International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B6. Istanbul 2004
clear by the repeated need for upgrading through project
intervention and support. The major reasons for this
phenomenon were a lack of research (culture) on which
programmes were based in combination with a lack of resources
and communication means for national staff to keep up to date
with developments world-wide in their knowledge field.
In the process of building educational capacity in the recipient
countries as described in sections 1.2, ITC has increasingly
changed its attention from (the training branches of)
professional organisations to academic institutions, university
faculties in particular. This shift was due to the recognition of
the fact that "institutional sustainability" is of paramount
importance.
At the same time, however, ITC itself has also developed a
position of enhancing scientific sustainability by embedding its
research programme in an international environment and by
enhancing its collaboration network with professional
organisations to keep its relation with "society at large"
4.4 Certification
Since the decision by the European ministers of education at the
Declaration of Bologna in 1999 to introduce the Bachelor-
Master system throughout Europe, procedures and criteria are
being developed for the accreditation of the programmes under
the new system (Section 3.6). Accreditation of programmes
determines not only official recognition by law of the degree but
also the funding of these programmes by the Dutch Ministry of
Education.
Procedures and criteria of accreditation are still in the process
of development. They are as yet unclear for programmes that are
entirely delivered in the Netherlands, while conditions for joint
programmes seem to be even less clear.
To address the uncertain policy with respect to accreditation
and the potential risk that "off-shore" joint programmes may
have on the accreditation (and hence financing) of those
programmes entirely organised in the Netherlands, ITC now
considers to certify those components of joint programmes
delivered by partner organisations and accept the credits
accumulated by those partners.
This certification may also allow expanding the collaboration to
other partners that have their own ongoing programmes,
without having a major requirement on ITC resources in terms
of development and quality assurance.
4.5 From bilateral to multilateral relationships: GI-NET
Up till now ITC's joint educational programmes were based on
bilateral relations between ITC and individual partners. In a
workshop organised at ITC in December 2003, attended by 27
representatives of 17 partner institutes on joint educational
programmes, it was concluded that partnerships should be
transferred from dependent bilateral relationships, where ITC
acted as provider and engine to bilateral equi-partnerships,
where knowledge and experience are exchanged between
partners through education, research and advisory services and
finaly to multilateral equi-partnerships. The aim of the
workshop was to find common ground for developing an
international network of university-level human resources
development programmes on geo-information science and earth
observation in which partners each contribute from their own
186
strength. The position of ITC in this network, although initially
a central node in the network will gradually change to a node of
equal importance compared to other partners. Eventually at this
workshop, common ground was found and a name for the
network accepted, i.e. called GI-NET, Geo-Information
Network for Education and Training. (Source ITC, 2004).
5. CONCLUSIONS
Joint educational programmes address the increasing demand
for flexibility in academic degree programmes and respond to
the need for more demand-driven and tailor-made training.
Moreover they turn out to be much more cost efficient and
effective. Calculations by ITC for its programmes have revealed
that from the perspective of the individual course participant (or
sponsor) joint programmes (at the same quality level as full
programmes at ITC) may be up to 65% cheaper. From the
perspective of the Dutch Government as a development
cooperation donor, joint educational programmes may be up to
even 75% cheaper compared to having them done entirely in the
Netherlands.
6. REFERENCES
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interpretation Institute at Dehra Dun 1965-1973. ITC Journal,
1973-4, pp. 678-726.
Beerens, S.J.J. and I. ten Dam, Globalization of International
Education — ITC's challenge of maintaining quality. Paper
presented at Asian Conference on Remote Sensing in
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and R. Groot, 2002, Beyond Education:
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Georgiadou, Y.
Capacity Building in Geoinformatics”
February 2002, Volume 16, pp 40-43.
ITC, 2001, Strategic Plan 2001-2004, 43 pages. ISBN 90 6164
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ITC, 2004, Building a geo-information community for
sustainable development: from bilateral to multilateral
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Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 2003. Mutual interests, mutual
responsibilities: Dutch development cooperation en route to
2015.
Molenaar, M. and M.J. Kraak, 2000, Geoinformatica in de ITC
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Onderwijs & Management, Volume 10, Nummer 1, 2004, pp
31-36.
Sinha, Col. J.N. 1976, The Indian Photo-interpretation Institute,
Dehra Dun, India. ITC Journal 1976-4, pp. 713-721