Report summary
As a whole, the proposed third-level study program is extremely ambitious by covering a
wide variety of artistic areas, so it was quite difficult to quality assess it as such, a priori -
even if it is clear that the applicant is condensing such a diversity into one program also
due to the reduction of the number of doctoral programs at the university.
The study program positively demonstrates the pedagogical potential of action research
and field-specific methods of research work, which gives the possibility of broadly covering
artistic and methodological solutions within the artistic discourse, as well as in practice,
especially by planned research projects. It also involves the checking of the established
critical discourse and professional reflection of student's own artistic production.
The relations between objectives, outcomes and competences, and the curricula content
of some of the courses are not properly regulated. The optionality (elective courses system)
of the study program is not clearly evident, and it is not sufficiently enabled within
individual artistic areas the program is supposed to cover. In view of the integration as
well as the critical reflection of technologies, the proposed study program remains only to
a limited extent responsive to the current state of the art and the development trends,
which are today strongly relevant in terms of artistic research and practice in each of the
artistic areas.
An important point in which the group of experts recognized inconsistency with the Criteria
is interdisciplinarity, namely as a basic concept, which is not consistently derived or
justified neither in the overall design nor in the structure and implementation planned in
the submitted study program. Contributing to this inconsistency is also an important
opportunity for improvement, which the group of experts decided to note in the report,
namely in the optionality (electivity) of the study program, which, even after the
Applicant's Response to the Preliminary Report, remained uncompleted and too formalistic
to open up or support possibilities of real and actual interdisciplinarity of this program.
Even after the reconsiderations, upon the Applicant's Response, the group of experts still
estimates that the interdisciplinarity (incl. optionality) of the submitted program is merely
of a technical nature, as it is already determined and thus narrowed through the student's
choice of the track (main course) in the artistic field of the study program. Therefore the
program is not about interdisciplinarity as a comprehensive and in-depth approach to the
study of art or an interweaving of specialist knowledge and insights from all or several
represented artistic and scientific disciplines, which would be directed towards a common
artistic research focus.
In practice, such an extensive and diversified program - without decisive and huge
adjustments even before or immediately after its implementation start - will be very
challenging to manage in a transparent and correct manner, such that would not only
ensure adequate visibility of all artistic areas and offer all participants a truly high-quality
academic experience, but would also from the point of view of the involved organizational
units of the applicant fulfill its role in the institution's development strategy.