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Virtual campus tests EU vision for borderless university system

Pan-European initiative EuroTeQ has made studying across the continent easier for students, but coordinating between nine different higher education institutions can be harder than building the digital infrastructure itself 

Published on
May 4, 2026
Last updated
May 4, 2026
The European Parliament building in Strasbourg, France with flags waving on a spring evening
Source: iStock/AdrianHancu

Nearly six years after its launch, EuroTeQ Engineering University is testing whether Europe鈥檚 vision of cross-border higher education can work in practice.

It brings together nine science and technology universities as well as business schools across the continent under a shared virtual campus.听Students at any member institution听can browse a joint course catalogue and enrol at a partner university using their existing university credentials. No separate application is needed.听

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to standardise and harmonise the parts that we can,鈥 said Patrick Crowley, a project lead at EuroTeQ.听

The goal is to make it easier for students to study across borders by allowing universities to share courses more directly than traditional exchange programmes.

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鈥淚n some cases, the idea of taking a whole semester abroad is kind of a remote fantasy,鈥 Crowley explained, adding that this is often the case for students who are working alongside their studies or have family responsibilities. 鈥淭his way we can offer courses they might be able to take while they study where they are.鈥

But, as with many pan-European initiatives, coordinating different ways of doing things remains a hurdle.听With dozens of different higher education systems, languages, policies, traditions, Europe鈥檚 higher education system is highly fragmented across national borders. The European Union (EU) is hoping to coax universities towards something resembling a coherent European system where collaboration is easier.听

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EuroTeQ is funded by the European Universities Initiative, a flagship European Commission programme aimed at improving cooperation and making institutions across the continent more competitive on a global stage where American and Asian universities increasingly set the pace. Each alliance gets up to around 鈧14.4 million (拢12.4 million) in EU funding over a four-year period under the 2021-27 Erasmus+ programme. 听

Universities often operate on different academic calendars, face different budget constraints and have deeply established ways of working.听EuroTeQ鈥檚 partners range from public institutions like the Technical University of Munich to grandes 茅coles like HEC Paris. 鈥淎ll our universities have extremely different academic year structures,鈥 Crowley explained, 鈥渋ncluding when the semester starts, when it ends, when exam periods are鈥.

Persuading professors to take part has also proven a challenge. Academics are under mounting pressure to prioritise research output, a structural issue that Crowley said cut across higher education more broadly. 鈥淩esearch is so incentivised these days, but teaching also needs to be linked in there somehow, so that you also have resources as a professor to [adapt a course for EuroTeQ].鈥

There is also the more basic challenge of getting students to notice EuroTeQ exists at all. 鈥淚t is a noisy space on campuses; students have a lot of different things to consider.鈥

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But Crowley said EuroTeQ has been tackling the bureaucracy piece by piece. It has built a shared enrolment system that lets students sign up to partner courses using their existing university credentials, removing the need for a separate application. He added that the differences among universities听are not necessarily a barrier, but part of what makes collaboration valuable.听

It is also now working on automatic grade transfer, so that when a student completes a course at a partner university, the result flows back to their home institution without anyone manually verifying a document. The plan is also to create a digital student card that works across every campus in the network.

Crowley also pointed to a recent joint course run across听Tallinn University of Technology, Eindhoven University of Technology and Czech Technical University in Prague that drew 37 students who spent听eight weeks collaborating online before meeting in person for a final week. By the time the students met in person, there was already a sense of camaraderie, he said.

For the lecturers, the model offered a practical incentive too. Since the curriculum is shared across three institutions, each professor had to commit to teaching just twice over the eight weeks. 鈥淲hile they had to frontload a lot of the work getting the curriculum together, when it came to actual lecturing it was shared,鈥 Crowley said. 鈥淭hat frees them up to do more of such initiatives and also focus on research, while also keeping the quality of the education high.鈥

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Crowley also stressed that while Erasmus+ works for a specific kind of student, EuroTeQ is designed for those it leaves behind.听

鈥淲hen you see students still taking online courses even as Erasmus mobility returns to pre-pandemic levels, that suggests to me there are other students here who are also keen on the experience that EuroTeQ offers,鈥 he said.

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seher.asaf@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

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"For the lecturers, the model offered a practical incentive too. Since the curriculum is shared across three institutions, each professor had to commit to teaching just twice over the eight weeks." Now this is innovative thinking here!! I am all for this. Well done!!!

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