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Regional specific aspects WS 3 : Neighbourhood eastern countries & Russia EC Delegation. Nicola Scaramuzzo Education programme officer Social Affairs and Civil Society Delegation of the European Commission to Russia Tel. + 7 495 721 20 36 Fax + 7 495 721 20 40 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Regional specific aspects WS 3 :Neighbourhood eastern countries & Russia
EC Delegation
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EC Delegation to Russia
Nicola ScaramuzzoEducation programme officerSocial Affairs and Civil Society Delegation of the European Commission to RussiaTel. + 7 495 721 20 36Fax + 7 495 721 20 40Email: [email protected]: www.delrus.ec.europa.eu
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Topics for discussionRecognition of study period abroad and exams, diplomas and degree
Promotion and monitoring of the programmeRole of the EC Delegation in the partner country
Follow-up actions of the EC Delegation to Russia
Examples of promotion material
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Recognition of study period abroad and exams, degrees and diplomas
Previous experience in recognising full degrees, in particular master’s degrees
Recognising a study period abroad is however more difficult There are cases when courses at the host university are similar to those
delivered at the home university
The home university carries out a review of courses offered at the host university and compare them with its own courses
If there is complete similarity, the home university agrees in advance to recognise courses at the host universities and the exams that the students will have to pass
The host university issues a certificate of accomplishment, indicating the courses attended, the number of hours, the content and the exams passed
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Recognition of study period abroad and exams, degrees and diplomas (2)
Courses at the host university are not similar to those delivered at the home university, even though subjects may be similar
The international department at the home university agrees with the dean’s offices and heads of chair of the courses concerned to enable the students to follow “individual” curricula
Students are not freed from the obligation to take a number of courses at the home university in accordance with education standard
However students are allowed to pass light exams either before they go abroad or when they come back
Are there risks that EMECW students could be expelled for not having passed all the exams in the partner country in time?
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Recognition of study period abroad and exams, degrees and diplomas – importance of
EMECW International cooperation programmes like EMECW are very timely and
relevant Countries participating in the Bologna process need to introduce changes
into the education degree system to fulfil Bologna obligations Countries need to achieve recognition of degrees They need to introduce credits following ECTS as credit accumulation and
transfer system Bologna countries need to introduce flexibility into the education programme Countries are afraid of loosing the current homogeneous education system,
lowering quality education Working together at international level helps developing new curricula,
introducing more flexibility and in many respect building trust
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Promotion and monitoring of the programmeRole of the EC Delegation in the partner
country Meeting the Ministry of Education to discuss higher education needs and
priority areas of EMECW
Organising EMECW info day at the EC Delegation in connection with the new call
Developing EMECW leaflets and brochures
Delivering presentation of EMECW within the framework of seminars, conferences and workshop at central and regional level
Regular meetings with the Ministry of Education to discuss new programme priorities, objectives and past results
Meeting with former EMECW students and academic staff asking to share experience with new universities, teachers and students
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Promotion and monitoring of the programmeRole of the EC Delegation in the partner
country Assessing the project proposals: providing inputs on the relevance of the
project proposals and on the eligibility of higher education institutions Following up the programme implementation with universities in the
partner countries (participation in project coordinating meetings) Supporting visa applications Visiting the universities participating in the programme Interviewing students, academic staff and university administrations Discussing the programme implementation with the Ministry of Education
in the partners countries Providing feedback to Education, Audiovisual and Culture Education
Agency and to relevant Commission DGs
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Follow-up actions of the EC Delegation Mobility starts when outgoing students and academic staff come
back to the country of origin
Former EMECW students and academic staff are the ambassadors/best promoters of the EU funded education programmes in the partner country
Former EMECW students and academic staff can provide invaluable information about the implementation of mobility programmes
Increasing attractiveness of higher education in the EU and in partner countries can be best achieved by sharing first-hand experience
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Follow-up actions of the EC Delegation (2)
Developing a database of former EMECW students, academic staff and universities
Getting feedback from former EMECW students, academic staff and universities to promote EMECW programme and to increase visibility of the programme
EC Delegations could organise once or twice a year workshops with former EMECW students, academic staff and universities
Sharing experience about EMECW programme on a website – study in Europe – in the language of the partner country
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Possible topics of the workshops
Topic 1: How can universities, students and academic staff best participate to EMECW
Topic 2: Sharing experiences about the organisation and implementation of different mobility flows, i.e. for BA, MSc, PhD, Post PhD, for academic staff
Topic 3: Development of university cooperation within the framework of EMECW and behind
Topic 4: Employability and carrier perspective (or carrier development) for former EMECW students (and teachers)
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Website “study in Europe” in the language of the partner country
News about EU and EU funded education programme
Deadlines for applications to EU funded education programmes
Sharing experiences about mobility of students and academic staff as well as about university cooperation
Posting evaluation of results, impact studies, qualitative and quantitative analysis, etc.
Links with the websites of all interested stakeholders - Commission services, EU MS education agencies in the partner countries, Ministry of education, education agency, Tempus office, etc.
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Examples of promotion material
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EMECW Leaflet about Russia
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Conclusions Promoting, monitoring and taking care of the follow-up of the
programme are crucial aspects for the success of EMECW
The Delegation has a key role to play vis-à-vis students, teachers, universities and other stakeholders (Ministry of education, EU MS embassies and education agencies, etc.)
The Delegation has the appropriate tools and the right political profile to ensure visibility of the programme and its results
The Delegation shall work together with the main stakeholders in the partner country to help reach the objective of EMECW programme