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QUALITY REVIEW REVIEWED

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QUALITY REVIEW REVIEWED APPRAISAL OF THE QA/QI PROTOCOLS DEVELOPED AND IMPLEMENTED IN UL Patrick Cashell & Adrian Thomas, University of Limerick, – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: QUALITY REVIEW REVIEWED


1
QUALITY REVIEW REVIEWED APPRAISAL OF THE QA/QI
PROTOCOLS DEVELOPED AND IMPLEMENTED IN
ULPatrick Cashell Adrian Thomas, University
of Limerick, Ireland

2
  • The number of universities increased from three
    to nine and the Government established a network
    of 14 Institutes of Technology distributed across
    the country.
  • Total student numbers in the HE Sector increased
    700 in that period with the total number engaged
    in full-time HE studies across all of Irelands
    institutions now numbering some 140,000.

3
  • UL originally established as the National
    Institute for Higher Education (NIHE) was the
    first of the new institutions to be established
    as a University by the Irish Parliament (1989).
  • Innovative and applied approach to undergraduate
    and postgraduate teaching and learning, and
    introduction of such unprecedented features as
    cooperative education, modular programmes and
    autonomous learning methodologies.

4
  • Rapidly changing Higher Education sector in
    Ireland inevitably resulted in the adoption of
    contemporary approaches to Quality
    Assurance/Quality Improvement.
  • The lateness of the development and
    implementation of QA/QI systems in Irelands
    universities and Institutes of Technology
    afforded Irelands HE institutions a timely
    opportunity to evaluate and adapt to Irelands
    own unique requirements, a best fit in terms of
    a QA/QI process.

5
  • Irelands universities, under the aegis of the
    Higher Education Authority (HEA). Put in place
    the Irish Universities Quality Board (IUQB).
  • The universities, working with the IUQB,
    developed and fine-tuned a sectoral set of
    guidelines and procedures for QA/QI across all
    the universities, thereby leading to a
    homogenous, although autonomous implementation of
    quality across the university sector.

6
  • The guidelines provided for substantial
    harmonisation in the procedures in use in each
    university, and made allowance for sufficient
    variation and autonomy between the individual
    institutions own requirements and approaches.
  • UL set about the project of quality-reviewing all
    of its 25 academic departments in the period
    1998-2006.
  • UL utilised a uniquely Limerick-based approach
    and methodology.
  • UL had a team of standing Chairpersons on each of
    its Quality Review Panels strong emphasis was
    also placed on the peer role of both academics
    and industrialists/professionals who were members
    of these panels.
  • All the Quality Review Panels, across the
    diversity of departments in the University,
    followed a consistent template, schedule and
    reporting process, in carrying out their reviews.

7
  • With the quality reviews in the Universitys
    academic departments well-established and with
    the first cycle completed, and the methodology
    fine-tuned, attention was turned by ULs Quality
    Support Unit to the many academic support
    departments.
  • Decided that the support departments should
    develop, and implement, a quality management
    system (QMS), based on the ISO90002000 model.

8
  • Information Technology (ITD) and Cooperative
    Education and Careers Division (CECD) completed
    this phase of ULs quality review strategy.
  • Library and Student Academic Administration
    developed their own basic QMS using ideas drawn
    from ISO9000 and other sources.
  • The university decided to set up a task force to
    develop a bespoke QMS based on the most
    appropriate elements of ISO9000, Baldridge and
    EFQM and in 2006 this was published as the UL
    Quality Management System.

9
  • It was agreed to make a quality review of all
    support departments during 2006 and 2007 and this
    had the effect of galvanising all units into
    activity.
  • The Departments
  • Buildings Estates,
  • Human Resources,
  • Student Affairs Division,
  • Campus Life Services,
  • University Arena and Sports,
  • Finance Division and
  • Research.

10
  • In addition to the self-evident added-value of
    these departmental quality reviews being
    completed, and the reports published, a
    significantly valuable spin-off of the process
    has been the now holistic and indeed enthusiastic
    manner in which the Campus Community has embraced
    the universitys quality agenda.

11
  • During the period 1997 to 2004 all of Irelands
    universities undertook regular reviews of their
    teaching and support departments.
  • The universities jointly agreed to devolve this
    authority to the IUQB and in 2004 the HEA and
    IUQB contracted the European University
    Association (EUA) to review the whole Irish
    university sector.
  • Three EUA review panels visited each individual
    university campus on two occasions, during 2004.
  • The EUA teams completed their mission and
    reported in detail on each universitys quality
    strategies and procedures, as well as presenting
    a holistic sectoral report.

12
  • This EUA report validated much of the work
    underway in the universities sector, for
    Quality Assurance, and provides accountability in
    respect of this work. It goes on to articulate
    The validation of these systems isa major
    endorsement of the universities.
  • The Minister for Education Science, in
    launching the Report commented that The
    systematic organisation and promotion of Quality
    Assurance at the initiative of the Universities
    themselves here is unparalleled in any other
    country in Europe or the US or Canada.

13
  • To promote awareness and enhance buy-in to the
    quality culture across the University, the
    Quality Support Unit has established the QIFAC
    Awards scheme, with a budget of 150,000 for
    funding QI projects.
  • The HEA also funds a number of sectoral projects,
    through the IUQB, which facilitate UL and its
    fellow universities in engaging in cross-sectoral
    studies on a common Quality theme.

14
  • Five significant features of the UL Quality
    brand which characterise the institutions
    approach
  • The bespoke QMS model deployed and adapted in the
    support departments
  • The open, honest and friendly tone of the
    engagement between the PRG and University staff,
    both before and during the review meetings
  • The requirement for departments to respond to the
    quality review by putting forward a detailed QI
    Action Plan for approval by the university
    Executive
  • Wide distribution and discussion of the quality
    review report, through Deans Council, Executive
    Committee and Governing Authority. Reports are
    published in full on the Universitys website
  • Involvement of stakeholders, and thereby
    elucidation of their views during the support
    departments quality reviews.
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