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Director of Research and Strategy Association of Commonwealth Universities and Director Observatory on Borderless Higher Education Developments in Borderless Higher Education Top Management Programme November 22, 2005 Svava Bjarnason
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Today’s Presentation: Context Transnational activities Regulatory frameworks Online learning Issues
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The Business of Borderless Education: UK Perspectives 2000
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Borderless Education Report: “... We consider that the drivers behind borderless developments are strong and will strengthen. As such, the picture as it exists today is not a good predictor of the future. The opportunities are real and the threats, both direct and indirect, are already present.” Business of Borderless Education: UK Perspectives 2000
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‘Borderless’ Higher Education New Technologies Public / Private / Not-for / For-profit Providers Traditional HE / CPD / Lifelong Learning Time / Space / Geography / Level Distance Learning / Transnational Education Internationalisation
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Demand for Higher Education Worldwide HE places to be 125 million in 2020 Demand for international education places predicted to be: –2.1 million in 2003 –5.8 million by 2020 Age participation rate: –40% – 50% in ‘north’ –Below 5% in many developing and emerging economies
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Demographic Context
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Transnational Education (TNE) “...where the learners are located in a country different from the one where the awarding institution is based.” UNESCO and Council of Europe 2005
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World Trade Organisation General Agreement on Trade in Services: –Mode 1 ~ Cross-border Supply –Mode 2 ~ Consumption Abroad –Mode 3 ~ Commercial Presence –Mode 4 ~ Presence of Natural Persons
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Global Players Global ‘mega’ universities Traditional public universities Private universities (for/not for profit) Corporate universities Media & Publishing Houses Professional Associations Public & private companies
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Types of Relationship with Higher Education Competitive Software services & sales Materials sales Core and non-core course sales Franchising/ marketing Funding Accreditation Joint content development
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Types of ‘Borderless’ Provision
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Current Choices… Face-to-face Online Generic Bespoke Mass-marketPersonalised Low cost High cost In-house Third party
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Qualifications – UK Providers QualificationEnrolments% of total Undergraduate56,46356 Postgraduate45,18244 Total101,645100 Sources: HESA and London External 2003
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DisciplineEnrolments% of total Business44,48844 Combined subjects21,27921 Law12,91413 IT8,6399 Engineering3,3294 Humanities2,6133 Social Sciences2,4652 Education2,1412 Health Sciences1,7702 Biological Sciences7521 Total – Top 10100,39099 Subjects – Top 10 Sources: HESA and London External 2003
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A More Mature Perspective... Integration, coordination, data-driven, evaluation Isolation, uncoordinated, minimal data, no impact assessment Narrow/ unclear agenda Integrated development/ commercial agenda Majority of UK TNE provision still here Competitive advantage
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UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman: major hosts UK: major source; emerging host USA: major source; emerging host C. America: hosts and sources S. America: varying levels of hosts and sources Australia (NZ): major source; emerging host Emerging Hosts & Sources China & India: major hosts, emerging sources Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore: major hosts, emerging sources Central Asia: emerging host Kenya & Mauritius: emerging hosts South Africa: declining host; emerging source Caribbean: emerging host Russia: declining source; emerging host Canada: emerging host and source
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North to South (vast majority) North to North (e.g. Charles Sturt University in Ontario, Canada) South to South (e.g. Manipal Academy of HE in UAE; Al-Azhar University to open in Thailand) South to North (e.g. University of Sonora to open in Arizona) Directions of TNE
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Bankroll model: Qatar, Singapore Economic hub model: Mauritius, UAE Education hub model: Malaysia, Thailand Capacity model: China, Hong Kong SAR ‘Suspicion’ model: South Africa Ignore/ obstruct model: Greece Minimal regulation/ no position/ random initiatives model: most countries Hosts ~ National Examples
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Majority of countries have little or no regulation Next most common is minimal source ‘accreditation’ and/ or local registration Few countries require extensive local QA ‘Special zone’ approach Few countries impose specific curricula/ language/ ownership requirements Regulatory Models
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National Regulatory Frameworks
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Guidelines on Provision UNESCO/OECD – Guidelines for quality provision Statement on sharing quality HE across borders AVCC – Code of ethical practice UK Quality Assurance Agency – Code of practice
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First survey of its kind - May ‘02 - second in 2004 Sent to 500 Executive Heads in 35 countries Focus on empirical data on institutional strategy, infrastructure, provision Benchmarking relative position(s) Online Learning in Commonwealth Universities
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Internet Use CountryPopulation2005 Users% U.S.A. 296,208,476202,888,30768.5% China1,296,110,643103,000,0007.9% India1,094,870,677 39,200,0003.6% U.K. 59,889,407 36,059,10060.2% Brazil 181,823,645 22,320,00012.3% Mexico 103,872,328 14,901,68714.3% From www.internetworldstats.comwww.internetworldstats.com
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Rationales for Online Provision On-campus enhancement Improve flexibility on-campus Keeping up with competition Widening access International markets Cutting teaching costs Collaboration Distance learning Disabled users New international markets
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Programmes Online Developing Other Developed UK %
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Some of the Issues Quality assurance Regulatory Credit transfer Recognition of awards Higher education as a commodity Working collaboratively with others
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Observatory’s Response: Information, Strategy, Reflection Descriptive Information - news on the latest developments Strategic Information - an attempt to explore rationales, decision-making processes and organisational change Reflection - standing back from events to consider implications of trends and developments
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www.obhe.ac.uk
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