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Wikipedia

Bologna Process

The Bologna Process is a series of ministerial meetings and agreements between European countries to ensure comparability in the standards and quality of higher-education qualifications.[1] The process has created the European Higher Education Area under the Lisbon Recognition Convention. It is named after the University of Bologna, where the Bologna declaration was signed by education ministers from 29 European countries in 1999. The process was opened to other countries in the European Cultural Convention[2] of the Council of Europe, and government meetings have been held in Prague (2001), Berlin (2003), Bergen (2005), London (2007), Leuven (2009), Budapest-Vienna (2010), Bucharest (2012), Yerevan (2015), Paris (2018), and Rome (2020).

Logo
Bologna zone

Before the signing of the Bologna declaration, the Magna Charta Universitatum was issued at a meeting of university rectors celebrating the 900th anniversary of the University of Bologna (and European universities) in 1988. One year before the declaration, education ministers Claude Allègre (France), Jürgen Rüttgers (Germany), Luigi Berlinguer (Italy) and Baroness Blackstone (UK) signed the Sorbonne declaration in Paris in 1998, committing themselves to "harmonising the architecture of the European Higher Education system".[3] The Bologna Process has 49 participating countries.[4]

Signatories

Signatories of the Bologna Accord,[5] members of the European Higher Education Area, are:[6]

 
European Higher Education Area

All member states of the EU are participating in the process, with the European Commission also a signatory. Monaco and San Marino are the only members of the Council of Europe which did not adopt the process.

The ESU, EUA, EURASHE, EI, ENQA, UNICE, the Council of Europe and UNESCO are part of the process' follow-up. Other groups at this level are ENIC, NARIC and EURODOC.

Rejected countries

Four countries, Israel, Kyrgyzstan and the unrecognized Northern Cyprus and Kosovo, have applied to join but did not meet the membership criteria.[7]

Israel is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe, although it has observer status. Although Israel is not geographically part of Europe, it is part of the UNESCO European Region,[citation needed] (although not a UNESCO member).[8] Israel has also ratified the Lisbon Recognition Convention but, under the criteria of the 2003 Berlin Communiqué, it is ineligible for the Bologna Process.

Kosovo is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe. Although Serbia is a party, Kosovo declared independence from it and has theoretically been a part of the Bologna Process since the Kosovo War. It was suggested that Kosovo could be associated with the process in a category appropriate to its situation, such as guest or special-observer status.

Kyrgyzstan is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe, although has also ratified the Lisbon Recognition Convention.

Northern Cyprus is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe and not recognized as an independent political entity by any member of the Bologna Process except Turkey.

Qualifications framework

The basic framework is three cycles of higher-education qualifications. The framework[9] adopted by the ministers at their meeting in Bergen in 2005 defines the qualifications in terms of learning outcomes: statements of what students know and can do on completing their degrees. In describing the cycles, the framework uses the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS):

  • First cycle: typically 180–240 ECTS credits (a minimum of 60 credits per academic year), usually awarding a bachelor's degree. The European Higher Education Area did not introduce the bachelor-with-honours programme, which allows graduates to receive a "BA hons." degree (for example, in the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada) which (in the UK, Australia and New Zealand) may enable graduates to begin doctoral studies without first obtaining a master's degree.
  • Second cycle: typically 60–120 ECTS credits (a minimum of 60 ECTS per academic year), usually awarding a master's degree.
  • Third cycle (doctoral degree): There is no concrete ECTS range, since the disciplines vary in length and comprehensiveness. However, some countries have minimum credit weight requirements on doctoral degrees. Those country-level requirements typically require 120–420 ECTS of study.

In most cases, it would take three to four years to earn a bachelor's degree and another one or two years for a master's degree. Doctoral degrees usually require another two to four years of specialization, primarily individual research under a mentor. Degree names may vary by country. One academic year normally corresponds to 60 ECTS credits, equivalent to 1,500–1,800 hours of study.

Reception

According to Chris Lorenz of the VU University Amsterdam,

The basic idea behind all educational EU-plans [sic] is economic: the basic idea is the enlargement of scale of the European systems of higher education ... in order to enhance its 'competitiveness' by cutting down costs. Therefore a Europe-wide standardization of the 'values' produced in each of the national higher educational systems is called for.[10]

Effects by state

The process, an intergovernmental agreement between EU and non-EU countries, does not have the status of EU legislation. Since the Bologna Declaration is not a treaty or convention, there are no legal obligations for the signatory states; participation and cooperation are voluntary.

Although the declaration was created without a formal affiliation with EU institutions, the European Commission (which has supported European projects such as the Tuning and TEEP projects) plays an important role in implementing the process. Most countries do not fit the framework, using their traditional systems. The process, which will result in bilateral agreements between countries and institutions which recognise each other's degrees, is moving from strict convergence in time spent on qualifications towards a competency-based system which will have an undergraduate and postgraduate division (with a bachelor's degree in the former and a master's and doctorate in the latter).

In mainland Europe, five-year-plus first degrees are common. Many do not complete their studies, and many countries are introducing bachelor-level qualifications. The situation is evolving as the Bologna Process is implemented.

Some countries introduced the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) and discussed their degree structures, qualifications, financing and management of higher education and mobility programmes. At the institutional level, the reform involved higher-education institutions, their faculties or departments, student and staff representatives and other factors. Priorities varied by country and institution.

Andorra

In Andorra, degrees are awarded by the state in all three cycles (bachelor's, master's and doctoral). The University of Andorra[11] has adapted its classroom studies to the European Higher Education Area in accordance with the Bologna Agreement. The degree workload is counted in European credits, with a European equivalent of 180 credits (three years) for bachelor's degrees and 120 credits (two years) for master's degrees.

Austria

Austria's situation is similar to Germany's, with the lowest undergraduate degrees the Magister (FH) and Diplom (FH) (designed to take three or four years). The lowest graduate degrees are Magister and Diplom, which typically fulfill a thesis requirement (including final examination and thesis defence) and can be obtained after four to six years of study. In 2000 many curricula began to be converted into bachelor's degrees (Bakkalaureat; the term was replaced by "bachelor's" in most curricula by 2007) and master's (Magisterstudium) programmes, with nominal durations of six semesters (three years) and three to four semesters (18 months to two years) respectively.

Enrollment in a doctoral programme generally requires a master's degree in a related field. Although the nominal duration of doctoral programmes is two or three years, the time to graduate varies considerably and is generally longer.

Armenia

Armenia ratified the Bologna Process in 2005 and is a member of the European Higher Education Area.[12]

Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan is a full member of the Bologna Process since 2005.

Belarus

Belarus became a member of the European Higher Education Area at a conference in Yerevan, Armenia, in May 2015.[13]

Croatia

In Croatia, implementation of the Bologna Process began during the 2005–2006 academic year. Diploma degree became baccalaureate (bachelor's degree, Croatian: prvostupnik), and the programmes were shortened from four to about three years. Magisterij (master's degree) is achieved after two additional years of post-graduate study. The doktorat degree (doctorate) may be received after three more years (eight years total).

The typical length of study is three years for a bachelor's degree (baccalaureus), two years for a master's degree (magistar) and three years for a doctor of science (doktor znanosti). A local distinction is made between vocational and academic degrees at the baccalaureate level, and between engineering and other programs at levels below the doctoral.

There are several exceptions. The first degree in economics still takes four years, and the master's degree is obtained after an additional year at the University of Zagreb's Faculty of Economics and Zagreb School of Economics and Management. The four-plus-one-year system also applies to fine arts and music. Medical and related studies replace the bachelor's degree with six-year first professional degrees and graduate Doctor of Medicine (doktor medicine) degrees.

The old degrees are translated as follows:

  • Diploma holders hold master's degrees (magistar inženjer for engineers and magistar for others).
  • The old master's degree is grandfathered into magistar znanosti (Master of Science), an intermediate title between the new master's degree and a doctorate for local use.
  • Doctoral degrees remain the same.

In May 2008, about 5,000 students protested weak funding, imprecisely defined new rules and the poor results of the Bologna reform.[14]

Denmark

Denmark introduced the 3+2+3 system in 1971 with an education-management working group of the Society of Danish Engineers and a 1984–85 group of the Federation of Danish Industries, both headed by Hans Bruno Lund. Before the adoption of international standards, the lowest degree normally awarded at universities in Denmark was equivalent to a master's degree (Kandidat/cand.mag). Although bachelor's degrees have been obtained after three years of study, most students[15] continue the additional two years required for a master's degree. Mid-length (two-to four-year) professional degrees have been adapted as professional bachelor's degrees (3+12 years).

Finland

In the Finnish pre-Bologna system, higher education was divided between universities and polytechnics. In universities, degrees were divided in most fields into a three-year bachelor's degree (kandidaatti) and a two-year master's degree (maisteri). In these fields, the Bologna Process resulted in no change.

In engineering, universities only offered a 5+12-year master's program (diplomi-insinööri). This has been replaced by a three-year bachelor's degree (tekniikan kandidaatti) and a two-year master's degree (diplomi-insinööri), for which the English names are Bachelor of Science (Technology) and Master of Science (Technology).[16] A corresponding change has been made in military higher education, where the officer's degree was divided between bachelor's and master's programmes. Finnish Universities of Applied Sciences, which have offered bachelor's-equivalent engineering programmes, began offering master's-degree programs in 2005.[17] Some Master of Engineering (insinööri (ylempi AMK)) programmes are taught in English.[18]

Only medicine and dentistry retain their non-standard degree structure, where the Licentiate (higher than a master's degree, but less extensive than Doctor of Medicine or Dentistry degrees) is the basic degree. A six-year program of at least 360 ECTS credits leads to the Licentiate of Medicine (lääketieteen lisensiaatti) degree. There is an intermediate title (but not an academic degree) of lääketieteen kandidaatti, and no master's degree.

Polytechnic degrees are considered bachelor's degrees in international use. In domestic use, bachelors transferring from polytechnics to universities may be required to amass a maximum of 60 ECTS credits of additional studies before beginning master's-level studies. In conjunction with the Bologna Process, polytechnics have the right to award master's degrees.

France

In France the baccalauréat, awarded at the end of secondary education, allows students to enter university. Before the LMD reform amid the 2000s which implemented the Bologna Process, it was followed by a two-year Diplôme d'études universitaires générales (DEUG) and a third-year Licence (the equivalent of a UK bachelor's degree).

Students could then pursue a Maîtrise, a one-year research degree which could be followed by a one-year vocational degree (the Diplôme d'études supérieures spécialisées or DESS) or research degree (the Diplôme d'études approfondies, or DEA). The DEA, preparation for a doctorate, was equivalent to the M. Phil. Students could then pursue a doctorat (PhD), which took at least three years.

The DESS was created in 1975 for students who completed four-year degrees. Intended as a doctorate with a more practical approach than research, it included the production of a 120-page paper which was defended to a jury of three international specialists in the field. The mini-thesis was kept in the libraries of the university issuing the DESS, unlike a PhD dissertation (distributed by its author to every French university library).

Higher education in France is also provided by non-university institutions dedicated to specific subjects. The Diplôme d'ingénieur (engineering diploma) is awarded to students after five years of study in state-recognized Écoles d'ingénieurs, particularly the Grandes Écoles such as Mines, Centrale and ENAC.

Although the baccalauréat and doctorat are unchanged in the Bologna system (known in France as LMD reform), the DEUG and licence have been merged into a three-year Licence. The Maîtrise, DESS and DEA have been combined into a two-year master's degree, which can be work- (master professionnel) or research-oriented (master recherche). The Diplôme d'ingénieur degree is still separate from a university degree, but holders may legally claim a master's degree as well.[19]

Strikes occurred in 2002 and 2003[20] and 2007[21] protesting LMD reform, focusing more on under-funding of French universities since May 1968 than on the Bologna Process. Although the two major student organisations object to some aspects of its application to the French system, they generally welcome the European process.

Georgia

Although Georgia joined the Bologna Process in 2005 at the Bergen summit, steps towards the establishment of the European Higher Education Area were completed earlier. Since the end of the 1990s, many Georgian universities (mostly private) have introduced limited educational programs allowing students to graduate with a bachelor's degree (four years) and earn a master's degree (one to two years) while preserving the old five-to-six-year scheme. During the Soviet era, the only degree was the discontinued Specialist.

Cycles of higher education are divided into first (bachelor's degree with 240 credits), second (master's degree, 120 credits) and third (doctorate, 180 credits). Human and veterinary medicine and dentistry (300–360 credits) are integrated programs with a qualification equal to a master's degree.[22]

Greece

Greece joined the Bologna Process in 1999. Since 2007, more-intensive steps towards the establishment of the European Higher Education Area were completed.

Hungary

In Hungary, the Bologna system applies to those who began their university education in or after September 2006. One hundred and eight majors were available for selection (compared with over 400 in 2005), of which six are exempt from the bachelor's-master's division: law, human and veterinary medicine, dentistry, pharmacy and architecture.

According to an online poll[23] by the National Tertiary Education Information Centre, 65 percent of respondents thought it unnecessary to adopt the system. The new system provides less of a guarantee that students will obtain a master's degree, because many will complete their education after the three-year bachelor's degree. Students are expected to study more unrelated subjects during the first three years, due to the smaller number of majors.[24]

Iceland

In Iceland, bachelor's degrees are usually three years in duration;[25] master's degrees are two years, and doctoral degrees range from three to six years.[26]

Ireland

In Ireland, bachelor's degrees are commonly three to four years in duration; master's and doctoral degrees are basically similar to those in the UK. Bachelor's degrees are first-cycle qualifications. Except for the MA at the Trinity College Dublin, a master's degree is always a postgraduate degree (teaching or research). The generic outcomes for Irish degrees are laid out in the 2003 National Framework of Qualifications. In 2006, Ireland was the first country to verify the compatibility of its national framework with that of the EHEA.[27]

Italy

Italy fits the framework since its 1999 adoption of the 3+2 system. The first degree is the Laurea triennale, which may be obtained after three years of study. Selected students may then complete their studies with two additional years of specialization leading to the Laurea Magistrale.

The Laurea corresponds to a bachelor's degree; the Laurea Magistrale, corresponding to a master's degree, grants access to third-cycle programmes (post-MA degrees, doctorates or specialized schools) lasting two to five years (completing a PhD usually takes three years). A five-year degree, Laurea Magistrale a Ciclo Unico (Single-cycle Master's Degree) is awarded in medicine (Medicina), Architecture (Architettura), law (Giurisprudenza), and dentistry (Odontoiatria), in Pharmacy (Farmacia) and Pharmaceutical Sciences (Chimica e Tecnologia Farmaceutiche), as well as in visual arts (Accademia di Belle Arti) and music (Conservatorio di Musica). The title for BA and BS undergraduate students is Dottore and for MA, MFA, MSc, MD and MEd graduate students Dottore magistrale (abbreviated Dott., Dott.ssa or Dr.). This should not be confused with PhD and post-MA graduates, whose title is Dottore di Ricerca (Research Doctor).

The Italian system has two types of postgraduate degree (called "Master", not to be confused with the master's degree). Laurea Magistrale (120 ECTS) allows access to third-cycle programmes, and Master universitario (at least 60 ECTS) may be divided into first- (second cycle) and second-level master's degrees (third cycle). A first-level master's degree is accessible by a first-cycle degree and "does not allow access to PhD and to 3rd cycle programmes, since this type of course does not belong to the general requirements established at national level, but it is offered under the autonomous responsibility of each university".[28]

Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan has been a full member of the Bologna Process and European Higher Education Area since 2010.[29]

Netherlands

The Netherlands differentiates between HBO (higher professional or polytechnic education) and WO (scientific education or research universities). WO and HBO have adopted the bachelor's-master's system.[30] It generally requires three (WO) or four (HBO) years of education to obtain a bachelor's degree; graduates may then apply for a master's program at a university, which generally require one to two years to complete. An HBO bachelor graduate may have to pass one year of pre-master's education to bridge the gap between their HBO study and (research-oriented) WO study to be admitted to a WO Master's programme, which may grant degrees such as MA, MSc and LLM.[31] There are also HBO master's studies, and HBOs are the only institutions offering associate degrees. A completed university level (not HBO) masters degree is the default (legal) requirement to enter a PhD program in the Netherlands. Dispensation can be granted on an individual base, judged by a special committee.

Portugal

Due to the Bologna Process, in 2005 new licenciatura (licentiate) degrees were organized at university and polytechnic institutions of Portugal. Previously a four- to six-year programme, equivalent to 300 ECTS, it is now a three-year first cycle and the only requirement for the two-year second cycle which awards a master's degree. Some Bologna courses are integrated five- or six-year programmes awarding a joint master's degree, a common practice in medicine. In engineering, despite the use of two cycles, an engineer may be licensed only after obtaining a master's degree. Master's degrees attained after five or six years of study correspond to the old undergraduate degrees known as licenciatura. The new licenciatura, obtained after three years of study, corresponds to the discontinued bacharelato awarded by polytechnics from the 1970s to the early 2000s (roughly equivalent to an extended associate degree). Old and new master's degrees are the first graduate degree before a doctorate, and the old and new licenciatura are undergraduate degrees.

The licenciatura degree (a four- to six-year course) was required for applicants who wished to undertake the old master's and doctoral programmes, but admission was reserved for those with a licenciatura degree with a grade above 14 (out of 20). After the changes introduced by the Bologna Process, the master's degree is conferred at the end of a programme roughly equivalent in time to many old licenciatura programmes. The process was developed to improve the education system to one based on the development of competency rather than the transmission of knowledge. Its goal was the development of a system of easily comparable degrees to simplify the comparison of qualifications across Europe. Its flexibility and transparency is intended to enable wider recognition of student qualifications, facilitating movement around a European Higher Education Area based on two main cycles (undergraduate and graduate) and providing third-cycle degrees for doctoral candidates.

Russia

The Russian higher education framework was basically incompatible with the process. The generic, lowest degree in all universities since the Soviet era is the Specialist, which can be obtained after five to six years of study. Since the mid-1990s, many universities have introduced limited programmes allowing students to graduate with a bachelor's degree in four years and a master's degree in an additional one to two years while preserving the old system.

After accession to the Bologna process happened in 2003,[32] in October 2007, Russia moved to two-tier education in line with the Bologna Process.[33] Universities inserted a BSc diploma in the middle of their standard specialist programmes, but the transition to MS qualification has not been completed.

Although Specialists and masters are eligible for doctoral programmes (Aspirantura), bachelors are not; the Specialist degree is being discontinued. In most universities bachelor's- and master's-degree education is free of charge, although some state and private universities charge for one or both.[34][35][better source needed][when?] The labour market does not yet understand BSc diplomas, but some universities made the program similar to classical education and the MS stage remains mandatory for most graduates.[36]

Sweden

A bill proposing new regulations in the field of Higher Education was presented to Parliament in 2005, and the new system came into force in July 2007. The new system of degrees will have two degrees, of different lengths, in each cycle.

Cycle Swedish English Length (undergraduate) Length (postgraduate)
1 Högskoleexamen University diploma 2 years n/a
1 Kandidatexamen Bachelor's degree 3 years n/a
2 Magisterexamen Master's degree, 1 year (a.k.a. "Swedish master's degree") 4 years Kandidatexamen + 1 year
2 Masterexamen Master's degree, 2 years 5 years Kandidatexamen + 2 years or Magisterexamen + 1 year
3 Licentiatexamen Licentiate n/a Magisterexamen or higher + 2 years
3 Doktorsexamen Doctorate n/a Magisterexamen or higher + 4 years

Students may not always be offered all the combinations above to obtain a degree. The högskoleexamen is usually not offered, and many schools require students to obtain the kandidatexamen before obtaining a magisterexamen or masterexamen. Most third-cycle programmes require at least a magisterexamen, although the legal minimal requirement is either a degree from the second cycle or four years of finished courses, where at least one year is second cycle.

In July 2007 a new system of credits, compatible with the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System, was introduced in which one credit (högskolepoäng) in the new system corresponds to one ECTS credit and two-thirds of a credit in the old system (poäng).

Some Swedish universities have introduced the ECTS standard grading scale for all students, and others will use it only for international students. Since criterion-referenced grading is used instead of relative grading in the Swedish educational system, the 10-, 25-, 30-, 25- and 10-percent distribution of students among A, B, C, D and E will not be done. Some universities only give Fail or Pass grades (F or P) for certain courses (such as internship and thesis projects) or assignments, such as laboratory exercises.

Seminars

Several Bologna Process seminars have been held. The first devoted to a single academic discipline, Chemistry Studies in the European Higher Education Area (which approved Eurobachelor), was held in June 2004 in Dresden.[37]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ BONJEAN, Dominique (21 September 2018). "The Bologna Process and the European Higher Education Area". Education and Training - European Commission. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  2. ^ Council of Europe. "European Cultural Convention". 1954.
  3. ^ (PDF). DAAD. 25 May 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2009. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  4. ^ "Members". European Higher Education Area. 2020. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  5. ^ "The Bologna Accord: A European Revolution with Global Implications". www.gmac.com. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  6. ^ "Bologna for Pedestrians, The Council of Europe Internet Portal". Coe.int. 19 June 1999. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  7. ^ . 30 October 2008. Archived from the original on 30 October 2008. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  8. ^ "69 years after joining, Israel formally leaves UNESCO; so, too, does the US". Times of Israel. 1 January 2019. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  9. ^ (PDF). EHEA. May 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  10. ^ Lorenz, Chris (2006). (PDF). University of Amsterdam. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 March 2016. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  11. ^ . University of Andorra. 2012. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013. Retrieved 5 September 2013.
  12. ^ "European Higher Education Area and Bologna Process".
  13. ^ "Belarus' accession to Bologna Process approved by European education ministers". Belarus By. 14 May 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  14. ^ Šimičević, Hrvoje (7 May 2008). [More than 3,000 students protested in Zagreb – Students: We are the first Bologna degeneration] (in Croatian). Nacional (weekly). Archived from the original on 9 June 2008. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  15. ^ "Statistikbanken.dk". Danish Statistics Bank. Retrieved 15 June 2013.[dead link]
  16. ^ [Diplomas and degree programmes in foreign languages]. Helsinki University of Technology (in Finnish). 5 September 2008. Archived from the original on 16 November 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  17. ^ Finnish governmental decree 423/2005 on degrees at Universities of Applied Sciences Accessed: 21 June 2009
  18. ^ Helsinki Metropolia University of Applied Sciences – Master's Degrees Accessed: 21 June 2009
  19. ^ . Wes.org. 29 August 2003. Archived from the original on 16 June 2010. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  20. ^ [Students have demanded the repeal of the LMD reform and definitive withdrawal of the bill on the autonomy of universities] (PDF). Révoltes (in French). December 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 March 2016. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  21. ^ "ttc.org - O domínio pode estar à venda pelo seu dono! - ttc Recursos e Informações". arquivo.pt. Archived from the original on 18 May 2016. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  22. ^ "Higher Education system of Georgia". Mes.gov.ge. 25 January 2010. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  23. ^ "Országos Felsőoktatási Információs Központ". felvi.hu. 24 February 2006.[dead link]
  24. ^ "Index – Belföld – Szabad bölcsész leszel vagy romanisztika szakos?". Index.hu. 15 December 2005. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  25. ^ . www.hi.is. Archived from the original on 24 April 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  26. ^ "Framhaldsnám | Háskóli Íslands". www.hi.is. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  27. ^ National Qualifications Authority of Ireland (2006). (PDF). Dublin: NQAI. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 January 2011.
  28. ^ "Italian Qualifications Framework (QTI): other qualifications". quadrodeititoli.it. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  29. ^ "Kazakhstan country page".
  30. ^ van Houten, Maarten Matheus (2 January 2018). "Vocational education and the binary higher education system in the Netherlands: higher education symbiosis or vocational education dichotomy?". Journal of Vocational Education & Training. 70 (1): 130–147. doi:10.1080/13636820.2017.1394359. ISSN 1363-6820.
  31. ^ [The MPhil degree is no longer granted] (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 26 July 2009. Although it is not recognised by the Dutch state, Dutch universities may still grant the degree MPhil, next to granting a degree as MA or MSc next to the MPhil degree, so that the graduate may still get a recognised degree.
  32. ^ "Россия присоединилась к Болонской конвенции". RIA Novosti (in Russian). 18 September 2003.
  33. ^ "В РФ вводится двухуровневая система высшего образования". RBK (in Russian). 25 October 2007.
  34. ^ [Payment for Masters]. uchsib.ru (in Russian). 20 July 2011. Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. (translated) Many tertiary institutions such as the Moscow State University, State University of Management, and RANEPA (Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration) provide an opportunity to take a Masters Degree only on a fee-for basis.
  35. ^ Yana Miliukova (21 July 2011). Магистратуру сделали платной в 50 вузах [Masters has been made a fee course by 50 tertiary institutions] (in Russian). sostav.ru. Retrieved 17 March 2016.
  36. ^ Guriev, Sergey (8 October 2007). [The Bologna Process: Catastrophe or panacea] (in Russian). Vedomosti. Archived from the original on 5 September 2008. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
  37. ^ (PDF). ECTN Association. November 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 October 2008.

Bibliography

  • Alexandra Kertz-Welzel, "Motivation zur Weiterbildung: Master- und Bachelor-Abschlüsse in den USA", Diskussion Musikpädagogik, vol. 29, pp. 33–35, 2006.

External links

  • Official website
  • Full Members of the European Higher Education Area

bologna, process, series, ministerial, meetings, agreements, between, european, countries, ensure, comparability, standards, quality, higher, education, qualifications, process, created, european, higher, education, area, under, lisbon, recognition, convention. The Bologna Process is a series of ministerial meetings and agreements between European countries to ensure comparability in the standards and quality of higher education qualifications 1 The process has created the European Higher Education Area under the Lisbon Recognition Convention It is named after the University of Bologna where the Bologna declaration was signed by education ministers from 29 European countries in 1999 The process was opened to other countries in the European Cultural Convention 2 of the Council of Europe and government meetings have been held in Prague 2001 Berlin 2003 Bergen 2005 London 2007 Leuven 2009 Budapest Vienna 2010 Bucharest 2012 Yerevan 2015 Paris 2018 and Rome 2020 LogoBologna zoneBefore the signing of the Bologna declaration the Magna Charta Universitatum was issued at a meeting of university rectors celebrating the 900th anniversary of the University of Bologna and European universities in 1988 One year before the declaration education ministers Claude Allegre France Jurgen Ruttgers Germany Luigi Berlinguer Italy and Baroness Blackstone UK signed the Sorbonne declaration in Paris in 1998 committing themselves to harmonising the architecture of the European Higher Education system 3 The Bologna Process has 49 participating countries 4 Contents 1 Signatories 2 Rejected countries 3 Qualifications framework 4 Reception 5 Effects by state 5 1 Andorra 5 2 Austria 5 3 Armenia 5 4 Azerbaijan 5 5 Belarus 5 6 Croatia 5 7 Denmark 5 8 Finland 5 9 France 5 10 Georgia 5 11 Greece 5 12 Hungary 5 13 Iceland 5 14 Ireland 5 15 Italy 5 16 Kazakhstan 5 17 Netherlands 5 18 Portugal 5 19 Russia 5 20 Sweden 6 Seminars 7 See also 8 Notes and references 9 Bibliography 10 External linksSignatories EditSignatories of the Bologna Accord 5 members of the European Higher Education Area are 6 European Higher Education Area1999 Austria Belgium Flemish Community and French Community of Belgium separately Bulgaria the Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland United Kingdom 2001 Croatia Cyprus Liechtenstein Turkey European Commission 2003 Albania Andorra Bosnia and Herzegovina North Macedonia Russia Serbia Vatican City 2005 Armenia Azerbaijan Georgia Moldova and Ukraine May 2007 Montenegro 2010 Kazakhstan May 2015 BelarusAll member states of the EU are participating in the process with the European Commission also a signatory Monaco and San Marino are the only members of the Council of Europe which did not adopt the process The ESU EUA EURASHE EI ENQA UNICE the Council of Europe and UNESCO are part of the process follow up Other groups at this level are ENIC NARIC and EURODOC Rejected countries EditFour countries Israel Kyrgyzstan and the unrecognized Northern Cyprus and Kosovo have applied to join but did not meet the membership criteria 7 Israel is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe although it has observer status Although Israel is not geographically part of Europe it is part of the UNESCO European Region citation needed although not a UNESCO member 8 Israel has also ratified the Lisbon Recognition Convention but under the criteria of the 2003 Berlin Communique it is ineligible for the Bologna Process Kosovo is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe Although Serbia is a party Kosovo declared independence from it and has theoretically been a part of the Bologna Process since the Kosovo War It was suggested that Kosovo could be associated with the process in a category appropriate to its situation such as guest or special observer status Kyrgyzstan is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe although has also ratified the Lisbon Recognition Convention Northern Cyprus is not a party to the European Cultural Convention of the Council of Europe and not recognized as an independent political entity by any member of the Bologna Process except Turkey Qualifications framework EditThe basic framework is three cycles of higher education qualifications The framework 9 adopted by the ministers at their meeting in Bergen in 2005 defines the qualifications in terms of learning outcomes statements of what students know and can do on completing their degrees In describing the cycles the framework uses the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System ECTS First cycle typically 180 240 ECTS credits a minimum of 60 credits per academic year usually awarding a bachelor s degree The European Higher Education Area did not introduce the bachelor with honours programme which allows graduates to receive a BA hons degree for example in the UK Australia New Zealand and Canada which in the UK Australia and New Zealand may enable graduates to begin doctoral studies without first obtaining a master s degree Second cycle typically 60 120 ECTS credits a minimum of 60 ECTS per academic year usually awarding a master s degree Third cycle doctoral degree There is no concrete ECTS range since the disciplines vary in length and comprehensiveness However some countries have minimum credit weight requirements on doctoral degrees Those country level requirements typically require 120 420 ECTS of study In most cases it would take three to four years to earn a bachelor s degree and another one or two years for a master s degree Doctoral degrees usually require another two to four years of specialization primarily individual research under a mentor Degree names may vary by country One academic year normally corresponds to 60 ECTS credits equivalent to 1 500 1 800 hours of study Reception EditAccording to Chris Lorenz of the VU University Amsterdam The basic idea behind all educational EU plans sic is economic the basic idea is the enlargement of scale of the European systems of higher education in order to enhance its competitiveness by cutting down costs Therefore a Europe wide standardization of the values produced in each of the national higher educational systems is called for 10 Effects by state EditThe process an intergovernmental agreement between EU and non EU countries does not have the status of EU legislation Since the Bologna Declaration is not a treaty or convention there are no legal obligations for the signatory states participation and cooperation are voluntary Although the declaration was created without a formal affiliation with EU institutions the European Commission which has supported European projects such as the Tuning and TEEP projects plays an important role in implementing the process Most countries do not fit the framework using their traditional systems The process which will result in bilateral agreements between countries and institutions which recognise each other s degrees is moving from strict convergence in time spent on qualifications towards a competency based system which will have an undergraduate and postgraduate division with a bachelor s degree in the former and a master s and doctorate in the latter In mainland Europe five year plus first degrees are common Many do not complete their studies and many countries are introducing bachelor level qualifications The situation is evolving as the Bologna Process is implemented Some countries introduced the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System ECTS and discussed their degree structures qualifications financing and management of higher education and mobility programmes At the institutional level the reform involved higher education institutions their faculties or departments student and staff representatives and other factors Priorities varied by country and institution Andorra Edit In Andorra degrees are awarded by the state in all three cycles bachelor s master s and doctoral The University of Andorra 11 has adapted its classroom studies to the European Higher Education Area in accordance with the Bologna Agreement The degree workload is counted in European credits with a European equivalent of 180 credits three years for bachelor s degrees and 120 credits two years for master s degrees Austria Edit See also Education in Austria Austria s situation is similar to Germany s with the lowest undergraduate degrees the Magister FH and Diplom FH designed to take three or four years The lowest graduate degrees are Magister and Diplom which typically fulfill a thesis requirement including final examination and thesis defence and can be obtained after four to six years of study In 2000 many curricula began to be converted into bachelor s degrees Bakkalaureat the term was replaced by bachelor s in most curricula by 2007 and master s Magisterstudium programmes with nominal durations of six semesters three years and three to four semesters 18 months to two years respectively Enrollment in a doctoral programme generally requires a master s degree in a related field Although the nominal duration of doctoral programmes is two or three years the time to graduate varies considerably and is generally longer Armenia Edit See also Education in Armenia Armenia ratified the Bologna Process in 2005 and is a member of the European Higher Education Area 12 Azerbaijan Edit See also Education in Azerbaijan Azerbaijan is a full member of the Bologna Process since 2005 Belarus Edit See also Education in Belarus Belarus became a member of the European Higher Education Area at a conference in Yerevan Armenia in May 2015 13 Croatia Edit See also Education in Croatia In Croatia implementation of the Bologna Process began during the 2005 2006 academic year Diploma degree became baccalaureate bachelor s degree Croatian prvostupnik and the programmes were shortened from four to about three years Magisterij master s degree is achieved after two additional years of post graduate study The doktorat degree doctorate may be received after three more years eight years total The typical length of study is three years for a bachelor s degree baccalaureus two years for a master s degree magistar and three years for a doctor of science doktor znanosti A local distinction is made between vocational and academic degrees at the baccalaureate level and between engineering and other programs at levels below the doctoral There are several exceptions The first degree in economics still takes four years and the master s degree is obtained after an additional year at the University of Zagreb s Faculty of Economics and Zagreb School of Economics and Management The four plus one year system also applies to fine arts and music Medical and related studies replace the bachelor s degree with six year first professional degrees and graduate Doctor of Medicine doktor medicine degrees The old degrees are translated as follows Diploma holders hold master s degrees magistar inzenjer for engineers and magistar for others The old master s degree is grandfathered into magistar znanosti Master of Science an intermediate title between the new master s degree and a doctorate for local use Doctoral degrees remain the same In May 2008 about 5 000 students protested weak funding imprecisely defined new rules and the poor results of the Bologna reform 14 Denmark Edit See also Education in Denmark Denmark introduced the 3 2 3 system in 1971 with an education management working group of the Society of Danish Engineers and a 1984 85 group of the Federation of Danish Industries both headed by Hans Bruno Lund Before the adoption of international standards the lowest degree normally awarded at universities in Denmark was equivalent to a master s degree Kandidat cand mag Although bachelor s degrees have been obtained after three years of study most students 15 continue the additional two years required for a master s degree Mid length two to four year professional degrees have been adapted as professional bachelor s degrees 3 1 2 years Finland Edit See also Education in Finland In the Finnish pre Bologna system higher education was divided between universities and polytechnics In universities degrees were divided in most fields into a three year bachelor s degree kandidaatti and a two year master s degree maisteri In these fields the Bologna Process resulted in no change In engineering universities only offered a 5 1 2 year master s program diplomi insinoori This has been replaced by a three year bachelor s degree tekniikan kandidaatti and a two year master s degree diplomi insinoori for which the English names are Bachelor of Science Technology and Master of Science Technology 16 A corresponding change has been made in military higher education where the officer s degree was divided between bachelor s and master s programmes Finnish Universities of Applied Sciences which have offered bachelor s equivalent engineering programmes began offering master s degree programs in 2005 17 Some Master of Engineering insinoori ylempi AMK programmes are taught in English 18 Only medicine and dentistry retain their non standard degree structure where the Licentiate higher than a master s degree but less extensive than Doctor of Medicine or Dentistry degrees is the basic degree A six year program of at least 360 ECTS credits leads to the Licentiate of Medicine laaketieteen lisensiaatti degree There is an intermediate title but not an academic degree of laaketieteen kandidaatti and no master s degree Polytechnic degrees are considered bachelor s degrees in international use In domestic use bachelors transferring from polytechnics to universities may be required to amass a maximum of 60 ECTS credits of additional studies before beginning master s level studies In conjunction with the Bologna Process polytechnics have the right to award master s degrees France Edit See also Education in France In France the baccalaureat awarded at the end of secondary education allows students to enter university Before the LMD reform amid the 2000s which implemented the Bologna Process it was followed by a two year Diplome d etudes universitaires generales DEUG and a third year Licence the equivalent of a UK bachelor s degree Students could then pursue a Maitrise a one year research degree which could be followed by a one year vocational degree the Diplome d etudes superieures specialisees or DESS or research degree the Diplome d etudes approfondies or DEA The DEA preparation for a doctorate was equivalent to the M Phil Students could then pursue a doctorat PhD which took at least three years The DESS was created in 1975 for students who completed four year degrees Intended as a doctorate with a more practical approach than research it included the production of a 120 page paper which was defended to a jury of three international specialists in the field The mini thesis was kept in the libraries of the university issuing the DESS unlike a PhD dissertation distributed by its author to every French university library Higher education in France is also provided by non university institutions dedicated to specific subjects The Diplome d ingenieur engineering diploma is awarded to students after five years of study in state recognized Ecoles d ingenieurs particularly the Grandes Ecoles such as Mines Centrale and ENAC Although the baccalaureat and doctorat are unchanged in the Bologna system known in France as LMD reform the DEUG and licence have been merged into a three year Licence The Maitrise DESS and DEA have been combined into a two year master s degree which can be work master professionnel or research oriented master recherche The Diplome d ingenieur degree is still separate from a university degree but holders may legally claim a master s degree as well 19 Strikes occurred in 2002 and 2003 20 and 2007 21 protesting LMD reform focusing more on under funding of French universities since May 1968 than on the Bologna Process Although the two major student organisations object to some aspects of its application to the French system they generally welcome the European process Georgia Edit See also Education in Georgia country Although Georgia joined the Bologna Process in 2005 at the Bergen summit steps towards the establishment of the European Higher Education Area were completed earlier Since the end of the 1990s many Georgian universities mostly private have introduced limited educational programs allowing students to graduate with a bachelor s degree four years and earn a master s degree one to two years while preserving the old five to six year scheme During the Soviet era the only degree was the discontinued Specialist Cycles of higher education are divided into first bachelor s degree with 240 credits second master s degree 120 credits and third doctorate 180 credits Human and veterinary medicine and dentistry 300 360 credits are integrated programs with a qualification equal to a master s degree 22 Greece Edit Main article Education in Greece Greece joined the Bologna Process in 1999 Since 2007 more intensive steps towards the establishment of the European Higher Education Area were completed Hungary Edit See also Education in Hungary In Hungary the Bologna system applies to those who began their university education in or after September 2006 One hundred and eight majors were available for selection compared with over 400 in 2005 of which six are exempt from the bachelor s master s division law human and veterinary medicine dentistry pharmacy and architecture According to an online poll 23 by the National Tertiary Education Information Centre 65 percent of respondents thought it unnecessary to adopt the system The new system provides less of a guarantee that students will obtain a master s degree because many will complete their education after the three year bachelor s degree Students are expected to study more unrelated subjects during the first three years due to the smaller number of majors 24 Iceland Edit See also Education in Iceland In Iceland bachelor s degrees are usually three years in duration 25 master s degrees are two years and doctoral degrees range from three to six years 26 Ireland Edit See also Education in the Republic of Ireland In Ireland bachelor s degrees are commonly three to four years in duration master s and doctoral degrees are basically similar to those in the UK Bachelor s degrees are first cycle qualifications Except for the MA at the Trinity College Dublin a master s degree is always a postgraduate degree teaching or research The generic outcomes for Irish degrees are laid out in the 2003 National Framework of Qualifications In 2006 Ireland was the first country to verify the compatibility of its national framework with that of the EHEA 27 Italy Edit See also Education in Italy Italy fits the framework since its 1999 adoption of the 3 2 system The first degree is the Laurea triennale which may be obtained after three years of study Selected students may then complete their studies with two additional years of specialization leading to the Laurea Magistrale The Laurea corresponds to a bachelor s degree the Laurea Magistrale corresponding to a master s degree grants access to third cycle programmes post MA degrees doctorates or specialized schools lasting two to five years completing a PhD usually takes three years A five year degree Laurea Magistrale a Ciclo Unico Single cycle Master s Degree is awarded in medicine Medicina Architecture Architettura law Giurisprudenza and dentistry Odontoiatria in Pharmacy Farmacia and Pharmaceutical Sciences Chimica e Tecnologia Farmaceutiche as well as in visual arts Accademia di Belle Arti and music Conservatorio di Musica The title for BA and BS undergraduate students is Dottore and for MA MFA MSc MD and MEd graduate students Dottore magistrale abbreviated Dott Dott ssa or Dr This should not be confused with PhD and post MA graduates whose title is Dottore di Ricerca Research Doctor The Italian system has two types of postgraduate degree called Master not to be confused with the master s degree Laurea Magistrale 120 ECTS allows access to third cycle programmes and Master universitario at least 60 ECTS may be divided into first second cycle and second level master s degrees third cycle A first level master s degree is accessible by a first cycle degree and does not allow access to PhD and to 3rd cycle programmes since this type of course does not belong to the general requirements established at national level but it is offered under the autonomous responsibility of each university 28 Kazakhstan Edit Kazakhstan has been a full member of the Bologna Process and European Higher Education Area since 2010 29 Netherlands Edit See also Education in the Netherlands and Academic degree Netherlands The Netherlands differentiates between HBO higher professional or polytechnic education and WO scientific education or research universities WO and HBO have adopted the bachelor s master s system 30 It generally requires three WO or four HBO years of education to obtain a bachelor s degree graduates may then apply for a master s program at a university which generally require one to two years to complete An HBO bachelor graduate may have to pass one year of pre master s education to bridge the gap between their HBO study and research oriented WO study to be admitted to a WO Master s programme which may grant degrees such as MA MSc and LLM 31 There are also HBO master s studies and HBOs are the only institutions offering associate degrees A completed university level not HBO masters degree is the default legal requirement to enter a PhD program in the Netherlands Dispensation can be granted on an individual base judged by a special committee Portugal Edit See also Higher education in Portugal Due to the Bologna Process in 2005 new licenciatura licentiate degrees were organized at university and polytechnic institutions of Portugal Previously a four to six year programme equivalent to 300 ECTS it is now a three year first cycle and the only requirement for the two year second cycle which awards a master s degree Some Bologna courses are integrated five or six year programmes awarding a joint master s degree a common practice in medicine In engineering despite the use of two cycles an engineer may be licensed only after obtaining a master s degree Master s degrees attained after five or six years of study correspond to the old undergraduate degrees known as licenciatura The new licenciatura obtained after three years of study corresponds to the discontinued bacharelato awarded by polytechnics from the 1970s to the early 2000s roughly equivalent to an extended associate degree Old and new master s degrees are the first graduate degree before a doctorate and the old and new licenciatura are undergraduate degrees The licenciatura degree a four to six year course was required for applicants who wished to undertake the old master s and doctoral programmes but admission was reserved for those with a licenciatura degree with a grade above 14 out of 20 After the changes introduced by the Bologna Process the master s degree is conferred at the end of a programme roughly equivalent in time to many old licenciatura programmes The process was developed to improve the education system to one based on the development of competency rather than the transmission of knowledge Its goal was the development of a system of easily comparable degrees to simplify the comparison of qualifications across Europe Its flexibility and transparency is intended to enable wider recognition of student qualifications facilitating movement around a European Higher Education Area based on two main cycles undergraduate and graduate and providing third cycle degrees for doctoral candidates Russia Edit See also Education in Russia The Russian higher education framework was basically incompatible with the process The generic lowest degree in all universities since the Soviet era is the Specialist which can be obtained after five to six years of study Since the mid 1990s many universities have introduced limited programmes allowing students to graduate with a bachelor s degree in four years and a master s degree in an additional one to two years while preserving the old system After accession to the Bologna process happened in 2003 32 in October 2007 Russia moved to two tier education in line with the Bologna Process 33 Universities inserted a BSc diploma in the middle of their standard specialist programmes but the transition to MS qualification has not been completed Although Specialists and masters are eligible for doctoral programmes Aspirantura bachelors are not the Specialist degree is being discontinued In most universities bachelor s and master s degree education is free of charge although some state and private universities charge for one or both 34 35 better source needed when The labour market does not yet understand BSc diplomas but some universities made the program similar to classical education and the MS stage remains mandatory for most graduates 36 Sweden Edit See also Education in Sweden and Academic grading in Sweden A bill proposing new regulations in the field of Higher Education was presented to Parliament in 2005 and the new system came into force in July 2007 The new system of degrees will have two degrees of different lengths in each cycle Cycle Swedish English Length undergraduate Length postgraduate 1 Hogskoleexamen University diploma 2 years n a1 Kandidatexamen Bachelor s degree 3 years n a2 Magisterexamen Master s degree 1 year a k a Swedish master s degree 4 years Kandidatexamen 1 year2 Masterexamen Master s degree 2 years 5 years Kandidatexamen 2 years or Magisterexamen 1 year3 Licentiatexamen Licentiate n a Magisterexamen or higher 2 years3 Doktorsexamen Doctorate n a Magisterexamen or higher 4 yearsStudents may not always be offered all the combinations above to obtain a degree The hogskoleexamen is usually not offered and many schools require students to obtain the kandidatexamen before obtaining a magisterexamen or masterexamen Most third cycle programmes require at least a magisterexamen although the legal minimal requirement is either a degree from the second cycle or four years of finished courses where at least one year is second cycle In July 2007 a new system of credits compatible with the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System was introduced in which one credit hogskolepoang in the new system corresponds to one ECTS credit and two thirds of a credit in the old system poang Some Swedish universities have introduced the ECTS standard grading scale for all students and others will use it only for international students Since criterion referenced grading is used instead of relative grading in the Swedish educational system the 10 25 30 25 and 10 percent distribution of students among A B C D and E will not be done Some universities only give Fail or Pass grades F or P for certain courses such as internship and thesis projects or assignments such as laboratory exercises Seminars EditSeveral Bologna Process seminars have been held The first devoted to a single academic discipline Chemistry Studies in the European Higher Education Area which approved Eurobachelor was held in June 2004 in Dresden 37 See also EditBologna declaration Chemistry Quality Eurolabels Education by country Education in the Czech Republic Education in Germany Education in Kazakhstan Education in Lithuania Education in Latvia Education in Malta Education in Moldova Education in Montenegro Education in North Macedonia Education in the Netherlands Education in Norway Education in Poland Education in Romania Education in Serbia Education in Slovakia Education in Slovenia Education in Spain Education in Sweden Education in Switzerland Education in Turkey Education in Ukraine Education in the United Kingdom European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System European Higher Education Area Melbourne Model University reformNotes and references Edit BONJEAN Dominique 21 September 2018 The Bologna Process and the European Higher Education Area Education and Training European Commission Retrieved 24 March 2020 Council of Europe European Cultural Convention 1954 Sorbonne Joint Declaration Joint declaration on harmonisation of the architecture of the European higher education system PDF DAAD 25 May 1998 Archived from the original PDF on 24 August 2009 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Members European Higher Education Area 2020 Retrieved 25 May 2021 The Bologna Accord A European Revolution with Global Implications www gmac com Retrieved 24 March 2020 Bologna for Pedestrians The Council of Europe Internet Portal Coe int 19 June 1999 Retrieved 28 April 2010 BFUG11 7a Applications To Join Bologna Process 30 October 2008 Archived from the original on 30 October 2008 Retrieved 21 March 2018 69 years after joining Israel formally leaves UNESCO so too does the US Times of Israel 1 January 2019 Retrieved 2 September 2022 The framework of qualifications for the European Higher Education Area PDF EHEA May 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 18 March 2016 Lorenz Chris 2006 Will the universities survive the European Integration Higher Education Policies in the EU and in the Netherlands before and after the Bologna Declaration PDF University of Amsterdam Archived from the original PDF on 27 March 2016 Retrieved 18 March 2016 Outstanding features University of Andorra 2012 Archived from the original on 15 January 2013 Retrieved 5 September 2013 European Higher Education Area and Bologna Process Belarus accession to Bologna Process approved by European education ministers Belarus By 14 May 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2016 Simicevic Hrvoje 7 May 2008 Vise od 3 tisuce studenata prosvjeduje u Zagrebu Studenti Mi smo prva bolonjska degeneracija More than 3 000 students protested in Zagreb Students We are the first Bologna degeneration in Croatian Nacional weekly Archived from the original on 9 June 2008 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Statistikbanken dk Danish Statistics Bank Retrieved 15 June 2013 dead link Tutkintojen ja tutkinto ohjelmien vieraskieliset nimet Diplomas and degree programmes in foreign languages Helsinki University of Technology in Finnish 5 September 2008 Archived from the original on 16 November 2008 Retrieved 9 May 2011 Finnish governmental decree 423 2005 on degrees at Universities of Applied Sciences Accessed 21 June 2009 Helsinki Metropolia University of Applied Sciences Master s Degrees Accessed 21 June 2009 WENR March April 2004 France Wes org 29 August 2003 Archived from the original on 16 June 2010 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Les etudiants ont exige l abrogation de la reforme LMD et le retrait definitif du projet de loi sur l autonomie des universites Students have demanded the repeal of the LMD reform and definitive withdrawal of the bill on the autonomy of universities PDF Revoltes in French December 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 24 March 2016 Retrieved 18 March 2016 ttc org O dominio pode estar a venda pelo seu dono ttc Recursos e Informacoes arquivo pt Archived from the original on 18 May 2016 Retrieved 21 March 2018 Higher Education system of Georgia Mes gov ge 25 January 2010 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Orszagos Felsooktatasi Informacios Kozpont felvi hu 24 February 2006 dead link Index Belfold Szabad bolcsesz leszel vagy romanisztika szakos Index hu 15 December 2005 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Grunnnam Haskoli Islands www hi is Archived from the original on 24 April 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Framhaldsnam Haskoli Islands www hi is Retrieved 15 January 2016 National Qualifications Authority of Ireland 2006 Verification of Compatibility of Irish National Framework of Qualifications with the Framework for Qualifications of the European Higher Education Area PDF Dublin NQAI Archived from the original PDF on 24 January 2011 Italian Qualifications Framework QTI other qualifications quadrodeititoli it Retrieved 18 March 2016 Kazakhstan country page van Houten Maarten Matheus 2 January 2018 Vocational education and the binary higher education system in the Netherlands higher education symbiosis or vocational education dichotomy Journal of Vocational Education amp Training 70 1 130 147 doi 10 1080 13636820 2017 1394359 ISSN 1363 6820 De MPhil graad wordt niet meer verleend The MPhil degree is no longer granted in Dutch Archived from the original on 26 July 2009 Although it is not recognised by the Dutch state Dutch universities may still grant the degree MPhil next to granting a degree as MA or MSc next to the MPhil degree so that the graduate may still get a recognised degree Rossiya prisoedinilas k Bolonskoj konvencii RIA Novosti in Russian 18 September 2003 V RF vvoditsya dvuhurovnevaya sistema vysshego obrazovaniya RBK in Russian 25 October 2007 Platnaya magistratura Payment for Masters uchsib ru in Russian 20 July 2011 Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 translated Many tertiary institutions such as the Moscow State University State University of Management and RANEPA Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration provide an opportunity to take a Masters Degree only on a fee for basis Yana Miliukova 21 July 2011 Magistraturu sdelali platnoj v 50 vuzah Masters has been made a fee course by 50 tertiary institutions in Russian sostav ru Retrieved 17 March 2016 Guriev Sergey 8 October 2007 Bolonskij process Katastrofa ili panaceya The Bologna Process Catastrophe or panacea in Russian Vedomosti Archived from the original on 5 September 2008 Retrieved 20 October 2008 Tuning Chemistry Subject Area Group and European Chemistry Thematic Network Recommendations for the Third Cycle PDF ECTN Association November 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 30 October 2008 Bibliography EditAlexandra Kertz Welzel Motivation zur Weiterbildung Master und Bachelor Abschlusse in den USA Diskussion Musikpadagogik vol 29 pp 33 35 2006 External links EditOfficial website Full Members of the European Higher Education Area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bologna Process amp oldid 1170218109, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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