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Partners situated in Belgium:

Note: One of the universities in Belgium is K.U.Leuven.

Belgium in a nutshell

The Kingdom of Belgium is a country in northwest Europe. It is a founding member of the European Union and hosts its headquarters, as well as those of other major international organizations, including NATO. Belgium covers an area of 30,528 km2 (11,787 square miles) and has a population of about 10.5 million. Belgium is a federal state in Europe with a constitutional monarchy, founded in 1830, and its capital is Brussels.

The citizens of Belgium are called Belgians. Straddling the cultural boundary between Germanic and Latin Europe, Belgium is home for two main linguistic groups, the Dutch speakers/Flemings and the French speakers, mostly Walloons, plus a small group of German speakers. Belgium's two largest regions are the Dutch-speaking region of Flanders in the north, with 59% of the population, and the French-speaking southern region of Wallonia with 31% of the population. The Brussels-Capital Region, officially bilingual, is a mostly French-speaking enclave within the Flemish Region and near the Walloon Region, and has 10% of the population. A small German-speaking Community exists in eastern Wallonia. Belgium's linguistic diversity and related political and cultural conflicts are reflected in the political history and a complex system of government.

This Belgium page is a merger of the information found on the Flanders and Wallonia pages, but you can still visit those separate pages for your convenience.


History

The name 'Belgium' is derived from Gallia Belgica, a Roman province in the northernmost part of Gaul that was inhabited by the Belgae, a mix of Celtic and Germanic peoples. Historically, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg were known as the Low Countries, which used to cover a somewhat larger area than the current Benelux group of states. From the end of the Middle Ages until the 17th century, it was a prosperous centre of commerce and culture. From the 16th century until the Belgian revolution in 1830, many battles between European powers were fought in the area of Belgium, causing it to be dubbed "the battlefield of Europe" and "the cockpit of Europe" - a reputation strengthened by both World Wars. Upon its independence, Belgium eagerly participated in the Industrial Revolution. Its King privately possessed the "Congo Free State" in Southern Africa until it was later annexed by the Kingdom of Belgium as the Belgian Congo" until it became independent as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The second half of the 20th century was marked by the rise of communal conflicts between the Flemings and the Francophones fuelled by cultural differences on the one hand and an asymmetrical economic evolution of Flanders and Wallonia on the other hand. These still-active conflicts have caused far-reaching reforms of the unitary Belgian state into a federal state. There is constant speculation by observers that this process of devolution might lead to the partition of the country.

Source: Wikipedia's page on Belgium


State Reforms: cultural and language-based

In the second half of the 19th century a language conflict surfaced, seeking recognition for the Dutch language (or Flemish as it is called in Belgium) as a fully-fledged language alongside French, which until then had been the only official language of Belgium. The language conflict in the sixties led to a series of state reforms and amendments to the constitution resulting in a double federation of regions and communities. Dutch became an official legal language in Belgium in 1959. In 1962 the final language boundary was territorially defined and in 1963 Belgium was divided into 4 language regions. A lot of language-based separations happened as with the unified broadcasting institution (1960), the ministerial portfolio for Culture (1962), the ministerial portfolio of National Education (1968).


  1. The 1st state reform (1970) created 3 cultural communities in response to the Flemish pursuit of cultural autonomy. At the same time the foundations for the 3 regions were laid, in response to the French-speakers’ pursuit of economic autonomy.
  2. The 2nd state reform (1980) extended the cultural communities to 3 communities (the Flemish, the French and the German-speaking Community), which – aside from cultural matters – were also given control of person-related matters, such as health and social security. These communities each had a council (their parliament) and a government. At the same time, two regions were established: the Flemish Region and the Walloon Region and these also got their own council and government. In Flanders the institutions of the Community and the Region immediately merged into one council and one government. The French–speaking community did not consolidate the institutions of the French-speaking Community and the Walloon Region.
  3. The 3rd state reform (1988) shaped the Brussels Capital Region, which also got its own council and government, and further expanded the powers of the Communities and Regions. Responsibility for education was transferred to the Communities and entered in the Constitution (art. 127 § 1.2). 127 § 1.2). Moreover, the guarantees which had previously been laid down in the so-called Schools Pact Act of 29 May 1959 (art. 24) were also recorded in the Constitution on this occasion. Article 142 of the revised Constitution (17 February 1994) entitles every citizen to lodge an appeal with a Constitutional Court if he is of the opinion that the principles and guarantees provided in, among others, article 24 of the Constitution on Education are being violated.
  4. The 4th state reform (1993) turned Belgium into a full federal state. The former bilingual province of Brabant was divided into two provinces: Vlaams-Brabant (Dutch-speaking) and Waals Brabant (French-speaking). Brussels, the capital of Belgium and, in geographical terms, the centre of the former province of Brabant, did from then on no longer form part of a province. Its special status as a bilingual region was thus reinforced.
  5. The 5th state reform (the so-called Lambermont agreements) (2001) gave the different federal states both more financial resources and more powers.


Source: The Education System in the Flemish Community of Belgium (PDF - EN - 5 pages), 2006/07


Regions and Communities

Belgium is a double federation of:

  • 3 Communities which are responsible for the person-related issues such as education, welfare, public health and culture:




Note: In Flanders the institutions of the Community and the Region immediately merged into one council and one government. The French–speaking community did not consolidate the institutions of the French-speaking Community and the Walloon Region.

Source: The Education System in the Flemish Community of Belgium (PDF - EN - 5 pages), 2006/07


Belgium has 10 provinces:

In Flanders you have West-Flanders / West-Vlaanderen, East-Flanders / Oost-Vlaanderen, Flemish Brabant / Vlaams-Brabant, Antwerp / Antwerpen and Limburg. In Wallonia you have Hainaut, Brabant wallon, Liège, Namur and Luxembourg. The most important or most frequent optional responsibilities of these provinces are education (the provinces organise educational institutions, secondary or higher), culture, social welfare, heritage sites and assets, etc.


Wallonia in a Nutshell

Wallonia (French: Wallonie, German: Wallonien, Dutch: Wallonië, Walloon: Waloneye) is the southern and largely French-speaking southern semi-autonomous region of Belgium. It has a population of somewhat over 3 million so is similar in population size to several small countries of the EU. Wallonia has an area of 16 844 km² (just over 55% of Belgium).


French is the official language in most municipalities which form the French Community of Belgium. German (with facilities for speakers of French) is the official language in nine eastern municipalities which belonged to Germany until 1918 and now form the German-speaking Community of Belgium. Several French-speaking municipalities have facilities in Dutch or German (or both). Some interesting facts are:

  • The variety of French spoken in Wallonia is Belgian French, which differs from the standard French of France to various degrees depending on the speaker. The French language used in the administration and in the media is very similar in Belgium and in France. One notable difference is the use of the words (numbers) septante (70) and nonante (90) in Belgium, as opposed to soixante-dix (70) and quatre-vingt-dix (90) in France.
  • In 1990, Belgium also officially recognised Champenois, Gaumais, Picard, and Walloon as regional languages. All are langues d'oïl - closely related, but not identical, to French.
  • The Walloon and Picard dialects were the predominant languages of the Walloon people until the beginning of the 20th century; French was the language of the upper class. With the development of education in French, these dialects have been in continual decline. There is currently an effort to revive Walloon dialects: some schools offer language courses in Walloon, which is also spoken in some radio programmes, but this effort remains very limited.
  • In certain districts, special statutes (known as facilities) protect language minorities. In this case, the French-speaking citizens of the 9 districts of the Deutschsprachigen Gemeinschaft (DG) are thereby entitled to demand official documents in their mother tongue. Source: DG Live – EN


Source: Wikipedia's page on Wallonia


German-speaking Community

If you look at the map of Belgium, you can see that the German-speaking Community (Deutschsprachigen Gemeinschaft - DG) is a small part of the Walloon Region and therefore we will mostly discuss the French Community on this wiki page. More information on the German-speaking Community (DG):

  • it comprises the whole germanophone area.
  • Some 70,000 people live in the German-speaking community of Belgium, which has been presented as the best-protected minority in Europe. Nevertheless, there is a drive in the German-speaking community towards gaining more autonomy from the Walloon Region. The current president of the executive of the German-speaking community, Karl-Heinz Lambertz, wants his community to obtain regional autonomy, thus cutting it completely off from Wallonia. Source: Wikipedia's page on Wallonia
  • four Ministers currently form the government of the German-speaking Community. These are each supported in their policy work by a cabinet of ancillary staff. In 2004, Oliver Paasch became Minister of Education and Research. The DG Ministry , Department of Education and Training
  • the Council for National and Adult Education ensures that the interests of people from all walks of life are represented in adult education.
  • the HEI in the German-speaking Community is Autonome Hochschule in der Deutschsprachigen Gemeinschaft in Eupen


Source: DG Live – EN



Education policy in Belgium

The Belgian Constitution stipulates that everyone has the right to education and therefore established compulsory education. Belgium also provides that access to education is free of charge up to the end of secondary education. Article 24 of the Belgian Constitution lays down the educational principle such as the right on education:

§ 1. Education is free; any preventive measure is forbidden; the punishment of offences is regulated only by the law or federate law.
The community offers free choice to parents.
The community organises non-denominational education. This implies in particular the respect of the philosophical, ideological or religious beliefs of parents and pupils. Schools run by the public authorities offer, until the end of compulsory education, the choice between the teaching of one of the recognised religions and non-denominational ethics teaching.
§ 2. If a community, in its capacity as an organising authority, wishes to delegate powers to one or several autonomous bodies, it can only do so by federate law adopted by a two-thirds majority of the votes cast.
§ 3. Everyone has the right to education with the respect of fundamental rights and freedoms. Access to education is free until the end of compulsory education. All pupils of school age have the right to moral or religious education at the community’s expense.
§ 4. All pupils or students, parents, teaching staff or institutions are equal before the law or federate law. The law and federate law take into account objective differences, in particular the characteristics of each organising authority that warrant appropriate treatment.
§ 5. The organisation, the recognition and the subsidising of education by the community are regulated by the law or federate law.


Source: the Belgian Constitution (EN - PDF - 60 pages), 2009, - Article 24, p. 11


As a result of the constitutional reform in Belgium the Dutch speaking and the French-speaking higher education systems were separated. The Parliaments of the Flemish and French Communities regulate, by federate law, education, with the exception of the setting of the beginning and of the end of compulsory education, minimum standards for the granting of diplomas, the pension scheme (according to Article 127, p. 37). And they regulate by federate law, the use of languages for education in the establishments created, subsidised or recognised by the public authorities (according to Article 129, p. 38). This is the same for the Parliament of the German-speaking Community (according to Article 130, p. 38).

Source: the Belgian Constitution (EN - PDF - 60 pages), 2009: Article 127, p. 37 and Article 129 and Article 130, p. 38


The use of languages in education in Belgium was stipulated in The law of 30 July 1963 (PDF):

Article 3.
As a minority, are protected with special measures:
1° the municipalities of the linguistic border: Comines, Houthem, Bas-Warneton, Warneton, Ploegsteert, Messines, Mouscron, Luingne, Herseaux, Dottignies, Espierres, Helchin, Renaix, Flobecq, Biévène, Marcq, Enghien, Petit-Enghien, Herstappe, Mouland, Fouron-le-Comte, Fouron-Saint-Martin, Fouron-Saint-Pierre, Remersdaal, Teuven;
2° the municipalities of the German-speaking region;
3° the municipalities of Malmédy, Bellevaux-Ligneuville, Bevercé, Faymonville, Robertville et Waimes, named "municipalities malmédiennes";
4° the municipalities of Baelen, Gemmenich, Henri-Chapelle, Hombourg, Membach, Montzen, Moresnet, Sippenaeken, Welkenraedt.


Article 4.
"The language of education is Dutch in the Dutch-speaking language area, French in the the French-speaking language area and German in the German-speaking language area, except for the cases provided in Articles 6 to 8."


Article 5. (replaced by the Law of 26 July 1971)
"In the district of Bruxelles-Capital, the language of education is French or Dutch la langue de l'enseignement est le français ou le néerlandais according to the choice of the head of the family if he/she resides in this district."


Article 6.
"In the municipalities , referred to in article 3, primary education can be given in another national language to children if that is their mother tongue or usual language, and if the head of the family resides in one of these municipalities."


Source: The law of 30 July 1963 (PDF)


Objectives of Education

The primary and secondary education missions were stipulated in the Decree of 24 July 2997 (FR).


The Higher Education Acts in Belgium states that the three main tasks of higher education are:

  1. cooperation with society;
  2. education;
  3. research.


HEIs in only a few countries are not officially required to develop a strategic plan:

  • The decree defining higher education in the French Community of Belgium provides the higher education objectives and the mission of the institutions.
  • In the German-speaking Community of Belgium, the mission and strategic priorities of the Autonome Hochschule were not established by the institution, but by official decree in 2005.
  • The HEIs in the Flemish Community of Belgium are free to draft long-term strategic or development plans and they are free to take the governmental priorities into account or not, as they decide.


Source: “The organisation of the academic year in higher education - 2008/09”. Chapter 2: Structures of Higher Education Governance ([1] – EN)


Two groups organise the educational structure: the public sector (the communes, provinces and communities) and the private sector. In the public sector there are 3 educational networks:

  • community schools: neutral on religious, philosophical or ideological convictions
  • subsidised publicly run schools: organized by communes and provinces
  • subsidised privately run schools: denominational schools and schools which are not affiliated to a particular religion: the Freinet schools, Montessori schools or Steiner schools, which adopt particular educational methods and are also known as ‘method schools’.


Education that is organised for and by the government (community education and municipal and provincial education) is known as publicly run education. Recognised education organised on private initiative is called privately run education.


Education policy in Flanders

As a result of the constitutional reform in Belgium the Dutch speaking and the French-speaking higher education systems were separated. The Flemish government wanted to do things ‘differently and better’. This led to a new higher education legislation in the early 1990s and to a policy based on the principles of deregulation, autonomy and accountability.


In general, there are two types of institutions: universities and university colleges or "hogescholen".


The Flemish government wanted to treat all institutions on an equal basis. New legislation made the former state universities autonomous and gave them almost the same responsibility as the ‘free’ universities. In terms of deregulation, autonomy and accountability the same principles were introduced for the hogescholen. This led in conjunction with the merger operation in 1995 to a fundamental change in the relationship between the government and the hogescholen. Former centralised and detailed regulations were replaced by a management regime aimed at achieving a balanced combination of broad autonomy and responsibility for the hogescholen. The higher education regulations as a whole – universities and hogescholen – became more integrated. The previous government wanted to bring the decree on universities (1991) and the decree on the hogescholen (1994) into line with each other without affecting the nature of the university and college education. This integration process has been stimulated even more by the 2003 legislation on the restructuring of higher education in order to implement the Bologna process.

In terms of policy preparation the following organisations play an important role in Flanders:

  • The Flemish Education Council (Vlaamse Onderwijsraad - VLOR) was founded in 1991. It is the advisory and consultative body for all educational matters. All draft decrees in the field of education must be submitted to the VLOR. Furthermore, the VLOR can give advice to the Flemish government on its own initiative. The VLOR consists of a general council and separate councils for primary, secondary, higher and adult education. The general council is composed of representatives of the organising bodies, school staff, parents and socio-economic organisations, university experts and Education Department representatives.
  • The Flemish Socio-Economic Council (Sociaal-Economische Raad van Vlaanderen - SERV), composed of representatives of employers and employees, gives advice on all draft decrees, including those in the field of education. The SERV plays an important role in the relationship between education

and the world of work.

  • The Flemish Interuniversity Council (Vlaamse Interuniversitaire Raad - VLIR) is an autonomous body of public utility with its own corporate status. It acts as a defender of the universities and as an advisor to the Flemish government on university issues (consultation, advice and recommendations).
  • A similar body has been established for the institutions of non-university higher education - the Flemish Council for hogescholen ([VLHORA). It was founded during the academic year 1996-1997 and represents the hogescholen. The Council gives advice and makes proposals to the Flemish government with regard to the education in the hogescholen. At the same time it can provide consultation among the hogescholen
  • The National Union of Students in Flanders (VVS) is the umbrella organisation of student unions at Flemish universities and hogescholen. The National Union of Students in Flanders gives advice at the request of the Flemish government.



Education policy in Wallonia

HEIs in only a few countries are not officially required to develop a strategic plan:

  • The decree defining higher education in the French Community of Belgium provides the higher education objectives and the mission of the institutions.
  • In the German-speaking Community of Belgium, the mission and strategic priorities of the Autonome Hochschule were not established by the institution, but by official decree in 2005.
  • The HEIs in the Flemish Community of Belgium are free to draft long-term strategic or development plans and they are free to take the governmental priorities into account or not, as they decide.


Source: “The organisation of the academic year in higher education - 2008/09”. Chapter 2: Structures of Higher Education Governance ([2] – EN)


In the French Community you have the following relevant organisations and sites:


Advocacy groups and Councils:


Source: Studying: The European dimension, Studying – Belgium and Education ... at the University – Belgium (PDF), European Youth Portal


Education system in Belgium

Article 24 of the Belgian Constitution (p. 11/60 - EN - PDF lays down the principle of the freedom of education and provides for the existence of state-organized teaching. Within this constitutional framework, two networks of institutions of higher education have developed extensively:

  • Public institutions set up by the state and administered by the (linguistic) communities, or by the provincial or municipal authorities.
  • Private institutions of which the majority is denominational (such as Roman Catholic) and which receive financial aid from the state, subject to certain conditions. The minority is not affiliated to a particular religion: the Freinet schools, Montessori schools or Steiner schools, which adopt particular educational methods and are also known as ‘method schools’.


Such as referenced in Article 24, "Access to education is free until the end of compulsory education". In Belgium, both primary and secondary education is obligatory.

Level Age Year Compulsory stages and cycles Additional information
2
Kindergarten/Nursery/pre-primary / maternel (FR) or kleuteronderwijs (NL) 3 1 stage 1, 1st cycle children that are 2 years and 6 months on 30 September can enter Kindergarten
4 2
5 3
Primary education / primaire (FR) or basisschool/lagere school (NL) 6 1 c stage 1, 2nd cycle Note': in the French Community, the schools where Kindergarten and primary education are combined are called les écoles fondamentale
7 2 c
8 3 c stage 2, 3nd cycle
9 4 c
10 5 c stage 2, 4nd cycle
11 6 c
Secondary education / secondaire (FR) or secundair/middelbaar (NL) 12 1 c stage 3, 5th cycle
  • general (G) / algemeen (ASO) (NL) ;
  • technical (T) / technisch (TSO) (NL) ;
  • artistic (A) / kunst (KSO) (NL)
  • vocational (P) / professionnel (FR) or beroeps (BSO) (NL)  ;
  • special needs / buitengewoon (BuSO) (NL)
13 2 c
14 3 c
15 4 c
16 5 c
17 6 c
Higher Education / supérieur (FR) or hoger (NL) 18 1 cycle1: Bachelor (3 yers)|
  • in Wallonia: Universities, Colleges, Colleges of Arts and Higher Education Institutions of Architecture
  • in Flanders: Universities, University Colleges and Colleges (Hogescholen)
19 2
21 3
22 4 cycle 2: master (1-2yrs)
23 5-


More information on legal documents for the French Community can be found on the portal of the circulars, issued by the French Community (FR).

Higher education

Higher education in Flanders - Universities and Polytechnics

Remark: Polytechnics are called University Colleges or "Hogescholen" in Flanders.

On 4 April 2003 the Flemish government approved the Decree on the restructuring of higher education in Flanders. A new qualification structure was introduced. One-cycle programmes have been converted to the level of bachelor’s degree. Two-cycle programmes in hogescholen are academic education: academic bachelor courses and master courses in association with a university. The system should be regarded as a binary system: professional higher education at the ‘hogescholen’ and academic higher education at the universities and at the hogescholen (associations). The ‘hogescholen’ can award academic degrees in cooperation with a university. Still the universities have the monopoly of awarding doctor’s degrees.One of the consequences is that co-operation between universities and hogescholen is increase considerably with the development of associations. Universities and university colleges cooperate intensively, especially in the field of research, in the Associations. These are formed by one university and at least one university college. As a third kind, the Flemish government has recognised a number of "registered" institutes of higher education, which mostly issue specialised degrees or provide education mainly in a foreign language. The educational provision in Flemish tertiary education is laid down in the Higher education register that contains all the accredited higher education programmes in Flanders. There are 39 recognised Higher Education Institutions. The Universities and Colleges are divided into 5 associations. The registered Institutions are not a member of an Association. A few tertiary education institutes are not regulated by the corresponding laws on tertiary education. The Faculty of Protestant Theology in Brussels and the Evangelical Theological Faculty (in Heverlee award degrees in Protestant Theology. They are recognised as private institutes. Whatever their origin, all institutions mentioned above are officially recognised by the Flemish authorities. The following postgraduate institutions have the same status:

  • Institute of Development Policy and Management,
  • Institute of Tropical Medicine,
  • Vlerick Leuven-Gent Management School


Please see the table below, for a complete overview:


Association Type English name / web pages Original language / web pages' City students
K.U.Leuven Association Fl Uni Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Leuven 30,442 (2005-06)
FL Uni Hogeschool-Universiteit Brussel Hogeschool-Universiteit Brussel Brussels 7,000 (full-time)
FL Col Lessius Lessius Antwerp
FL Col Katholieke Hogeschool Limburg] Katholieke Hogeschool Limburg Hasselt 5,500
FL Col Sint-Lukas Brussels University College of Art and Design Hogeschool Sint-Lukas Brussel Brussels 750
FL Col University College for Sciences and Arts Hogeschool voor Wetenschap en Kunst Brussels
FL Col KH Kempen University College Katholieke Hogeschool Kempen Geel 6,200
FL Col Katholieke Hogeschool Brugge-Oostende Bruges-Ostend
FL Col Catholic University College Ghent Katholieke Hogeschool Sint-Lieven Ghent 5,000
FL Col Group T-International University College Leuven Groep T - Internationale Hogeschool Leuven Leuven 5,000
FL Col Katholieke Hogeschool Zuid-West-Vlaanderen Katholieke Hogeschool Zuid-West-Vlaanderen Kortrijk 7,000
FL Col Katholieke Hogeschool Leuven Leuven
FL Col Mechelen University College Katholieke Hogeschool Mechelen Mechelen 4,400
Antwerp University Association FL Uni University of Antwerp Universiteit Antwerpen Antwerp 11,000
FL Col Antwerp Maritime Academy Hogere Zeevaartschool Antwerp
FL Col Karel de Grote-Hogeschool Antwerp Karel de Grote-Hogeschool Antwerp 7,250
FL Col Plantijn-Hogeschool (van de Provincie Antwerpen) Antwerp
FL Col Artesis (Hogeschool Antwerpen) Antwerp
Brussels university association FL Uni Vrije Universiteit Brussel Vrije Universiteit Brussel Brussels 9,157
FL Col Erasmushogeschool Brussel Erasmushogeschool Brussel Brussels
Ghent University Association FL Uni Ghent University Universiteit Gent Ghent 30,000
FL Col University College Arteveldehogeschool Arteveldehogeschool Ghent 8,600
FL Col University College Ghent Hogeschool Gent Ghent 15,000
FL Col University College West Flanders (HOWEST) Hogeschool West-Vlaanderen Kortrijk-Bruges-Ostend 4,500
universiteit - hogescholen Limburg association FL Uni Hasselt University Universiteit Hasselt Hasselt 2,219
FL Col PHL University College Provinciale Hogeschool Limburg Hasselt
FL Col XIOS University College Limburg XIOS Hogeschool Limburg Hasselt 3,000
Registered Institution FL RHEI Flanders Business School Antwerp
Registered Institution FL RHEI Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp Instituut voor Tropische Geneeskunde Antwerp 250
Registered Institution FL RHEI College of Europe Bruges/Warsaw 300 in Bruges
Registered Institution FL RHEI Faculteit voor Protestantse Godgeleerdheid Brussel Brussels
Registered Institution FL RHEI Vesalius College Brussels
Registered Institution FL RHEI Evangelical Theological Faculty (ETF) Evangelische Theologische Faculteit Heverlee 200 full-time and part-time
Registered Institution FL RHEI Vlerick Leuven Gent Management School Vlerick Leuven Gent Management School Leuven-Ghent
Registered Institution FL RHEI Continental Theological Seminary Sint-Pieters-Leeuw

In Flanders, the following higher education courses are provided:

  • Bachelor courses( Professional bachelor courses and Academic bachelor courses)
  • Master courses
  • Further training programmes
  • Postgraduates and updating and in-service training courses
  • Doctoral programmes

Higher professional education exclusively consists of professionally oriented bachelor courses, which are only organised at colleges of higher education. Academic education comprises bachelor and master courses, which are provided by universities. Also colleges of higher education belonging to an association are allowed to provide academic education.


Adult Education In Flanders there are several publicly funded education, training and developmental provision schemes for adults. Within part-time adult education, 3 different actors can be distinguished:

a continuing education (OSP): with more than 250,000 course participants, continuing education is the most important pillar in adult education. Continuing education is provided in centres for adult education which are recognised and funded by the authorities.
b supervised individual study (BIS): BIS has discontinued. It is however published in our research list.
c adult basic education: the 29 centres for basic adult education try to provide a broad and varied range of basic education programmes: languages, mathematics, social orientation, ICT, introduction in French and English and stimulation and student counselling activities.
In contrast with continuing education and BIS, courses in basic education are free of charge.


Lifelong Learning

On 31 March 2003, the Training and Alignment Information Service /Dienst Informatie Vorming en Afstemming (DIVA) was launched. DIVA co-ordinates the educational provision for adults in Flanders. DIVA facilitates the co-operation between the policy fields Education and Training, Employment, Culture and Economy. DIVA’s partners are the educational networks, Flemish Employment and Vocational Training Agency (VDAB), Flemish Institute for the Self-Employed (VIZO) and Support Centre for Socio-cultural Work (Socius). These partners represent respectively adult education (including further higher education, OSP, basic education, BIS and DKO), the training courses set up by VDAB, by Syntra and socio-cultural adult work. An awareness-raising campaign was launched: http://www.wordwatjewil.be (“Become what you want”)


Higher education in Wallonia- Universities and Polytechnics

In higher education, the academic year begins between mid-September and 1 October, depending on the course. The community is responsible for official education and private higher education takes place either in religious institutions or in civic institutions.

Source: http://www.fitforeurope.info/webcom/show_page_ffee.php?wc_c=15903&wc_id=1


Higher education reform

The Bologna Process

Administration and finance

Quality assurance

Country's HEIs in the information society

Towards the information society

Information society strategy

Virtual Campuses in HE

Interesting Virtual Campus Initiatives

Interesting Programmes

Re.ViCa Case-study

Lessons learnt

References

Belgium:

  1. Wikipedia on Belgium
  2. Wikipage on the communities, regions and language areas of Belgium
  3. Information about Higher Education on Belgium.be
  4. Wikipedia’s page on Belgium Universities and Colleges

Flanders:

  1. The web site for the ministry of Education and Formation
  2. “EDUCATION IN FLANDERS - The Flemish educational landscape in a nutshell”, PDF
  3. Higher Education in Flanders Register
  4. Study in Flanders
  5. Introduction to (initial) accreditation (EN)
  6. Accreditation (EN)
  7. Accredidation Framework for Flanders (EN)
  8. Automatic recognition of qualifications (EN)
  9. Joint declaration automatic recognition qualifications December 2005 (PDF) (EN)

Other:

  1. For corporate e-learning there's the Belgian network for Open & Distance learning (BE-ODL)
  2. Interesting country reports concerning e-learning: State of the art of e-learning in Belgium

Internal evaluation Belgium


> Countries