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Strategy of Transformation of Czech Universities Petr Kolář Vice Minister for Science and HE Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports Basic Features of the Czech HE System HE Acts 1990, 1998 Amendments 2001-2004 Full academic rights and freedom Governance, student participation Plurality of HE institutions (public, private, state; university or non-university type) Autonomy of HE institutions Independent QA Multi-source financing System Problems Universities – public funding, economic dependency upon the Government Formula financing prevails Quantitative growth Universities underfunded Access to HE Research: Universities vs. Academy of Sciences – two systems of funding Reform – Points of Departure Adopted by the Czech Government (December 2004) Focus on quality research competitiveness access sustainable funding BUT No tuition fees at public universities Limited influence of the Ministry on HEI: funding, partly QA Reform – Principles Shift from input to output Shift from quantitative to qualitative growth Access to HE – implementing Bologna principles Internationalization of study and research (Lisbon) Gradual division of the universities into teaching and research institutions Social affairs of students – combining public and individual responsibility More competition for educational and research funds More co-operation with businesses, industry, and regions Reform – Financial Implications Public funding (2003) Cost of the reform (2004-2008) +2.6 billion CZK in 2004 +2.8 billion CZK in 2005 +2.8 billion CZK in 2006 Increase 13 billion CZK (430 million €) So far 17.5 billion CZK (530 million €) By 50% in 2004-2006 (incl. research) Goal 1.0% GDP in 2008 (cf. 0.8% GDP in 2004) Reform – Priorities for 2006 Formula financing – Input Formula financing – Output Internationalization RnD Development programmes Development fund Student lodging Student board Investments Total 381 400 60 642 450 80 200 20 586 2,819 mil. CZK Trends towards 2008 (Almost) full implementation of Bologna Development programmes – more independence to universities Formula financing – output (graduates) RnD Social dimension OECD Thematic Review of Tertiary Education New amendment to HEA (2006) Use of EU structural funds: OP Education, OP RnD for Innovation … and beyond (I) Long-Term Plan for HEI Development (2006-2010) Priorities Internationalisation of academic activities Quality and excellence in teaching and RnD Quality and culture of academic life Social dimension Competitiveness … and beyond (II) Major shifts in Quantity Input par. Normative Uniformity Teaching focus: → Quality → Output par. → Non-normative → Diversity → Research … and beyond (III) Quantified objectives Lisbon / Barcelona goals in RnD 1% GDP for HE in 2008 42-45% young population enrolled by 2010 50% young population in HE by 2015 Success rate 80-85% Labour market: 35% HE graduates in 2010 10% foreign students Degree programmes delivered in foreign languages: 60% doctoral, 50% Master’s RnD funding: 20% share of HEI Thank you for your attention