A future European degree must not favour studies in 鈥渃ritical technology areas鈥 at the expense of the humanities, sector leaders have .
In March, the European Commission unveiled a 鈥渂lueprint鈥 for the creation of an international European degree, proposing that the qualification take one of two forms: students completing joint degree programmes could receive an additional 鈥淓uropean degree label certificate鈥, or multiple universities could jointly award a new qualification known as a European degree.
The degree should be 鈥渂ased on a set of common criteria agreed at European level鈥, the commission advised, listing among those criteria an emphasis on student mobility, relevance to the labour market and the promotion of 鈥淓uropean values鈥 including democracy, multilingualism and inclusivity.
In a response to the blueprint, the Guild of European Research-Intensive Universities cautioned that the European degree should not become a funding mechanism for programmes in 鈥渃ritical technology areas鈥, but must also support study in social sciences and humanities, while participating universities must 鈥渞etain institutional autonomy in the choice of disciplines and curricula design鈥.
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鈥淭he European degree needs to put more emphasis on the interlinkage between new technologies and social sciences, arts and humanities,鈥 the guild said.
Addressing the commission鈥檚 reference to 鈥淓uropean values鈥, the umbrella body commented, 鈥淲e should insist on the idea that values are global, as is the quest for new understanding and insight.鈥 This perspective, the guild said, is 鈥渆specially relevant when attracting global talent to Europe鈥.
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The university group raised questions about the two proposed routes to a European degree, noting that it was 鈥渘ot obvious鈥 how the qualification could exist as both an additional certificate and as a degree in its own right.
The guild also touched on the commission鈥檚 emphasis on student mobility, calling for increased funding for the Erasmus+ programme in order to realise this goal. 鈥淚f this is to become reality, we must avoid a situation where universities compete for the already limited Erasmus+ budget,鈥 the group said.
In a statement, Ole Petter Ottersen, the guild鈥檚 acting secretary-general, said a European degree could result in 鈥渕ore seamless cooperation at the European level鈥, while stressing that 鈥渁 more tightly knit European academic community should not detract from our global engagement but rather serve as a springboard for an even stronger engagement with global partners.鈥
Jo Angouri, deputy pro vice-chancellor for education and internationalisation at the University of Warwick, a guild member, described the creation of European degrees as 鈥渁 chance to bring real value added for the sector by simplifying process and cutting red tape in [quality assurance] frameworks鈥.
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鈥淭he European degree agenda offers a rare prospect to accomplish objectives beyond the reach of existing designs. We should not let this chance slip away,鈥 Professor Angouri added.
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