Pristupačnost

Font za disleksiju

Tamni prikaz

Veličina fonta

heading

Mobility

CEEPUS

The Central European Exchange Program for University Studies (CEEPUS) is a regional academic mobility program. The CEEPUS began to be implemented on 1 December 1994, when the Agreement on the CEEPUS Program, concluded in Budapest in 1993, entered into force. Croatia signed the CEEPUS Agreement in 1995, and, in addition to it, the following countries traditionally participate in the Program too: Albania, Austria, Bulgaria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Macedonia, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Serbia. In the Academic Year 2009–10, the University of Pristina in Kosovo joined the Program, and Moldova joined in the Academic Year 2011–12.

On 1 May 2011, the CEEPUS Ⅲ Contract entered into force for a period of seven years. The CEEPUS Ⅲ Contract emphasizes the development of joint studies and cooperation within the ninth Priority Area: People and Skills of the EU Danube Strategy (EUSDR).

The official website of the CEEPUS program is www.ceepus.info.

 

The CEEPUS Network

The CEEPUS Program primarily aims to promote mobility within the CEEPUS networks. A CEEPUS network consists of at least three members from at least three CEEPUS Member States, with one member having the role of a network coordinator. In practice, the number of members within the network is significantly higher. The coordinators and partners can be the higher educational institutions and their constituents. In addition to the mobilities realized through the networks, it is also possible to realize them beyond the networks (i.e., as the freelancers or freemovers) within the framework of CEEPUS.

The institutional CEEPUS coordinator is Daniel Haman, LLD.

In the Academic Year 2023–24, the Faculty of Agrobiotechnical Sciences Osijek is a member of the following eight networks:

  • RO‐1811‐01‐2324: Deep Neural Networks (DNN), for Digital Climate Smart Agriculture (D‐CSA)
  • RS‐1607‐03‐2324: Resilient Management of Bioactive Compounds from Plants and Organic Wastes in Middle Europe
  • SK‐1018‐09‐2324: Biology, Biotechnology, and Food Sciences
  • SK‐0405‐15‐2324: Renewable Energy Sources
  • HU‐0003‐19‐2324: Agriculture and Environment in the 21st Century: @groen
  • RS‐1706‐02‐2324: Sustainable Fishery and Aquaculture in the 21st century: AQUA‐21
  • HR‐1302‐06‐2324: Research and Education of Environmental Risks
  • SI‐1817‐01‐2324: Tourism and Agriculture Sustainable Alliances ‐ #TASA network

 

The Types and Categories of Mobilities

The CEEPUS offers three basic types of mobility. These are:

  • network mobility, which includes a mobility within the approved CEEPUS networks (i.e., a network mobility) and a mobility within the CEEPUS umbrella networks (i.e., the networks that met the quality but are not among the approved networks for a particular Academic Year)
  • mobility beyond the CEEPUS networks, the so‐called freemovers
  • short group mobility

In addition to the three basic types of mobility, all mobilities in the CEEPUS fall into one of four categories, taking into account the category of a scholarship recipient and the purpose of the mobility. These are also the categories of mobility in the Mobility Plan (Traffic Sheet), as follows:

  • Student: this type of mobility is applicable to the students who wish to participate in a semestral mobility, with a duration lasting for at least three months
  • Short‐Term Student Mobility: this type of mobility is applicable to the students who wish to participate in a mobility for the purpose of research aimed at a final paper/dissertation, with a minimum duration of this type of mobility being one month
  • Teacher Mobility: teaching staff applies to this type of mobility for the purpose of teaching/mentoring at a host institution and developing an interuniversity cooperation, and, according to the Work Program, a condition for the approval of this type of mobility is to deliver six hours of teaching/mentoring work per week, with a minimum duration being five days, or three days in case of a short group mobility
  • Short‐term Excursion: the participants of a short group mobility (for example, summer schools) apply for this type of mobility; the teaching staff participating in a summer school, however, applies under the Teacher category

Scholarships

Each year, the signatories to the CEEPUS Contract determine the quota of available scholarships for the incoming mobilities, with the motto of “one month of scholarship.” The countries also determine the number of scholarships for different categories of CEEPUS scholarship beneficiaries, as well as other beneficiary rights (e.g., free accommodation, subsidized meals, health insurance, etc.). Scholarships depend on the standard of living in a particular country and must be sufficient for mobility needs. The students are also exempted from tuition fees.

Here you can see the scholarship amounts are for each country and what rights the CEEPUS scholarship beneficiaries may enjoy in a particular country. The National CEEPUS Office covers travel expenses of its outgoing scholars.

You can find out a more detailed information about the way higher educational institutions participate in the CEEPUS networks and the opportunities related to the mobility of students and teaching staff within the CEEPUS in the Office for International Cooperation or on the website of the Agency for Mobility and EU Programs.

ZEMLJE SUDIONICE CEEPUS PROGRAMA

CEEPUS dolazne mobilnosti u posljednjih 5 godina

CEEPUS incoming mobility in the last 6 years

CEEPUS odlazne mobilnosti u posljednjih 5 godina

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CEEPUS outgoing mobility in the last 6 years

 

 

 

CEEPUS information package FAZOS