Joint degrees can be a tool for pushing聽national education policy that supports greater harmonisation among Europe鈥檚 higher education systems, according to the head of an international collaboration agency.
Vidar Pedersen, head of the Norwegian Agency for International Cooperation and Quality Enhancement in Higher Education (Diku), said the organisation is actively encouraging Norwegian universities to establish joint degrees 鈥 different from double degrees because they offer a single diploma bearing two university logos 鈥 in an effort to move towards the Bologna Process vision of greater coherence among higher education systems across Europe.
鈥淲e鈥檙e in favour of joint degrees with one diploma because we would like this to be a catalyst for streamlining national legislation to allow for [these types of certification],鈥 said Pedersen, who presented on the topic at the European Association for International Education鈥檚 annual conference in Helsinki on 25 September.
However, he said Norway has seen a decrease in interest among universities for these programmes since they were聽first introduced in 2005 because national policy is 鈥渦nintentionally prohibitive鈥 to this type of international collaboration among universities.聽
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鈥淓ven in a country like Norway, where it is encouraged, you see that the administrative challenges can be so daunting that you give up along the way and decide to just go for the double degree,鈥 Pedersen said, noting that complying with the legal requirements in different countries 鈥渋s a big task鈥.
Other policy challenges include streamlining tuition fee payments between two countries, agreeing on how academic credits will be counted in two systems and even allowing foreign students to set up temporary bank accounts.
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Joint degrees also tend to provide the same academic outcomes for students as double degrees or joint study programmes 鈥 like close academic cooperation on programme and course design, and embedded student mobility 鈥 adding to the apathy among academics to take them on.
Pedersen warns against double degrees, however. 鈥淲e do share a slight concern that if there are too many double degrees you end up with a lot of students having two diplomas for what is actually one education,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t looks like they have two master鈥檚 degrees 鈥 one from this institution and one from this one.鈥澛
The European Commission鈥檚 Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters Degree programme helped open the door to joint degrees but national legislation across the continent has a long way to go before they are fully integrated into higher education systems, he said.聽
鈥淓ducation in general is a national prerogative, it鈥檚 not something that the EU has any influence on, and I think that when you make national legislation for higher education you don鈥檛 necessarily have at the back of your mind: 鈥榳e need to facilitate joint degrees鈥.鈥
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