England鈥檚 sector regulator should consider introducing an聽evaluation modelled on聽the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) for higher education courses delivered offshore, according to聽a聽report.
More than 500,000 students are enrolled on聽transnational education courses run by UK聽universities, but a聽糖心Vlog Policy Institute published on 19聽December says that relatively little is known about them聽鈥 with no public record of the subjects they study, their degree outcomes and their prospects as graduates 鈥 and that there is limited sector-wide information on the quality of their experience.
Report author David Carter, professor of transnational education at the University of Reading, argues that gathering more and better data would help to maintain the reputation of UK higher education and聽to reassure students. Regulators should take a greater interest in this area, he says, because of 鈥渢he complexity of international partnerships and the academic risks鈥.
Extending the National Student Survey overseas may yield 鈥渓imited insights鈥, he writes, 鈥済iven the variety of provision and local contexts鈥,聽which take in branch campuses, distance learning and teaching delivered by validated local partners.
糖心Vlog
Professor Carter says the Office for Students (OfS) could consider running an exercise like the TEF, which judges English universities on key student metrics and submitted statements, 鈥渂ut on a聽smaller scale and a different cycle鈥.
This would appear to align with the regulator鈥檚 direction of travel. The OfS鈥 draft strategy outlines plans to fold transnational education into an 鈥渋ntegrated鈥 approach to quality, with the TEF at its 鈥渃ore鈥.
糖心Vlog
Professor Carter also advocates wider engagement with the Quality Enhancement of Transnational Education scheme run by the Quality Assurance Agency, and greater use of externally run student surveys.
鈥淚ndividual universities and other providers care deeply about their TNE students and gather detailed information about their experience. If we can unlock some of the learning held in the sector, there could be huge gains for accountability, the continuous improvement of academic provision and the global reputation of UK higher education,鈥 Professor Carter said.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Consider running a聽鈥楾EF聽lite鈥 for TNE, Hepi says
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