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Australia can help England along the QA path ahead

QAA chief Anthony McClaran, who is soon to take over Teqsa, tells Chris Havergal that Down Under they have pioneered a risk- and data-based system

Published on
August 1, 2015
Last updated
February 16, 2017
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The UK can learn much from Australia about quality assurance in higher education, according to a sector leader who is swapping one system for the other.

Anthony McClaran, who will leave the UK鈥檚 Quality Assurance Agency in October after six years as chief executive to take on the equivalent role at Australia鈥檚 Tertiary Education Quality Standards Agency, told 探花视频 that his move had nothing to do with the ongoing review of quality assessment in England.

Instead he described the opportunity to join Teqsa as 鈥渁 terrific opportunity at this stage of my career鈥.

The Higher Education Funding Council for England proposes to move further towards a risk-based system and to abolish regular institutional reviews undertaken by the QAA. Under the plan, the performance of established providers would be undertaken via the monitoring of data relating to student outcomes.

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Although the future role for the QAA in this area is unclear, Mr McClaran said he felt the debate was moving 鈥渋n a positive direction鈥, and he highlighted that Teqsa had been a pioneer in this field.

鈥淭eqsa was the first agency to prominently engage with risk-based quality assurance, and the idea of quality assurance being risk-based has now become a very important strand in quality assurance thinking around the world,鈥 Mr McClaran said. 鈥淭eqsa was also engaged early with the use of data in external quality assurance, and that is of relevance to the debate we are having here in the UK.鈥

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Following Australia鈥檚 move to a risk-based system, it appears that ministers are nonetheless particularly concerned with reducing the burden that Teqsa places on institutions.

The organisation鈥檚 budget was cut significantly last year, and legislation was proposed that would have removed much of Teqsa鈥檚 quality assurance role.

The bill was eventually watered down, but Christopher Pyne, Australia鈥檚 minister for education and training, made clear in a statement issued to welcome Mr McClaran鈥檚 appointment that a key priority would be ensuring that 鈥渋nstitutions are not overburdened with red tape鈥.

Mr McClaran, however, said he believed that both UK and Australian higher education systems shared an 鈥渦nderstanding of the fundamental importance of quality assurance鈥 and that balancing this 鈥渨ith the desire not to create systems which are excessively bureaucratic or burdensome鈥 was the 鈥渟ubject of discussion and debate in both of our systems鈥.

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In relation to the planned reforms in England, Mr McClaran said the QAA would reiterate 鈥渢he continuing importance of external review鈥, highlighting that it was a requirement of European standards.

鈥淲e would support the value of external review,鈥 he said, although he added: 鈥淒oes external review need to remain exactly as it is at the moment? Certainly not.鈥

Mr McClaran said observers who foresaw the imminent demise of the QAA in the proposed reforms were wrong, emphasising the organisation's activities elsewhere in the UK, and its work with alternative providers and institutions seeking degree-awarding powers.

New policy developments may provide further opportunities, and Mr McClaran said the QAA was 鈥減articularly focused鈥 on the development of the teaching excellence framework.

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Mr McClaran said he was 鈥渧ery encouraged鈥 by the statement by Jo Johnson, the universities minister, that the TEF 鈥渟hould be underpinned by an external assessment process undertaken by an independent quality body from within the existing landscape鈥.

chris.havergal@tesglobal.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Can Australia help England along the QA path ahead?

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