Historical context
In the decades followingA country’s educational system and the structures for qualification affect the students’ degree of completion and drop-out in education. It has become evident that countries with degree structures offering shorter study programmes leading to a achelor’s degreehave lower drop-out rates than countries with long study programmes leading to the first degree. mong OECD countries, the completion rates are 27 percent and 14 percent, respectively./blockquote> The committee also discussed challenges related to interinstitutional mobility between universities, between universities and university colleges (a type of vocational or polytechnic demi-university), and not least to academic institutions abroad. A major obstacle for mobility between academic institutions in Norway was that not only universities and university colleges but also single universities had different degree systems. Addressing the challenges related to interinstitutional mobility, the committee wrote:Today, this is a discussion which increasingly deals with mobility and transfer possibilities between public and private educational institutions, at different levels of education and between institutions internationally. ..The degrees must be comparable and adaptable nationally as well as internationally. ..The degree system must be flexible and offer good solutions for an increasingly varied student mass, be it, full-time students, adult- and continuing-education students, students with special needs, and students ho requestflexible learning.Finally, in section 9.5.2, the committee wrote: ‘Students who have taken single courses may, after directions specified by the Ministry ">f Higher Education have their accumulated education approved as equivalent to a degree.’ This would in effect create the so-called elective bachelor: a fully-fledged bachelor’s degree in which the selection of major, minor, and elective courses had been made by the student, contrasting elective bachelor’s degrees to programme bachelor’s degrees in which major, minor, and often also elective courses were preselected by the programme and compulsory for students. The Quality Reform (No. ''Kvalitetsreformen'') was passed by the Parliament on 12 June 2001,Parliament of Norway (no date). ‘Gjør din plikt - krev din rett. Kvalitetsreform av høyere utdanning’. Retrieved 19 Nov 2019 from https://www.stortinget.no/no/Saker-og-publikasjoner/Saker/Sak/?p=21539 becoming effective in 2003. Along with a simplified degree system consisting of a three-year bachelor’s degree, a two-year master’s degree, and a three-yeardoctoral degree A doctorate (from Latin ''docere'', "to teach"), doctor's degree (from Latin ''doctor'', "teacher"), or doctoral degree is an academic degree awarded by universities and some other educational institutions, derived from the ancient formalism ''l ...was introduced at all universities and university colleges, cf. the Bologna Process, one of its more important features was that more than before, universities and university colleges were obliged to recognise each other’s credits while offering a nonprogramme bachelor’s degree (elective bachelor’s degree) for students’ education accumulated from single courses.
Legislation
The majority of universities in Norway are obliged by their respective royal regulations to offer elective bachelor's degrees, with exceptions being theUniversity of Bergen The University of Bergen ( no, Universitetet i Bergen, ) is a research-intensive state university located in Bergen, Norway. As of 2019, the university has over 4,000 employees and 18,000 students. It was established by an act of parliament in 194 ..., the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, and theNorwegian University of Life Sciences The Norwegian University of Life Sciences ( no, Norges miljø- og biovitenskapelige universitet, NMBU) is a public university located in Ås, Norway. It is located at Ås in Viken, near Oslo, and at Adamstuen in Oslo and has around 5,200 stude .... The degree's official designation, content requirements, and so on vary between universities.
See also
* Academic degree *Higher education in Norway Higher education in Norway is offered by a range of eight universities, nine specialised universities (focused on a specific program area), 24 university colleges as well as a range of private university colleges. The national higher education sys ...
References
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Literature
* Bakken, Anbjørg 2003 (24 Mar). 'Tidligere studenter må tenke nytt!' '' Moss Dagblad'', 35 (92): 14-15. https://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-nb_digavis_mossdagblad_null_null_20030324_92_35_1 * Nordisk förening för pedagogisk forskning 2009. ''Nordisk pedagogik'' : ''Journal of Nordic educational research'' : ''Pohjoismainen pedagogiikka'', 29 (4). København: Nordisk förening för pedagogisk forskning. https://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-nb_digitidsskrift_2011120155030_001 * Witsø, Hilde & Hanne Stousland, eds. 2013. ''Likestilling 2013'' : ''Kunnskap og innovasjon på Agder'' Kristiansand: Portal forlag. https://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-nb_digibok_2013071008073 Academic degrees of Norway