DK, EE, IE, EL, FR, IT, LV, LT, HU), higher education
institutions regularly submit data or show they monitor or track graduate
employment.[38] Despite these findings, overall, few HEIs
currently track or survey their alumni to improve educational programmes and
graduates’ employability[39].
Those that do see multiple benefits – developing a more systematic approach to
QA, improving accountability, contributing actively to a Europe of knowledge, and
improving links with stakeholders[40]. 2.4. Has
QA supported study mobility and internationalisation? Growing international cooperation in higher
education has created peer pressure for institutions to develop strong QA, and
HEIs intending to develop their international profile want to be able to
demonstrate their quality standards, as a prerequisite for the trust that
underlies international partnerships[41].
Students value known quality standards when making study choices, ensuring they
avoid poor quality providers and institutions that offer or accredit fake or
poor quality degrees without authorisation. A commitment to QA can also help
offset concerns (as raised inter alia by the PIAAC survey) about the quality of
foreign degrees, which can hinder recognition and student mobility. The European Association for Quality
Assurance in Higher Education (ENQA) and the European Quality Assurance
Register (EQAR) foster cooperation on QA at European level. Through ENQA
membership, about two-thirds of QAAs in the EHEA (up from around half in 2009)[42] are recognised as
acting in compliance with the European Standards and Guidelines. However 10 EU
countries (CY, EL, IT, LV, LU, MT, PT, SE, SI, SK) are without a full member
agency in ENQA[43]. EQAR has also grown in numbers (from 19
government members at its founding in 2008 to 32 in 2013[44]). The register supports
a pan-European approach to external quality assurance, where institutions may
choose to be evaluated by any QAA outside their country, stimulating a
European, quality-enhancing dimension to QA. Thus far, 39 EHEA agencies (84% of
all eligible QAAs - those which have been reviewed against the ESG) have
applied to join EQAR, of which 35 applications have been approved[45]. Key users of the
Register are now more confident that EQAR is helping to open national QA
systems for agencies from abroad (60% of national students unions in 2012,
compared to 41% in 2009)[46]. However national ministries tend to prefer
working with their own rather than foreign Agencies. As yet, only two-fifths of
EQAR-registered QAAs actually operate across borders, and for those that do,
national differences in QA and the lack of a common European QA dimension pose
challenges. Six EU countries (AT, BE-nl, BG, LT, PL, RO) allow their HEIs to
work with foreign registered agencies for regular evaluation, audit or accreditation.
Two more countries (DE, DK) recognise QA decisions of all EQAR-registered
agencies on joint programmes[47]. The external QA and accreditation of joint
programmes is a challenge as it normally includes multiple national
accreditation procedures. Governments have undertaken to examine national
legislation and practices relating to joint programmes and degrees as a way to
dismantle obstacles to cooperation and mobility. A current Bologna Process
initiative to develop a European approach for accrediting joint degrees may help
minimise bureaucracy and facilitate the growth of joint degrees. In the
meantime, projects by ECA[48]
are a step towards simplification and mutual trust. Budget restrictions have meant that many QAAs
have concentrated on core activities inside their national systems.[49] But as higher
education becomes more globally connected, QA needs to develop to create the
trust needed by HEIs to cooperate internationally. One positive development
since 2009 is the tendency to include international experts in QA panels. ENQA
and EQAR can play a key role in building trust, including by involving ministries
and other stakeholders, gathering data on QAAs’ activities across borders, and
promoting common standards and approaches (encompassing data collection at
national level, comparable standards, strategic documents and reports).[50] Cross-border cooperation in QA is
particularly essential for cross-border higher education (CBHE - franchising
and branch campuses). Although it affects only a small number of students in Europe, it is increasing and quality assurance arrangements vary substantially between
countries and providers. By monitoring the quality of their institutions' CBHE
exports, QAAs can help to ensure high quality education and so safeguard the
reputation of their HE system and their wider ability to attract incoming
students. An increased focus by QAAs on the quality
of cross-border cooperation, with agencies strengthening their own
international links, will increase the credibility, transparency and
consistency of their assessments. To facilitate the process, QAAs in the
hosting country could be informed about quality assessments of CBHE
institutions located in their country, or could carry out joint assessments.
Bilateral agreements mandating the QA agency in the receiving country to act on
behalf of the sending QA agency, or to allow an EQAR-registered agency to
evaluate the CBHE institution, would help meet quality concerns and have the
added advantage of encouraging cross-border cooperation and mutual learning. 3. CONCLUSIONS
– EU SUPPORT FOR QUALITY ENHANCEMENT IN HIGHER EDUCATION This report demonstrates some progress
since 2009, but also reveals gaps in how QA supports higher education reforms such
as widening access, improving employability and internationalisation, or
improving doctoral training and human resources strategies. To bridge these
gaps, QA has to become a support to creating an internal quality culture rather
than a tick-box procedure. It needs to engage with all areas of an institution's
activities, to keep up with change in how higher education is designed and
delivered, and involve the entire institution in creating a quality culture
that underpins teaching and learning. Moreover, citizens increasingly move
between systems – both in the traditional initial education pathway and to
upgrade and widen their knowledge and skills throughout their lives. More and
more learning opportunities no longer fit in conventional classification
arrangements. Learners are increasingly offered – and rightly so – the chance
of assembling their learning pathway by selecting opportunities from different
sub-systems and forms of delivery, including via learning resources delivered
through ICT, and they need to be able to trust their quality. The emergence of quality assured
qualification frameworks for lifelong learning, strongly promoted by the EQF,
calls for reflections on a sector-based approach to quality assurance and on
whether it is possible to identify some basic principles and guidelines valid
across sectors and applicable to all qualifications. To address such
challenges, it would be valuable to discuss QA in higher education within a
comprehensive context of all instruments for transparency and quality
assurance. The case for closer coordination of all European instruments for
transparency and quality assurance is being explored by the Commission as a way
to achieve a full European area of skills and qualifications. The scope of
quality assurance should be widened to cover a broader range of topics relevant
to higher education. In that light the Commission plans to
undertake the following actions towards better European cooperation in quality
assurance for lifelong learning: ·
Consulting stakeholders on the findings of this
report and on the need for and feasibility of improving coherence between
quality assurance in different education sub-sectors, as part of the forthcoming
public consultation towards a European area of skills and qualifications,
seeking further synergies and convergence of EU transparency and recognition tools[51]. ·
Stressing the need for a thorough-going revision
of the ESG that lays emphasis on raising quality standards rather than on
procedural approaches, widens its scope to include the issues raised by this
report, and opens up to cooperation on quality assurance with other education
and training sectors. ·
Continuing to improve the articulation of
European transparency tools that support quality assurance, recognition and
mobility, inter alia in its follow-up to the 2013 evaluations of the European
Qualifications Framework, EQAVET and Europass; through support to the
ENIC-NARIC network, EQF National Coordination Points and Europass Centres; and
in the revision of the ECTS Users’ Guide. ·
Working with Member States to encourage[52] more quality assurance
agencies to apply for EQAR registration; and to allow foreign EQAR-registered
agencies to operate in their HE systems. ·
Continuing to promote cooperation on QA at
international level, through policy dialogue with key international partners
and as a basis for partnerships with HEIs around the world. Through Erasmus+, the EU will provide: ·
Support for cross-border cooperation in QA
through: ·
Strategic partnerships and knowledge alliances, enabling
HEIs to learn from each other in developing quality cultures and in supporting
involvement of employers and new stakeholders such as researchers, employees,
etc.; ·
Providing support to QAAs and HEIs to work
together to develop internal quality assurance processes to address key challenges
and ensure better impact of the revised ESG at institutional level. ·
Enhancing cross-sectoral dialogue with VET on
the theme of QA; ·
Sharing good practice to foster simpler
procedures for accreditation of joint programmes, through European-supported
initiatives. ·
Support for higher education reform, including ·
An initiative to promote reform in higher
education, including on the development of a quality culture, through peer-learning
and review and stakeholder studies or tools, manuals, etc., ·
Innovative projects to enhance the capacity of
quality assurance to support sustainable reform. The Commission welcomes the emphasis placed
by a number of countries on the quality of their higher education systems in
the draft Partnership Agreements being submitted to provide a framework for
spending under the 2014-2020 European Structural and Investment Funds. It is
vital that these commitments are underpinned by focused initiatives in the
operational programmes which will implement the Agreements, and strengthening
quality assurance arrangements should be a clear objective of such initiatives. [1] COM(2011) 567 final [2] COM(2013) 499 final [3] COM(2013) 654 final [4] OECD Skills Outlook 2013: First Results from the
Survey of Adult Skills. http://skills.oecd.org/documents/OECD_Skills_Outlook_2013.pdf [5] COM(2009) 487 final [6] Recommendation 2006/143/EC of 15February
2006 (OJ L 64of 4.3.2006) [7] Rauhvargers, Andrejs (2012): Report by the EHEA
Working Group on Recognition, p 23. Available online at http://www.ehea.info/Uploads/%281%29/Recognition%20WG%20Report.pdf [8] http://www.eua.be/Libraries/Publications_homepage_list/Salzburg_II_Recommendations.sflb.ashx http://ec.europa.eu/euraxess/pdf/research_policies/Principles_for_Innovative_Doctoral_Training.pdf [9] http://ec.europa.eu/euraxess/index.cfm/rights/strategy4Researcher [10] EACEA (2012): The European
Higher Education Area in 2012: Bologna Process Implementation Report, p 60 http://www.ehea.info/Uploads/%281%29/Bologna%20Process%20Implementation%20Report.pdf [11] Loukkola, Tia; Zhang, Thérèse (2010): Examining Quality
Culture: Part 1. EUA. Brussels, p. 33.
http://www.eua.be/pubs/Examining_Quality_Culture_Part_1.pdf [12] EACEA, op.cit, p 68 [13] IBAR (2012): Identifying Barriers in Promoting the ESG
for Quality Assurance at Institutional Level. Work Package 8, p 4 http://www.ibar-llp.eu/assets/files/wp8/WP8%20Cross-country%20comparative%20study.pdf [14] Ibid, p 38 [15] Jungblut, Jens; Vukasovic,
Martina (2013): QUEST FOR QUALITY FOR STUDENTS - Survey on Students’
perspectives. ESU, Brussels, p 68. http://www.esu-online.org/resourcehandler/30010f4b-c7a9-4827-93a5-84aaaaa91709/ [16] Bischof, Lukas; Gajowniczek, Joanna; Maikämper, Moritz
(2013): Study to Prepare the Report on Progress in the Development of Quality
Assurance Systems in the Various Member States and on Cooperation Activities at
European Level, p 27 [17] Modernisation of Higher
Education in Europe: access, retention and employability - Eurydice research, to be published first semester 2014. BE-de and
IS involve employers in external QA without any formal requirements. [18] Eurydice source data for the Bologna Implementation
report [19] EACEA, op.cit, p 69 [20] Bischof et al., op.cit, p 39.
Vercruysse, Proteasa, 2012 [21] ENQA (2011): MAPPING THE
IMPLEMENTATION AND APPLICATION OF THE ESG (MAP-ESG PROJECT). ENQA. Brussels, p 56.
http://www.enqa.eu/files/op_17_web.pdf [22] IBAR (2012): Work Package 5, p
12 http://www.ibar-llp.eu/assets/files/wp5/WP5%20Cross-country%20comparative%20study.pdf [23] Jungblut, Vukasovic, op.cit, p
67 [24] EHEA Ministerial Conference (2012): Bucharest
Communiqué, p2. Revision undertaken by stakeholder organisations (ENQA; ESU;
EUA; EURASHE, Education international; EQAR; Business Europe) for endorsement
by Ministers in 2015 [25] Eurydice, op. cit. [26] OECD average in 2011 is 68.4%
of undergraduates who complete their degree. [27] Loukkala, Zhang, op.cit, pp.
11, 30 [28] EACEA, op.cit, p 112 [29] Sursock, Andrée; Smidt, Hanne
(2010): Trends 2010: A decade of change in European Higher Education. EUA. Brussels, p 86 http://www.eua.be/typo3conf/ext/bzb_securelink/pushFile.php?cuid=2756&file=fileadmin/user_upload/files/Publications/Trends_2010.pdf [30] EACEA, op.cit, p 51 [31] Ibid, p 51 [32] Cf Bucharest Communiqué, p 4 [33] Loukkala, Zhang, op.cit, p 34 [34] Report of the High Level Group
on Modernisation of Higher Education, http://ec.europa.eu/education/higher-education/modernisation/index.html [35] Eurydice unpublished [36] Ibid. [37] Gaebel, Michael et al (2012):
Tracking Learners’ and Graduates’ Progression Paths (TRACKIT). EUA. Brussels, pp 27-28. http://www.eua.be/Libraries/Publications_homepage_list/EUA_Trackit_web.sflb.ashx [38] Eurydice unpublished [39] Gaebel et al., op.cit, p 26 [40] Ibid, p 44 [41] Sursock, Smidt, op.cit, p 21 [42] Bischof, op.cit, p 50 [43] http://www.enqa.eu/agencies.lasso, checked on 04/11/2013 (although this includes small
countries that may not have a national QAA) [44] EU Governmental Members: AT, BE-nl, BG, HR, CY, CZ, DK,
EE, ES, FR, DE, IE, PT, LV, LU, MT, NL, PL, PT, RO, SI -
http://www.eqar.eu/association/members.html#c28 [45] http://www.eqar.eu/fileadmin/documents/eqar/information/EQAR_AR12_screen.pdf [46] Bischof, op.cit, p 56 [47] Tück, Colin (2013): EQAR Annual Report 2012, pp 15-17.
http://www.eqar.eu/fileadmin/documents/eqar/information/EQAR_AR12_print.pdf [48] Ibid. See also MULTRA at: http://www.ecaconsortium.net/main/documents/mutual-recognition-agreements
[49] Bischof, op. cit, p 52 [50] ENQA and EQAR led projects to report
in 2014. [51] COM(2012) 669 final [52] Strategic Plan 2013 – 2017 (Tück, op.cit, pp 25-29)
suggests, inter alia, doing this through the ESG revision.