11 - Greece - Curriculum

country: Greece

Curricula in tertiary education are elaborated by the institutions and are approved by the YPEPTH.

Curriculum in Higher Technological Education

Following the decision of the Minister of National Education and Religious Affairs issued upon opinion of the competent Committee of the National Council of Education (ΕΣΥΠ/ESYP), general rules applying to the elaboration of curricula, academic credits, the percentage of elective courses, the total number of courses required to receive a degree and any other relevant issue are specified on a single basis for all Technological Education Institutions (TEI).

Based on the above, the General Assembly of every TEI Department is drafting –following a committee proposal- the Curriculum which is approved by the TEI Board based on its compatibility with the Department’s study agenda. The Curriculum includes the courses’ title, their content, the weekly hours and the type of teaching (theory, workshop, practice, seminars, etc.) Moreover, it determines the time sequence or interdepence of the courses, provided that these have been characterized as pre-requisites of other, dependent classes.

The courses provided in the TEI/ΑΣΠΑΙΤΕ departments are described as compulsory, compulsory elective, or optional. During registration or when registration is renewed at the beginning of each semester, students submit their personal curriculum, which must reflect the relationship between prerequisite and dependent courses as decided by the Department. With the exception of this obligation, students draw up independently their personal programme of studies, taking into consideration that the distribution of the courses over semesters is indicative, according to the Department curriculum, and not compulsory for students.

Concurrently, various research programmes have been developed in TEI as a result of the multifaceted role of the Institutes and their co-operation with other TEI, faculties, departments and research centres.

Each department of Technological Education Institutes offer courses on foreign languages, thus providing students with the opportunity to learn one or more languages throughout their studies.

Ministry of National Education and Religious Affairs (YP.E.P.TH.)

In University institutions of higher education, the Department is the main operating academic unit, which covers a discipline’s field of knowledge. Pursuant to the provisions of Law 2083/1992, a Department is competent, inter alia, to determine its overall educational and research policy; plan and specify the strategy of its development; elaborate and revise the curriculum; and formulate its opinion regarding the specialisations or directions of the Department’s degree

The curriculum, which is established by the department’s General Assembly, is adapted to the number of semesters required to receive a degree. For each degree this number is determined by a presidential decree issued upon the advice of the National Education Council and relevant Schools. The curriculum of every University department contains the titles of compulsory courses, their subject matter, the number of hours of classes per week, including each and every teaching task, chronological sequence or interdependence of courses, the number of credits (didaktikes monades - δμ/dm) corresponding to each course and the minimum number of credits required for the student to obtain a degree. In addition, the curriculum of each department or faculty determines compulsory, elective and optional courses. It also specifies whether students are obliged to spend a period of compulsory apprenticeship in workplaces under the supervision of the Department.

A department may include in its curriculum courses from other departments and provide courses to other departments of the same faculty (usually, teaching takes place simultaneously). The specific details are regulated in the curriculum of the academic year concerned and in conjunction with the interested departments. The curriculum may be amended by way of decision of the Department’s General Assembly.

In many university departments and, first and foremost, at the Translation – Interpretation Departments and the Departments of Foreign Languages and Literature (English, French, German, Italian and Spanish language and literature), many courses (especially the compulsory ones) are taught in the respective target language.

Moreover, many higher education institutions in the context of their educational and wide training mission provide students with the opportunity to learn one or more languages throughout their studies, since these are necessary tools for their scientific development. They also offer them intensive courses of linguistic preparation for undergraduate and postgraduate studies abroad.

Postgraduate Study Programmes

The detailed curricula, the courses taught, the number of hours provided for each course, the time required for granting a Postgraduate Specialisation Degree (Metaptychiako Diploma Eidikefsis - ΜΔΕ/MDE), etc are drawn up by the Special General Assembly of the Department and are approved by the Senate of the corresponding tertiary education institute. The operation of a Postgraduate Study Programme is finally approved by way of a decision of the Minister of National Education and Religious Affairs.

According to Law 2916/2001, departments of technological education institutes (TEI) may act jointly in the operation of Postgraduate Study Programmes (ΠΜΣ/PMS), which are organised in a university with the participation of TEI Teaching Faculty (ΕΠ/EP) or by providing premises and facilities or by organising ΠΜΣ/PMS together with university departments, provided that certain evaluation criteria are met. In any other case, degrees are given by the Universities.

Professors invited from other university and research institutions in the country and abroad may participate in the materialisation of a ΠΜΣ/PMS, in addition to the Teaching and Research Faculty (ΔΕΠ/DEP) of the Department. By way of decision of the Special General Assembly, the internal regulation of a ΠΜΣ/PMS specifies whether doctoral candidates are obliged to attend doctoral level courses or not; and the total duration set for the elaboration of the thesis, according to the cognitive field.

Pursuant to this Law, Greek universities may cooperate with acknowledged similar institutes abroad in order to organise and run joint postgraduate study programmes and/or for the elaboration of a doctoral thesis. For the common postgraduate studies, a Special Cooperation Protocol (EPS) is drafted between the cooperating Institutions, which determines the subject of the program and, by case, the scientific fields of the post-doctoral studies, the language or languages of teaching and writing the dissertation or PhD, etc. The new framework-law of 2007 on higher education gives the possibility to complete a Phd or to organize in part or in whole a graduate or post-graduate program of studies in a foreign language.

Institutions:
Ministry of National Education and Religious Affairs (YPEPTH)

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Date: 2009
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