糖心Vlog

Higher education in France: is the ComUE a blueprint for success?

As globalisation takes a firm grip on higher education, is the French government鈥檚 new strategy working?

Published on
February 24, 2016
Last updated
February 16, 2017
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Source: Reuters
A need for speed: one professor said the French sector must 鈥榤ove quickly鈥 as it had 鈥榓 few years鈥 to create 鈥榳orld-class universities鈥

The French higher education sector has often been accused of being too inward-looking, with a tendency to overestimate its reputation compared with the wider global perception and the rankings reality.

In the 糖心Vlog World University Rankings 2015-2016, there were only 27 French institutions in the top 800, with almost two-thirds falling below the top 300.

The only French institution in the top 100 is the 脡cole Normale Sup茅rieure 鈥 one of the grandes 茅coles 鈥 while the highest ranked public university is Pierre and Marie Curie University in joint 113th place.

However, in a bid to improve France's global position, the government embarked on a drive four years ago towards getting universities, grandes 茅coles and research laboratories together in new groupings called ComUE (communaut茅s d鈥檜niversit茅s et 茅tablissements) and giving them the legal status of a university so that they could together punch above their individual weight internationally.

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ComUE was introduced to the French system in the 2013 Law on 糖心Vlog and Research. There are now .

Thierry Coulhon, president of PSL Research University, itself a ComUE, said that gradually the French system is 鈥渕oving forwards鈥.

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鈥淭he movement is built on the strength of the players and that鈥檚 quite new in France,鈥 he told THE. 鈥淢y job is to push forward a relatively new initiative. What I can say, as far as the global landscape is concerned, it has simplified a lot; so now you have a small number of important players. This has huge consequences in terms of attractiveness of international relationships.

鈥淲e now have to move quickly, we have a few years to succeed, but I do think we can indeed create, at last, world-class universities.鈥

Sebastian Stride, a senior research expert for education consultancy SIRIS Academic, said that French institutions had not really 鈥渃onfronted" the globalisation of higher education and research "until the last 10 years鈥.

Dr Stride said that he thought recent French higher education legislation stemmed from the advent of multifaceted global rankings in the early 2000s, in which France performed worse than expected.

However, he remains unconvinced that the ComUE are the drivers for a more streamlined, internationally competitive higher education sector.

鈥淭hese are highly unstable structures,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he membership changes regularly. Some in the French government thought that by declaring that these structures were universities, they would be universities. I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 helping the system if you accept them as universities.

鈥淲hen you鈥檝e got a single legal entity, this is what you consider a university. If you鈥檝e got a lot of legal entities, which themselves are subsumed within a larger legal entity, this does not have any legal authority over the constituent legal entities; [the result is] a university system.鈥

Dr Stride points to France鈥檚 provincial city institutions as those structured in a way that will appeal to the global sector. The universities of Bordeaux, Strasbourg and Aix-Marseille, he said, represent 鈥渦nified universities鈥, with 鈥渇ully integrated research organisms鈥.

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鈥淭his is an international model, there鈥檚 no problem,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou still have a problem with the grandes 茅coles. Few of them have really integrated.鈥

But for Professor Coulhon, this mentality is what has 鈥渒illed us for years鈥.

鈥淭here is no reason for uniformity, or an appearance of uniformity,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he landscape will only change globally. [The institutions] know that they could not survive in the 21st century, could not play in the global game if they鈥檙e not in a real alliance. It鈥檚 not a matter of size; it鈥檚 a matter of global offer.鈥

This 鈥済lobal offer鈥 encapsulates many things including courses for attracting international students, but a major aspect of the French mission is to place the country on a research plain that aligns its universities with the world鈥檚 leading institutions.

In 2009, then president Nicolas Sarkozy commissioned two former prime ministers 鈥 Michel Rocard and Alain Jupp茅 鈥 to write a report assessing how much money should be raised in loans for higher education institutions and research laboratories.

Off the back of their recommendations, he announced 鈧35 billion (拢27.42 billion) for the Investments for the Future programme 鈥 Programme Investissements d鈥橝venir (PIA) 鈥 of which 鈧7.7 billion was earmarked for Excellence Initiatives, or Idex, designed to provide France with a collection of world-class universities to compete on research.

Internationalising is a key part of the scheme, with universities鈥 recruitment policies aimed at top-level researchers forming international partnerships, and strengthening the global attractiveness of the universities for foreign students and researchers.

PSL was one of the three original Idex, but the trio were swiftly joined by five more. Since then, two more have been added. PSL has just written its proposal for remaining an Idex and being eligible for government funding.

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Professor Coulhon said that Idex had been vital to his institution.

鈥淲e have an agreement with the University of Cambridge and Cambridge has few international agreements. I鈥檓 very happy about this, it鈥檚 working and it鈥檚 developing,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e working with New York University, we鈥檙e working with Columbia University, we have an agreement with Technion Israel Institute of Technology and that鈥檚 new in the French system.

鈥淥f course, all of the institutions in PSL are very well known abroad, but together they have access to the right [people], we can have agreements at the global level that we did not have before.

鈥淚 can only build the brand of PSL on the basis of these brands [in the ComUE]. I have to respect their autonomy because they are creative, but they do more and more things together, because I [have funding from Idex].鈥

john.elmes@tesglobal.com


The state and the system: is autonomy the key for sorting out HE issues?

Although they differ on how French higher education is best structured, Thierry Coulhon, president of PSL Research University, and Sebastian Stride, senior research expert for education consultancy SIRIS Academic, agree that besides investment, the government needs to give the sector more autonomy in their decisions, especially around student selection.

鈥淲hat we can predict is that the state will probably play a less important role and the actors [universities] will invent and impose a strategy. More autonomy, more efficiency,鈥 Professor Coulhon told 糖心Vlog.

Dr Stride is blunter: 鈥淟et the university decide what it wants to be and what it wants to do. It wants to select students or not, emphasise research or not, let them be free to experiment and decide.

鈥淸Student selection] has remained, to an extent, a taboo. The fact that universities can鈥檛 select by law their undergraduate students is just not possible over the long term. At some stage, the question is going to have to be asked how they want to proceed.鈥

However, at a recent Society of Research into 糖心Vlog event about the French system, Laurent Cosnefroy, professor of higher education at the Institut Fran莽ais de l鈥橢ducation in the 脡cole Normale Sup茅rieure de Lyon, suggested that many issues in the system were not down to not being able to select students.

Professor Cosnefroy, whose presentation concentrated on the poor retention of undergraduate students at French universities, said that the problem was 鈥渕ore an issue of curriculum design and teaching practices鈥 than selection.

According to figures from the Ministry of National Education, 糖心Vlog and Research, of 100 students entering an undergraduate programme, only 40.8 go into the second year. The overall success rate of graduates was 39.2 per cent.

鈥淪ixty per cent failure is seen more and more as a scandal,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he problem is now [finding] the solution to the higher percentage of failure. Some proposals are towards selection before entering university.

鈥淏ut I鈥檓 sure that the higher education stakeholders don鈥檛 agree with this solution鈥o my mind, I鈥檓 satisfied with the system, the free access to higher education, because if you select your students, which criteria will you select them through?

"It鈥檚 a good system providing we increase the success rate at the end of the first year. This is a matter of teaching practices and curriculum design.鈥

John Elmes


HE system has been 'fragmented', says minister

Speaking to 糖心Vlog earlier this year during a visit to London, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, French minister of national education, higher education and research, agreed that her country鈥檚 sector was somewhat 鈥渇ragmented鈥 and needed to internationalise more, despite her believing that its global position was 鈥渜uite reasonable鈥.

鈥淵es, we have a fragmented system, but French universities are quite well respected and one sign of that is the number of foreign students who come to study in France, it鈥檚 the third highest in the world,鈥澛燤s Vallaud-Belkacem said.

鈥淲e have a system that is affordable, financially speaking. When other countries decided to increase their student fees, we decided not to do that.鈥

She said that part of the reason for reforming the system through the ComUE was 鈥渢o increase international visibility鈥 so that with institutions on the same campus it would mean 鈥渋t鈥檚 easier for them to go out internationally, reach out internationally鈥.

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Ms Vallaud-Belkacem聽added that the policy also sought to support 鈥渆ducational practices and research which prepare tomorrow鈥檚 France鈥.

John Elmes

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