2013, Vol. 62. Changing Degree Structures and Economic Returns to Higher Education in Poland. The Impact of the Bologna Process

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    Changing Degree Structures and Economic Returns to Higher Education in Poland. The Impact of the Bologna Process (CPP RPS 62/2013)
    (Center for Public Policy Research Papers Series, 2013) Kwiek, Marek
    The Bologna Process in Poland, as in Central Europe generally, was seen prior to the EU enlargement in 2004 as an effective avenue to integrate Polish universities with their Western European counterparts. Poland was among the initial signatory countries of the Bologna Declaration in 1999. In post-communist Europe, the Bologna Process was often viewed as “a political option aiming at ingraining itself into European values” (Gorga 2007, 62, Tomusk 2006, Dobbins 2011). In the present chapter, the Bologna Process is viewed through the lenses of the end product of reform initiatives it has been promoting in the last decade: in this case, a coherent system of three degrees – the bachelor, the master, and the doctorate. And in particular, it is focused on the changing social and labor market perceptions of the bachelor degree during the implementation of the Bologna Process in Poland. Enhancing “employability”, following Teichler (2011: 4-5), is viewed here as an increasingly relevant “additional” objective of the Bologna Process, its “core” objective being enhancing mobility.
Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
Biblioteka Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
Ministerstwo Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego