Higher Education in Sweden: An Overview Swedish higher education has been shaped by
historical, social, economic and intellectual forces. Some of these are
peculiar to Sweden, like a long tradition of neutrality and the pervasive
influence of social democracy. Others apply more widely, like the shift from
industrial and post-industrial society and the movement towards postmodernism.
The last reform of higher education in Sweden took place at a time when
neutrality was still unchallenged, social democracy seemed to represent the
most advanced form of modern society, industrial growth appeared to be
inexorable and faith in the scientific tradition was still unchallenged.
Today, with the end of the Cold War, the rapid movement towards Western
European unity and diminishing Third World ideals, Sweden's traditional
neutrality needs to be redefined. The rise of neo-conservatism has pushed
social democracy on the defensive. The high-technology revolution, especially
in telecommunications and intelligent systems, has disrupted old industrial
patterns. And the sanctity of science is being challenged both by powerful
"green" movements and also by the intellectual incoherence of postmodernism.
Swedish universities and colleges, therefore, have to operate in a less
certain world. A redefined neutrality may make it easier to pursue closer
academic collaboration in Europe. Higher education's egalitarian instincts may
be modified if social democracy becomes a less dominant , or less confident,
force. And post-industrialism and postmodernism point to a volatile and
uncertain future. It is against this background that the detailed reform of the
system must be considered.
Swedish higher education has been a unified
system since 1977. Compared to most other European systems there is a strong
sense of a united mission and shared purposes. But important expectations
remain, most notably health colleges which have been left outside this unified
system and music, drama and other art colleges, which have remained
semi-detached.
A more important exception, however, is the division of
the system into reSearch (in Swedish) and teaching institutions, the
universities, and colleges which only provide undergraduate education. The
former have better qualified teachers and more of them. As a result they can
offer a richer and more varied undergraduate experience. Also, because reSearch
(in Swedish) budgets have increased faster than teaching budgets, universities
are much better funded.
Another exception to the unity of Swedish
higher education is that even within the universities important divisions
remain between the traditional faculties and the newer professional schools
incorporated after 1977. Here are signs that the equilibrium of the system is
now being threatened by demands from colleges for fairer treatment or even full
university status. Sweden may need to be faced with a difficult choice - either
to create a fully integrated system or to make explicit its present
stratification.
The relationship between reSearch (in Swedish) and
teaching is crucial to undergraduate education for two reasons - first, there
is a world wide trend to spend more on reSearch (in Swedish) and less on
teaching, so there is a risk that undergraduate education will be starved of
resources; and secondly, teaching needs to be informed and refreshed by
reSearch (in Swedish).
In Sweden there is unusually strong bias to
reSearch (in Swedish) and against teaching. Almost two-thirds of the system's
budget is for reSearch (in Swedish), and universities during the 1980's became
reSearch (in Swedish) institutions also engaged in undergraduate education
rather than the other way round. Also reSearch (in Swedish) and teaching are
more strictly segregated in Sweden than in many other countries, therefore
making it more difficult for the former to inform the latter. Many students
complain that their teachers are not sufficiently involved in reSearch (in
Swedish) and that undergraduate education suffers.
There is a three-way
split in the Swedish system. First, universities are pushed too far towards
reSearch (in Swedish), and colleges have to concentrate too narrowly on
teaching (although some have been successful in attracting external reSearch
(in Swedish) grants). If the latter were funded to carry out reSearch (in
Swedish), their budgets would more than double. Secondly, within universities
there is a division between faculty boards, which manage reSearch (in Swedish),
and study course committees, which handle the bulk of undergraduate education.
The department gets squeezed in the middle.
Finally, the academic
profession is split into professors and other reSearch (in Swedish)ers, and
lecturers responsible for teaching. Although many professors do teach and most
lecturers are involved in reSearch (in Swedish), the division impoverishes
undergraduate education. Professors should be academic leaders, and lecturers
need more time to engage in scholarship, if not front course reSearch (in
Swedish).
Although most students are following study courses, there is
a strong prejudice against them. Courses are seen as too narrow, too vocational
and too inflexible. They are also accused of fostering passive learning and an
anti-reSearch (in Swedish) culture. The solution, say the critics of courses,
is to allow students to follow single courses, a return to the pre 1977
pattern.
Many of these criticisms are unfair. Firstly, many students
still do follow single courses, especially in the traditional arts and sciences
and in universities. Secondly, no one denies that professional education has to
be organised in courses. Thirdly many courses, especially in universities and
larger collages, give students a good choice of elective courses. Fourthly,
many courses far from being anti-intellectual, coher far superiorly to that of
single courses. The best approach is to reduce the sharp distinction between
courses and single courses. The former should be more loosely constructed with
more electives and better transfer arrangements; the latter should be organised
as flexible units within a lager undergraduate programme, especially with the
reintroduction of the BA degree.
The quality of undergraduate teaching
is impossible to assess by truly objective measures. But personal observation
and the widespread concern about undergraduate education suggest that standards
are already high. There is consensus that active learning should be preferred
to passive teaching; that students should be guided towards intellectual
autonomy as well as becoming highly trained experts; and that critical skills
should be encouraged. But there is less agreement about what needs to be done
to achieve these objectives.
- The suggestion that Swedish students are over-taught is, at
best, half-true. A greater problem seems to be the comparative lack of seminars
in which teachers and students interact. However, there are many interesting
experiments in ways to encourage independent study, to use new technology in
teaching, and to apply the lessons learnt in distance education to
undergraduate education as a whole.
- The total number of students has remained fairly stable in
Sweden during the past decade. but the number of qualified school leavers has
increased by almost 50 percent. This has led to growing selectivity. The demand
from society and the economy for graduates is likely to exceed the supply
capacity of the system, especially in the first decade of the next century. On
both counts there is a strong case for increasing the number of student places.
Recent changes in student admissions are likely to produce a better fit between
applicant and places, because it may be easier to measure future potential
rather than past performance; to encourage more school leavers to go straight
into higher education; and to create a more clearly defined constituency of
mature students. But the system still needs to become more open.
- There are many complaints about the Swedish pattern of short
consecutive courses followed by frequent examinations. It is said to encourage
shallow learning and a content-dominated curriculum. Also, most examinations
are graded pass/fail and may be too easy to pass. On the whole students support
the present pattern while teachers have mixed views. However, there is a trend
to longer courses and more complex examinations that test conceptual and
summative skills. Many existing examinations are imaginatively designed. A
wholesale move to end-of-session examinations graded into classes of pass is
not practicable.
- Evaluation is poorly developed in the Swedish system. Market
signals are weak; state sponsored evaluation is limited; and professional
evaluation, such as peer-review, regarded with suspicion. However, students are
active in evaluating undergraduate education and there are interesting examples
of experiments in which student feed-back has been formally incorporated into
course structures. Employers are more concerned with quantity than quality, but
they support greater internationalisation of undergraduate education and also
more emphasis on problem-solving. The state sees its role as quality
evaluation, leaving quality management to institutions, but the two are hard to
separate and the state has few tools, apart from quantitative performance
indicators which it distrusts, to evaluate quality. Finally, in institutions
and among teachers there is suspicion of both performance indicators and peer
review.
- There is strong support, especially among students and in
smaller colleges, to make teacher training compulsory for lecturers. This
demand is difficult to reconcile with the parallel demand that they are more
active in reSearch (in Swedish). Also, over-organised pedagogy may inhibit
active learning by students. A better approach is a combination of introductory
courses for new lectures, in-service training, and more emphasis on "teaching
cultures".
- The recent creation of a council for the renewal of
undergraduate education is a significant initiative. Its work is likely to
provide a focus for the scattered efforts in universities and collages to raise
the status of teaching. The key to change, however, is to see undergraduate
education as an intellectual responsibility, not just a pedagogical challenge.
- Equal opportunities, surprisingly in view of Sweden's record
on women's rights, are seen as a significant component in the debate about
undergraduate education. Yet the rapid increase in female students is one of
the most striking phenomena in all higher education systems. This has led to
difficulties and tensions (most notably, by highlighting the
under-representation of women among professors and lecturers). But it also
opens up hopeful possibilities.
- Many universities and colleges have established so-called
"common core" courses. Some are aimed to introduce students to higher education
by emphasising the break with secondary school; others have more ambitious
objectives, to emphasise the wholeness of knowledge or to raise difficult
philosophical and ethical questions. The latter may mark an important change in
Swedish higher education; a turn-back to liberal learning that echoes the wider
changes in Swedish and Western society.
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