Professors from the University of Bucharest are invited by CIVIS to develop, in partnership with professors from other CIVIS member universities, new Blended Intensive Programmes – BIPs.
With the aim to increase mobility among its students and staff members and in view of promoting the values above and cultivating innovation in the mentioned areas, CIVIS is launching a call for Blended Intensive Programmes (BIPs) to be designed, submitted and implemented by the ten partner universities. The application deadline is 15 November 2022.
Eligibility criteria include the following:
- Proposals should involve at least 3 CIVIS member universities
- The programme should be in a blended format (virtual sessions & 5 days of physical mobility)
- Participation in the BIP should correspond to a set number of at least 3 and up to 6 ECTS (to be defined by the organisers)
- Proposals should be related to one of the 5 Hubs of the CIVIS Alliance: Health; Cities, Territories and Mobility; Climate, Environment, Energy; Digital and Technological Transformation; Societies, Culture and Heritage.
Full description and instructions for applying to this BIPs call for proposals are available here, while the online application form is available here.
The application deadline is 15 November 2022.
More details about this call for proposals can be accessed here. The catalogue of the 18 Blended Intensive Programmes available at this moment can be accessed here.
The CIVIS Blended Intensive Programmes use an interdisciplinary teaching and learning approach. Anchored in academic excellence, these courses often cross the borders of traditions subjects, university cycles or faculties.
CIVIS is a European University Alliance gathering 11 member universities: Aix-Marseille Université (France), National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (Greece), University of Bucharest (Romania), Université libre de Bruxelles (Belgium), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (Spain), Sapienza Università di Roma (Italia), Stockholm University (Sweden), Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen (Germany), University of Glasgow (UK), Paris Lodron University of Salzburg (Austria) and University of Lausanne (Switzerland). Selected by the European Commission as one of the first 17 European Universities pilots, it brings together around half a million students and more than 70 000 staff members, including 37 400 academics and researchers.




