scholarly journals The formation of doctoral schools in Europe in the condition of cross-border education

2019 ◽  
Vol 70 ◽  
pp. 02013
Author(s):  
Mariya Skorobogatova ◽  
Larisa Yagenich ◽  
Yekaterina Siritsa ◽  
Irina Kirillova

Training of doctoral students is of special attention in the modern integration conditions of the higher education development. Trends of study of the doctoral schools development are necessary and practically in demand; absence of such investigations makes forecasting of the higher education in Russia difficult. Main tendencies of the doctoral schools formation and development were identified in this article: focus shifting of the questions solving from the national into the European level; applying of the modern methodological approaches system (student-centered, interdisciplinary and competency based ones); responsibility increasing of the academic community for the doctoral students’ training quality; implementation of thematic principles; interdisciplinary; interuniversity and international integration.

2016 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 96
Author(s):  
Oleksandr A. Scherbyna

The National Strategy of the Education Development in Ukraine for 2012-2021 includes modernization of structure, content and organization of education founded on competency-based approach, full implementation of which requires an appropriate assessment system. This article discusses the features of competency evaluation, recently appeared in Moodle learning management system, and compares them with "Skills repository" module which is used for certification of information and communication competencies C2i, which has been implemented in the system of higher education in France. It is shown, that new evaluation tools of competencies have much more convenient interface, are easy to use and have bigger functionality.


2015 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 134
Author(s):  
Oleksandr A. Shcherbyna

The National Strategy of the Education Development in Ukraine for 2012-2021 includes modernization of structure, content and organization of education on the basis of competency-based approach, which requires the full implementation of an appropriate assessment system. This article discusses the features of competency evaluation and use of "Skills repository" module for Moodle learning management system, created for the needs of the certification of information and communication competencies C2i, which has been implemented in the system of higher education in France since 2011. Work with examples and an instance of the repository is considered, as well as with summarizing evaluation report. New features that have appeared in the latest version of the module are reviewed.


The paper deals with the methodological principles of the dual education development in the hotel and restaurant business taking into account the modernization paradigm. The preconditions for the formation of dual education systems in different countries suggest that such an approach should be more appropriately applied to practically oriented specialties. Analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of existing dual education systems offers an opportunity to suggest ways to modernize them in the conditions of the information society development. The paper proposes a system of principles (general and specific) on which the cooperation of higher education institutions and hotel and restaurant business should be based. The stages and methodological approaches to the analysis of hotel and restaurant business modernization processes in the context of the formation of a dual education system are substantiated.


2021 ◽  

The monograph presents innovative research in modern pedagogy, language education, methods of teaching Ukrainian literature, highlights the peculiarities of training students of philology. The papers concern the problems of learning with the Sіор model, the peculiarities of the organization of education and research, independent activities of the students, mixed forms of education. There are found out strategic approaches to the formation of intercultural communication of future philologists. The study of cognitive linguistics and linguoculturology, discourse in the media demonstrates the development of new areas of modern linguistics. The monograph is recommended for teachers of higher education institutions, postgraduate students, doctoral students, lecturers, students.


Author(s):  
Patricia López Vicent ◽  
María Paz Prendes Espinosa

Resumen:Con el proceso de Bolonia la tutoría es una de las acciones docentes que marcan el cambio en nuestras instituciones de enseñanza superior. Supone hablar de un nuevo rol docente que amplía su acción formativa hacia aspectos que van más allá de lo estrictamente curricular y que nos conducen hacia una personalización de la acción docente, lo cual a su vez redunda en la calidad de la enseñanza y en un modelo universitario centrado en el alumno. Y si en estos procesos de tutoría incluimos el uso de las TIC, hablaremos entonces de un modelo de acción tutorial más flexible y ajustado a las necesidades de los alumnos. Partiendo de estas premisas, la tutoría electrónica puede entenderse como un elemento de calidad en la acción formativa de nuestras instituciones de enseñanza superior. En 2009 en la Universidad de Murcia se propone la tutoría electrónica como un proyecto de innovación del Vicerrectorado de Convergencia Europea e Innovación. A partir del curso 2010/2011 se asume como un modelo de acción tutorial implantado y conocido por la comunidad universitaria. Este artículo recoge el análisis de este proceso de implantación de la tutoría electrónica desde sus comienzos en el curso 2009/2010. Se ha utilizado una metodología cuantitativa a través de un estudio tipo encuesta de carácter longitudinal que recoge datos durante 3 cursos académicos -considerados como el reflejo del proceso de innovación, de implantación y de consolidación-. Se ha empleado un cuestionario en línea aplicado al profesorado de dicha universidad cuyos resultados reflejan el uso diverso que se hace de esta modalidad de tutoría y el grado de satisfacción del mismo. Las conclusiones conducen a observar la tutoría electrónica como una acción formativa altamente valorada por el profesorado, coincidiendo así plenamente con los resultados de investigaciones previa. Abstract:Tutoring is one of most innovative teaching actions in the introduction of the Bolonia process in higher education. It is directly linked to the new role of university professors, incorporating not only curricular activity but also the personalization of teaching and what this entails. This has a knock-on effect in that it enhances quality through a new student-centered model. If moreover we include the possibilities afforded by ICT, we are talking about a flexible tutoring model that is responds to the real needs of today’s students. So virtual tutoring can be understood as a quality element of teaching in higher education. Virtual tutoring was proposed as an educational innovation in our University in 2009 by the Vicechancellor of European Convergence and Innovation. After the process of implementation, this bimodal system of tutoring is now considered as part of our usual model of work and it is well known by all the university community. This article presents the analysis of this process over three academic courses. We have used a quantitative approach with a questionnaire, applied during this period. The survey was carried out online. Results show that the virtual tutoring is used for diverse purposes and there is great satisfaction among the participants in this study. Our conclusions are important in explaining that this system is a value for our academic community, as has been reported in other studies.


Author(s):  
Mahdalyna Opachko ◽  
Iryna Kozlovska ◽  
Iryna Kliuchkovska

In modern conditions of higher school development the problem of student-centrism realization is actualized, which encourages to design educational environment for the development and formation of personality of future specialist, capable of independent construction of educational trajectory, of constant self-development and self-improvement, self-realization of creative potential. Modern students are an active subject and participants of international and domestic scientific and educational forums, public initiatives and social transformations. The purpose of the study was to carry out an aspect analysis of student-centeredness as a characteristic feature of modern university education and to reveal the conditions for the effectiveness of its implementation. To achieve this goal, the following research methods were applied: analysis, synthesis, generalization, systematization to identify aspects of student-centeredness: social (civilizational), philosophical, social, psychological, pedagogical, managerial, personal and revealing the essence of each. The modeling method was used to penetrate into the essence of the social phenomenon − student-centeredness and to define markers for its characterization and criterion assessment of levels of manifestation. The method of interpreting the results of the survey clarified the nature of non-adaptability to the perception of the idea of student-centeredness. The зкщоусештп method was used to outline the strategic directions of higher school development on the example of a specific university in terms of student-centered learning. The result of the study is the formulation of conditions for the effectiveness of the student-centered approach in the context of university education. The prospects for the further research: to identify markers of student-centeredness, which would make it possible to recognize the levels of its displays and comparative analysis (foreign and domestic) of higher education institutions to implement the idea of student-centeredness.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 2303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Almudena Eizaguirre ◽  
María García-Feijoo ◽  
Jon Paul Laka

One of the concerns in our time is the need to integrate economic, social and environmental aspects, which is known as sustainable development. The role of higher education is essential for providing future professionals with the necessary profiles to respond to the sustainability challenges in increasingly complex and global contexts. That is why numerous authors have sought to define key competencies, skills and learning outcomes for sustainability. However, there is still no agreement on what these key competencies for sustainability in higher education really are. For that reason, the objective of this paper is to determine which are the sustainability core competencies, considering three different geographical regions (Europe, Latin America, and Central Asia), and the perspective of four different stakeholders (graduates, employers, students and academics). The framework of the research is the development of the so-called Tuning projects, which aim to design comparable and compatible higher education degrees in different regions of the world, based on student-centered and competency-based learning. Using an exploratory factor analysis (EFA), the results of this study reveal the existence of a factor intimately related to sustainability, which includes competencies such as commitment to the preservation of the environment, social responsibility or respect for diversity and multiculturality, among others.


10.28945/4871 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 633-656
Author(s):  
Aireen Grace Andal ◽  
Shuang Wu

Aim/Purpose: This paper identifies and examines cross-cutting experiences from the perspective of two doctoral students, whose research was affected by the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19). Background: The COVID-19 pandemic continues to be challenging for higher education scholars in terms of proceeding with their research and how the pandemic sets the scene for changes in higher education’s future. Due to increased anxiety levels because of uncertainties, the paper provides a reflection of doctoral experiences from two students – one in Russia at the data collection stage, and one in China (enrolled in New Zealand) at the proposal stage. Methodology: Through collaborative autoethnography and joint-reflection, we analyze our experiences as doctoral students focusing on methodological adjustments, ethical dilemmas, adaptation strategies and supervisor-supervisee relationships. Conducting a collaborative autoethnography provides a richer analysis of the interplay between perspectives, compared to a traditional autoethnography. Collaborative autoethnography also provides conditions for a collective exploration of subjectivities of doctoral students through an iterative process. After providing separate individual accounts, we discussed our experiences, analyzed them, and engaged in a joint-reflection from our consensual interpretations. Contribution: Our work aims to contribute to existing discussions on how COVID-19 impacted on doctoral students’ coping strategies during the pandemic. The paper encourages doctoral students to further discuss how they navigate their doctoral experiences through autoethnography and joint-reflections. Findings: Three main themes transpired in our analysis. First, we encountered roadblocks such as interruptions, frustrations and resistance to adapt our doctoral studies in the pandemic context, which align with the recent literature regarding education during the coronavirus pandemic. Second, we faced a diversity of burdens and privileges in the pandemic, which provided us with both pleasant (opportunity to create change) and unpleasant (unknown threats) situations, thereby enabling us to construct and reconstruct our stories through reflection. Third, we experienced a shared unfamiliarity of doing doctoral studies during the pandemic, to which the role of the academic community including our supervisors and doctoral colleagues contributed to how we managed our circumstances. Recommendations for Practitioners: We speak to our fellow doctoral students to dare navigate their doctoral experiences through collaborative reflections. In practice, by reflecting on our experience, we recommend that new doctoral students remain flexible and mindful of their doctoral journeys and recognize their agency to deal with the unexpected. We thus encourage the view of doctoral studies as a process rather than outcome-oriented, as we gain experience from processes. Recommendation for Researchers: We recommend using both collaborative autoethnography and joint-reflection as an instructive tool for qualitative research. Such engagements offer important discussions towards further communications and exchange of ideas among doctoral students from various backgrounds. Impact on Society: More broadly, this work is an invitation to reflect and provoke further thoughts to articulate reflections on the impact and various ways of thinking that the pandemic might bring to the fore. Future Research: Doctoral students are welcome to contribute to a collectivity of narratives that thicken the data and analyses of their pandemic experiences in higher education to reinforce the role of doctoral researchers as agents of history in the trying times of a pandemic.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 221
Author(s):  
Alena Kasparkova ◽  
Kamila Etchegoyen Rosolová

Supporting Academic Writing and Publication Practice: PhD Students in Engineering and their Supervisors This poster documents the bottom-up efforts leading to the establishment of an academic writing support program for doctoral students at an engineering university in the Czech Republic (CR). To defend their dissertation, by law Czech doctoral students have to have published their research. Moreover, many faculties require their doctoral students to publish in prestigious English-medium journals, which is a challenge even for the students’ supervisors. Although publication requirements prior to dissertation defence are becoming common in many countries (Kamler and Thompson, 2014; Kelly, 2017), Czech students often face a challenge of writing in the absence of any prior writing support, where insufficient knowledge of English only adds an extra hurdle to the already difficult task of argumentation absent in Czech schooling. CR has a comparatively high number of doctoral students, but also alarmingly high drop-out rates with more than 50% students not finishing their studies (Beneš et al., 2017). In part, this is due to the students’ difficulties to publish (National Training Fund, 2019). This challenge could be addressed with systematic writing development, but Czech educators and dissertation supervisors are not commonly aware of composition being teachable as we learned from our preliminary study on writing support in doctoral programs in several Czech universities (Rosolová & Kasparkova, in press). While supervisors and university leaders tended to see writing development as a responsibility of the students, the doctoral students were calling for systematic support.  We strive to bring attention to the complexity of writing development and introduce a discourse on academic writing that conceives of academic writing as a bundle of analytical and critical thinking skills coupled with knowledge of rhetorical structures and different academic genres. We show how these skills can be taught through a course drawing on the results from a needs analysis survey among engineering doctoral students, the target population for this course (for more information on the survey, see Kasparkova & Rosolová, 2020). In the survey, students expressed a strong interest in a blended-learning format of the course, which we base on a model of a unique academic writing course developed for researchers at the Czech Academy of Sciences, but not common in Czech universities. Our course is work in progress and combines writing development with library modules that frame the whole writing process as a publication journey ranging from library searches, to a selection of a target journal and communication with reviewers. Because we are well aware that a course alone will not trigger a discourse on writing development in Czech higher education, we also plan on involving a broader academic community through workshops for supervisors and a handbook on teaching academic writing and publishing skills for future course instructors. Colleagues at EATAW 2019 conference commented on the poster sharing their difficulties from the engineering context and for instance suggested a computer game to engage engineers. This resonated with our plan to invite our engineers into the course through a geo-caching game – for more, see Kasparkova & Rosolová (2020). References Beneš, J., Kohoutek, J., & Šmídová, M. (2017). Doktorské studium v ČR [Doctoral studies in the CR].  Centre for Higher Education Studies. https://www.csvs.cz/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Doktorandi_final_2018.pdf Rosolová, K. E., & Kasparkova, A. (in press). How do I cook an Impact Factor article if you do not show me what the ingredients are? Educare. https://ojs.mau.se/index.php/educare Kamler, B., & Thomson, P. (2014). Helping Doctoral Students Write (2nd edition). Routledge. Kasparkova, A., & Rosolová, K. (2020). A geo-caching game ‘Meet your Editor’ as a teaser for writing courses. 2020 IEEE International Professional Communication Conference (ProComm), Kennesaw, GA, USA, 2020, pp. 87-91. https://doi.org/10.1109/ProComm48883.2020.00019 Kelly, F. J. (2017). The idea of the PhD: The doctorate in the twenty-first-century imagination. Routledge. National Training Fund. (2019). Complex study of doctoral studies at Charles University and recommendations to improve the conditions and results. Report for the Charles University Management. Prague.


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