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Qualifications framework

A qualifications framework is a formalized structure in which learning level descriptors and qualifications are used in order to understand learning outcomes.[1] This allows for the ability to develop, assess and improve quality education in a number of contexts. Qualifications frameworks are typically found at the national, regional, and international level.[2]

History edit

The origin of qualification structures can be traced back to organized education in antique civilizations such as Greece, Sparta, Rome and China. As no specialized career structure existed in these cultures, organized education focused on broad issues of international citizenship, and not on vocational preparedness, which was achieved mainly through informal apprenticeships. As civilizations developed, the role of social class and caste received more emphasis, and people who displayed certain competences were grouped together. The advantage of having participated in and benefited from education gradually became more visible as civilizations developed. In this respect the Chinese civilization was the most organized, with a series of levels attached to examinations, which in turn granted the right of access to public office. During the Middle Ages education had a particularly religious nature, while the late medieval centuries were categorized by a new approach to education alongside the clergy and feudal knighthood. New economic objectives as a result of the Crusades and the development of banking, importing and shipping across Europe and the West gave rise to the development of cities, and a new form of education aimed at professional life. Education became available to the middle classes, and the merchant and craft guild system developed.[3][2]

The first institutions of formal higher education were established at this time in the Islamic universities of Al-Azhar in Cairo and Sankore in Timbuktu.[4] By the eleventh century, universities were developing in Europe, largely in reaction to the previous narrow religious doctrine. The establishment of the University of Bologna marked the beginning of the European university tradition. This was also the time when the term 'qualification' acquired a more definite meaning, although it retained its emphasis on social class structures. The nineteenth century brought with it a wave of liberalism and consciousness of equal rights and opportunities, accompanied by increased specialization and bureaucratization.[3] The increased need for skilled employees eventually resulted in an emphasis on credentials which persists to the present day. During the twentieth century the emphasis shifted to human capital theory and technological development, eventually leading to concerns whether the education system was able to meet the demands of the labour market. At the time it was argued that the strong divisions were creating barriers to learning, and that there was a need to do away with the sharp distinction between academic and vocational systems.[2]

During the late 1980s, and strongly influenced by the thinking on integration but also by a focus on vocational training through a competency approach, the notion of a National Qualification Frameworks (NQF) emerged in the United Kingdom. Its roots lay in the competence approach to vocational education which was broadened by Jessup,[5] as well as the Scottish Action Plan which led to the modularization of vocational education and training in Scotland.[6] The idea developed that all qualifications could be expressed in terms of outcomes without prescribing learning pathways or programmes.[7] Within this politically charged melting pot of factors, and a renewed emphasis on the importance of lifelong learning, the first NQFs were established in Australia, England, Scotland, New Zealand, Ireland and South Africa between 1989 and 1995. France, as a country with a different tradition from the anglophone countries, was also a member of this group of first-generation NQFs (Bouder, 2003; Keevy et al., 2011).[8][9] In the case of France, the NQF drew on a hierarchy of qualifications that found official expression at the end of 1960s in a nomenclature which tried to rationalize the number of students leaving the education and training system to correspond with the needs of the labour market.[2]

Across the first-generation countries, NQFs were conceptualized as hierarchical classifications of levels of formal learning programmes and their associated qualifications and certificates.[10] Integral features of NQFs included new quality assurance and standards-setting regimes based on learning outcomes, and importantly for this study, level descriptors which are used to determine the level at which a qualification should be pegged.[11][2] 

Construction edit

All qualifications frameworks are learning outcomes-based. In qualifications frameworks, qualifications are developed using learning outcomes, and the set of hierarchical levels they consist of are described with a set of learning level descriptors.[2]

Qualifications frameworks emerged from two complementary education and training discourses in the late 1980s: the competence approach to vocational education, and the shift to learning outcomes, embedded within the broader concept of lifelong learning. As a result, the interrelationship between competences and learning outcomes was not only firmly embedded in qualifications framework thinking from the very outset, but was also used in a hybridized form.[2]  

National level edit

A national qualifications framework (NQF) addresses the educational quality concerns of specific countries. Some examples include:

Regional level edit

A Regional Qualifications Framework (RQF) focuses specifically on qualifications at the regional level. Some examples include:

International level/world reference levels edit

The purpose of the world reference levels lies mainly in their potential to provide a neutral and independent reference point against which a level of learning can be assessed.[2]

The idea of a set of world reference levels was considered in May 2012, during the Third International Congress on TVET, held in Shanghai, China. The research included in this report was initiated by UNESCO based on the recommendation from the Congress to the UNESCO Director-General to undertake this work. The UNESCO TVET Section, in cooperation with the European Commission's Directorate General for Education and Culture and the European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training (CEDEFOP), subsequently invited key organizations in Brussels to deliberate on the Shanghai Consensus Recommendation[12] in September 2013. The deliberations included regional developments in Europe, notably the European Qualifications Framework (EQF) and in Asia, notably a common standard for competences developed by the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), as well as the move towards regional qualifications frameworks (RQFs) in Central America and the Southern African Development Community (SADC). At the national level, the development of national qualifications frameworks (NQFs) was considered across and beyond these regions, including Mercosur (Mercado Común del Sur, the Common Market of the South) in South America and the development of a transnational qualifications framework (TQF) by twenty-nine small states of the Commonwealth.[13] The additional dimension of learning metrics as used in longitudinal studies, international competence assessments and diagnostics reviews was also considered.[2]

The Brussels deliberations concluded that the mobility of people (both learners and workers, including migrant workers) and jobs (including outsourcing and offshoring) constitutes an important driver for the world reference levels[14] emanating from the Shanghai Consensus Recommendation.[12] It was noted that jobs are not always matched to demands during these movements, because of demographic shifts and the differential capacities of economies to create jobs. The cross-border provision of education and training, as well as the technological developments resulting in increased open and distance learning, and online learning, were also identified as important drivers towards world reference levels.[12] Another important driver identified in the Brussels deliberations was the need for international dialogue, cooperation and capacity-building in the field of the recognition of qualifications.[2]

Other types of frameworks edit

Sectoral qualifications frameworks  edit

Sectoral qualifications frameworks are developed within a specific country and with a specific sectoral focus. Examples include:

  • a TVET framework in Jamaica
  • the occupational qualifications subframework in South Africa
  • the General Education Qualifications Framework in Poland
  • the Engineering Sectoral Framework in Armenia[2] 

Transnational qualifications frameworks  edit

Transnational qualifications frameworks are developed across a range of countries. Where these countries are in the same geographical proximity they are referred to as regional qualifications frameworks (examples include the SADC RQF and the EQF). Transnational qualifications frameworks can also be developed across countries that are not in the same geographic proximity.[2] 

For online learning edit

The E-xcellence framework edit

The E-xcellence framework was developed by the European Association of Distance Teaching Universities (EADTU). It is an instrument for benchmarking the quality of online, open and flexible education at programme, faculty and institutional levels. The framework defines requirements (called "benchmarks") for the entire process, from curriculum design to delivery, including the management and support of online and blended learning.[15]

The OpenupEd quality label edit

The OpenupEd quality label is derived from the E-xcellence framework. Ossiannilsson and colleagues[16] identified this framework as useful for certification and benchmarking. The label describes a self-assessment and review Quality Assurance (QA) process for the MOOCs (Massive open online courses) in the European OpenupEd partnership,[17] but the OpenupEd framework can be used for the QA of any MOOC. The benchmarks statements in this label, derived from benchmarks produced by the E-xcellence framework, are divided into two groups: those that apply at the institutional level and those for individual courses (MOOCs).[15]

Learning level descriptors edit

Learning level descriptors are essential elements in Qualifications Frameworks. Learning Level descriptors are statements that provide a broad indication of learning appropriate to attainment at a particular level, describing the characteristics and context of learning expected at that level. They are designed to support the reviewing of specified learning outcomes and assessment criteria in order to develop particular modules and units and to assign credits at the appropriate level.[2][18]

Learning outcomes edit

A learning outcome is a measurable result of a learning experience which allows us to ascertain to which extent / level / standard a competence has been formed or enhanced.[19] Learning outcomes can be used to describe many things, including knowledge, skills and competences (KSC), in the context of qualifications frameworks. Learning outcomes are increasingly being used in global context 'as a dynamic tool for modernisation and reform'.[20] The key mechanism through which the learning outcomes approach is being implemented is qualifications frameworks, but there are also others, such as within curriculum reform on both national and international levels. The Tuning Project, which started in 2000, stands out as a good example of the introduction of learning outcomes outside of, but nonetheless related to, qualifications frameworks. Learning outcomes are used in the formulation of qualifications, and also in the formulation of level descriptors.[2]

Definitions of the concept of learning outcomes vary across contexts, although some common elements can be identified. Here are several definitions. Learning outcomes...

  • Describe what students will know and be able to do upon successful completion of a course or programme.[21]
  • The contextually demonstrated end-products of specific learning processes which include knowledge, skills and values.[22]
  • The Statements of what a learner knows, understands and is able to do after the completion of learning.[20]
  • A statement of what students should know, understand and can do upon the completion of a period of study.[23]
  • Knowledge, skill, and aspects of competence that a learner is expected to know and be able to do.[24]

From a review of the interpretation of learning outcomes it is evident that learning outcomes are understood to be statements that describe mainly three major domains: knowledge (learning to know), skills (learning to do) and competences (learning to be).[2][20][25]

Competences edit

The interrelationship between learning outcomes and competences is best illustrated in qualifications frameworks. While learning outcomes often describe competences, competences can also be stand alone. Competences represent a dynamic combination of cognitive and meta-cognitive skills, demonstration of knowledge and understanding, interpersonal, intellectual and practical skills, and ethical values.[19][2] 

Sources edit

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0. Text taken from Level-setting and recognition of learning outcomes: The use of level descriptors in the twenty-first century​, 10, 12-13, 15-16, 21, 31-33, 35, 71-72, 80-81, UNESCO. UNESCO.

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0 (license statement/permission). Text taken from Making Sense of MOOCs: A Guide for Policy-Makers in Developing Countries​, 42-43, Patru, Mariana; Balaji, Venkataraman, UNESCO. UNESCO.

References edit

  1. ^ "Qualifications Framework". UNESCO-UNEVOC.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Keevy, James; Chakroun, Borhene (2015). Level-setting and recognition of learning outcomes: The use of level descriptors in the twenty-first century (PDF). Paris, UNESCO. pp. 10, 12–13, 15–16, 21, 31–33, 35, 76–77, 80–81. ISBN 978-92-3-100138-3.
  3. ^ a b De Villiers, H. C. 1997. Affirmative action and the qualification structure. Unpublished Master's dissertation, University of Pretoria. 
  4. ^ Serpell, R. 2007. Bridging between orthodox Western higher educational practices and an African sociocultural context. Comparative Education, Vol. 43, No. 1, pp. 23–51. 
  5. ^ Jessup, G. 1991. Outcomes: NVQs and the Emerging Model of Education mid Training. New York, RoutledgeFalmer. 
  6. ^ Scottish Education Department (SED). 1983. 16–18s in Scotland: An Action Plan. Edinburgh, SED.
  7. ^ Young, M. F. D. 2005. National Qualifications Frameworks: Their Feasibility and Effective Implementation in Developing Countries. Geneva, ILO. 
  8. ^ Bouder, A. 2003. Qualifications in France: towards a national framework? Journal of Education and Work, Vol. 16, No. 3, pp. 347–56.
  9. ^ Keevy, J., Charraud, A. and Allgoo, K. 2011. National qualifications frameworks developed in Anglo-Saxon and French traditions. Considerations for sustainable development in Africa. Research report for the ADEA Triennial on Education and Training in Africa, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 27 November – 2 December 2. 
  10. ^ Coles, M., Keevy, J., Bateman, A. and Keating, J. 2014. Flying blind: policy rationales for national qualifications frameworks and how they tend to evolve.
  11. ^ Tuck, R. 2007. An Introductory Guide to NQFs: Conceptual and Practical Issues for Policy Makers. Geneva, ILO. 
  12. ^ a b c UNESCO. 2012. Shanghai Consensus: Recommendations of the Third International Congress on Technical and Vocational Education and Training 'Transforming TVET: Building skills for work and life', Shanghai, People's Republic of China, 14 to 16 May.
  13. ^ COL and SAQA. 2008. Transnational Qualifications Framework for the Virtual University of Small States of the Commonwealth. Concept Document. Pretoria: Commonwealth of Learning and South African Qualifications Authority.
  14. ^ Chakroun. 2013. Outcomes of the workshop, Engaging global conversations on recognition of TVET quali cations based on learning outcomes, 25–27 September 2013, Brussels, unpublished report.
  15. ^ a b Patru, Mariana; Balaji, Venkataraman (2016). Making Sense of MOOCs: A Guide for Policy-Makers in Developing Countries (PDF). Paris, UNESCO. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-92-3-100157-4.
  16. ^ Ossiannilsson, E., Williams, K., Camilleri, A., & Brown, M. (2015). Quality models in online and open education around the globe: State of the art and recommendations. Oslo, Norway: International Council for Open and Distance Education.
  17. ^ "Home". openuped.eu.
  18. ^ Vlasceanu, L., Grünberg, L. and Pârlea, D. 2007. Quality assurance and accreditation: a glossary of basic terms and de nitions. Bucharest, UNESCO Centre Européen pour l'Enseignement Supérieur (CEPES). http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0013/001346/134621e.pdf
  19. ^ a b Lokho , J., Wegewijs, B., Durkin, K., Wagenaar, R., González, J., Isaacs, A., Rose, L. and Gobbi, M. (eds). 2010. A Tuning Guide to Formulating Degree Programme Profiles Including Programme Competences and Programme Learning Outcomes. Bilbao, Groningen and The Hague. Manabile, E. 2007. Summary of the revised Bloom's taxonomy. Unpublished. 
  20. ^ a b c CEDEFOP. 2009. The Shift to Learning Outcomes. Luxembourg, CEDEFOP.
  21. ^ University of Adelaide. 2014. Guide to writing learning outcomes. www.adelaide.edu.au
  22. ^ SAQA. 2014. NQFpedia: Standard Glossary of Terms. www.saqa.org.za
  23. ^ MQA. 2011. Malaysian Qualifications Framework. Point of Reference and joint understanding of higher education qualifications in Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysian Quali cations Authority.
  24. ^ NQAUAE. 2012. Qualifications Framework Emirates Handbook. Abu Dhabi, NQAUAE.
  25. ^ UNESCO. 1996. Learning: The Treasure Within. Report of the International Commission on Education for the 21st Century. Paris, UNESCO.

qualifications, framework, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, november, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, message, qualifications, framework, formalized, structure, whi. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message A qualifications framework is a formalized structure in which learning level descriptors and qualifications are used in order to understand learning outcomes 1 This allows for the ability to develop assess and improve quality education in a number of contexts Qualifications frameworks are typically found at the national regional and international level 2 Contents 1 History 2 Construction 3 National level 4 Regional level 5 International level world reference levels 6 Other types of frameworks 6 1 Sectoral qualifications frameworks 6 2 Transnational qualifications frameworks 6 3 For online learning 6 3 1 The E xcellence framework 6 3 2 The OpenupEd quality label 7 Learning level descriptors 8 Learning outcomes 8 1 Competences 9 Sources 10 ReferencesHistory editThe origin of qualification structures can be traced back to organized education in antique civilizations such as Greece Sparta Rome and China As no specialized career structure existed in these cultures organized education focused on broad issues of international citizenship and not on vocational preparedness which was achieved mainly through informal apprenticeships As civilizations developed the role of social class and caste received more emphasis and people who displayed certain competences were grouped together The advantage of having participated in and benefited from education gradually became more visible as civilizations developed In this respect the Chinese civilization was the most organized with a series of levels attached to examinations which in turn granted the right of access to public office During the Middle Ages education had a particularly religious nature while the late medieval centuries were categorized by a new approach to education alongside the clergy and feudal knighthood New economic objectives as a result of the Crusades and the development of banking importing and shipping across Europe and the West gave rise to the development of cities and a new form of education aimed at professional life Education became available to the middle classes and the merchant and craft guild system developed 3 2 The first institutions of formal higher education were established at this time in the Islamic universities of Al Azhar in Cairo and Sankore in Timbuktu 4 By the eleventh century universities were developing in Europe largely in reaction to the previous narrow religious doctrine The establishment of the University of Bologna marked the beginning of the European university tradition This was also the time when the term qualification acquired a more definite meaning although it retained its emphasis on social class structures The nineteenth century brought with it a wave of liberalism and consciousness of equal rights and opportunities accompanied by increased specialization and bureaucratization 3 The increased need for skilled employees eventually resulted in an emphasis on credentials which persists to the present day During the twentieth century the emphasis shifted to human capital theory and technological development eventually leading to concerns whether the education system was able to meet the demands of the labour market At the time it was argued that the strong divisions were creating barriers to learning and that there was a need to do away with the sharp distinction between academic and vocational systems 2 During the late 1980s and strongly influenced by the thinking on integration but also by a focus on vocational training through a competency approach the notion of a National Qualification Frameworks NQF emerged in the United Kingdom Its roots lay in the competence approach to vocational education which was broadened by Jessup 5 as well as the Scottish Action Plan which led to the modularization of vocational education and training in Scotland 6 The idea developed that all qualifications could be expressed in terms of outcomes without prescribing learning pathways or programmes 7 Within this politically charged melting pot of factors and a renewed emphasis on the importance of lifelong learning the first NQFs were established in Australia England Scotland New Zealand Ireland and South Africa between 1989 and 1995 France as a country with a different tradition from the anglophone countries was also a member of this group of first generation NQFs Bouder 2003 Keevy et al 2011 8 9 In the case of France the NQF drew on a hierarchy of qualifications that found official expression at the end of 1960s in a nomenclature which tried to rationalize the number of students leaving the education and training system to correspond with the needs of the labour market 2 Across the first generation countries NQFs were conceptualized as hierarchical classifications of levels of formal learning programmes and their associated qualifications and certificates 10 Integral features of NQFs included new quality assurance and standards setting regimes based on learning outcomes and importantly for this study level descriptors which are used to determine the level at which a qualification should be pegged 11 2 Construction editAll qualifications frameworks are learning outcomes based In qualifications frameworks qualifications are developed using learning outcomes and the set of hierarchical levels they consist of are described with a set of learning level descriptors 2 Qualifications frameworks emerged from two complementary education and training discourses in the late 1980s the competence approach to vocational education and the shift to learning outcomes embedded within the broader concept of lifelong learning As a result the interrelationship between competences and learning outcomes was not only firmly embedded in qualifications framework thinking from the very outset but was also used in a hybridized form 2 National level editMain article National qualifications framework A national qualifications framework NQF addresses the educational quality concerns of specific countries Some examples include Australian Qualifications Framework AQF Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework SCQF German Qualifications Framework Deutscher Qualifikationsrahmen DQR 2 Regional level editA Regional Qualifications Framework RQF focuses specifically on qualifications at the regional level Some examples include European Qualifications Framework EQF SADC RQF CARICOM TVET Qualifications Framework TVET QF ASEAN RQF Qualifications Framework for the European Higher Education Area QF EHEA Pacific Qualifications Register PQR 2 International level world reference levels editThe purpose of the world reference levels lies mainly in their potential to provide a neutral and independent reference point against which a level of learning can be assessed 2 The idea of a set of world reference levels was considered in May 2012 during the Third International Congress on TVET held in Shanghai China The research included in this report was initiated by UNESCO based on the recommendation from the Congress to the UNESCO Director General to undertake this work The UNESCO TVET Section in cooperation with the European Commission s Directorate General for Education and Culture and the European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training CEDEFOP subsequently invited key organizations in Brussels to deliberate on the Shanghai Consensus Recommendation 12 in September 2013 The deliberations included regional developments in Europe notably the European Qualifications Framework EQF and in Asia notably a common standard for competences developed by the Association of South East Asian Nations ASEAN as well as the move towards regional qualifications frameworks RQFs in Central America and the Southern African Development Community SADC At the national level the development of national qualifications frameworks NQFs was considered across and beyond these regions including Mercosur Mercado Comun del Sur the Common Market of the South in South America and the development of a transnational qualifications framework TQF by twenty nine small states of the Commonwealth 13 The additional dimension of learning metrics as used in longitudinal studies international competence assessments and diagnostics reviews was also considered 2 The Brussels deliberations concluded that the mobility of people both learners and workers including migrant workers and jobs including outsourcing and offshoring constitutes an important driver for the world reference levels 14 emanating from the Shanghai Consensus Recommendation 12 It was noted that jobs are not always matched to demands during these movements because of demographic shifts and the differential capacities of economies to create jobs The cross border provision of education and training as well as the technological developments resulting in increased open and distance learning and online learning were also identified as important drivers towards world reference levels 12 Another important driver identified in the Brussels deliberations was the need for international dialogue cooperation and capacity building in the field of the recognition of qualifications 2 Other types of frameworks editSectoral qualifications frameworks edit Sectoral qualifications frameworks are developed within a specific country and with a specific sectoral focus Examples include a TVET framework in Jamaica the occupational qualifications subframework in South Africa the General Education Qualifications Framework in Poland the Engineering Sectoral Framework in Armenia 2 Transnational qualifications frameworks edit Transnational qualifications frameworks are developed across a range of countries Where these countries are in the same geographical proximity they are referred to as regional qualifications frameworks examples include the SADC RQF and the EQF Transnational qualifications frameworks can also be developed across countries that are not in the same geographic proximity 2 For online learning edit The E xcellence framework edit The E xcellence framework was developed by the European Association of Distance Teaching Universities EADTU It is an instrument for benchmarking the quality of online open and flexible education at programme faculty and institutional levels The framework defines requirements called benchmarks for the entire process from curriculum design to delivery including the management and support of online and blended learning 15 The OpenupEd quality label edit The OpenupEd quality label is derived from the E xcellence framework Ossiannilsson and colleagues 16 identified this framework as useful for certification and benchmarking The label describes a self assessment and review Quality Assurance QA process for the MOOCs Massive open online courses in the European OpenupEd partnership 17 but the OpenupEd framework can be used for the QA of any MOOC The benchmarks statements in this label derived from benchmarks produced by the E xcellence framework are divided into two groups those that apply at the institutional level and those for individual courses MOOCs 15 Learning level descriptors editLearning level descriptors are essential elements in Qualifications Frameworks Learning Level descriptors are statements that provide a broad indication of learning appropriate to attainment at a particular level describing the characteristics and context of learning expected at that level They are designed to support the reviewing of specified learning outcomes and assessment criteria in order to develop particular modules and units and to assign credits at the appropriate level 2 18 Learning outcomes editA learning outcome is a measurable result of a learning experience which allows us to ascertain to which extent level standard a competence has been formed or enhanced 19 Learning outcomes can be used to describe many things including knowledge skills and competences KSC in the context of qualifications frameworks Learning outcomes are increasingly being used in global context as a dynamic tool for modernisation and reform 20 The key mechanism through which the learning outcomes approach is being implemented is qualifications frameworks but there are also others such as within curriculum reform on both national and international levels The Tuning Project which started in 2000 stands out as a good example of the introduction of learning outcomes outside of but nonetheless related to qualifications frameworks Learning outcomes are used in the formulation of qualifications and also in the formulation of level descriptors 2 Definitions of the concept of learning outcomes vary across contexts although some common elements can be identified Here are several definitions Learning outcomes Describe what students will know and be able to do upon successful completion of a course or programme 21 The contextually demonstrated end products of specific learning processes which include knowledge skills and values 22 The Statements of what a learner knows understands and is able to do after the completion of learning 20 A statement of what students should know understand and can do upon the completion of a period of study 23 Knowledge skill and aspects of competence that a learner is expected to know and be able to do 24 From a review of the interpretation of learning outcomes it is evident that learning outcomes are understood to be statements that describe mainly three major domains knowledge learning to know skills learning to do and competences learning to be 2 20 25 Competences edit The interrelationship between learning outcomes and competences is best illustrated in qualifications frameworks While learning outcomes often describe competences competences can also be stand alone Competences represent a dynamic combination of cognitive and meta cognitive skills demonstration of knowledge and understanding interpersonal intellectual and practical skills and ethical values 19 2 Sources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA IGO 3 0 Text taken from Level setting and recognition of learning outcomes The use of level descriptors in the twenty first century 10 12 13 15 16 21 31 33 35 71 72 80 81 UNESCO UNESCO nbsp This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA IGO 3 0 license statement permission Text taken from Making Sense of MOOCs A Guide for Policy Makers in Developing Countries 42 43 Patru Mariana Balaji Venkataraman UNESCO UNESCO References edit Qualifications Framework UNESCO UNEVOC a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Keevy James Chakroun Borhene 2015 Level setting and recognition of learning outcomes The use of level descriptors in the twenty first century PDF Paris UNESCO pp 10 12 13 15 16 21 31 33 35 76 77 80 81 ISBN 978 92 3 100138 3 a b De Villiers H C 1997 Affirmative action and the qualification structure Unpublished Master s dissertation University of Pretoria Serpell R 2007 Bridging between orthodox Western higher educational practices and an African sociocultural context Comparative Education Vol 43 No 1 pp 23 51 Jessup G 1991 Outcomes NVQs and the Emerging Model of Education mid Training New York RoutledgeFalmer Scottish Education Department SED 1983 16 18s in Scotland An Action Plan Edinburgh SED Young M F D 2005 National Qualifications Frameworks Their Feasibility and Effective Implementation in Developing Countries Geneva ILO Bouder A 2003 Qualifications in France towards a national framework Journal of Education and Work Vol 16 No 3 pp 347 56 Keevy J Charraud A and Allgoo K 2011 National qualifications frameworks developed in Anglo Saxon and French traditions Considerations for sustainable development in Africa Research report for the ADEA Triennial on Education and Training in Africa Ouagadougou Burkina Faso 27 November 2 December 2 Coles M Keevy J Bateman A and Keating J 2014 Flying blind policy rationales for national qualifications frameworks and how they tend to evolve Tuck R 2007 An Introductory Guide to NQFs Conceptual and Practical Issues for Policy Makers Geneva ILO a b c UNESCO 2012 Shanghai Consensus Recommendations of the Third International Congress on Technical and Vocational Education and Training Transforming TVET Building skills for work and life Shanghai People s Republic of China 14 to 16 May COL and SAQA 2008 Transnational Qualifications Framework for the Virtual University of Small States of the Commonwealth Concept Document Pretoria Commonwealth of Learning and South African Qualifications Authority Chakroun 2013 Outcomes of the workshop Engaging global conversations on recognition of TVET quali cations based on learning outcomes 25 27 September 2013 Brussels unpublished report a b Patru Mariana Balaji Venkataraman 2016 Making Sense of MOOCs A Guide for Policy Makers in Developing Countries PDF Paris UNESCO pp 42 43 ISBN 978 92 3 100157 4 Ossiannilsson E Williams K Camilleri A amp Brown M 2015 Quality models in online and open education around the globe State of the art and recommendations Oslo Norway International Council for Open and Distance Education Home openuped eu Vlasceanu L Grunberg L and Parlea D 2007 Quality assurance and accreditation a glossary of basic terms and de nitions Bucharest UNESCO Centre Europeen pour l Enseignement Superieur CEPES http unesdoc unesco org images 0013 001346 134621e pdf a b Lokho J Wegewijs B Durkin K Wagenaar R Gonzalez J Isaacs A Rose L and Gobbi M eds 2010 A Tuning Guide to Formulating Degree Programme Profiles Including Programme Competences and Programme Learning Outcomes Bilbao Groningen and The Hague Manabile E 2007 Summary of the revised Bloom s taxonomy Unpublished a b c CEDEFOP 2009 The Shift to Learning Outcomes Luxembourg CEDEFOP University of Adelaide 2014 Guide to writing learning outcomes www adelaide edu au SAQA 2014 NQFpedia Standard Glossary of Terms www saqa org za MQA 2011 Malaysian Qualifications Framework Point of Reference and joint understanding of higher education qualifications in Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Malaysian Quali cations Authority NQAUAE 2012 Qualifications Framework Emirates Handbook Abu Dhabi NQAUAE UNESCO 1996 Learning The Treasure Within Report of the International Commission on Education for the 21st Century Paris UNESCO Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Qualifications framework amp oldid 1204789921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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