Working group proposes carrots and sticks to encourage early graduation
Published:
8 January 2004 y., Thursday
A working group at the Ministry of Education wants to impose limits on the time students spend on university studies. Under the plan, which would take effect in 2005, the normal amount of time taken to complete studies could be exceeded by a maximum of two years. In most cases this would place a seven-year limit for a higher, master's-level degree.
The working group also wants to require a personal study plan for each student to prevent students from taking on too diverse an array of courses. Tuition would continue to be free for full-time students studying for a degree. However, mandatory fees are planned for supplementary studies undertaken when a person already is at work.
The working group is also calling for a number of other ways to keep students to their schedule, including making more efficient use of time and trimming the content of the subject matter. The academic year would also be longer: the autumn term would begin on the first of September and end on December 15. The spring term would be extended to the end of May.
The proposals of the working group are part of broader government plans to extend the amount of time that Finns stay at work.
Šaltinis:
helsinki-hs.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The European Commission announced today the award of three of the six contracts for the procurement of Galileo’s initial operational capability.
more »
Today the European Commission has adopted measures to make participation in the EU's current Seventh Framework Programme for Research more attractive and more accessible to the best researchers and most innovative companies, especially Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs).
more »
European civil servants go back to school to talk to young people about what the EU does.
more »
The European Commission adopted the ENPI Interregional Action Programme for 2011. It covers the European Neighbourhood countries and Russia and is worth a total of €52 million.
more »
Space agency confirms feasibility studies are underway into a one–way mission to colonise the Red Planet.
more »
Scientists complete the world's first ocean census, part of a 10-year effort in which thousands of new marine species were discovered.
more »
The European Commission has launched a new drive to encourage more European universities to offer high-quality courses for students who want to work as translators.
more »
Education at a Glance covers 35 countries, including 21 EU countries and looks at what is spent on education, how education systems operate and what results are achieved.
more »
European civil servants go back to school to talk to young people about what the EU does.
more »
The World Bank will provide the Palestinian Authority (PA) $5 million to fund the Teacher Education Improvement Project.
more »
The European Research Council has now funded over 1000 innovative ideas. A further €661m is still available for early-career researchers.
more »