fbpx
Wikipedia

Erasmus Programme

The Erasmus Programme ("EuRopean Community Action Scheme for the Mobility of University Students"[1]) is a European Union (EU) student exchange programme established in 1987.[2][3] Erasmus+, or Erasmus Plus, is the new programme combining all the EU's current schemes for education, training, youth and sport, which was started in January 2014.

Logo of the Erasmus Programme showing the programme's namesake of Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam

In 1989, the Erasmus Bureau invited 32 former Erasmus students for an evaluation meeting in Ghent, Belgium. The lack of peer-to-peer support was singled out as a major issue, but it was also a driving force behind the creation of the Erasmus Student Network. The organization supports students from Erasmus programme and other bilateral agreement and cooperates with national agencies in order to help international students. As of 23 July 2020, the Erasmus Student Network consists of 534 local associations ("sections") in 42 countries and has more than 15,000 volunteers across Europe.

As of 2014, 27 years after its creation, the programme has promoted the mobility of more than 3.3 million students within the European community. More than 5,000 higher education institutions from 38 countries are participating in the project.[4]

The Erasmus Programme, together with a number of other independent programmes, was incorporated into the Socrates programme established by the European Commission in 1994. The Socrates programme ended on 31 December 1999 and was replaced with the Socrates II programme on 24 January 2000, which in turn was replaced by the Lifelong Learning Programme 2007–2013 on 1 January 2007.

History

Origins of the name

The programme is named after the Dutch philosopher, theologian, Renaissance Humanist, monk, and devout Roman Catholic, Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam, called "the crowning glory of the Christian humanists".[1] Erasmus, along with his good friend Thomas More, became one of the main figures of European intellectual life during the Renaissance. Known for his satire, Erasmus urged internal reform of the Catholic Church. He encouraged a recovery of the Catholic Patristic tradition against what he considered to be contemporary abuses of the Sacraments and certain excessive devotional practices. He famously clashed with Protestant revolutionary Martin Luther on the subject of free will. ERASMUS is a backronym meaning European Community Action Scheme for the Mobility of University Students.[1] Erasmus travelled widely across Europe and he was a pioneer of the European Republic of Letters. He was one of the first intellectuals to use as a vehicle of diffusion of his ideas a path-breaking technology, namely the movable type and spent a lot of his time inside printing workshops.[5]

The idea of promoting cultural, social, and academic exchanges between European students originated in 1969, with Italian Sofia Corradi (nicknamed "Mamma Erasmus"), an educator and scientific consultant for the permanent conference of Italian university rectors. Her role allowed her to raise awareness about this idea and make it known in the academic and institutional spheres.[6] The project was born after an initiative of the EGEE student association (now AEGEE) founded by Franck Biancheri (who later became president of the trans-European movement Newropeans) which in 1986–1987 convinced French president François Mitterrand to support the creation of the Erasmus programme.

This active collaboration between AEGEE and the European Commission and especially Domenico Lenarduzzi, Ministry of Public Education, allowed the approval of the Erasmus programme in 1987. It became an integral part of the Socrates I (1994–1999) and Socrates II (2000–2006) programmes. From 2007 it became one of the elements of the Lifelong Learning Programme (2007–2013).

In June 1984, the European Council decided in Fontainebleau to establish an ad-hoc European citizens' committee with the mission to make proposals in order to improve the image of the European Union. Each council member would select a member and together they should present a set of proposals to be approved at a future European Council. Under the chairmanship of Pietro Adonnino, the committee presented two successive reports[7] that were approved at the Council session in Milano on the 28–29 of June 1985.[8] Under the proposals that were advanced in these reports was the suggestion (to be found in the second report from number 5.6: University Cooperation) that the ministers for education and universities and higher-education establishments

  1. should establish a cross-frontier cooperation enabling students to pursue part of their studies in an establishment in a member state other than their own;
  2. should implement, a comprehensive European inter-university programme of exchanges and studies aimed at giving this opportunity to a significant section of the EU's student population.

These suggestions were advanced by the Belgian member Prosper Thuysbaert and were discussed and approved by the committee.[citation needed]

1987 European Commission proposal

By the time the Erasmus Programme was adopted in June 1987, the European Commission had been supporting pilot student exchanges for six years. It proposed the original Erasmus Programme in early 1986, but reaction from the then member states varied: those with substantial exchange programmes of their own (essentially France, Germany and the United Kingdom) were broadly hostile[citation needed]; the remaining countries were broadly in favour. Exchanges between the member states and the European Commission deteriorated, and the latter withdrew the proposal in early 1987 to protest against the inadequacy of the triennial budget proposed by some member states.[1]

European Court of Justice decision

This method of voting, a simple majority, was not accepted by some of the opposing member states, who challenged the adoption of the decision before the European Court of Justice. Although the court held that the adoption was procedurally flawed, it maintained the substance of the decision; a further decision, adapted in the light of the jurisprudence, was rapidly adopted by the Council of Ministers.[citation needed]

Adoption and growth

The programme built on the 1981–1986 pilot student exchanges, and although it was formally adopted only shortly before the beginning of the academic year 1987–1988, it was still possible for 3,244 students to participate in Erasmus in its first year. In 2006, over 150,000 students, or almost 1% of the European student population, took part. The proportion is higher among university teachers, where Erasmus teacher mobility is 1.9% of the teacher population in Europe, or 20,877 people.[citation needed]

From 1987 to 2006, over two million students[9] benefited from Erasmus grants, and the European Commission aimed to reach a total of 3 million by 2012.[citation needed] In 2004 Erasmus Programme was awarded the Princess of Asturias Award for International Cooperation.

Lifelong Learning Programme 2007–2013

After 2007, the Lifelong Learning Programme 2007–2013 replaced the Socrates programme as the overall umbrella under which the Erasmus (and other) programmes operated.

Erasmus Mundus

The Erasmus Mundus programme is a parallel programme oriented towards globalising European education and is open to non-Europeans with Europeans being exceptional cases.

Citizens' initiative for more money 2014–2020

In May 2012,[10] Fraternité 2020 was registered as Europe's first European Citizens' Initiative and a goal to increase the budget for EU exchange programmes like Erasmus or the European Voluntary Service starting in 2014. It ultimately collected only 71,057 signatures from citizens across the EU out of 1 million signatures needed by 1 November 2013.[11]

Erasmus+ 2014–2020

Erasmus+ also called Erasmus Plus, has been the new 14.7 billion euro catch-all framework programme for education, training, youth and sport from 2014 to 2020.[12] The Erasmus+ programme combined all the EU's schemes for education, training, youth and sport, including the Lifelong Learning Programme (Erasmus, Leonardo da Vinci, Comenius, Grundtvig), Youth in Action and five international co-operation programmes (Erasmus Mundus, Tempus, Alfa, Edulink and the programme for co-operation with industrialised countries). The Erasmus+ regulation[13] was signed on 11 December 2013.[14]

Erasmus+ provided grants for a wide range of actions including the opportunity for students to undertake work placements abroad and for teachers and education staff to attend training courses. Projects are divided into two parts – formal and non-formal education – each of them with three key actions. Erasmus+ key action one provides a unique opportunity for teachers, headmasters, trainers and other staff of education institutions to participate in international training courses in different European countries.[15]

The staff home institution must apply to receive the grant to send its staff members abroad for training.[16]

Erasmus+ conducted projects in Central Asia's Kazakhstan, funding 40 projects involving 47 Kazach universities with more than 35.5 million euros.[17]

Erasmus+ Programme 2021–2027

On 30 May 2018, the European Commission adopted its proposal for the next Erasmus programme, with a doubling of the budget to 30 billion euros for the period 2021–2027.[18] Further negotiations were expected to take place during the 2019–2024 European parliamentary term with the European Parliament and the European Council before the final programme is adopted.[19] The agreement between the European Parliament and the European Council was adopted and the publication of the new regulation 2021/817 establishing the new Erasmus+ programme was made on 28 May 2021.[20]

With Brexit, the UK government decision not to participate in Erasmus meant UK students lost access to the Erasmus programme and EU students lost access to UK universities, despite some Conservatives such as Suella Braverman having benefitted from it and promises made by then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson that "There is no threat to the ERASMUS scheme."[21][22]

Participation

More than 9 million people have participated in the Erasmus programme since its creation. The number of young participants has increased significantly since 1987. Nearly 300,000 a year[when?] compared with only 3,244 in 1987. Spain is the country that has allowed most people to participate in Erasmus with more than 40,000 per year, slightly ahead of France, Germany and Italy. The countries receiving the most Erasmus students are Spain with more than 47,000 students and then Germany with 32,800.[23] There are currently more than 4,000 higher institutions participating in Erasmus across the 37 countries. In 2012–13, 270,000 took part, the most popular destinations being Spain, Germany, Italy and France.[24] Erasmus students represented 5 percent of European graduates as of 2012.[25]

Studies have discussed issues related to the selection into the programme and the representativeness of the participants. Some studies have raised doubts about the inclusiveness of the programme, by socio-economic background, level of study, or academic performance. Thus, one study analyses the financial issues and family background of Erasmus students, showing that despite the fact that access to the programme has been moderately widened, there are still important socio-economic barriers to participation in the programme.[26] Another study uncovered what seems to be an adverse self-selection of Erasmus students based on their prior academic performance, with higher-performing students less likely to participate than lower-performing ones. However, this case was based on a number of four hundred graduates in a Spanish university only.[27] Inversely, one study looking in details at French and Italian students found that the primary predictor of participation to Erasmus was students' prior academic records, not the occupation of their parents.[28]

Requirements

The Erasmus Programme had previously been restricted to applicants who had completed at least one year of tertiary-level study, but it is now also available to secondary school students.

Details

Students who join the Erasmus Programme study at least three months or do an internship for a period of at least 2 months to an academic year in another European country. The former case is called a Student Mobility for Studies or SMS, while the latter case is called a Student Mobility of Placement or SMP.[29][30] The Erasmus Programme guarantees that the period spent abroad is recognised by their university when they come back, as long as they abide by terms previously agreed. Switzerland has been suspended as a participant in the Erasmus programme as of 2015, following the popular vote to limit the immigration of EU citizens into Switzerland. As a consequence, Swiss students will not be able to apply for the programme and European students will not be able to spend time at a Swiss university under that programme.[31]

A main part of the programme is that students do not pay extra tuition fees to the university that they visit. Students can also apply for an Erasmus grant to help cover the additional expense of living abroad. Students with disabilities can apply for an additional grant to cover extraordinary expenses.

In order to reduce expenses and increase mobility, many students also use the European Commission-supported accommodation network, CasaSwap, FlatClub, Erasmusinn, Eurasmus,[32] Erasmate or Student Mundial, which are free websites where students and young people can rent, sublet, offer and swap accommodation – on a national and international basis. A derived benefit is that students can share knowledge and exchange tips and hints with each other before and after going abroad.

The "Erasmus experience"

Cultural impact

For many European students, the Erasmus Programme is their first time living and studying in another country. Hence, it has become a cultural phenomenon[according to whom?] and is popular among European students, going on to become the subject of movies such as the French-Spanish film L'Auberge espagnole, and the documentary Erasmus 24 7.[33]

The programme fosters learning and understanding of the host country, and the Erasmus experience is considered both a time for learning as well as a chance to socialize and experience a different culture.

Tutors are often keen for students of subjects such as politics or international relations to participate in Erasmus. It is seen as a great opportunity to study abroad while not having the expense of studying outside the European Union, since the grants available to Erasmus students are not available to those opting to leave the Union to study.

The Erasmus generation

Some academics have speculated that former Erasmus students will prove to be a powerful force in creating a pan-European identity. In 2005, the political scientist Stefan Wolff, for example, has argued that "Give it 15, 20 or 25 years, and Europe will be run by leaders with a completely different socialisation from those of today", referring to the so-called 'Erasmus generation'.[34] This term describes young Europeans who participate in Erasmus programme and are assumed to support European integration more actively when compared with their elder generations.[35] The assumption is that young Europeans, who enjoyed the benefits of European integration, think of themselves as European citizens, and therefore create a base of support for further European integration. However, questions are raised about whether there is positive correlation between the programme and pro-European integration.[36]

According to the former European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Youth and Sport, Tibor Navracsics, Erasmus programme is a soft power tool and it reflects the political motivation behind its creation,[37] including the task of legitimising the European institutions. This conception has already presented in the project of Sofia Corradi, an Italian educationalist creator of the Erasmus Programme. She gives a particular attention to the need to activate an exchange between young people from all over Europe to contribute to the strengthening of its unity and integrity.[38]

One issue discussed is whether participation in the Erasmus programma helps generate more European solidarity. A study carried out by the European Commission in 2010, shows that participating to Erasmus strengthens tolerance. Another issue is whether Erasmus enables the mixing of Europeans.[39] For example, more than a quarter of Erasmus participants meet their life partner through it and participation in Erasmus encourages mobility between European countries.[40] Umberto Eco called it sexual integration.[41] The European Commission estimates that the program has resulted directly in the births of over 1 million children, sometimes called "Erasmus Babies".[42]

As to whether Erasmus fosters a sense of European identity the results are mixed. Some research indicates that those participating in Erasmus exchanges are already significantly predisposed to be pro-European,[43][44] leading some scholars to conclude that such exchange programmes are 'preaching to the converted'.[45] However, more recent research has critised the earlier findings for being methodically flawed, relying primarily on the experience of British students and for using relatively small samples. Relying on a larger scale survey conducted on some 1700 students in six countries, Mitchell found that 'participation in an Erasmus exchange is significantly and positively related to changes in both identification as European and identification with Europe'.[46] In addition, it has also been submitted that the earlier literature confused cause and effect, since the existence of such programmes constitutes a tangible benefit provided by the EU to prospective students interested in going abroad, which may cause them to view the EU positively even prior to participation.[47]

In popular culture

Film

Most of the characters in the movie L'Auberge Espagnole are enrolled in the Erasmus programme and the programme plays a central role in the plot.[citation needed]

Books

Pakistani novelist Nimra Ahmed's novel Jannat K Patte (Leaves of Heaven) is based on the Erasmus programme, where the protagonist Haya goes to Sabancı University Turkey through Erasmus Mundus, which marks a turning point in her life.[48]

In the story set in 1997 in Slade House, students on Erasmus programme appear.

In the novel Normal People and its subsequent adaptation, Marianne goes to Sweden via the Erasmus programme.

Cafébabel

The online public forum Cafébabel was founded in 2001 by Erasmus exchange programme students, and is headquartered in Paris. The forum is based on the principle of participatory journalism. As of June 2020 it had over 15,000 contributors as well as a team of professional editors and journalists in Paris, Brussels, Rome, Madrid and Berlin.[49] Volunteer contributors simultaneously translate the forum into six languages – French, English, German, Italian, Spanish and Polish.[50]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on 4 April 2013.
  2. ^ Council decision, OJ L 166, 25 June 1987
  3. ^ "EUR-Lex - 31987D0327 - DE - EUR-Lex". from the original on 17 October 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  4. ^ "Higher education institutions holding an ECHE - 2021-2027".
  5. ^ Huizinga, Johan (1924). Erasmus and the Age of Reformation. London: Phaidon Press, Ltd.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 May 2021. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
  7. ^ L'impact du Comité Adonnino (1984-1986): Rapprocher les Communautés Européennes des Citoyens, Nathalie Tousignant, Etudes Internationales, vol. 36, 1 maart 2005, Erudit
  8. ^ Session du Conseil Européen, Milan 28 et 29 juin 1985, Conclusions des Sessions du Conseil Européen (1975-1990), 240-245.
  9. ^ Ec.europa.eu 11 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Table: Erasmus student mobility (number of outgoing students): 1987/88-2006/07
  10. ^ "Open initiatives - European Citizens' Initiative - European Commission". ec.europa.eu. from the original on 6 July 2014.
  11. ^ Simona Pronckutė (1 November 2013). "European Citizens Initiatives – one year of challenges". EuropeanPublicAffairs.eu. from the original on 18 May 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  12. ^ "Green light for Erasmus+: More than 4 million to get EU grants for skills and employability". European Commission. from the original on 22 January 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  13. ^ Regulation (EU) No 1288/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2013 establishing 'Erasmus+': the Union programme for education, training, youth and sport and repealing Decisions No 1719/2006/EC, No 1720/2006/EC and No 1298/2008/EC Text with EEA relevance 4 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "Procedure File: 2011/0371(COD) - Legislative Observatory - European Parliament". www.europarl.europa.eu. from the original on 23 June 2017.
  15. ^ Anonymous (7 October 2016). "How to read the Programme Guide". Erasmus+ - European Commission. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  16. ^ "Erasmus Plus Funding for Teacher Training Courses | Erasmus+ KA1". TEACHER TRAINING. from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  17. ^ "Kazakh universities take part in European projects: Erasmus+ Projects Fair opened at the Eurasian National University". eeas.europa.eu.
  18. ^ "Commission adopts proposal for the next Erasmus programme 2021–2027". European Commission. 30 May 2018. Retrieved 8 December 2018.
  19. ^ Benakis, Theodoros (28 March 2019). "Erasmus+ 2021–2027: Budget tripled for the 2021–2027 period". European Interest. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  20. ^ "EUR-Lex - 32021R0817 - EN - EUR-Lex". eur-lex.europa.eu. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  21. ^ "Prime minister denies threat to Erasmus scheme".
  22. ^ Adams, Richard (24 December 2020). "UK students lose Erasmus membership in Brexit deal". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  23. ^ "Spain: The most popular Erasmus destination".
  24. ^ "Press release--Another record-breaking year for Erasmus". from the original on 20 September 2014.
  25. ^ "Erasmus students as a proportion of graduates in 2012, page 35" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 5 March 2016.
  26. ^ Otero, Manuel Souto (12 February 2008). "The Socio-Economic Background of Erasmus Students: A Trend Towards Wider Inclusion?" (PDF). International Review of Education. 54 (2): 135–154. Bibcode:2008IREdu..54..135O. doi:10.1007/s11159-007-9081-9. ISSN 0020-8566. S2CID 40096930.
  27. ^ Varela, Diego (5 May 2016). "Grade uncertainty and the adverse selection of Erasmus students: a Spanish experience". Journal of Contemporary European Research. 12 (2). doi:10.30950/jcer.v12i2.697. ISSN 1815-347X. S2CID 156295309. from the original on 29 May 2016.
  28. ^ Di Pietro, Giorgio (20 August 2008). "Who Studies Abroad? Evidence from France and Italy". European Journal of Education. 43 (3): 389–398. doi:10.1111/j.1465-3435.2008.00355.x. ISSN 1465-3435.
  29. ^ IUZ, Admin. "Erasmus+ | Outgoing | International Office | TU Chemnitz". www.tu-chemnitz.de. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  30. ^ . associatie.kuleuven.be. Archived from the original on 12 May 2019. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  31. ^ "Swiss students out of Erasmus program starting in 2015". from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 November 2014. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  33. ^ "Erasmus 24_7 Official Website". from the original on 4 May 2014.
  34. ^ Bennhold, Katrin (26 April 2005). "Quietly sprouting: A European identity". The New York Times. from the original on 27 July 2017. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
  35. ^ Iain Wilson, What should we Expect of ‘Erasmus Generations’, Journal of Common Market Studies, Vol.49, No.5, p.1114
  36. ^ Feyen, B. The Making of a Success Story: the Creation of the programme in the Historical Context. in B. Feyen & Krzaklewska (eds.), The Erasmus Phenomenon-Symbol of a New European Generation?(p.22)
  37. ^ "Europe's 'soft power': EU Commissioner Tibor Navracsics on European identity". France 24. 18 December 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  38. ^ Corradi, Sofia (2015). Student mobility in higher education Erasmus and Erasmus plus. Rome: Laboratorio di educazione permanente, Dipartimento di scienze della formazione, Università degli Studi Statale Roma tre. pp. 19–21. ISBN 9788890527326.
  39. ^ "In the spotlight: Erasmus+ brings people together". European Commission. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  40. ^ European Commission (2014). The Erasmus impact study: effects of mobility on the skills and employability of students and the internationalisation of higher education institutions (PDF). European Union. pp. 14, 70. ISBN 978-92-79-38380-9.
  41. ^ Riotta, Gianni. "Umberto Eco: 'It's culture, not war, that cements European identity'".
  42. ^ "'You Wouldn't Exist Without Europe': The Erasmus Baby Phenomenon". University Times.
  43. ^ Wilson, I. (2011). "What Should we Expect of 'Erasmus Generations'?" (PDF). JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies. 49 (5): 1113–1140. doi:10.1111/j.1468-5965.2010.02158.x. hdl:20.500.11820/f3b95d45-89dd-445a-b20f-d038b3760bb0. S2CID 152860534.
  44. ^ Sigalas, Emmanuel (2010). "Cross-border mobility and European identity: The effectiveness of intergroup contact during the ERASMUS year abroad". European Union Politics. 11 (2): 241–265. doi:10.1177/1465116510363656. ISSN 1465-1165. S2CID 145366910.
  45. ^ Kuhn, Theresa (2012). "Why Educational Exchange Programmes Miss Their Mark: Cross-Border Mobility, Education and European Identity*: Why educational exchange programmes miss their mark". JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies. 50 (6): 994–1010. doi:10.1111/j.1468-5965.2012.02286.x. S2CID 154731420.
  46. ^ Mitchell, Kristine (2015). "Rethinking the 'Erasmus Effect' on European Identity: Rethinking the 'Erasmus effect' on European identity". JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies. 53 (2): 330–348. doi:10.1111/jcms.12152. S2CID 55156492.
  47. ^ Hoogenboom, Alexander (2017). Balancing student mobility rights and national higher education : autonomy in the European Union. Leiden. pp. 72–75. ISBN 978-90-04-34445-7. OCLC 995162537.
  48. ^ "Online novels by Nimra Ahmed". from the original on 31 August 2015.
  49. ^ "Cafébabel. About us". Cafébabel. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  50. ^ "Cafébabel, the first European media". European Commission. 16 July 2013. from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 24 September 2015.

Further reading

  • Benjamin Feyen/Ewa Krzaklewska (eds.): "The ERASMUS Phenomenon - Symbol of a New European Generation?" Peter Lang Publishing, 2013, ISBN 978-3-631-62719-8

External links

  • Erasmus website of the European Commission
  • Cafébabel
  • Erasmus Student Network

erasmus, programme, european, community, action, scheme, mobility, university, students, european, union, student, exchange, programme, established, 1987, erasmus, erasmus, plus, programme, combining, current, schemes, education, training, youth, sport, which,. The Erasmus Programme EuRopean Community Action Scheme for the Mobility of University Students 1 is a European Union EU student exchange programme established in 1987 2 3 Erasmus or Erasmus Plus is the new programme combining all the EU s current schemes for education training youth and sport which was started in January 2014 Logo of the Erasmus Programme showing the programme s namesake of Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam In 1989 the Erasmus Bureau invited 32 former Erasmus students for an evaluation meeting in Ghent Belgium The lack of peer to peer support was singled out as a major issue but it was also a driving force behind the creation of the Erasmus Student Network The organization supports students from Erasmus programme and other bilateral agreement and cooperates with national agencies in order to help international students As of 23 July 2020 the Erasmus Student Network consists of 534 local associations sections in 42 countries and has more than 15 000 volunteers across Europe As of 2014 27 years after its creation the programme has promoted the mobility of more than 3 3 million students within the European community More than 5 000 higher education institutions from 38 countries are participating in the project 4 The Erasmus Programme together with a number of other independent programmes was incorporated into the Socrates programme established by the European Commission in 1994 The Socrates programme ended on 31 December 1999 and was replaced with the Socrates II programme on 24 January 2000 which in turn was replaced by the Lifelong Learning Programme 2007 2013 on 1 January 2007 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins of the name 1 2 1987 European Commission proposal 1 3 European Court of Justice decision 1 4 Adoption and growth 1 5 Lifelong Learning Programme 2007 2013 1 6 Erasmus Mundus 1 7 Citizens initiative for more money 2014 2020 1 8 Erasmus 2014 2020 1 9 Erasmus Programme 2021 2027 2 Participation 2 1 Requirements 2 2 Details 3 The Erasmus experience 3 1 Cultural impact 4 The Erasmus generation 5 In popular culture 5 1 Film 5 2 Books 5 3 Cafebabel 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditOrigins of the name Edit Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam The programme is named after the Dutch philosopher theologian Renaissance Humanist monk and devout Roman Catholic Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam called the crowning glory of the Christian humanists 1 Erasmus along with his good friend Thomas More became one of the main figures of European intellectual life during the Renaissance Known for his satire Erasmus urged internal reform of the Catholic Church He encouraged a recovery of the Catholic Patristic tradition against what he considered to be contemporary abuses of the Sacraments and certain excessive devotional practices He famously clashed with Protestant revolutionary Martin Luther on the subject of free will ERASMUS is a backronym meaning European Community Action Scheme for the Mobility of University Students 1 Erasmus travelled widely across Europe and he was a pioneer of the European Republic of Letters He was one of the first intellectuals to use as a vehicle of diffusion of his ideas a path breaking technology namely the movable type and spent a lot of his time inside printing workshops 5 The idea of promoting cultural social and academic exchanges between European students originated in 1969 with Italian Sofia Corradi nicknamed Mamma Erasmus an educator and scientific consultant for the permanent conference of Italian university rectors Her role allowed her to raise awareness about this idea and make it known in the academic and institutional spheres 6 The project was born after an initiative of the EGEE student association now AEGEE founded by Franck Biancheri who later became president of the trans European movement Newropeans which in 1986 1987 convinced French president Francois Mitterrand to support the creation of the Erasmus programme This active collaboration between AEGEE and the European Commission and especially Domenico Lenarduzzi Ministry of Public Education allowed the approval of the Erasmus programme in 1987 It became an integral part of the Socrates I 1994 1999 and Socrates II 2000 2006 programmes From 2007 it became one of the elements of the Lifelong Learning Programme 2007 2013 In June 1984 the European Council decided in Fontainebleau to establish an ad hoc European citizens committee with the mission to make proposals in order to improve the image of the European Union Each council member would select a member and together they should present a set of proposals to be approved at a future European Council Under the chairmanship of Pietro Adonnino the committee presented two successive reports 7 that were approved at the Council session in Milano on the 28 29 of June 1985 8 Under the proposals that were advanced in these reports was the suggestion to be found in the second report from number 5 6 University Cooperation that the ministers for education and universities and higher education establishments should establish a cross frontier cooperation enabling students to pursue part of their studies in an establishment in a member state other than their own should implement a comprehensive European inter university programme of exchanges and studies aimed at giving this opportunity to a significant section of the EU s student population These suggestions were advanced by the Belgian member Prosper Thuysbaert and were discussed and approved by the committee citation needed 1987 European Commission proposal Edit By the time the Erasmus Programme was adopted in June 1987 the European Commission had been supporting pilot student exchanges for six years It proposed the original Erasmus Programme in early 1986 but reaction from the then member states varied those with substantial exchange programmes of their own essentially France Germany and the United Kingdom were broadly hostile citation needed the remaining countries were broadly in favour Exchanges between the member states and the European Commission deteriorated and the latter withdrew the proposal in early 1987 to protest against the inadequacy of the triennial budget proposed by some member states 1 European Court of Justice decision Edit This method of voting a simple majority was not accepted by some of the opposing member states who challenged the adoption of the decision before the European Court of Justice Although the court held that the adoption was procedurally flawed it maintained the substance of the decision a further decision adapted in the light of the jurisprudence was rapidly adopted by the Council of Ministers citation needed Adoption and growth Edit The programme built on the 1981 1986 pilot student exchanges and although it was formally adopted only shortly before the beginning of the academic year 1987 1988 it was still possible for 3 244 students to participate in Erasmus in its first year In 2006 over 150 000 students or almost 1 of the European student population took part The proportion is higher among university teachers where Erasmus teacher mobility is 1 9 of the teacher population in Europe or 20 877 people citation needed From 1987 to 2006 over two million students 9 benefited from Erasmus grants and the European Commission aimed to reach a total of 3 million by 2012 citation needed In 2004 Erasmus Programme was awarded the Princess of Asturias Award for International Cooperation Lifelong Learning Programme 2007 2013 Edit After 2007 the Lifelong Learning Programme 2007 2013 replaced the Socrates programme as the overall umbrella under which the Erasmus and other programmes operated Erasmus Mundus Edit Main article Erasmus Mundus The Erasmus Mundus programme is a parallel programme oriented towards globalising European education and is open to non Europeans with Europeans being exceptional cases Citizens initiative for more money 2014 2020 Edit In May 2012 10 Fraternite 2020 was registered as Europe s first European Citizens Initiative and a goal to increase the budget for EU exchange programmes like Erasmus or the European Voluntary Service starting in 2014 It ultimately collected only 71 057 signatures from citizens across the EU out of 1 million signatures needed by 1 November 2013 11 Erasmus 2014 2020 Edit Erasmus also called Erasmus Plus has been the new 14 7 billion euro catch all framework programme for education training youth and sport from 2014 to 2020 12 The Erasmus programme combined all the EU s schemes for education training youth and sport including the Lifelong Learning Programme Erasmus Leonardo da Vinci Comenius Grundtvig Youth in Action and five international co operation programmes Erasmus Mundus Tempus Alfa Edulink and the programme for co operation with industrialised countries The Erasmus regulation 13 was signed on 11 December 2013 14 Erasmus provided grants for a wide range of actions including the opportunity for students to undertake work placements abroad and for teachers and education staff to attend training courses Projects are divided into two parts formal and non formal education each of them with three key actions Erasmus key action one provides a unique opportunity for teachers headmasters trainers and other staff of education institutions to participate in international training courses in different European countries 15 The staff home institution must apply to receive the grant to send its staff members abroad for training 16 Erasmus conducted projects in Central Asia s Kazakhstan funding 40 projects involving 47 Kazach universities with more than 35 5 million euros 17 Erasmus Programme 2021 2027 Edit On 30 May 2018 the European Commission adopted its proposal for the next Erasmus programme with a doubling of the budget to 30 billion euros for the period 2021 2027 18 Further negotiations were expected to take place during the 2019 2024 European parliamentary term with the European Parliament and the European Council before the final programme is adopted 19 The agreement between the European Parliament and the European Council was adopted and the publication of the new regulation 2021 817 establishing the new Erasmus programme was made on 28 May 2021 20 With Brexit the UK government decision not to participate in Erasmus meant UK students lost access to the Erasmus programme and EU students lost access to UK universities despite some Conservatives such as Suella Braverman having benefitted from it and promises made by then Prime Minister Boris Johnson that There is no threat to the ERASMUS scheme 21 22 Participation EditMore than 9 million people have participated in the Erasmus programme since its creation The number of young participants has increased significantly since 1987 Nearly 300 000 a year when compared with only 3 244 in 1987 Spain is the country that has allowed most people to participate in Erasmus with more than 40 000 per year slightly ahead of France Germany and Italy The countries receiving the most Erasmus students are Spain with more than 47 000 students and then Germany with 32 800 23 There are currently more than 4 000 higher institutions participating in Erasmus across the 37 countries In 2012 13 270 000 took part the most popular destinations being Spain Germany Italy and France 24 Erasmus students represented 5 percent of European graduates as of 2012 25 Studies have discussed issues related to the selection into the programme and the representativeness of the participants Some studies have raised doubts about the inclusiveness of the programme by socio economic background level of study or academic performance Thus one study analyses the financial issues and family background of Erasmus students showing that despite the fact that access to the programme has been moderately widened there are still important socio economic barriers to participation in the programme 26 Another study uncovered what seems to be an adverse self selection of Erasmus students based on their prior academic performance with higher performing students less likely to participate than lower performing ones However this case was based on a number of four hundred graduates in a Spanish university only 27 Inversely one study looking in details at French and Italian students found that the primary predictor of participation to Erasmus was students prior academic records not the occupation of their parents 28 Requirements Edit The Erasmus Programme had previously been restricted to applicants who had completed at least one year of tertiary level study but it is now also available to secondary school students Details Edit Students who join the Erasmus Programme study at least three months or do an internship for a period of at least 2 months to an academic year in another European country The former case is called a Student Mobility for Studies or SMS while the latter case is called a Student Mobility of Placement or SMP 29 30 The Erasmus Programme guarantees that the period spent abroad is recognised by their university when they come back as long as they abide by terms previously agreed Switzerland has been suspended as a participant in the Erasmus programme as of 2015 following the popular vote to limit the immigration of EU citizens into Switzerland As a consequence Swiss students will not be able to apply for the programme and European students will not be able to spend time at a Swiss university under that programme 31 A main part of the programme is that students do not pay extra tuition fees to the university that they visit Students can also apply for an Erasmus grant to help cover the additional expense of living abroad Students with disabilities can apply for an additional grant to cover extraordinary expenses In order to reduce expenses and increase mobility many students also use the European Commission supported accommodation network CasaSwap FlatClub Erasmusinn Eurasmus 32 Erasmate or Student Mundial which are free websites where students and young people can rent sublet offer and swap accommodation on a national and international basis A derived benefit is that students can share knowledge and exchange tips and hints with each other before and after going abroad The Erasmus experience EditCultural impact Edit For many European students the Erasmus Programme is their first time living and studying in another country Hence it has become a cultural phenomenon according to whom and is popular among European students going on to become the subject of movies such as the French Spanish film L Auberge espagnole and the documentary Erasmus 24 7 33 The programme fosters learning and understanding of the host country and the Erasmus experience is considered both a time for learning as well as a chance to socialize and experience a different culture Tutors are often keen for students of subjects such as politics or international relations to participate in Erasmus It is seen as a great opportunity to study abroad while not having the expense of studying outside the European Union since the grants available to Erasmus students are not available to those opting to leave the Union to study The Erasmus generation EditSome academics have speculated that former Erasmus students will prove to be a powerful force in creating a pan European identity In 2005 the political scientist Stefan Wolff for example has argued that Give it 15 20 or 25 years and Europe will be run by leaders with a completely different socialisation from those of today referring to the so called Erasmus generation 34 This term describes young Europeans who participate in Erasmus programme and are assumed to support European integration more actively when compared with their elder generations 35 The assumption is that young Europeans who enjoyed the benefits of European integration think of themselves as European citizens and therefore create a base of support for further European integration However questions are raised about whether there is positive correlation between the programme and pro European integration 36 According to the former European Commissioner for Education Culture Youth and Sport Tibor Navracsics Erasmus programme is a soft power tool and it reflects the political motivation behind its creation 37 including the task of legitimising the European institutions This conception has already presented in the project of Sofia Corradi an Italian educationalist creator of the Erasmus Programme She gives a particular attention to the need to activate an exchange between young people from all over Europe to contribute to the strengthening of its unity and integrity 38 One issue discussed is whether participation in the Erasmus programma helps generate more European solidarity A study carried out by the European Commission in 2010 shows that participating to Erasmus strengthens tolerance Another issue is whether Erasmus enables the mixing of Europeans 39 For example more than a quarter of Erasmus participants meet their life partner through it and participation in Erasmus encourages mobility between European countries 40 Umberto Eco called it sexual integration 41 The European Commission estimates that the program has resulted directly in the births of over 1 million children sometimes called Erasmus Babies 42 As to whether Erasmus fosters a sense of European identity the results are mixed Some research indicates that those participating in Erasmus exchanges are already significantly predisposed to be pro European 43 44 leading some scholars to conclude that such exchange programmes are preaching to the converted 45 However more recent research has critised the earlier findings for being methodically flawed relying primarily on the experience of British students and for using relatively small samples Relying on a larger scale survey conducted on some 1700 students in six countries Mitchell found that participation in an Erasmus exchange is significantly and positively related to changes in both identification as European and identification with Europe 46 In addition it has also been submitted that the earlier literature confused cause and effect since the existence of such programmes constitutes a tangible benefit provided by the EU to prospective students interested in going abroad which may cause them to view the EU positively even prior to participation 47 In popular culture EditFilm Edit Most of the characters in the movie L Auberge Espagnole are enrolled in the Erasmus programme and the programme plays a central role in the plot citation needed Books Edit Pakistani novelist Nimra Ahmed s novel Jannat K Patte Leaves of Heaven is based on the Erasmus programme where the protagonist Haya goes to Sabanci University Turkey through Erasmus Mundus which marks a turning point in her life 48 In the story set in 1997 in Slade House students on Erasmus programme appear In the novel Normal People and its subsequent adaptation Marianne goes to Sweden via the Erasmus programme Cafebabel Edit The online public forum Cafebabel was founded in 2001 by Erasmus exchange programme students and is headquartered in Paris The forum is based on the principle of participatory journalism As of June 2020 it had over 15 000 contributors as well as a team of professional editors and journalists in Paris Brussels Rome Madrid and Berlin 49 Volunteer contributors simultaneously translate the forum into six languages French English German Italian Spanish and Polish 50 See also EditAcademic mobility Comenius programme Erasmus Student Network ESN non profit European students organisation Erasmus Student Accommodation Association des Etats Generaux des Etudiants de l Europe AEGEE non profit European students organisation European Students Union ESU non profit European students organisation European Medical Students Association EMSA non profit European medical students organisation European Students of Industrial Engineering and Management ESTIEM non profit European students organisation European Credit Transfer System ECTS European Higher Education Area Socrates Network for Translator Training University Mobility in Asia and the Pacific Student exchange programme Public diplomacy Enhancing Student Mobility through Online Support Erasmus Housing INTEgrated REporting for SMEs Transparency the INTEREST project supported by the ERASMUS programme of the European Union References Edit a b c d What s in a name History of the Erasmus Programme Archived from the original on 4 April 2013 Council decision OJ L 166 25 June 1987 EUR Lex 31987D0327 DE EUR Lex Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Retrieved 17 October 2017 Higher education institutions holding an ECHE 2021 2027 Huizinga Johan 1924 Erasmus and the Age of Reformation London Phaidon Press Ltd Sofia Corradi Mamma Erasmus Archived from the original on 25 May 2021 Retrieved 17 September 2019 L impact du Comite Adonnino 1984 1986 Rapprocher les Communautes Europeennes des Citoyens Nathalie Tousignant Etudes Internationales vol 36 1 maart 2005 Erudit Session du Conseil Europeen Milan 28 et 29 juin 1985 Conclusions des Sessions du Conseil Europeen 1975 1990 240 245 Ec europa eu Archived 11 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Table Erasmus student mobility number of outgoing students 1987 88 2006 07 Open initiatives European Citizens Initiative European Commission ec europa eu Archived from the original on 6 July 2014 Simona Pronckute 1 November 2013 European Citizens Initiatives one year of challenges EuropeanPublicAffairs eu Archived from the original on 18 May 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2014 Green light for Erasmus More than 4 million to get EU grants for skills and employability European Commission Archived from the original on 22 January 2015 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Regulation EU No 1288 2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2013 establishing Erasmus the Union programme for education training youth and sport and repealing Decisions No 1719 2006 EC No 1720 2006 EC and No 1298 2008 EC Text with EEA relevance Archived 4 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Procedure File 2011 0371 COD Legislative Observatory European Parliament www europarl europa eu Archived from the original on 23 June 2017 Anonymous 7 October 2016 How to read the Programme Guide Erasmus European Commission Retrieved 5 December 2019 Erasmus Plus Funding for Teacher Training Courses Erasmus KA1 TEACHER TRAINING Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 4 November 2017 Kazakh universities take part in European projects Erasmus Projects Fair opened at the Eurasian National University eeas europa eu Commission adopts proposal for the next Erasmus programme 2021 2027 European Commission 30 May 2018 Retrieved 8 December 2018 Benakis Theodoros 28 March 2019 Erasmus 2021 2027 Budget tripled for the 2021 2027 period European Interest Retrieved 24 June 2019 EUR Lex 32021R0817 EN EUR Lex eur lex europa eu Retrieved 16 January 2022 Prime minister denies threat to Erasmus scheme Adams Richard 24 December 2020 UK students lose Erasmus membership in Brexit deal The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 27 December 2020 Spain The most popular Erasmus destination Press release Another record breaking year for Erasmus Archived from the original on 20 September 2014 Erasmus students as a proportion of graduates in 2012 page 35 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 5 March 2016 Otero Manuel Souto 12 February 2008 The Socio Economic Background of Erasmus Students A Trend Towards Wider Inclusion PDF International Review of Education 54 2 135 154 Bibcode 2008IREdu 54 135O doi 10 1007 s11159 007 9081 9 ISSN 0020 8566 S2CID 40096930 Varela Diego 5 May 2016 Grade uncertainty and the adverse selection of Erasmus students a Spanish experience Journal of Contemporary European Research 12 2 doi 10 30950 jcer v12i2 697 ISSN 1815 347X S2CID 156295309 Archived from the original on 29 May 2016 Di Pietro Giorgio 20 August 2008 Who Studies Abroad Evidence from France and Italy European Journal of Education 43 3 389 398 doi 10 1111 j 1465 3435 2008 00355 x ISSN 1465 3435 IUZ Admin Erasmus Outgoing International Office TU Chemnitz www tu chemnitz de Retrieved 2 August 2019 What administration do I have to do before departure ISBI associatie kuleuven be Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 2 August 2019 Swiss students out of Erasmus program starting in 2015 Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Student rooms and accommodation internships and erasmus guides Archived from the original on 5 November 2014 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Erasmus 24 7 Official Website Archived from the original on 4 May 2014 Bennhold Katrin 26 April 2005 Quietly sprouting A European identity The New York Times Archived from the original on 27 July 2017 Retrieved 24 January 2019 Iain Wilson What should we Expect of Erasmus Generations Journal of Common Market Studies Vol 49 No 5 p 1114 Feyen B The Making of a Success Story the Creation of the programme in the Historical Context in B Feyen amp Krzaklewska eds The Erasmus Phenomenon Symbol of a New European Generation p 22 Europe s soft power EU Commissioner Tibor Navracsics on European identity France 24 18 December 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2019 Corradi Sofia 2015 Student mobility in higher education Erasmus and Erasmus plus Rome Laboratorio di educazione permanente Dipartimento di scienze della formazione Universita degli Studi Statale Roma tre pp 19 21 ISBN 9788890527326 In the spotlight Erasmus brings people together European Commission Retrieved 13 May 2019 European Commission 2014 The Erasmus impact study effects of mobility on the skills and employability of students and the internationalisation of higher education institutions PDF European Union pp 14 70 ISBN 978 92 79 38380 9 Riotta Gianni Umberto Eco It s culture not war that cements European identity You Wouldn t Exist Without Europe The Erasmus Baby Phenomenon University Times Wilson I 2011 What Should we Expect of Erasmus Generations PDF JCMS Journal of Common Market Studies 49 5 1113 1140 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5965 2010 02158 x hdl 20 500 11820 f3b95d45 89dd 445a b20f d038b3760bb0 S2CID 152860534 Sigalas Emmanuel 2010 Cross border mobility and European identity The effectiveness of intergroup contact during the ERASMUS year abroad European Union Politics 11 2 241 265 doi 10 1177 1465116510363656 ISSN 1465 1165 S2CID 145366910 Kuhn Theresa 2012 Why Educational Exchange Programmes Miss Their Mark Cross Border Mobility Education and European Identity Why educational exchange programmes miss their mark JCMS Journal of Common Market Studies 50 6 994 1010 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5965 2012 02286 x S2CID 154731420 Mitchell Kristine 2015 Rethinking the Erasmus Effect on European Identity Rethinking the Erasmus effect on European identity JCMS Journal of Common Market Studies 53 2 330 348 doi 10 1111 jcms 12152 S2CID 55156492 Hoogenboom Alexander 2017 Balancing student mobility rights and national higher education autonomy in the European Union Leiden pp 72 75 ISBN 978 90 04 34445 7 OCLC 995162537 Online novels by Nimra Ahmed Archived from the original on 31 August 2015 Cafebabel About us Cafebabel Retrieved 25 June 2020 Cafebabel the first European media European Commission 16 July 2013 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 24 September 2015 Further reading EditBenjamin Feyen Ewa Krzaklewska eds The ERASMUS Phenomenon Symbol of a New European Generation Peter Lang Publishing 2013 ISBN 978 3 631 62719 8External links EditErasmus website of the European Commission Cafebabel Erasmus Student Network Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erasmus Programme amp oldid 1149780324, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.