ECTS and US College Credits
European Nazarene College follows the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS). This system is one of the key elements of the Bologna Declaration of 1999, originally signed by 29 countries, currently by 46 countries, and intends to develop a comparable educational system across national boundaries.
What is ECTS?
EuNC follows the European credit system, called European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS). This is a student-centred system based on the student workload required to achieve the objectives of a course or programme. The ECTS system requires that every assignment states the estimate number of student work hours needed to fulfill this requirement.
Student Learning Hours
One ECTS is equivalent to 25-30 student learning hours. The student learning hours are all activities needed to accomplish the intended educational outcomes. These learning activities can be class sessions, reading, paper assignments, presentations, supervised learning activities, internships, mentoring, or any other activity that will help the student reach the intended educational outcomes. See for more detailed information, refer to the page "ECTS and Student Learning Hours”.
Course Load
The criterion for a year of full time studies is 60 ECTS (1500-1800 Student Learning Hours). Every level at EuNC consists therefore of 60 ECTS.
The regular courses at EuNC will be offered for 3 or 5 ECTS. The guideline for these courses is the following:
- 3 ECTS Course (75-90 Student Learning Hours): 20-30 hours of class sessions; 45-70 hours of learning activities outside of class.
- 5 ECTS Course (125-150 Student Learning Hours): 30-40 hours of class sessions; 85-120 hours of learning activities outside of class.
Full-Time and Part-Time Studies
EuNC off-campus locations that qualify for part-time location are required to have a minimum course offering of 15 ECTS per year, so students need two to four years to complete the Spiritual Formation Certificate, and four to eight years to complete the Christian Ministry Certificate.
Off-Campus Locations that cannot meet this requirement will be listed as a location where courses can be followed that can count toward a certificate from EuNC, but no guarantee is given that this will be possible at that location.
Comparison with US College Credit System
The major difference between the ECTS and the US College Credit system is that the first is based on student load and the second on contact hours (Ground rule for US credit system is for every hour in class, students need to spend two outside of class). The first is more oriented towards the students (the time required for them to meet the intended outcomes); the second towards the faculty (the time a faculty member needs to teach).
Technically the ECTS has no co-curricular or extra-curricular activities because every activity needed to meet the intended outcomes of the programme is valued with a certain number of ECTS.
Using an hour rate of 45 hours for 1 US College credit, the 240 ECTS of the Bachelor of Arts programme of EUNC is equivalent to 133-160 US College credits.
The conversion used by EuNC between ECTS and US College Credit is the following:
0.50 ECTS = 0.30 US College Credit Hours
0.83 ECTS = 0.50 US College Credit Hours
1.00 ECTS = 0.60 US College Credit Hours
1.67 ECTS = 1.00 US College Credit Hours
2.00 ECTS = 1.20 US College Credit Hours
2.50 ECTS = 1.50 US College Credit Hours
3.00 ECTS = 1.80 US College Credit Hours
3.33 ECTS = 2.00 US College Credit Hours
4.00 ECTS = 2.40 US College Credit Hours
5.00 ECTS = 3.00 US College Credit Hours
6.67 ECTS = 4.00 US College Credit Hours
8.33 ECTS = 5.00 US College Credit Hours