Fachhochschule
A Fachhochschule ( Fachhochschule ; FH; plural Fachhochschulen) or University of Applied Sciences (UAS) is a German tertiary education institution, specializing in topical areas (e.g. engineering, technology or business). Fachhochschulen were first founded in Germany, and were later adopted in Austria, Liechtenstein, Switzerland and Greece (where they are called TEI-Technological Educational Institutes). An increasing number of Fachhochschulen are abbreviated as Hochschule, the generic term in Germany for institutions awarding academic degrees in higher education, or expanded as Hochschule für angewandte Wissenschaften (HAW). Due to the Bologna process, Universitäten and Fachhochschulen award legally equivalent academic bachelor's and master's degrees.[1] Fachhochschulen do not award doctoral degrees themselves. This, and the rule to call professors with a professional career of at least three years outside the university system, remain the two major ways in which they differ from traditional universities.
Universities of Applied Sciences are primarily designed with a focus on teaching professional skills. Swiss law calls Fachhochschulen and Universitäten "separate but equal".[2] UAS are able to issue both bachelor's and master's degrees. In Switzerland, they may run doctoral programs when the degree itself is awarded by a partner institution, just as some German Fachhochschulen also co-run doctoral programs with degrees awarded by a partner university.[3]
Germany
The Fachhochschule or University of Applied Sciences and Arts is a type of German institution of higher education that emerged from the traditional Engineering Schools and similar professional schools of other disciplines. It differs from the traditional university (Universität) mainly through its more practical orientation.[4] Subjects taught at Fachhochschulen include engineering, computer science, business and management, arts and design, communication studies, social service, and other professional fields.
The traditional degree awarded at a Fachhochschule was the Diplom (FH). Actual coursework generally totals eight semesters (four years) of full-time study with various options for specialization. In addition, there were one or two practical training semesters to provide hands-on experience in real working environments. The program concluded usually after five years with the final examination and a thesis (Diplomarbeit) which usually is an extensive project of a current practical or scientific aspect of the profession.
In an effort to make educational degrees more compatible within Europe, the German Diplom degrees were mostly phased out by 2010 and were replaced by the European bachelor's and master's degree.
The Fachhochschule represents a close relationship between higher education and the employment system. Their practical orientation makes them very attractive for employers.[5]
Today the Fachhochschulen also conduct research. The research projects are either publicly funded or sponsored by industry. Nevertheless, in Germany the right to confer doctoral degrees is still reserved to the Universitäten.[6] Some Fachhochschulen run doctoral programs where the degree itself is awarded by a partner university (similar to the doctoral programs in German research institutes, such as the Fraunhofer Society or the Max Planck Society).
There are a few universities, such as the Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt and the Bundeswehr University Munich, which run Fachhochschule courses in addition to their normal courses.
Bologna process
Due to the Bologna process, most German Universitäten and Fachhochschulen have ceased admitting students to programs leading to the traditional German Diplom, but apply now the new EU degree standard of Bachelor and Master's degrees. In line with the Bologna process, bachelor's and master's degrees awarded by both types of universities (Universitäten and Fachhochschulen) are legally equivalent.
With a Master's from either it is now possible to enter a doctoral degree program at a Universität, but a graduate with a bachelor's degree from either is normally unable to proceed directly to a doctoral degree program in Germany (most US schools only require a bachelor's degree for admission to doctoral programs, but virtually all require additional coursework). Also, with the master's degree of either of the institutions a graduate can enter the höheren Dienst (higher service) career for civil servants.[1][7]
Austria
The Austrian government decided to establish Fachhochschulen (FH) in 1990. In the academic year of 2010/11, there were twenty-one institutions officially considered as Fachhochschulen plus a number of other providers of Fachhochschulstudiengängen with a total of over 27,000 students. About a third of the 136 Fachhochschulstudiengänge are organized as part-time courses of studies.
Name | City | Bundesland | Type | Founded | Students 2008/09 |
Students 2009/10 |
Difference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fachhochschule Burgenland | Eisenstadt | Burgenland | Fachhochschule | 1994 | 1.451 | 1.453 | +2 |
Fachhochschule Kärnten | Spittal an der Drau | Kärnten | Fachhochschule | 1995 | 1.518 | 1.664 | +146 |
IMC Fachhochschule Krems | Krems | Niederösterreich | Fachhochschule | 1994 | 1.779 | 1.750 | -29 |
Fachhochschule St. Pölten | Sankt Pölten | Niederösterreich | Fachhochschule | 1994 | 1.715 | 1.698 | -17 |
Fachhochschule Wiener Neustadt | Wiener Neustadt | Niederösterreich | Fachhochschule | 1994 | 2.658 | 2.763 | +105 |
Theresian Military Academy | Wiener Neustadt | Niederösterreich | Fachhochschul-Einrichtung | 1751 | 324 | 314 | -10 |
FH Oberösterreich | Wels | Oberösterreich | Fachhochschul-Einrichtung | 1994 | 4.154 | 4.434 | +280 |
FH Gesundheitsberufe Oberösterreich | Linz | Oberösterreich | Fachhochschul-Einrichtung | 2010 | |||
Fachhochschule Salzburg | Puch/Urstein | Salzburg | Fachhochschule | 1995 | 2.184 | 2.267 | +83 |
Campus02 | Graz | Steiermark | Fachhochschule | 1996 | 1.028 | 1.106 | +78 |
FH Joanneum | Graz | Steiermark | Fachhochschule | 1995 | 3.383 | 3.428 | +45 |
FH Kufstein | Kufstein | Tirol | Fachhochschule | 1997 | 1.030 | 1.070 | +40 |
FH Gesundheit Tirol | Innsbruck | Tirol | Fachhochschul-Einrichtung | 2007 | 247 | 413 | +166 |
Management Center Innsbruck | Innsbruck | Tirol | Fachhochschul-Einrichtung | 1995 | 1.883 | 2.052 | +169 |
Fachhochschule Vorarlberg | Dornbirn | Vorarlberg | Fachhochschule | 1989 | 1.005 | 1.054 | +49 |
Fachhochschule des bfi Vienna | Vienna | Vienna | Fachhochschule | 1996 | 1.431 | 1.502 | +71 |
Fachhochschule Technikum Vienna | Vienna | Vienna | Fachhochschule | 1994 | 2.654 | 2.939 | +285 |
Ferdinand Porsche Fern-Fachhochschule | Vienna | Vienna | Fachhochschul-Einrichtung | 1997 | 85 | 305 | +220 |
FH Campus Vienna | Vienna | Vienna | Fachhochschule | 2001 | 2.439 | 3.215 | +776 |
FHVienna | Vienna | Vienna | Fachhochschule | 1994 | 1.779 | 2.362 | +583 |
Lauder Business School | Vienna | Vienna | Fachhochschul-Einrichtung | 2003 | 253 | 296 | +43 |
Switzerland
The Swiss Universities of Applied Sciences UAS are vocational universities established in Switzerland in 1995 following the model of the German Fachhochschulen. They are called Fachhochschule in German, Haute école specialisée in French and scuola universitaria professionale (SUP) in Italian. The Swiss Universities of Applied Sciences offer third level education, continuing education, services businesses and institutions, and produce applied research activities. In 2013 there are seven public UAS approved by the Swiss Federal Council in 1998 and two private UAS approved by the Federal Council in 2005 and 2008.[8] The public UAS are run by one or more cantons.[9]
UAS have the institutional mandate to provide degree programmes (Bachelor’s degrees and Master's degrees), continuing education and training, to conduct applied research and to offer services to companies and institutions. Students with a finished apprenticeship and a Fachmatura (subject Matura) and students with the Matura and a practical year in a company can access further education within the Universities for Applied Science. The UAS and their Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees are federally accredited.
The Federal Department of Economic Affairs, Education and Research (EAER) and is in charge of the accreditation of the UAS which are requested to meet the federal legislative requirements.[2] The UAS are supported by the cantons, the Federal Department of Economic Affairs, Education and Research (EAER), the State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI)[8] and by the Rector's Conference of Swiss Universities (swissuniversities).[10]
University of Applied Sciences | Typology | Establishment | Recognition | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|
Berner Fachhochschule (BFH) | Public | 1998 | ||
Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz (FHNW) | Public | 1998 | ||
Fachhochschule Ostschweiz (FHO) | Public | 1998 | ||
Haute école spécialisée de la Suisse occidentale (HES-SO) | Public | 1998 | ||
Hochschule Luzern (HSLU, formerly known as FHZ) | Public | 1998 | Not to be mismatched with University of Lucerne (unilu) | |
Scuola universitaria professionale della Svizzera italiana (SUPSI) | Public | 1997 | 1998 | |
Zürcher Fachhochschule (ZFH) | Public | 1998 | ||
Kalaidos Fachhochschule | Private | 2005 | ||
Haute école spécialisée Les Roches-Gruyère | Private | 2008 | ||
See also
- Swiss Association for Private Schools and Universities
- Education in Switzerland
- Ammattikorkeakoulu
- College
- Institute of technology
- University of applied sciences
- Vocational university
References
- 1 2 Secretariat of the Standing Conference of the Ministers of Education and Cultural Affairs of the Länder in the Federal Republic of Germany, 10/10/2003, version of 22/09/2005
- 1 2 "Federal Act on Funding and Coordination of the Swiss Higher Education Sector (Higher Education Act, HEdA, SR 414.20) Status of 1 January 2015" (PDF). SERI: Universities of Applied Sciences. Berne, Switzerland: State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation SERI, Swiss Federal Administration. 11 September 2011. Retrieved 2015-04-25.
- ↑ "Molecular imaging methods for the analysis of gene and protein expression". University of Heidelberg. Retrieved 2008-06-06.
- ↑ Claudia Unseld; Gaby Reucher (13 September 2010). "University types: Universities of applied science". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 17 August 2011.
- ↑ Studienberatung USA in der Fachhochschule Hannover, an Education USA Student Advising Center for Lower Saxony, affiliated with the U.S. Department of State, Washington, 2006. Adapted from: G. B. Porter, Federal Republic of Germany: a Study of the Educational System of the FRG and a Guide to the Academic Placement of Students in Educational Institutions of the United States. (American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, 1986)
- ↑ "Auszüge aus dem Hochschulrahmengesetz der BRD (citings are outdated)" (PDF). German Rectors Conference. 2003-12-01.
- ↑ Standing Conference of the Ministers of Internal Affairs of the Länder (IMK) in the Federal Republic of Germany, 07/12/2007.
- 1 2 "Switzerland’s Universities of Applied Sciences (UAS)". Berne, Switzerland: State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation SERI, Swiss Federal Administration. Retrieved 2015-04-25.
- ↑ "Schweizerischer FH-Rat / Conseil suisse des HES" [Swiss council of UAS] (in German, French, Italian, and Romansh). Berne, Switzerland: Schweizerische Konferenz der Erziehungsdirektoren EDK CDIP CDPE CDEP. Retrieved 2015-04-25.
- ↑ "swissuniversities". Berne, Switzerland: swissuniversities. Retrieved 2015-04-25.
External links
- Germany
- FH Aachen University of Applied Sciences, Germany
- International University of Applied Sciences Bad Honnef - Bonn, Germany.
- Hochschule Bonn-Rhein-Sieg, Germany.
- Hochschule Deggendorf, Germany.
- Hochschule Esslingen, Germany.
- Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences (FRA-UAS), Germany; formerly known as Fachhochschule Frankfurt am Main
- FH Gelsenkirchen, Germany.
- Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Dresden, Germany.
- Hochschule Hannover, Germany.
- Hof University, Germany
- University of Applied Sciences Jena, Germany.
- Hochschule Karlsruhe, Germany.
- FH Koblenz, Germany.
- FH Köln, Cologne University, Germany biggest University of Applied Sciences in Germany
- Hochschule München, Munich, Germany
- Nordhausen University of Applied Sciences, Germany.
- Hochschule Ostwestfalen-Lippe, Lemgo, Germany.
- HTW Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft des Saarlandes, Saarbrücken, Germany.
- Hochschule für Technik Stuttgart, Germany
- Hochschule Zittau/Görlitz, Germany.
- Hochschule für Oekonomie und Management, University of Applied Sciences, Germany.
- Westfälische Hochschule (Westfalia University of Applied Sciences) Recklinghausen and Bocholt, Germany
- Westsächsische Hochschule Zwickau - University of Applied Sciences Zwickau
- Offenburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany
- Austria
- Fachhochschule Kärnten, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Oberösterreich, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Salzburg, Austria.
- FH Kufstein/Tirol, Austria.
- Management Center Innsbruck, Austria.
- Fachhochschule St. Pölten, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Krems, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Technikum Wien, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Wiener Neustadt, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Joanneum, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Wien, Austria.
- Fachhochschule Campus Wien, Austria.
- Switzerland
- Haute école spécialisée de la Suisse occidentale HES-SO
- Berner Fachhochschule BFH
- Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz FHNW
- Hochschule Luzern (HSLU), formerly known as Fachhochschule Zentralschweiz FHZ
- Scuola universitaria professionale della Svizzera italiana SUPSI and Fernfachhochschule Schweiz
- Zürcher Fachhochschule ZFH
- Fachhochschule Ostschweiz FHO
- Kalaidos Fachhochschule (private, officially recognized)
- SUP Les Roches-Gruyère (private, officially recognized)
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