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What is Bologna Process

Emerging Technologies for Health Literacy and Medical Practice
A European higher education reform aimed at creating a more cohesive and compatible European Higher Education Area. It emphasizes student-centered learning, flexibility, and the development of competencies relevant to professional practice.
Published in Chapter:
Digital Health in the Context of Healthcare Workers' Education and Training: The Other Side of Health Curricula in Portugal
Carlos Alberto da Silva (University of Évora, Portugal), Rui Pedro Pereira de Almeida (University of Algarve, Portugal), Francisca Carvalheira (University of Évora, Portugal), António Fernando Abrantes (University of Algarve, Portugal), Dulce Lourenço Miranda (Hospital Fernando Fonseca, Portugal), Bianca Vicente (University of Algarve, Portugal), Magda Ramos (University of Algarve, Portugal), and Tatiana Mestre (University of Algarve, Portugal)
Copyright: © 2024 |Pages: 20
DOI: 10.4018/979-8-3693-1214-8.ch004
Abstract
Digital technologies are reshaping healthcare practices, influencing patient information-seeking behavior, and impacting ethical considerations. The emergence of eHealth, mHealth, and advanced technologies like artificial intelligence, machine learning, and robotics hold promise for improving healthcare quality. However, in Portugal, digital health literacy is underexplored, particularly in healthcare education. This chapter scrutinizes curricula at higher education health schools, revealing that while health technologies are integrated, digital health is often confined to specific modules. Portuguese institutions must reconsider curricula to equip healthcare professionals with essential digital skills. The significance of this chapter lies in its critical analysis and recommendations for reform. It underscores the urgent need for comprehensive integration of digital health in healthcare education, highlighting the gap in current curricula and advocating for a more comprehensive approach. Recommendations include implementing ongoing training to enhance digital health literacy.
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Transforming Moldovan Higher Education: Past, Present, and a Look to the Future
Launched in 1998, it established goals for reform in higher education in participating European countries.
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Convergence and Internationalization of Higher Education in Europe: The Case of Romania
Formed of a series of ministerial meetings and agreements between European countries with the purpose to ensure comparability of higher education qualifications in order to foster mobility.
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Business Schools: Internationalization towards a New European Perspective
Political process within Europe to create a common higher education area. Aiming at harmonization of degrees and increasing student mobility through the so-called ECTS credit point scheme covering a two-tier system of Bachelor’s (undergraduate) and Master’s level (post-graduate) degrees. At the core of EU higher education policy; reflecting a neo-liberal approach devoted to competition, market forces, and enactment of a globalized knowledge economy.
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Convergence of Internationalization Paths in Romanian Universities: A Qualitative Analysis
Agreement between several countries to ensure similar standards and quality across their education systems.
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Innovation in Foreign Language Literature Didactics in Higher Education
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New and Pressing Challenges for Romanian Higher Education System after 10 Years of Bologna Values Implementation
An endeavour of the European Union to ensure comparability and compatibility among the qualifications provided by the educational systems in Member countries.
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Simulation: Body of Knowledge
is a European reform process aiming to establish a European Higher Education Area by 2010. The process is driven by 46 participating countries and not based on an intergovernmental treaty.
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Implementation of Bologna Reforms: A Comparative Analysis between Participating Countries
Agreement between several countries to ensure similar standards and quality across their education systems.
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Government Expenditures on Higher Education and Innovativeness: Does Quantity or Quality Matter?
The result of the signing of the Bologna Declaration in order to creating a European Higher Education Area.
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Academic Mobility Programs as Part of Individual and Professional Development in a Globalized World: Uncovering Cultural Dimensions
A European reform in education aimed at establishing similar educational processes to promote international cooperation and academic exchange.
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Inclusive Universities: Call to Action to Increasingly Implement Universal Design in Educational Practices and Services
The Bologna Process seeks to bring more coherence to HE systems across Europe. It established the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) to facilitate student and staff mobility, to make higher education more inclusive and accessible, and to make HE in Europe more attractive and competitive worldwide.
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Evaluating International Competitiveness: A Study of the Application of External Quality Assurance Performance Indicators in Romania
Initiated by Bologna Declaration presented in 1999 is an overall attempt to move toward European integration initiated with Common Market; the focus is predicated on the acknowledgment that highlighting the importance of cooperative education reform is paramount to the development of stable, peaceful democratic societies.
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Using Student Participation to Improve Higher Education Models: Lessons From the Development of a Comprehensive Student Participation Plan
The broad process developed across European countries to ensure comparability in the standards and quality of higher education qualifications. It includes several ministerial meetings and agreements that resulted in the creation of the European Higher Education Area under the Lisbon Recognition Convention. It takes its name from one of the oldest universities in the world, founded in Bologna, Italy, in 1088, where the Bologna declaration was signed by education ministers from 29 European countries in 1999.
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Higher Education's New Frontier for the E-University and Virtual Campus
European reform process aiming at the creation of an High Education European Space within 2010. Actually it includes 45 countries and many international organizations. It pursuit the organization of the national High Education Institutions so that: (a) curricula and degrees are transparent and readable, (b) students can make their studies wherever they want in Europe, (c) European High Education can attract extra-European students and (d) an high quality knowledge base for the social and economic development of Europe is made available.
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Model for Identifying Competencies and Learning Outcomes (MICRA)
A collective effort of public authorities, universities, stakeholder associations, quality assurance agencies and international organizations, which the main focus is the introduction of the three cycle system (bachelor/master/doctorate), strengthened quality assurance and easier recognition of qualifications and periods of study in different countries.
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An Integral Theory Approach to the Feedback System in Supervising Doctoral Students in the Nordic Higher Education Context
The Bologna Process was signed by 29 European countries in 1999. Named after the University of Bologna where the Bologna declaration was signed, it was the result of a series of ministerial meetings and agreements between European countries to ensure comparability in the standards and quality of higher education qualifications. It supports freedom of movement of labor and inter-university transfers of students and staff between European countries.
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Convergence at What Cost?: A Quasi Experiment of Professional Identity under the Bologna Process
The reforming European Higher Education initiated by the Bologna Declaration signet at June 19, 1999, in Bologna, by ministers in charge with higher education from 29 countries. The aim of this process has been to create the European Area of Higher Education, an area of comparable and compatible higher education systems from all European states.
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Renewed Image of Higher Education: Globalization of Higher Education through Organizational Justice and Culture
A step that stipulates the restructuring of the higher education institutions in Europe for the purpose of creating European Higher Education Area.
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Company Internships: Filling the Gap Between University Training and Business Reality
A series of ministerial meeting between European countries aiming to ensure comparability in the standards and quality of higher education programs in Europe, and thus, facilitate the mobility of students and professionals throughout the continent. To achieve those goals, the European Higher Education Area was created in 2010.
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Teaching a Technical Writing and Research Course to Engineering Students: Recommendations for Curriculum Reform
A series of agreements made between various European countries set out in June 1999 to ensure common standards, comparability, and reliability of higher education qualifications across Europe.
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New Knowledge - New Learning?: Curriculum Change in Higher Education and Academic Engagement in the Bologna Process in Ireland
One of the most comprehensive higher education curriculum reform initiatives undertaken on an international basis. Launched in 1999 by the Ministers of Education of 29 countries it has its aims to promote greater mobility and transparency in the emerging European Higher Education Area (EHEA).
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Math-Related Problems in Russian Engineering Education: Possible Solutions Based on Best Practices in European and Russian Universities
A series of ministerial meetings and agreements between European countries to ensure comparability in the standards and quality of higher-education qualifications.
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Teachers' Perceptions of Their Educational-Musical Practice at Compulsory Education Levels in Spain
Educational process initiated between several countries with the Bologna Declaration with the aim of adapting university studies to current demands.
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Comparison of Academic and Professional Recognition Systems of Engineering Degrees in Bologna Countries: Case Studies From Cyprus and Russian Federation
A voluntary higher education reform process with the aim of making higher education systems compliant and enhancing their international visibility.
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Engineering and Information Technology: Challenges and Opportunities for Exchange Studies
In 1999, 30 European states signed the so-called Bologna declaration in Italy, intending to create the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) until 2010. The goal was to establish and ensure comparability in the standards and quality of HE qualifications based on learning outcomes and competences, and credit ranges in the first and second cycles. In the first cycle (180-240 ECTS credits) Bachelor’s degrees are typically awarded, the second cycle (90-120 ECTS) leads to a Master’s degree. The new study structure replaced, in some cases complemented, former national degrees. Meanwhile 47 states, EU and non EU-members, have joined the EHEA.
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