Skip Navigation

科学与创新政策: 人才流失

政策简述

Working with foreign universities to build capacity

来源: OECD

2009年3月11日 | EN

This policy brief, published by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), examines different models of "cross-border higher education" and outlines the benefits and risks associated with each.

The authors discuss two approaches widely used in South-East Asia — sending students abroad to study, and inviting foreign institutions to run courses locally.

Although sending students abroad is widely recognised as a way of accessing new knowledge and research methods, the approach runs the risk of increasing brain drain, warn the authors.

The benefits of inviting in foreign institutions are less obvious but can help expand higher education systems and build capacity. In Malaysia, for example, foreign providers accounted for 34 per cent of bachelor and postgraduate programmes in the private education sector in 2006.

Making it work requires a suitable regulatory framework for foreign institutes that considers issues of accreditation, quality assurance, recognition of foreign qualifications and access to public funds.

The authors identify commercial education as a threat to least developed countries, arguing that cross-border education could become an export industry for some donor nations — at the expense of development assistance.

Signing up to international trade agreements, such as the General Agreement on Trade in Services, could help countries attract foreign investment in higher education.

Link to full article from OECD[214kB]

This policy brief was prepared by the OECD Public Affairs and Communications Directorate.

添加你的评论

所有的评论都要接受审核,我们保留对评中包括 不适当/不适合的语言进行编辑的权利。科学与发展网络享有网站发布所有内容的版权。请查看使用条款了解详情。

您需要注册后发表评论或者给作者发送评论的邮件。请登陆或注册。 登陆 或者 注册.

返回 政策简述
到达顶部