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French education minister announces new degree qualifications database

Najat Vallaud-Belkacem launches first-of-its-kind digital certification service as part of Education Ministry’s modernisation plan

January 22, 2016
The move by the French government to digitise qualifications data could end the need to show degree certificates

The French education minister has announced plans to create a unique digital database for degree qualifications, which aims to simplify the task of verifying job candidates’ academic ability to employers and to save a significant amount of government money.

Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, the minister of national education, higher education and research, made the announcement at Bett 2016, the international trade show for digital technology in education, which she attended as part of an official visit to London.

Innovation should not “end on the ministry’s doorstep”,?Ms Vallaud-Belkacem said. “We’re continuing to digitally modernise the way the ministry…is run. As such, we’re launching a digital service unique in Europe: one which certifies any French…higher education qualification, and this will be up and running at some point in 2016.”

The digital certification service will supply proof for all state-issued national?qualifications, which confer degree status, from the past 15 years. Degree holders will be able to pass on their qualifications data to employers in secure and authentic digital form.

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Currently, an official degree certificate on watermarked paper can be issued to its holder only once; after that, only proof of the qualification can be obtained. Every year, 80,000 requests for proof of qualifications are made; handling them costs French authorities?a great deal of time and money.

At the same time, the use of proofs of qualification during job interviews is not thought to be reliable. A communiqué released alongside Ms Vallaud-Belkacem’s announcement said that a private study carried out on behalf of recruitment agencies had shown that 30 per cent of degree data on CVs was either inaccurate or misleading.

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By guaranteeing the authenticity of the degrees, it is hoped that the new service will combat fraud during job recruitment. It will also automate requests made to the authorities, saving time and money.

Initially, it is hoped that the database will hold data on 500,000 higher education qualifications and 1.6 million from secondary level issued at the end of the 2016-17 academic year. The service will then be rolled out to cover the past decade and a half, with 25 million qualifications covered.

john.elmes@tesglobal.com

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Reader's comments (1)

It's good to see the French government is the latest nation to take degree fraud seriously, but as we’ve learned from running the 成人VR视频 Degree Datacheck in the UK, the key to protecting higher education goes beyond one initiative, it requires collaboration from universities, employers and government. Hedd.ac.uk is a very similar system to that proposed in France. Backed by the government, so far it contains candidate information from 26 UK universities, enabling higher qualification qualifications for a quarter of UK graduates to be verified through a secure online service. Since launching it has processed more than 90,000 qualification checks and identified over 200 bogus institutions. Working with authorities here and overseas, over 40% of illicit operators reported to us since June have been closed down. France is joining a long line of countries that have had to tackle fraud as the number of fake institutions selling degrees far outweighs genuine institutions internationally, and more appear online daily. What appears to be a genuine UK university online can be run from anywhere in the world. This isn’t a problem that will just go away. It won’t cease to exist without collaboration. Employers must verify qualifications as a matter of course. Authorities must work collaboratively internationally. Government must continue to invest and back the systems in place. And universities must take action individually and collectively with clear policies on degree fraud to protect their brand, reputation and students.

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