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Brace yourself: Belarus is investing in higher education to help shift its 颅economy towards high-technology industries
Walking a diplomatic tightrope between neighbouring Ukraine and Russia, Belarus 鈥 a member of the Commonwealth of Independent States 鈥 is attempting to adopt liberal market-led policies to improve the quality of its higher education and to attract more international students.
As part of such moves, a deal was signed last month in the capital, Minsk, between a UK awarding body 鈥 the Association of Business Executives 鈥 and the Belarusian government recognising ABE qualifications as the equivalent of the country鈥檚 diplomas of higher education and master鈥檚 degrees.
The signing of such a memorandum is part of a campaign by Belarus to join the Bologna Process, a system designed to ensure comparability in the standards of higher education qualifications and to promote freedom of movement within Europe.
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鈥淲e welcome educational ties with the UK because it is the motherland of the English language,鈥 Sergey Maskevitch, Belarus鈥 education minister, said at the forum in Minsk where the agreement was signed. 鈥淏eing able to study for a qualification that is internationally recognised offers our students the confidence to know that their education is the best we can make it. We need graduates to stay in Belarus and help us build our economy.鈥
By investing 2 per cent of its gross domestic product in improving the quality of its higher education, Belarus hopes to shift a stagnant economy that is reliant on state-owned manufacturing companies supplying Russia with lorries, coaches and chemicals towards high-technology industries. 鈥淲e have a very good higher educational platform here, but we don鈥檛 have enough specialists in business and technology. We would like to see more research devoted to pharmaceuticals and nanotechnology,鈥 said Mr Maskevitch.
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Although the Russian higher education 鈥渇ive plus one鈥 model of combining undergraduate and master鈥檚 education is widely adopted within Belarus, universities are now trying to shorten degree courses to converge with the Bologna Process. At the same time, degree syllabuses are becoming less prescriptive and more influenced by the views of student councils and employer bodies.
Striving for quality
Belarusian universities have also been upgrading quality management systems to meet European standards in an attempt to become more like the West. Anatoly Osipov, first vice-rector of the Belarusian State University of Informatics and Radioelectronics, said his institution achieved a key European kitemark for quality management in 2010, 鈥渁nd this academic year for the first time we have started offering a four-year undergraduate degree followed by a two-year master鈥檚 to bring us closer to the European system鈥.
Despite these efforts, the Soviet Union鈥檚 legacy is still apparent in a country where academic freedom can be constrained and degree syllabuses traditionally need state approval. These are issues that must be resolved ahead of the republic鈥檚 Bologna bid.
Deborah Trayhurn, chief operating officer of the private Magna Carta College Oxford, who attended the Minsk forum, said there was still much work to be done to help Belarus meet the Bologna conditions.
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鈥淯K universities have the scope to set their own agenda. But in Belarus, much more is laid down already and university practice is centrally arranged and administered. Terms such as efficiency, effectiveness and quality control are philosophically likely to be differently viewed,鈥 said Ms Trayhurn. Magna Carta has set up a base in Minsk to offer ABE qualifications by distance and blended learning.
Internationalisation
Degrees taught in English are also helping to open up Belarus to the West. Institutions such as the Belarusian State University and the BSUIR have recently begun offering undergraduate and postgraduate degrees taught in the language. Already a third of all master鈥檚 students and 20 per cent of doctoral students at BSUIR, which has more than 16,000 students in all, are international. 鈥淭eaching in English helps us interact better with foreign students and is a lot more successful than trying to teach them the basics of Russian in one year,鈥 Dr Osipov said. As a result of this policy, numbers of international students at BSUIR are doubling year on year, he said.
Although, in the main, international students in Belarus still come from fellow CIS countries such as Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, many are arriving from as far afield as China, Vietnam, Turkey and Iran. In all, there are now about 16,000 international students in Belarus from 98 countries, a figure that Mr Maskevitch would like to see doubled.
But the key to Belarus鈥 success 鈥 and perceptions about the extent to which it has come in from the cold 鈥 may hinge on encouraging students from elsewhere in Europe, particularly in the West, to study there. 鈥淓urope is under-represented, but I hope our education reforms will soon change that,鈥 Dr Osipov said.
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