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During this meeting the challenges, identified at the previous workshop were addressed. The aim of the meeting was also to identify more NRENs that would benefit from a collaborative approach and guidance from the wider NREN community. The list of participants can be found here.
TNE: Context and Session Objectives
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At the beginning of the session, Esther defined TNE, briefly introducing to what TNE is
(the provision of education for students based in a country other than the one in which the awarding institution is located, e.g. students based in country X studying for a degree from a university in country Y)
and what types of TNE activities there are (including 'branch campuses', overseas partnerships, distance/online learning).
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Following the introduction to the SIG and main working areas, the Steering Committee members that lead those areas gave brief overviews on what their issues are and what needs to be done to solve them.
TNE data: regional, national and global. What exists now… and how do we obtain it?
Urszula Chomicka, Internet2
Urszula gave a presentation on the UK (Jisc) and USA (Internet2) TNE data collection and outlined the main challenges that NRENs face related to TNE - starting with differences in basic things like spelling (programme vs program) and the variety of definitions used to describe the phenomenon of local/foreign collaboration in the joint design and delivery of an academic programme in a host country, which is only one of the many examples of such confusing terminology in the field of TNE.
There are numerous differences that make TNE data complicated, such as linguistic, cultural, regulatory, methodology, classification, etc - no certral body collects this data, so there is no one universal TNE data system. However, even if there was one, would it contain the data needed by the NRENs? NRENs would be interested in the kinds of programmes that use their services - currently and in the future, to plan for the connectivity in advance.
The two examples that Urszula looked into in more detail were Jisc and Internet2 - the NRENs that are already collecting or have access to higher education data, helping them to identify where their members are at and what help they could potentially need - remote sites of the universities might not be aware of what NRENs can do for them. The overview of the two NRENs and their data sources showed that even between the countries that are more advanced in the field of TNE, the data is approached in different ways. In some other countries, such as China, the data is collected by the government and more data is available than anywhere else, but how can NRENs benefit from it?
NRENs face a number of chalenges:
- different data sets
- different needs for TNE data usage (host vs sending campus)
- different stages of TNE support programme development
- different resources available to tackle this
Ideas for moving forward: NRENs should work together in consolidating the information available into something that can be used to move towards a common way of treating the data, perhaps involving some other national and international organisations and sharing the best practice examples.