BAYHOST Kompetenzatlas

Hochschulen in Russland und der Ukraine

Tag: higher education policy

Ukraine to Modernize Higher Education System with World Bank Support

The World Bank approved a $200 million project to support the Government of Ukraine’s efforts to strengthen efficiency, quality, and transparency of the country’s higher education system.

The project – Ukraine Improving Higher Education for Results – will finance investments in the modernization of teaching and research facilities and digital learning infrastructure of higher education institutions (HEIs) to ensure learning continuity through remote learning modalities and to support resilience and change management over the longer term. It will also support the development of modern digital infrastructure for distance learning and creation of advanced teaching and research laboratories and learning support facilities. Another objective is to improve transparency of Ukraine’s education sector through modernization of the HE Management Information System and establishment of a National Student Survey and unified information system on competitive research funding of HEIs.
The Project will be implemented over a 5 years by the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine.

ukrainet.eu

Ukraine says goodbye to a Soviet era funding formula

Higher education institutions in Ukraine used to get public funding through an historic principle. Incremental budgeting changes for universities were contingent solely on the year-to-year variation in state-subsidised student numbers. The permissible student-faculty ratio per field of education, level and mode of study governed institutional staffing arrangements in line with respective state regulation.

This regulatory framework has long been blamed for irrational institutional behaviour and preventing universities from exercising autonomy over their staffing. For one thing, the financial incentives prompted universities to keep the student body growing regardless of their capacity or students’ academic performance.

According to the 2019 U-Multirank country note, Ukrainian universities are placed well above average when compared to their peers on student graduation rates. While low drop-out rates could be a consequence of student-centred strategies, they are more likely to result from the retention-orientated public funding mechanism.

The top-down policy with regard to academic recruitment has also had a negative impact. The obligation to have university appointments confirmed by the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine brought about a deterioration in institutional managerial efficiency.

The need to switch from maintaining the country’s extensive university network to rewarding quality education providers has brought a discussion about the introduction of performance-based funding to Ukrainian higher education policy.

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén