Higher education has changed dramatically over the past decades, whether in terms of increasing enrolment, student mobility, the diversity of provision or research dynamics. Although the digital revolution transformed higher education more profoundly than any other level of the system in the past decades, the COVID-19 pandemic has been no less hard-hitting.
A recent global survey conducted by UNESCO shows that COVID-19 has caused setbacks in research activities and heavily affected international student mobility. It has increased the multiplicity of providers and the diversity of degree offerings, and revealed the urgency to strengthen the digital infrastructure as governments plan the future along hybrid lines.
Beyond the crisis, the international community must also speed up efforts to transform higher education to tackle global challenges and contribute to the SDGs. The Futures of Education Report, launched on 10 November 2021 by UNESCO’s International Commission, reveals that universities and other higher education institutions must be active in every aspect of building a new social contract for education. This will require reimagination of the ways that higher education not only draws from the knowledge commons but supports its further growth and greater inclusiveness.
Universities house much of the world’s potential for knowledge and research production and must be better connected. The circulation of knowledge and research between them, facilitated by the entry into force of the Global Convention on the Recognition of Qualifications concerning Higher Education and regional recognition conventions, is thus key to the future of higher education and global sustainability.
Objectives and agenda
This is the second in the series of Higher Education Conversations in the leadup to the 3rd World Higher Education Conference (Barcelona, 18 – 20 May 2022). It aims to bring together policy makers and higher education stakeholders to discuss how higher education must transform itself, as it faces one of the greatest periods of uncertainty in its long history, including the digital aspect.
Key questions to be examined:
Contact: Vanja Gutovic