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News Podcast

European Universities on national radio 3

Berlin, 22 June 2020. The proposal to condense some of the interviews conducted with university staff, students, administrators and experts about the EU-funded European Universities Initiative — and about modern university development in general — resonated well in the educational radio magazine “Campus & Karriere” of Germany’s national radio channel Deutschlandradio.

Episode 3:
The university alliance CHARM-EU presents itself. Our reporter speaks with Katalin Németh, internationalisation officer of Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, and Gilles Subra, researcher and coordinator at the University of Montpellier. Both universities are members of the CHARM EU Alliance. The alliance’s structural feature of inter-university work packages and task forces is being explained.

 

UUU wants to thanks all alliance members and all you beautiful people of being so frank and patient and available to explain, especially in these stressful times of restrictions, home office and online work. Thanks to you it was possible to make this radio programme and to develop an interesting format that mirrors and accompanies the alliances’ genisis.

The producers of the programme – who are part of the creative process just like all the interview partners – are, apart of the author Tino Brömme, sound and editing genius Andreas Hagelüken in Freiburg who normally produces sophisticated radio plays and sound installations (randfunk). Also aboard are the two German voices Marco Höhmann, an actor, commedian and project manager, as well as the brilliant Matia Sprenger who just finished her high school diploma with honors.

The upcoming episode of the radio series will feature Daniela Trani from the alliance YUFE, and Dominic Orr from YUFE associate partner KIRON Open Higher Education.

Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag Photos for social media can be downloaded here: Ep. 1 Forlino | Ep. 2 Maria & Genís | Ep. 3 Gilles and Katalin | Podcast studio with author Tino Brömme

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News Podcast

European Universities on national radio 2

UUU has launched a radio programme on German national radio – Deutschlandradio – presenting and discussing European Universities. The second of four episodes has now been aired.

Berlin, 17 June 2020. June has been a good month for the United Universities of Europe project (UUU). The proposal to condense some of the interviews conducted with university staff, students, administrators and experts about the EU-funded European Universities Initiative – and about modern university development in general – resonated well in the educational radio magazine “Campus & Karriere” of Germany’s national radio channel Deutschlandradio.

Episode 2: A conversation with two students, Maria Michailova, Russian exchange student at the University of Tampere, Finland, a member of the alliance ECIU, and with Genís Vives, student representative at the University of Barcelona, a partner of CHARM-EU. The students show how drastically different was (and is) the emergency situation under Corona restrictions in different countries.

 

The producers of the programme – who are part of the creative process just like all the interview partners – are, apart of the author Tino Brömme, sound and editing genius Andreas Hagelüken in Freiburg who normally produces sophisticated radio plays and sound installations (randfunk). Also aboard are the two German voices Marco Höhmann, an actor, commedian and project manager, as well as the brilliant Matia Sprenger who just finished her high school diploma with honors.

The upcoming episodes of the radio series will feature Katalin Németh, internationalisation officer of Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest (CHARM-EU), and Gilles Subra, researcher and coordinator at the University of Montpellier (UNA EUROPA); Daniela Trani from the alliance YUFE, and Dominic Orr from YUFE associate partner KIRON Open Higher Education.

Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag Photos for social media can be downloaded here: Ep. 1 Forlino | Ep. 2 Maria & Genís | Ep. 3 Gilles and Katalin | Podcast studio with author Tino Brömme

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Podcast Project News

European Universities on national radio

UUU has launched a radio programme on German national radio, Deutschlandradio presenting and discussing European Universities. The first of four episodes has just been aired.

Berlin, 15 June 2020. June has been a good month for the United Universities of Europe project (UUU). The proposal to condense some of the interviews conducted with university staff, students, administrators and experts about the EU-funded European Universities Initiative – and about modern university development in general – resonated well in the educational radio magazine “Campus & Karriere” of Germany’s national radio channel Deutschlandradio.

Episode 1: An interview with Antonella Forlino, prorector for internationalisation at the University of Pavia, member of the university alliance EC2U. Prof. Forlino gives an account of her difficulties to switch to online teaching and the university’s response to the Corona pandemic.

 

UUU wants to thanks all alliance members and all you beautiful people of being so frank and patient and available to explain, especially in these stressful times of restrictions, home office and online work. Thanks to you it was possible to make this radio programme and to develop an interesting format that mirrors and accompanies the alliances’ genisis.

The producers of the programme – who are part of the creative process just like all the interview partners – are, apart of the author Tino Brömme, sound and editing genius Andreas Hagelüken in Freiburg who normally produces sophisticated radio plays and sound installations (randfunk). Also aboard are the two German voices Marco Höhmann, an actor, commedian and project manager, as well as the brilliant Matia Sprenger who just finished her high school diploma with honors.

The upcoming episodes of the radio series will feature Maria Michailova, Russian exchange student at the University of Tampere, Finland (ECIU), Genís Vives, student representative at the University of Barcelona, Katalin Németh, internationalisation officer of Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, and Gilles Subra, researcher and coordinator at the University of Montpellier (all three from the alliance CHARM-EU); Daniela Trani from the alliance YUFE, and Dominic Orr from YUFE associate partner KIRON Open Higher Education.

 

Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag Photos for social media can be downloaded here: Ep. 1 Forlino | Ep. 2 Maria & Genís | Ep. 3 Gilles and Katalin | Podcast studio with author Tino Brömme

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Video

Postcard from Poitiers – The EC²U Alliance

The University of Poitiers was the first stop on our first University Tour. We spoke with Ludovic Thilly, the Rectors’s delegate for European Networks and Coordinator of the EC²U Alliance.

What did you recently do, at work, that made you happy?

Ludovic Thilly: Actually, for the past two years and a half, we’ve been working with other colleagues from the different universities, so, seven universities. The coordination is indeed performed by the University of Poitiers, but we have together the University of Coimbra, we have the University of Salamanca, Pavia, Turku, Iași and Jena. And I must say that the most fulfilling part was to have the meetings with all the different colleagues, because there we were really working together to create a new model of what could be the University of the future.

And we were coming from very diverse backgrounds. I’m a physicist, but we had linguists, we had administrative staff, we had colleagues involved in energy related research … a real diversity of profiles, but everybody was working in the same direction. And this was indeed very interesting because we could have a sort of dialogue between disciplines, between the ways that we see the university or how it should evolve. And this was really enriching, I learned a lot, and that was indeed very very pleasant and fulfilling.

So, this is just something from academics for academics?

No, what we are proposing is to build a new model of what could be the University of the future. What I’m saying is, we really want to push all the colleagues at all levels and all the students at all levels to work together without the traditional bias of the disciplines in order to achieve responses that may help solving the challenges of today and of the future. This includes of course the climate crisis, but not only, it is also about the social side, social challenges, inclusiveness, the way to reach all the citizens, the spread of knowledge and culture, and also critical thinking, a full understanding of what is going on in our society. So, this new model, it’s difficult to qualify, but we want to reach a new way to spread knowledge with capital K.

You deal with a lot of European and national programmes, projects and co-operations. What makes this one different?

The whole concept of the European Universities Alliances is something that we have never worked on. When you look at the history of the recent European programmes, in particular investment programmes and also the research programmes, we never had the opportunity to bring complete creativity and really let our minds go in all directions.

What I’m saying is, when you read the guidelines of this new initiative, this is the first time that creativity is left in the hands of the proposers to really propose different models. And in the case of the EC²U Alliance, we decided that the main commitment of our seven universities was to create a model where inclusiveness and reaching the citizens is the main goal. And for that, we are developing series of activities that will involve students, the whole academic community, but it will also involve all the stakeholders, all the local partners, the municipalities, the socio-economic world, the student associations and other associations to bring together their creativity and forces to promote and propose new solutions to the challenges of today and tomorrow.

What is the concept of the ‘city university’ in your proposal?

The concept of the city-university is something that we are very involved in, here in Poitiers. Four years ago, on the occasion of one of the annual meetings of the Coimbra Group – a university association we are a member of – we decided to choose as a topic “The City and the University.” We realised that we perform a lot of activities together with the municipalities, sharing the same goal. Both want to spread knowledge, both want to engage with citizens in solving society’s challenges.

So this is the concept of the city-university, a university that has been created more or less at the same time of the city, and with ages the two have become a sort of symbiotic institutions. And this is what we have placed at the core of the EC²U Alliance, the European Campus of City Universities.

Please give some practical examples of what EC²U does.

The University of Poitiers has been founded in 1431. From the very beginning, it has a tradition of innovation, and in the particular case of this opening to the citizens and to the society at large, we are continuously inventing new ways to reach the public.
For instance for the students: We recently created what we call the solidarity grocery where we provide the students who have limited income to still have access to goods of consumption for the minimum of what they need in their daily life. Also we have decided, and this was a very strong political commitment, to open all the courses to inhabitants for free. They don’t get a degree but they have access to the courses, and this desacralized the access to higher education. The public goes to the campus, and this is not becoming a forbidden place. So these examples that we have developed at the local level, we want to promote now at the scale of the Alliance.

And, for instance, to create a sense of belonging to a single community, we will create joint sports and join cultural events for the academic community but also with access to the public. And we also want to create what we call the EC²U Forum. It’s a new concept where we put around the table the academic personnel, the policy makers, the citizens, to discuss together on what are the challenges and how to bring solutions to these. So basically what we want to create is a space for dialogue that all actors are on equal footing and can share, and can really move forward in solving the issues of today or tomorrow.

An event every six months doesn’t make a model for future universities…

What we want to develop during the pilot phase of this Alliance is indeed to test these different activities and see which ones work and which ones don’t. If they don’t work, why? Can we find remedies to these problems? And then, when the Alliance will continue to grow and develop, maybe we will create new activities while we will keep the ones which are, let’s say, the flagship projects, the DNA of the whole Alliance. So the events will continue, maybe not every six months at each university, maybe only once a year. But the idea is to really keep this commitment as long as universities will exist.

How do you translate your local activities to the Alliance?

There are really important developments to come, especially regarding the innovation transfer. All the results that we obtain from the laboratories in research, but also the new knowledge that is created, needs to be transferred to society in creation of start-ups, new enterprises and so on. So this is also one of the targets of the EC²U Alliance to create a sort of network of transfer agencies, so that we can also build a link, or bridges,, with the socio-economic stakeholders locally but then also within the whole seven regions of the Alliance.

Why should the public care about all of this?

When the European Commission launched this initiative called the European Universities Alliances, there were a lot of concerns that this would indeed become a sort of new Ivy League or new elite of universities in Europe. In the case of the EC²U Alliance, all the members have very committed to this, and this is something that is very important to me, too. We should not, indeed, create something that would be only for the Happy Few.

What I’m saying here is that we are living in times, in periods of the European history, where it is absolutely important that all the knowledge that is created at universities – because this is where knowledge is created.
What we mean about knowledge is the new education. But it is also research and innovation, and we should not forget the fourth aspect of what is called now the knowledge square, the service to society. So, universities should not be isolated and they are not, but people tend to forget this. And the whole spirit of the European alliances, and in particular the case of EC²U, is that we want to show that the universities are the places where critical thinking, where understanding the world is going on. And this should be transferred to the society so that we avoid, indeed, these awful cases of Brexit, this awful cases of people not recognising the role of science in solving for instance the climate crisis, and so on.

What do you consider the ‘European’ part of the Alliance?

So we need to bring this knowledge to the people, if the European Universities are becoming just a small club, that would be a disaster! What we want to achieve with the EC²U Alliance is absolutely the opposite. We want to test the model first be among a limited number of universities. But once we have shown that it works, we want to disseminate. We want really to share all the results, all the procedures, all what is working to transfer the knowledge to the people.

And we want to share this freely with all the other universities and higher education institutions in Europe, and even beyond. All the seven universities have their international network outside Europe. And we will choose to enrich these external links with the rest of the world, because we cannot consider that Europe is isolated on the planet. We cannot just create a small space of freedom only in Europe, it has also to spread outside. So basically what we are creating here is a space of freedom, freedom of movement, freedom of thinking, but thinking in a critical manner … And we want to spread this to the others.

What else is the EC²U Alliance about except students and mobility?

The European Universities Initiative is financed by the Erasmus+ programme. So one could believe that it is only about education for students. But as I mentioned earlier, this is the first time that we have the capacity to really be creative when submitting a European project.

And, we can really link together education, research and innovation. I think this is the first time that a European programme allows this kind of flexibility. And basically we can combine the three missions of the university, again, education, research and innovation. And to do so within the EC²U Alliance, we decided that we would create what we called EC²U Virtual Institutes that are, let’s say, laboratories without walls. So, purely virtual systems where we will gather students, teachers and researchers working on topics which are interdisciplinary and that are also based on the strengths of each of the seven universities to really bring solution and innovation to the current challenges.

What challenges?

We have, for the first three years, selected three of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, namely, “Good Health and Well being”, “Quality education” and “Sustainable Cities and Communities”. And we are joining forces and creating this new knowledge team – in a way, these are new knowledge teams – to solve the three UN SDGs. After the first three years, we hope to address more of the SDGs, possibly all of them.

 

Tino Brömme spoke with Ludovic Thilly in Poitiers on February 11, 2020. Camera assistant, city guide and translator was Aymen Ben Djeema. Thanks to Emilie Lama, International Projects Manager at the University of Poitiers for organising everything and making this interview, the whole visit in Poitiers possible.

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News Video

The University of Granada / ARQUS # Gaudeamus Igitur

The University of Granada, member of the university alliance ARQUS, “tele-gathered” 70 members of its Orchestra and Choir to record the Gaudeamus of Resistance with a verse dedicated to the current situation caused by COVID-19. It has been subtitled in 13 languages thanks to the support and solidarity of its international partners.

 

Arqus, 30th April, 2020. The Gaudeamus Igitur has been for centuries the anthem and a symbol of universities and their academic communities in a huge number of countries all over the world.

Its nature has always been to be alive and its lyrics have never been static. Some of its verses were adjusted and modified whenever it was deemed relevant to reflect change in society and in the academic world. When the pandemic started, the University of Granada brought together more than 70 members of its Orchestra and Choir to record an online version of the anthem that includes a dedicated verse of resistance against the SARS-CoV-2 virus causing the COVID-19 crisis.

Jesús Luque Moreno, who is an honorary Emeritus Full Professor of Latin, proposed updating the anthem to fit the reality in which we currently find ourselves, and wrote the additional verse that inspires strength and hope, and emphasizes the certainty of victory over the coronavirus.

Almost 20,000 people from more than 15 countries have already viewed the original version, sung in Latin and subtitled in Spanish. Due to its success, the University of Granada decided to subtitle it in 13 additional languages so that people across the globe could enjoy and understand the strong and meaningful lyrics.

Subtitling the Gaudeamus anthem to 13 more languages, including all the languages of the Arqus Alliance, has been possible thanks to the voluntary contributions of academic and administrative staff of the University of Granada, and the collaboration of international partners, in particular, those that make up the Arqus Alliance. These efforts were promoted and coordinated by the University of Granada’s Vice-Rectorate for Internationalization.

The recording of the Gaudeamus has been possible thanks to the enthusiasm of 45 musicians and 26 choristers. All of these musicians used their own resources at home to record each part separately, and then they were adjusted, edited, mastered and equalised by the production team. Approximately 75 parallel audio and video tracks have been used for the final video. It has been an unprecedented challenge both artistically and technically.

The Gaudeamus of Resistance and its international versions are, in summary, a collaborative work that overcomes borders and restrictions and makes use of the best we can offer. It shows that international cooperation can help to throw off chains and stand by each other.

Source: https://www.arqus-alliance.eu/news/arqus-supports-granada-Gaudeamus

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News Video

EUA Survey on European Universities

EUA has published the position “The future of the European Universities Initiative – the sector’s perspective” together with the results of the recent EUA survey on international strategic institutional partnerships and the European Universities Initiative.

 

Endorsed by the EUA Council, the position supports the initiative and calls for it to remain open and flexible, so that it allows universities to grow and deepen their cooperation according to their strategy and priorities. The Initiative should also be used as an additional way to address obstacles to transnational collaboration and work towards greater compatibility of systems across Europe building on and embedded in the work in the framework of the Bologna Process and the European Research Area.

European collaboration and solidarity, including in research, innovation and education are of ever greater importance in the current coronavirus crisis. Strengthening Europe’s innovation capacity, to which universities contribute greatly, will be crucial for recovery and for building a sustainable future. Deepening transnational university collaboration, including through alliances such as those developed under the European Universities Initiative, can play an important role in this and has great potential to strengthen European higher education and research and its international competitiveness.

In the position, EUA calls on the European Commission, the EU Member States in Council and the European Parliament to consider the following seven points for the future development of the initiative:

  1. The European Universities Initiative must be seen as an additional way to explore strategic cooperation, identify challenges and propose solutions.
  2. The alliances must have leeway to be innovative and creative.
  3. The diverse ways of collaborating must be preserved.
  4. The initiative must encompass all university missions in a bottom-up approach.
  5. Fostering cohesion within Europe and contributing to competitiveness must be key objectives.
  6. Participation should be further opened to promote international competitiveness.
  7. Long-term sustainability requires continued political and financial support.

The position is founded on consultations with national rectors’ conferences and evidence from the sector included in the EUA report “International strategic institutional partnerships and the European Universities Initiative: results of the EUA survey”, which has also just been published. It was conducted with universities in early 2020 to map the state of play of their international engagement, explore in particular the topic of international strategic institutional partnerships and collect views about the European Universities Initiative. EUA received 219 valid responses from higher education institutions in 34 systems across Europe. The results confirm that international collaboration has been a strategic issue for universities for a long time and developing long-term strategic institutional partnerships with a selected number of partners abroad is high on the list of internationalisation priorities.

The European Universities Initiative, which aims at supporting the creation of such deep university alliances, has thus triggered high interest among responding institutions. While the results highlight the benefits that respondents are expecting from participating in the European Universities Initiative, they also reveal challenges and reasons why some institutions decide not to participate and give recommendations for the future.

The survey results and the EUA Council position outline the sector’s views and demands for the future development of the initiative. They come at a crucial moment when decisions are being taken on future EU funding programmes, amid the current coronavirus crisis.

www.eua.be

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Video

The University of Pavia # Close at a Distance

The University of Pavia – member of the European university alliance EC²U – has just launched a video of encouragement during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The video description reads as follows:

“We have tapped into our creativity with a moral obligation to continue to be a community. Universities have not closed. They adapted. In order to continue being close while at a distance. And to return renewed, stronger than before.”

The video promoted by the Italian Rectors’ Conference (CRUI) describes the prompt reaction of Italian universities during the epidemiological emergency on the distance teaching front: 76,000 lessons in a month, 94% of the lessons confirmed, 70,000 examinations carried out, 27,000 degree sessions, 1.4 million students involved.

English website of the University of Pavia

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Podcast

Reinventing the University – François Taddei


Today we have François Taddei, in Paris, on the line. Monsieur Taddei is an educator, a teacher, he has co-founded a research and learning centre in Paris called CRI, which holds an UNESCO chair for ‘learning science’. He was also a counselor for one of the new European university networks funded by the European Commission.

Monsieur Taddei, what are these networks or alliances about?

Universities are being challenged who used to have a sort of a monopoly on places of both construction of knowledge and sharing of knowledge. But today there are many other places where you can do either of these two things.

So the specificity of what a university is and what it should be, is challenged. And I think the European Universities Initiative is one that is inviting universities to rethink their mission, what role they can play for society, what added value they can offer to their students and to the researchers and to the society in general.

Is this initiative a continuation of the Bologna Process? Another push for more academic mobility?

It’s certainly part of it. But, you know, the same package includes also more money for Erasmus which is definitely to increase mobility. I think, this would not be enough, there could have been other ways of doing it.

These European Universities Initiative, is it more than a ‘universities based in Europe’ initiative? Is it just trying to get a few more ranks into the Shanghai Ranking or any other international ranking? Or is there something more substantial? There has been quite a lot of debate.

But I think that, what it could be, is the will to include other dimensions that are not typical of universities.

What makes this different from other EU higher education funding policies?

The discussion we are having is: Should we focus on the universities of the future or on the future of the university? Is it universities trying to think themselves (in) their own future, or should they prepare their students and the citizens for the future? – Which is somewhat different a perspective.

Those questions are very open and I like the fact that we are invited to open those questions. What I do know is that the applicants, even those who didn’t get the money, say that they were so pleased that there was such a call. The interesting part is that they are willing to experiment with different models. And that’s the most promising, because in a fast changing world if you don’t evolve you will be obsolete before you know it.

I understand, however, the EU call is all about buzz words like ‘internationalisation’ and ‘innovation’ – how can that ever lead to pedagogic experimentation or student participation?

There are gonna be 7 rounds for this call, and the first round was organised rather quickly as attempt to see what will come back. They were pleased to see that many universities were interested in going for this. Of course universities, by default, would like to be better funded and by default would be happy to be higher in the Shanghai ranking.

But the real question is, what universities are for? There is very little incentive to discuss these issues. The Shanghai ranking is very uni-model view of the world. It’s like when you take every human and rank them according to their ability to run a hundred meters, but not the thousand other dimensions of human life.

So of course by default some people say, ok, let’s do what the Americans are doing. We want to compete with the Americans, we want to compete with Singapur – But does Europe want to look like America or Asia – or does it want to invent its own model? And I think there is ever more people who are willing to engage in that conversation, certainly the students.

Was this the idea at the Sorbonne in 2017, when the French president Emanuel Macron first proposed to build university networks?

I don’t have first-hand information. The only thing I know is that he is someone who deeply believes in Europe. And who believes deeply in education. He didn’t have a very precise agenda, He is willing to prepare Europe for the future, and he believes that universities are the place where discussions can be happening.

Clearly Erasmus is one of the big successes of Europe. But how do you go beyond that academic tourism? And I think that he was clever enough to to over-prescribe, feeling that there was an interesting potential there. If he had over-prescribed it, he would have forbidden many possible dimensions of evolution. Whereas by inviting – and I think that’s what the European Commission is trying to do – by inviting universities to look for their own path, the conversation became much more interesting.

One of the dimensions I remember discussing with the Commission was, you know, more and more people are dissatisfied with Europe and dissatisfied with elites. And when Europe is investing in universities in an elitistic perspective, you are going to dissatisfy many people.

So the only way that there can be a gobal benefit is if those experiments are well documented, put in an open source mode, and where other universities and the rest of society are invited to take advantage in these experimentations. So, the EU Commission money is not so much, but if it is combined with the national level, then we can hope that there is an impact that is a systemic impact.

The first 17 university networks have been chosen in July 2019, the second call will be published in October. Are there new developments? What is the kind of project that has the chance to be successful in the future?

I didn’t have time to go to their last meeting. But one of my colleagues went there. He was very pleased abot the discussion that was happening there. What was discussed then – rather than ask the people to do the impossible, make sure that you become good in 100 dimensions at once – was to say, pick one or two dimensions where you really think that your consortia can make a difference, and can make real experiments, and can prototype something that could be truely useful. Then make sure that, whatever your prototype is available to everyone else by documenting it and making it in a sort of open-source way.

This way there might be a hundred different ways of approaching the question, but all of them would be available. And rather than enforcing one model only, we would offer tens of experiments to universities that would be willing to take the challenge because it’s closer to their specificities and local environment.

So, let’s see the new ideas that university networks will come up with in the next years. Thank you, Monsieur Taddei, for talking with us today.

Tino Brömme spoke with François Taddei via Skype on August 28, 2019 © ESNA 2019

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News

ENHANCE – A joint campus for Europe

TU Berlin Architekturgebäude

TU Berlin initiates alliance with six partner universities as part of the European Commission’s European University Initiative

(Press Release) Europe’s universities should strive to be places of outstanding research and educational innovation. More flexible study and research offers and fewer bureaucratic hurdles can ease the individual educational and career paths of students, doctoral candidates, researchers, and staff. As an institution that actively shapes the European educational area, TU Berlin, together with six European partner universities, is taking part in the second call of the European Commission’s “European Universities Initiative”.  As coordinating university, TU Berlin submitted the proposal for “ENHANCE – European Universities of Technology Alliance” on 26 February 2020. The Alliance is made up of seven European innovative technical universities: Chalmers University of Technology (Sweden), Norwegian University of Science and Technology (Norway), Politecnico di Milano (Italy), RWTH Aachen University and Technische Universität Berlin (Germany), Universitat Politècnica de València (Spain), and Warsaw University of Technology (Poland). Successful alliances will receive 120 million euros and serve as role models for future European universities, for which the new Erasmus program will provide a special funding line.

With a vision to “drive responsible societal transformation by enhancing a strong alliance of European Universities of Technology, empowering people to develop and use science and technology responsibly and turn global challenges into opportunities”, the ENHANCE partner universities aim to use the three-year funding period to lay the foundation for structures which enable the seamless mobility of students, researchers, and employees of the universities. Their plan includes a recognition database and a mapping of study offers so that students can select study offers and modules from within the Alliance with the assurance that these will receive automatic academic recognition. The envisioned instruments will first be tested in select bachelor’s and master’s programs. Additionally, the implementation of innovative teaching and learning formats will enable all students to profit from international ENHANCE offerings. For example, students will be able to take online courses offered by the partner universities, virtually work with other students on projects, or participate in workshops and summer schools.

Value-based teaching offered in collaboration with social players will ensure that students learn to critically think and develop and apply knowledge and technologies for the benefit of society. As a coalition of technical universities, one focus of ENHANCE is also on sustainable innovation and entrepreneurship. In a first step, joint research will be conducted to investigate what support start-ups need to be economically and ecologically viable long term.

“After a very constructive application period, we are looking forward to the results of the competition,” says Professor Angela Ittel, vice president for strategic development, junior scholars, and teacher education at TU Berlin. “We have set ourselves ambitious goals and I am convinced that the European University Initiative will elevate our cooperation with partners to a new level. We are already working closer together than ever before.”

Source: www.pressestelle.tu-berlin.de

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News

Views from the frontline of the European University project

Seventeen pan-European higher education alliances focused on working with industry, community and embracing alternative education models are benefiting from EU funding which comes on stream this month. What could they achieve?
ECIU students working on the concept of the European university of 2040 ©ECIU University

“We are all very optimistic about it. We see it as a great opportunity to create a truly European university model,” says Seán Hand, deputy pro-vice-chancellor of the University of Warwick in the UK.

He is enthusing over a newly forged bond with partner universities in Brussels, Barcelona, Gothenburg, Paris, and Ljubljana.

The alliance, called EUTOPIA, is one of 17 others supported by the EU – each European University alliance receives €5 million in the first three years and will work to become models of European integration: “inter-university campuses” around which students, doctoral candidates, staff and researchers can move seamlessly.

“We would have pursued many of the planned cooperative projects anyway,” explains Luke Walton, international press manager at Warwick. “But the EU call has encouraged us even more to further enhance our focus on Europe as a key part of our internationalisation strategy.

“It offers a framework, some funding and a public platform to put a sustainable collaboration in place.”

Bartosz Brozek in Kraków is driven by the same pioneering spirit. As vice-dean for international relations, he manages the Jagiellonian University’s projects within the seven-member group UNA Europa.

“The EU money is not even essential,” he stresses. “All of us are committed to working together as one future university. And we are starting by creating a common identity.”

The origins

The enthusiasm for the ‘European Universities Initiative’, launched by the European Commission in late 2018, was huge from the very beginning. A thousand participants, internationalisation officers, vice-rectors, ministerial delegates and representatives of research organisations, joined the information session in Brussels before Christmas either in person or via a video link.

Signatories of the EUTOPIA alliance © EUTOPIA

Over 300 institutions from 31 countries — that is one in 10 of the approximately 3,000 universities in the European Union — had formed 54 networks and submitted their proposals by February. Eventually 17, comprising 114 institutes, were selected in June.

The European Universities project, first pronounced in autumn 2017 by the newly elected French President Emmanuel Macron in his Sorbonne speech, has been hailed as nothing less than a “renaissance of the European spirit.”

“He didn’t have a very precise agenda,” recalls François Taddei, who is a counsellor for the 4EU+ alliance of six partner universities — Charles, Heidelberg and Sorbonne Universities, and the Universities of Copenhagen, Milan and Warsaw.

“But he is someone who deeply believes in Europe and in education, and who believes that universities are the place where discussions can be happening. He was clever enough not to over-prescribe, feeling that there was an interesting potential there.”

The idea originated, according to education journalist Jan-Martin Wiarda, in the European department of the Elysée Palace, and had to be elaborated by the research ministry. Some in the French government, says Wiarda, claim that Macron’s wife Brigitte Trogneux inspired it.

Twenty French universities will receive €100 million over 10 years

Higher education and research minister Frédérique Vidal said in retrospect: “We already agreed in the election campaign that universities and research institutions will play a central role in reconciling citizens with Europe.”

Making it in the first round

“We lost out in the first round by one point,” explains Ludovic Thilly, professor at the University of Poitiers and Executive Vice-Rector in charge of European affairs. He coordinates the European Campus of City-Universities, or EC2U, with Coïmbra, Iasi, Jena, Pavia, Salamanca, Turku and Poitiers in the boat.

“Our EC2U Alliance was ranked 18th, so that was very frustrating… Fortunately, we got a score of 80/100, i.e. we reached the score of excellence, and thus we are supported by the French government. This will greatly help with preparing the best resubmission.”

The selection was made by an evaluation committee, based on the advice of 26 independent external experts whose names were not made public. Each proposal was assessed by three of them against the five necessary criteria: relevance, geographical balance, quality of the proposal, quality of the cooperation arrangements, sustainability & dissemination.

Thilly, who recently attended an EU information session in Brussels, said the Commission considers funding alliances selected in the first and second round for a three-year period with the possibility to apply for a four-year extension.

After that, they are supposed to be self-sustaining. From 2021, when the Initiative becomes part of the Erasmus+ program, subsidies for four years with the possibility of a three-year extension are under discussion.

Geographic self-portrait of the EC2U Alliance

The financing

“Five million euros for three years per consortium is not very much,” Frank Petrikowski, a policy officer for the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, BMBF, told ESNA European Higher Education News in Berlin. The first mentioned budget was €30 million, it was raised to €60 million and finally set at €85 million for 17 – instead of 12 – chosen consortia.

He hopes that the European Universities will be “a counterweight to Harvard and Stanford”

“It is planned to go even further to €120 million in the second round,” he reveals. “€1.3 billion has been earmarked as a separate pillar of the Erasmus+ program in the forthcoming MFF from 2021 to 2027.”

Secondly, some governments are committed to provide additional money. French and German universities scored highest in the first round of the competition, appearing in 16 and 14 successful alliances respectively.

Paris will support “very well evaluated projects” with a focus on “research and innovation” as well as “other activities which are not eligible for European funding on national territory.” Twenty French universities will receive €100 million over 10 years. Among them are four universities; the above-mentioned University of Poitiers, as well as Orléans, Troyes, and Lille — whose alliances were unsuccessful in the first round.

The Germans have set up a national support programme of €7 million over three years; this also includes universities that didn’t win the first bid and might even not win the second, but that scored high in the Commission’s evaluation.

Rattling the rankings

Harald Kainz, rector of the Technical University of Graz, which is a member of the university alliance ARQUS, hopes that the European Universities will be “a counterweight to Harvard and Stanford.”

Patrick Aebischer, former President of the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), went even further, saying at a conference in Munich that the Initiative should focus on a few top universities in order to create a European Ivy League after the American model.

Olga Wessels, Head of the Brussels’ Office of the ECIU University — the biggest of the alliances with now 14 member universities — makes no bones about it: “Especially after Brexit when the UK is leaving the EU, if you look at the rankings, there are not many highly ranked European universities. So we need to build competitiveness of the universities.”

So far, the advantage of internationally high ranking European universities is marginal. Among the 114 alliance members successful in the first round of the programme, only 18 are in the top 200 of the Shanghai ranking, 25 in the QS ranking and 26 in the Times Higher Education ranking.

Can the incentives for merging ever be big enough for a university to give up its autonomy? Or, under what conditions would international ranking companies consider a European University one institution? Phil Baty, editor of the THE World University Rankings, told ESNA: “It is very unlikely that we would treat such a consortium or alliance as a single entity—we tend to look at the legal entity when considering how to rank organisations.”

Kinds of innovation

The call’s specifications were patched together by the EU agency EACEA in a consultation process with the higher education and research sector. Unsurprisingly, they bear the mark of research-intensive universities with strong industry relations in need of ‘innovation’, ‘excellence’ and ‘entrepreneurship.’

An interesting plan of YUFE is furnishing special homes where students can live for free during their stay

The networks have been given catchy names such as EUTOPIA for European Universities Transforming to an Open, Inclusive Academy for 2050, or EDUC, short for European Digital UniverCity, or UNITE! as an acronym of University Network for Innovation, Technology and Engineering.

ECIU University, the European Consortium of Innovative Universities, is less catchy but interesting for its statement that it “is determined to change the way of delivering education from degree-based to challenge-based”.

Beyond the compelling names, there are many pedagogically interesting projects, of network-building experiments and of activities that involve students, citizens and local companies.

One is a multi-campus joint master’s course of the alliance CIVICA. The course forms “European knowledge-creating teams” which concentrate on four research topics.

The alliance with members from France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Romania and Sweden, including the private business school Hertie School of Governance in Berlin, also organises a trans-European arts and sports tournament.

CharmEU includes the University of Barcelona and Montpellier, Utrecht and Eötvös Loránd University and Trinity College Dublin; they are not the only alliance planning multilingual courses and language-learning support for the participating students. But they are particularly ambitious in exploring exemplary collaboration models—a joint-governance model, guidelines for joint degrees and an open science agenda.

Daniela Trani, Director of the YUFE Alliance © ESNA

Alternative education

The above-mentioned ECIU alliance wants to experiment with alternative educational formats, offer micro-courses, micro-credits, a “competence passport”, and organise “pop-up labs.” These approaches point at diverse learning paths, where students participate in composing their curricula, and skills can be recognised across borders.

The alliance YUFE of eight “young universities” is interesting for its associated partners — the NGO Kiron that builds an online learning platform for refugees, the Adecco staffing agency, the testing organisation ETS Global, and a European association of small and medium-sized enterprises.

An interesting plan of YUFE is furnishing special homes where students can live for free during their stay and in close proximity with local residents.

EC2U, hoping to be successful in the second round, also puts emphasis on community connections. “Our ambition,” says Thilly, “is to deepen the connection with the local communities of the cities we are rooted in.

“We want to involve the municipalities and citizens into the university life, for instance through open conferences, workshops and summer schools.”

Coïmbra and Poitiers have already started by linking their students’ music and arts festivals and by setting up support schemes for young student artists aimed at improving their professional integration.

 

This article was first published in The Pie News, on November 15, 2019