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Accreditation and the global higher education market

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Author(s)
El-Khawas, Elaine
Hernes, Gudmund
Levy, Jan S.
Lemaître, Maria José
Stella, Antony
Poisson, Muriel
Hallak, Jacques
Hendriks, Birger
Hugonnier, Bernard
Prakash, Ved
UNESCO-IIEP
Vincent-Lancrin, Stéphan
Tayag, Jean
Levasseur, Michel
Martin, Michaela
Uvalic-Trumbic, Stamenka
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Keywords
accreditation (education)
evaluation methods
corruption
higher education institutions
globalization
quality control
privatization
National Assess
educational quality
higher education
academic standards
private education
universities
educational evaluation
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Full record
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/452623
Online Access
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0016/001635/163514e.pdf
http://lst-iiep.iiep-unesco.org/cgi-bin/wwwi32.exe/[in=epidoc1.in]/?t2000=025989/(100)
Abstract
Incl. bibl. references
Higher education systems throughout the world in developed and developing countries are undergoing diverse types of changes that are often interrelated. One of these changes is that there has been considerable growth in the private provision of higher education over the last decade, in particular within developing countries. Globalization also widely affects higher education systems. The globalization of professions and the mobility of professionals highlight the need for institutions to deliver qualifications recognized in the international labour market, allowing for the comparability of educational standards. These trends require the adoption of a common quali?cation structure as well as of comparable systems for external quality assurance (EQA). Cross-border providers of higher education are emerging in many countries - most commonly under the form of branch campuses and franchise higher education - while, at the same time, an international market of accreditation services is developing. While higher education is becoming a global market good, governments are faced with a new set of providers over which they have little control and which poses new challenges as to regulation and the recognition of credentials. The 2005 IIEP Policy Forum hosted a policy discussion on how to design accreditation systems in line with international 'good practice' and national policy agendas for higher education. Issues of regulation and quality assurance of cross-border education providers were also addressed. The papers and recorded discussions of the Policy Forum are presented in this book.
Date
2008
Type
text
Identifier
oai:iiep.unesco.org:epidoc:025989
978-92-803-1309-3
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0016/001635/163514e.pdf
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Ethics in Higher Education

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