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The implementation of the Master’s Programme is subject to approval of the boards of Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg and the Bavarian State Ministry of Education, Cultural Affaires and Science


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Deadline: Application for scholarships ends MAY 1 !!!


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The homepage of the Master's programme "Educational Quality in Developing Countries" is now online.


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Master's Programme

The need for educational expertise has grown significantly over the last decades. This applies notably to the African continent, where educational systems – not least due to the UN initiative ‘Education for All’ – are expanding rapidly. This trend is going to continue. At the same time it must be recognised that the people responsible for school management have often received too little training to cope with the challenges of educational and ethical orientation with increasing quality management in a global society. Implementing compulsory schooling, training and in-service training for more than four million teachers will be necessary in Africa and other developing regions during the next decade without the public teacher training and in-service training systems being prepared for this challenge. In addition, during the training, it will be necessary to focus on topics which until now have hardly been taken into account: sustainability and the interpretation of how to shape globalisation, the strengthening of the including function of education within societies or rather the minimisation of its excluding effects, and the challenges arising from educational planning and didactics in view of migration, multilingualism and the pluralisation of cultures.  Attending to these challenges in the training of decision makers in the educational sector – both from developing countries and from agencies in donor states – is a pivotal challenge the Master’s programme will respond to. 

Furthermore, the Master’s programme will deal with a further phenomenon closely related to this development: in many countries, governments do not sufficiently meet their educational responsibility for different reasons. Therefore, programmes in public education often do not reach the whole population. At the same time, in many countries where educational responsibility is recognised by the civil society (e.g. schools run by minorities or denominations), it is often insufficiently subsidiary supported. In Rwanda, for example, 60% of all schools are not state schools and schooling expenditures are not completely covered by the state. In this context, a new culture of school sponsorship is developing, which is referred to as the ‘low-fee private school sector’. These private schools are founded through the initiative of parents, parishes or other providers in areas where the state, due to many different reasons, cannot offer any or adequate education. Until today, it has often been the educational stimulus from religious communities which has led to the foundation of schools in the low-fee private school sector.