Skikkethetsvurdering | Rettigheter og plikter - Student

Suitability assessment

Suitability assessment

Pursuant to the Act relating to Universities and University Colleges § 4.10, the university must make an overall assessment of a student’s academic and personal prerequisites for being able to function in the profession. The aim is to ensure that children in kindergartens, pupils, patients, and other users/consumers meet employees that are suitable for the profession they practice.

What is meant by 'suitability'?

A suitability assessment is a comprehensive assessment of the student’s academic and personal qualifications for work as a teacher or as a health or social care worker.

Who is deemed to be unsuitable?

A student posing a potential danger to the lives, physical and mental health, rights and safety of kindergarten children and pupils or patients, clients and users is not suitable for the profession.

Why do we have a suitability assessment?

To ensure that only students who meet the requirements of the national curriculum receive diplomas.

Continuous suitability assessment

All students in teacher education programmes and health and social care programmes are assessed on a continuous basis throughout the study programme.

Special suitability assessment

Such an assessment is carried out if there are grounds to doubt that a student is suitable, based on a notification of doubt. The provisions of the Public Administration Act apply in special suitability assessment cases.

Who can submit a justified notification of doubt?

Anyone can submit a notification of doubt – the teaching staff, such as practice supervisors and subject teachers, as well as students and administrative personnel. The person submitting the notification is not party to the case, and is thus not entitled to receive feedback. The staff member responsible for suitability assessments at the institution will not consider notifications of doubt that are obviously unjustified.

Forms

Head of institution

Head of institution