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1 Quality Assurance for Transnational Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the UK’s QAA and Australia’s TEQSA Dr. Linda Chiang Professor Department of.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Quality Assurance for Transnational Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the UK’s QAA and Australia’s TEQSA Dr. Linda Chiang Professor Department of."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Quality Assurance for Transnational Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the UK’s QAA and Australia’s TEQSA Dr. Linda Chiang Professor Department of Education National U of Tainan lcchiang@mail.nutn.edu.tw Oct 3, 2014

2 Government Study Abroad TNHE Providers/ Source Country TNHE Host Higher education Market Government HE Market Government HEMarket TNHE Providers Government HE Market Source Country Domestic provision 2 3 4 5 6 1

3 Definition  Academic programs offered by awarding institutions of one country to learners who are located in another country

4 National Quality Assurance Mechanisms and Policies 1. Local HE programs and institutions QA Information exchange 3. Local HEI set up TNHE programs and institutions overseas Edu. Service Mode 1 & Mode 3 QA Information exchange Edu. Service Mode 1 & Mode 3 2. TNHE programs and branch campus at home QA Information exchange Conceptual Framework for National QA in TNHE

5 Developing QA for TNHE  Global Alliance for Transnational Education (GATE) (1995~2003): To develop and promote principles of good practice and accrediting quality TNHE  The ‘UNESCO/OECD Guidelines for Quality Provision in Cross-border Higher Education’: the 1 st int’l document approved by government representatives that offers guidelines for QA in TNHE.

6 To provide an int’l framework to protect students and other stakeholders from low- quality provision and disreputable providers. To sustain the development of quality cross-border HE that meets human, social, economic and cultural need s.

7 The conventional practices  Little QA and accreditation criteria for TNHE  Adopting minimum-requirement procedure: TNHE providers should be accredited by their home accreditation bodies  Adopting further requirement to fit to national needs and goals: e.g. Joint cooperation/ partnership e.g. Submitting annual report e.g. Renewing registration licence

8 Argument of the Study  National QA mechanisms and policies should assume the responsibility to develop appropriate frameworks for quality provision of HE across borders.

9 The Development of TNHE  Massive demand for TNHE: While internationally mobile students have been predicted to grow approximately 5.8 million by 2020 (British Council, 2012), the number students, considerably in excess of 100 million, continue to study home.  Set to grow faster than student mobility over the next decade

10 Implications for HE  At the leading edge of the most fundamental changes taking place in HE today (McBurnie and Ziguras (2007: 1)  An innovation begins in-depth transformation of HE in the long term (Vincent-Lancrin, 2009: 69)

11 This Study Aim  To identify key issues regarding QA of TNHE  To discuss the lessons learned from 2 TNHE leaders UK’s QAA Australia’s TEQSA (formerly AUQA)

12 Issues  Imposition of practices and philosophies associated with the home program: the current approach to QA in TNHE promotes educational imperialism (Pyvis, 2011)  Quality culture of both nations need to be considered (Eldridge & Cranston, 2009)  Applying the same quality procedures and standards, regardless of location and diverse forms of TNHE  Data availability: inadequate  Recognition of TNHE qualifications: an area of relative weakness.

13 The Current QA of TNHE (1)  British council (2013): About 2/3 of the study countries have some TNHE QA systems in place. Registration of TNHE with host country MoE TNHE provider is accredited in home country TNHE provider must get approval/license from host country MoE to operate QA reviewed/accredited the same as domestic HEIs since TNHE considered as part of the host education system

14 The Current QA of TNHE (2)  British council (2014): QA of TNHE undertaken: By local institutions (69%) By local QA bodies (54%) By partner/parent institutions (41%) and their QA bodies (35%)  Most TNHE programs and providers are undergoing some type of local- and partner-level QA process.

15 UK Experience  QAA has conducted audit of overseas provisions since 2006  By far, QAA conducted a review in China (2006, 2013), in India (2009), Malaysia (2010) and Singapore (2011)

16 Australia Experience  Since 2001, AUQA has audited all Australian Unis, including their overseas activities.  Depending on the nature of the operations and areas of risk, AUQA determines what needs further examination: by 2010, 155 offshore visits (partners and campuses)  TEQSA undertook one quality assessment in 2013, focused on third party arrangements : Using the findings to inform TEQSA‘s regulatory work and guidance.

17 QA in TNHE practices  Reviewing HEI’s QA framework, policies and procedures in place for its TNHE’s QA  Undergoing an evidence ‐ based annual self ‐ review for TNHE programs  Review panel delegation visiting overseas partnerships  The focus concern of QA in TNHE: For QAA: to protect the interests of everyone working towards a UK HE award, regardless of how or where they study, within the UK or overseas. For AUQA: to assure equivalence of degrees offered offshore compared to those offered onshore.

18 Conclusion: Progress in the QA of TNHE  From largely unregulated to regulated: TNHE becomes a regulated activity  Not only National QA systems for TNHE in place, QA practices have improved enormously over the last 10 years  Diverse TNHE forms and the context of host country/ institutions started to be considered.

19 Thanks for your listening Time for Q&A 19


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