Report summary
The FKPV has adopted a comprehensive, extensive and detailed strategic plan. The
expert group suggests that the faculty should consider a clearer orientation of
professional and research activities. At the same time, it would be useful to include
in the strategic plan the key competences that are assessed as excellence in the
commercial-business and professional profile and to place emphasis on the key
competences that are recognised as excellence in the commercial-business, scientific
and professional activities in a broader sense.
All bodies of the institution operate properly and in accordance with legislation and
established standards. In a discussion with various stakeholders of the faculty, a
group of experts concluded that all professional areas are adequately and equally
represented in the bodies. The faculty considering amending its statutes to include a
representative of the external environment in the work of the Faculty Senate.
Notwithstanding the fact that there are relatively few full-time employees at the
faculty or that they are only employed to a limited extent, all processes and functions
of the Faculty function properly and at the same time the faculty involves as many
different interest groups as possible in the administration and development of the
Faculty.
The Faculty is clearly interdisciplinary in its undergraduate and postgraduate
programmes and subjects (commerce, economics, business informatics, tourism,
security management), but the Faculty's professional and scientific research activities
do not follow this interdisciplinarity. The faculty does not guarantee successful
professional and academic activity (publications, projects, research) in each of these
areas.
Professional practise is appropriately systematised and implemented at the Faculty.
The Faculty co-operation with representatives of employers and the regional
economic environment is based on a good knowledge of their needs and regular
formal and informal contacts. Co-operation with various stakeholders from the
environment is complemented by lecturers working in the professional field with key
bodies from the business community and state administration.
The Faculty has an approved quality procedure which sets out the processes and
procedures for management, monitoring and quality assurance. Based on the FKPV
statutes, all staff are responsible for monitoring and quality assurance. Decisions on
self-evaluation measures are made in the Quality Commission, the Academic
Assembly, the Senate, the Executive Board and the Student Council. The Quality
Commission assesses the quality of the Faculty by monitoring and implementing
institutional and programme quality, the effectiveness of educational and scientific
research work and the functioning of the Faculty as a whole. The Quality Commission
consists of five members, namely two academic teachers or academic staff, one
administrative staff member, one professional staff member and one student
representative.
The faculty provides regular information on study programmes and activities
throughout the academic year. The faculty pays particular attention to information
days, which it supports with advertising and informs students by e-mail. Information
about the faculty's activities is publicly available on the school's website in the study
programmes section. Students are familiar with how to obtain information and know
how to access it. For all study programmes there is a presented curriculum, course
plans, competences acquired, information on the implementation and progression of
the study programme, tuition fees, areas of application, etc.
Individual university teachers do very little or no professional or academic research
work, which is evident from the available databases and records. Four contract
university lecturers were found not to be recorded in the SICRIS or COBBIS database.
It is much more difficult for university lecturers who are not professionally or
academically active in research to pass on their knowledge and experience from
professional and academic research work to students in an appropriate manner
(Article 13 - l NAKVIS).
The Faculty offers students various forms of support and advice in the Study office,
the Office for International Cooperation and the Career Centre. The Stady office is
the central point of contact for prospective and enrolled students, lecturers and
members of the Alumni Club.
The academic staff respond to the diversity and needs of the students in a very
individualised way. Each student is treated individually and according to their needs.
Foreign students are also guaranteed appropriate help from the International Office.
The Faculty monitors student satisfaction with services in an appropriate manner by
conducting surveys. The Faculty has defined the rights and obligations of students in
a separate chapter of the Statute (Articles 79, 80, 81 and 82 of the FKPV Statute),
in accordance with Article 66 of the Law on Higher Education. The Statute (Articles
76, 77 and 78 of the FKPV Statute) also regulates the status of students in detail and
accordingly. Students influence the implementation of the Faculty's activities in
various ways.
They can submit their suggestions, opinions and comments through the Student
Council and other faculty committees on which they serve, and many of their
suggestions are also forwarded to the Faculty Report and through other informal
channels. Based on their suggestions and comments, the faculty updates the
implementation of faculty activities. Student involvement in changing study
programmes is less evident, although students say in the interview that they also
have the opportunity to make informal suggestions and comments in this area.
The facilities at the faculty are suitable for students with special needs. The entrance
to the building is equipped with a suitable ramp and there is an elevator in the
building. The elevator does not have switches for the blind and visually impaired or
two tone signals for the deaf and hard of hearing. The lecture theatres have enough
space for a wheelchair at the front. A group of experts suggests that the faculty
should additionally look into the possibility of making adaptations for students with
special needs (elevator, toilets, waymarking).
The faculty receives 90% of its income from tuition fees and 10% from projects. In
terms of expenditure, the focus is on salary and service costs, which account for
around 90% of all expenditure. material costs and investments account for 10% of
expenditure. In the past periods 2020 and 2021, the faculty has performed
successfully and there are no major deviations. In 2022, there was an overspend of
EUR 58,456.49 due to a 400% increase in the price of energy products, which was
not foreseen. The plan for 2023/24 and 2024/25 provides for the stabilisation of
income and expenditure as well as the liquidity of the facility. EUR 200,000 in
investments are planned for 2023/24 and 2024/25.
Prior to the second visit, the faculty sent an additional documentation as follows:
- Action plan based on the recommendations of the Nakvis (reaccreditation of 8/1
and 9/1)
- Action plan for the acquisition of projects and the development of professional
activities in the period 2024-25
- Action plan to increase the volume of publications and the success of the institutions'
professional and scientific research work in the period 2024−2025
- Guidelines for lecturers on the possibilities of publishing their work
- Explanation of the partial fulfilment of quality standards (scientific, professional,
research or artistic achievements of university lecturers and academic staff)
In the action plan, the faculty has presented suitable measures to eliminate the
partial fulfilment of the standards and to realise opportunities for improvement on
the basis of the recommendations of the Nakvis (reaccreditation of 8.1. and 9.1.).
We took the documents into account when preparing the final report and
supplemented the planned measures from the material sent to us when defining the
main opportunities for improvement and the partial fulfilment of the quality
standards.
On 23 May 2024, the Institute submitted a response to the report stating that the
partial non-compliance related to the professional and scientific research work for the
measures set out in the Action Plan based on the recommendations of NAKVIS
experts (re-accreditation of 8.1. and 9.1.). The expert group is of the opinion that by
implementing the measures set out in the action plan, the quality standard in relation
to professional scientific work can be met.