From 1999 to 2019: 20 years of European debate, development, and achievements

  • Maria Sticchi Damiani Free International University of Social Studies (LUISS), Italy
Keywords: Europe, HE systems, HE institutions, cooperation, convergence, reforms, implementation, cultural change

Abstract

This paper suggests that, although the Bologna process officially began in the late 1990s, the conditions that made it possible had already been created in the previous decade through the growing practice of international academic cooperation, mainly triggered by EU inter-institutional programmes. As the need for structural reforms in some higher education systems became more evident, in 1999 the Ministers of Education of 29 European countries gathered in Bologna to start a process of voluntary convergence of their systems with the objective of creating a European Higher Education Area. In the last 20 years the participating governments (now 48), with the support of international organizations and major stakeholders, have jointly developed a common framework of principles, actions, policies and tools. Accordingly, different types of structural reforms have taken place in the various countries. At present, however, implementation of the key commitments – full adoption of the three-cycle structure and ECTS, of the Lisbon recognition convention and the Diploma supplement, and of QA systems based on the European standards and guidelines – is still uneven in the EHEA and a peer-support approach was adopted by the ministers last year. Concerning the implementation issue, this paper raises two sets of questions. First: to what extent have the structural reforms implemented by the governments really affected grassroots educational activities? How deeply have the underlying principles – like student-centred learning – been implemented in actual programme design and everyday teaching/learning practice? Second: although inspired by the same basic principles, are EHEA-induced reforms actually being implemented consistently throughout European countries and institutions? Deeper involvement and more international coordination of European academics is advocated in the paper, in order to face these challenges and consolidate the EHEA in the years to come.

Received: 03 April 2019
Accepted: 02 May 2019
Published online: 29 May 2019

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Maria Sticchi Damiani, Free International University of Social Studies (LUISS), Italy

Former professor of English at the Free International University of Social Studies (LUISS) in Rome, where she served as Head of the Department of Modern Languages and Rector’s delegate for International Relations. Mail: msticchi@gmail.com

References

“Budapest-Vienna Declaration on the European Higher Education Area.” March 12, 2010. http://www.ehea.info/media.ehea.info/file/2010_Budapest_Vienna/64/0/Budapest-Vienna_Declaration_598640.pdf.

“Convention on the Recognition of Qualifications concerning Higher Education in the European Region.” Council of Europe, Lisbon, 11 April 1997. https://www.coe.int/en/web/conventions/full-list/-/conventions/rms/090000168007f2c7.

“Diploma Supplement.” Revised version, 2018. http://www.ehea.info/media.ehea. info/file/20180205-06-Sofia/73/5/BFUG_BG_SR_58_4h_AG4_DS_ExplanatoryNotesRev_887735.pdf.

“ECTS Users’ Guide.” Publications of the European Union, 2015. https://ec.europa.eu/education/ects/users-guide/docs/ects-users-guide_en.pdf.

“European Higher Education in a Global Setting: A Strategy.” Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research, 2007. http://www.ehea.info/media.ehea.info/file/EHEA_in_a_Global_Context/24/2/Strategy_plus_possible_actions_597242.pdf.

“Italian Ministerial Decree No.509 (3 November, 1999).” http://www.miur.it/0006Menu_C/0012Docume/0098Normat/2088Regola.htm.

“Joint declaration on harmonisation of the architecture of the European higher education system.” Paris, the Sorbonne, 25 May 1998. http://www.ehea.info/media.ehea.info/file/1998_Sorbonne/61/2/1998_Sorbonne_Declaration_English_552612.pdf.

“Paris Communiqué.” Paris, 25 May 25h 2018. http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/EHEAParis2018_Communique_final_952771.pdf.

“Realising the European Higher Education Area. Communiqué of the Conference of Ministers responsible for Higher Education.” Berlin, 19 September. 2003 http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/2003_Berlin_Communique_English_577284.pdf.

“Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance in the European Higher Education Area (ESG).” Brussels, Belgium, 2015. https://enqa.eu/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/ESG_2015.pdf.

“The Bologna Process 2020: The European higher Education Area in the new decade - Communiqué of the Conference of European Ministers Responsible for Higher Education.”, Leuven and Louvain-la-Neuve, 28-29 April 2009. http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/Leuven_Louvain_la_Neuve_Communique_April_2009_595061.pdf.

“The Bologna Process Revisited: The Future of the European Higher Education Area.” Bfug report, Yerevan, 2015.

“The European Higher Education Area – Achieving the Goals. Communiqué of the Conference of European Ministers Responsible for Higher Education.” Bergen, 19-20 May 2005. http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/2005_Bergen_Communique_english_580520.pdf.

“The European Higher Education Area: The Bologna Declaration.” 19 June 1999. http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/1999_Bologna_Declaration_English_553028.pdf.

“Towards the European Higher Education Area – Communiqué of the meeting of the European Ministers in charge of Higher Education.” Prague, 19 May 2001. http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/2001_Prague_Communique_English_553442.pdf.

“Towards the European Higher Education Area: responding to challenges in a globalised world. London Communiqué.” 18 May 200.

“Yerevan Communiqué.” EHEA ministerial Conference, 14-15 May 2015. http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/YerevanCommuniqueFinal_613707.pdf.

Bologna Working Group on Qualifications Frameworks. “A Framework for Qualifications of the European Higher Education Area.Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation, Copenhagen, 2005. http://ecahe.eu/w/images/7/76/A_Framework_for_Qualifications_for_the_European_Higher_Education_Area.pdf.

European Students Union (ESU). “Bologna with Student Eyes: The final countdown, Brussels.” May 2018. https://www.esu-online.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/BWSE-2018_web_Pages.pdf.

Gaebel, Michael, and Thérèse Zhang. “Trends 2018: Learning and teaching in the European Higher Education Area.” https://eua.eu/resources/publications/757:trends-2018-learning-and-teaching-in-the-european-higher-education-area.html.

Haug, Guy, and Christian Tauch. “Trends in Learning Structures in Higher Education (II). Follow-up Report prepared for the Salamanca and Prague Conferences of March/May 2001.” April 2001. http://www.aic.lv/ace/ace_disk/Bologna/Reports/Trends/trend_II.pdf. http://www.ehea.info/media.ehea.info/file/2015_Yerevan/71/1/Bologna_Process_Revisited_Future_of_the_EHEA_Final_613711.pdf. http://www.ehea.info/Upload/document/ministerial_declarations/2007_London_Communique_English_588697.pdf.

Published
2019-05-29
How to Cite
Sticchi Damiani, Maria. 2019. “From 1999 to 2019: 20 Years of European Debate, Development, and Achievements”. Tuning Journal for Higher Education 6 (2), 51-71. https://doi.org/10.18543/tjhe-6(2)-2019pp51-71.