Non-university sector of higher education closer to the labour market: the Polish experience

被引:1
|
作者
MacUkow, Bohdan
Witkowski, Marek
机构
关键词
Curricula; -; Employment; Teaching; Apprentices;
D O I
10.1080/03043790110054391
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Higher education in many countries has been influenced by major factors of change due to globalization and reinforced by the development of internationalization, competition, new and different social demands, strategic importance of higher education as a business, etc. As a result of a tremendous growth in the number of students, higher education is moving towards 'mass studies'; in many cases, this is not coupled with proportional increases in expenditure on education, thus lowering the quality of education. Many countries are trying to solve this problem by developing two sectors of higher education, which may be called 'university sector' and 'vocational/non-university sector'. While the mission of the university sector is to educate intellectual élites, higher vocational education schools should, in principle, offer mass education at the undergraduate/first-stage level. Both types of higher education institutions are needed, and thus one could not speak of any subordination of one sector to another. In 1997 the Polish Parliament passed the Act on Vocational Higher Schools. The Act served as the basis for the establishment of the Accreditation Commission for Vocational Higher Schools, which has the task of laying down educational standards and defined conditions which should be met in order to establish and provide courses in specific vocational specialization as well as staff requirements for such specialization. Furthermore, standards were introduced for teaching facilities and curriculum contents. During the 3 years since the introduction of the Act, 16 public higher vocational education schools and 44 non-public higher vocational schools have been established. © 2001, Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
引用
收藏
页码:241 / 246
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Research in the non-university higher education sector - tensions and dilemmas
    Kyvik, S
    Skodvin, OJ
    HIGHER EDUCATION, 2003, 45 (02) : 203 - 222
  • [2] Research in the non-university higher education sector – tensions and dilemmas
    Svein Kyvik
    Ole-Jacob Skodvin
    Higher Education, 2003, 45 : 203 - 222
  • [3] Current news and perspectives of the sector of non-university higher education in Europe
    Ramirez Torrado, Carla E.
    ZONA PROXIMA, 2009, 11 : 196 - 209
  • [4] Diversification of Higher Education as Policy Diffusion: The Rise of the Non-university Sector in China
    Yang, Po
    Liu, Yunbo
    HIGHER EDUCATION POLICY, 2024, 37 (01) : 167 - 190
  • [5] Diversification of Higher Education as Policy Diffusion: The Rise of the Non-university Sector in China
    Po Yang
    Yunbo Liu
    Higher Education Policy, 2024, 37 : 167 - 190
  • [6] POLISH LABOUR MARKET AND EMPLOYEES WITH HIGHER EDUCATION
    Bebel, Anna
    13TH INTERNATIONAL DAYS OF STATISTICS AND ECONOMICS, 2019, : 90 - 100
  • [7] DIGITAL COMPETENCIES IN NON-UNIVERSITY HIGHER EDUCATION TEACHERS
    Berrocal Villegas, Carmen Rosa
    Montalvo Fritas, Willner
    Parihuaman Quinde, Geraldina Rebeca
    Berrocal Villegas, Salomon Marcos
    Espejo Rivera, Roberto
    REVISTA CONRADO, 2022, 18 (87): : 65 - 73
  • [8] Connecting Higher Education to the Labour Market: The Experience of Service Learning in a Portuguese University
    Pais, Sofia Castanheira
    Dias, Teresa Silva
    Benicio, Deyse
    EDUCATION SCIENCES, 2022, 12 (04):
  • [9] Non-university higher education: geographies of place, possibility and inequality
    Donnelly, Michael
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2022, 43 (08) : 1297 - 1299
  • [10] The reorganisation of non-university higher education in Norway: Problems and potentials
    Ole-Jacob Skodvin
    Tertiary Education and Management, 1997, 3 (4) : 317 - 324