Academic Cooperation Association

Founded 1993
Members 21 full
3 associate
Working language English
Seat Brussels, Belgium
President Sijbolt Noorda
Director Bernd Wächter
Board Ulrich Grothus (Deputy Secretary General, DAAD)

Hubert Dürrstein (Chief Executive Officer, OeAD)
Pat Killingley (Director of Educational Services, British Council)
Pasi Sahlberg (Director General, CIMO)
Hanneke Teekens (Director of Communication, NUFFIC)
Katarina Kostalova (Executive Director, SAIA)
Antoine Godbert (Director, Agence 2E2F)

Website http://www.aca-secretariat.be

The Academic Cooperation Association (ACA) is an international think tank in the area of international cooperation in higher education. Since 1993, ACA has worked to promote innovation and internationalisation of European higher education in collaboration with its pan-European network of member organisations, each responsible in their respective countries for supporting internationalisation in education and training. ACA also maintains a global perspective through its associate members in other parts of the world.

ACA’s activities include research and analysis, evaluations, consultancy for private and public bodies, advocacy and publications. The Academic Cooperation Association’s Secretariat is located in Brussels — a privileged position to create and maintain close working relations to the European institutions.

ACA History

ACA was founded in June 1993 by the British Council, the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) and the Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education (NUFFIC). These organisations supported, and still support, on behalf of their governments, bilateral international cooperation of their countries' higher education institutions. They felt the need for a common European platform as the importance and number of European Union (EU) programmes in education and training was growing.[1]

ACA membership soon expanded. In tribute to the EU enlargement and with a view to promote the setting up of independent internationalisation agencies in Central and Eastern Europe, full membership was extended from the EU and EFTA countries to the whole of Europe in 1998.

Throughout its history, ACA has provided the European Commission and other international bodies with background research on issues of international cooperation in higher education. In 1999, the association started its own publication series, the ACA Papers on International Cooperation in Higher Education.[2]

ACA Members

Full Members

Associate Members

ACA Publications

ACA Papers on International Cooperation in Education

In 1999, ACA started its own monograph series, the ACA Papers on International Cooperation in Education which are published by Lemmens Medien in Bonn, Germany.[27] Most of the books emerged from ACA's projects in the field of analysis and research on internationalisation of higher education. Examples of the ACA Papers are:

Other Publications on Internationalisation of Higher Education

ACA also publishes the ACA Newsletter – Education Europe, a monthly newsletter which provides policy-makers and practitioners world-wide with concise and up-to-date information on the developments in higher education policy at the national, European and global level. It also highlights important events, presents recent research on education and training matters and informs on the latest European Union funding opportunities.[29]

Apart from the ACA Papers series and the ACA Newsletter, ACA publishes also a collection of reference works about trends and data of internationalisation in Europe and around the world. Examples are the EUA/ACA Internationalisation Handbook (2010), Handbook of International Associations in Higher Education (2009), and EURODATA – Student Mobility in European Higher Education (2006).[30]

List of ACA Presidents

References

  1. "Education and training homepage - European Commission". 12 March 2012.
  2. http://www.aca-secretariat.be/index.php?id=25.
  3. "OeAD - Österreichischer Austauschdienst - Home".
  4. "Flanders Agency for Mobility and Cooperation in Higher Education (Belgi) Flanders Knowledge Area".
  5. "Archimedes".
  6. "Kansainvälisen liikkuvuuden ja yhteistyön keskus CIMO - CIMO".
  7. "Agence Erasmus+ France / Education & Formation - Programmes européens d'éducation et de formation".
  8. "Accueil > CampusFrance".
  9. DAAD - Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst. "Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst - DAAD - Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst".
  10. "IKY - Ίδρυμα Κρατικών Υποτροφιών - IKY - Ίδρυμα Κρατικών Υποτροφιών".
  11. Dizaino Kryptis. "Švietimo mainų paramos fondas".
  12. "Nuffic".
  13. SIU - Senter internasjonalisering av utdanning. "Senter for internasjonalisering av utdanning (SIU)".
  14. "Fundacja Rozwoju Systemu Edukacji".
  15. "Education Foundation PERSPEKTYWY - Home".
  16. "Presmerovanie na optimalizovanu stranku".
  17. "SAIA, n.o.".
  18. "Fundación Universidad.es - Estudiar en España (Oficial)".
  19. "Start - utbyten.se".
  20. Svenska institutet. "En myndighet för det globala Sverige - Svenska institutet". Svenska institutet.
  21. "Home - ch Stiftung für eidgenössische Zusammenarbeit".
  22. "Home".
  23. "British Council - The UK's international culture and education organisation".
  24. "Study abroad with IDP Education".
  25. "AMPEI - Asociación Mexicana para la Educación Internacional, A.C.".
  26. "Institute of International Education".
  27. "Bildung, Forschung, Technologie - Lemmens Medien GmbH". Lemmens.de. 2011-02-04. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  28. "ACA Secretariat: ACA papers".
  29. "ACA Secretariat: Current edition".
  30. "ACA Secretariat: Other publications".
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.