Inside the EU The first European Union exchange programmes were the COMETT Programme for Industry-University links and exchanges, launched in 1987 (and discontinued in 1995); the
Erasmus university exchange programme was launched in the same year. Similar programmes have been running ever since, and as from 2007 all the education and training programmes were brought together in one single programme; the
Lifelong Learning Programme 2007-2013. The Lifelong Learning programme comprises separate sub-programmes for schools; universities and higher education; professional education; adult education; teaching about the EU in universities; and a 'horizontal' programme for policy development. The schools exchange programme, named after the 15th century Czech teacher, scientist and educator John Amos
Comenius, has helped over 2.5 million school students take part in joint projects across boundaries. The Erasmus programme (named after
Desiderius Erasmus, the 16th century Dutch humanist and theologian), has been the icon of university exchange programmes since its launch in 1987. Some two million students have so far spent a fully accredited period of between 3 months and an academic year in another EU university under the programme, which has become a symbol of Europe in universities. The professional education programme is named after the renaissance inventor and all-rounder
Leonardo da Vinci. It currently helps around 75,000 young people each year to do an apprenticeship or internship in another
EU country. The adult education programme, named after Pastor
N. F. S. Grundtvig, the 19th century Danish theologian, poet, philosopher and thinker, helps those involved in adult education to have access to similar international experience. The sub-programme which supports teaching about Europe in higher education is named after the French politician and architect of
European Unity,
Jean Monnet. The programme entered into force on 1 January 2007, and will continue until projects launched in its final year 2013 are closed – probably in 2016. Educational levels across EU regions have become more similar, which has played an important role in increasing employment rates within the European Union. The number of young people not in education, employment, or training (NEETs), notably women, is significantly higher in
cohesion regions (less developed regions of Europe) than the EU average (11.2 percent in 2023). Lower educational achievement in these places is exacerbated by relatively low levels of reading and numeracy among young people.
Outside the EU The first EU programme to promote educational exchange and cooperation between educational institutions inside the EU and those outside it was the
TEMPUS programme, adopted on 7 May 1990 by the
Council as part of the assistance provided by the European Community of the day to the countries breaking free of Soviet rule. The idea behind TEMPUS was that individual universities in the
European Community could contribute to the process of rebuilding free and effective university systems in partner countries; and that a bottom-up process through partnerships with individual universities in these countries would provide a counterweight to the influence of the much less trusted Ministries, few of which had by then undergone serious change since Soviet domination. The programme was an immediate success; and by 1993 the number of participating countries had grown from five at the start to eleven. The programme was subsequently enlarged to include the
Newly Independent States of the former Soviet Union; again to include the countries of the Western Balkans; and finally to cover the Mediterranean countries. The TEMPUS programme currently supports projects run by consortia of universities in the EU and in partner countries which aim to update curricula and teaching methods; to improve academic management (e.g., strategic development plans, systems of quality assessment and assurance); and to promote the higher education priorities of its partner countries. It also provides Individual Mobility Grants to enable individuals to travel to or from Europe in connection with these themes. The TEMPUS programme is still running, but will be renewed and revised as from 2007. TEMPUS was followed by a series of smaller programmes built more round the mobility of academics towards the EU. These included the ALFA/ALBAN programmes with Latin American universities; the Asia-Link programme; and others, sometimes time-limited. A number of these appear to have been set up as a means of
development assistance rather than with the development of universities as such, an impression strengthened by the fact that they were managed by the
European Commission's development assistance service
EuropeAid rather than (like
TEMPUS or
Erasmus Mundus programme) by its
Education and Culture department. Finally, in 2003 the European Union launched the Erasmus Mundus programme, a project to ensure the place of European Universities as centres of excellence across the world; to attract the best students from around the world to Europe; and to enable partnerships between European universities and those in other countries. The programme had strong support both from the
Council of Ministers and from the
European Parliament. The first phase of Erasmus Mundus will finish in 2008. The commission has announced its intention to propose a further period. Europe Study Centre (ESC) has lately come up as a reputed and dependable company in Indian providing end to end services in the European overseas education field helping Indian students to avail the Erasmus Mundus benefits. ==See also==