Information and Communication Technologies in Application,
Dissemination and Evaluation of Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Activities
Mariia A. Galaburda
1 a
, Olena H. Kuzminska
1 b
and Mykola K. Halaburda
2 c
1
National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine, 15 Heroyiv Oborony Str., Kyiv, 03041, Ukraine
2
Kyiv National Economic University named after Vadym Hetman, 54/1 Peremohy Ave., Kyiv, 03057, Ukraine
Keywords:
Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Project, Information and Communication Technologies (ICT), Food Safety Compe-
tence, Evaluation, Education.
Abstract:
A new training module on EU Food Safety Control was developed and implemented at the Department of
Veterinary and Sanitary Examination (currently Department of Veterinary Hygiene) of NULES. The article
describes ICT used for the achievements of results of Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Module “EU Food Safety Con-
trol”. Module in the EU food safety control was design to contribute to better understanding of applied system
of European food safety assurance and the objectives of official food control at EU level within the frameworks
of different types of competencies. To assess the effect of the educational course on food safety control, at
the start and after completion of the Module, participants’ knowledge were evaluated. The monitoring of the
project results presents a comparative analysis of the implementation strategy for blended learning stage (be-
fore spring 2020) and distance learning under the COVID-19 disruption. Tools and the degree of involvement
and satisfaction of participants in the project outputs were determined. Impact effort matrix technique reviled
that action taken with ICT are the best for achieving project result.
1 INTRODUCTION
Making better use of digital technology for teaching
and learning is one of three European Digital Educa-
tion Action Plan priorities (ec.europa.eu, 2021; eur-
lex.europa.eu, 2018). The strategy for the develop-
ment of education in the European Union and other
countries for the last decades has been focused on
the introduction of information and communication
technologies (ICT) (eur-lex.europa.eu, 2018; Osorio
and Nieves, 2014; Khvilon and Patru, 2002; Cran-
mer, 2014). Currently education systems are in-
creasingly embedding digital competencies in their
curricula (European Commission/EACEA/Eurydice,
2019; Moiseienko et al., 2020). These trends became
more relevant with regard to the COVID-19 disrup-
tion when most educational institutions were forced
to discontinue or transform the educational process
(Miao et al., 2020; Di Pietro et al., 2020). Those uni-
versities win that had the basis, skills and experience
to work with various ICT tools and digital environ-
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3896-4927
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8849-9648
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3151-5966
ments (Morze et al., 2013; Lynch, M., 2018; Vlasenko
et al., 2020).
In addition to the pandemic impact strategic in-
tegration of Ukraine into the European Community
is one of priority of development, determined by its
close geographic location and interaction in trade,
first of all by agricultural produce (Galaburda and
Yakubchak, 2019). The appropriate level of educa-
tion, relevance and competence of educational pro-
grams to the request of society determine the future
in the internal and external labor market. The inter-
disciplinary nature of food safety assurance demands
complex knowledge of future food safety experts
(Kholoshyn et al., 2020). Serious gaps in training cur-
ricula of the future veterinarians and poor awareness
of the food safety concept and the key aspects of the
EU official food safety control in Ukraine was the key
reason of development of Jean Monnet Module “EU
Food Safety Control”.
As any educational and project activity Eras-
mus+ Jean Monnet Module need to be monitored
(ec.europa.eu, 2020) and its success is evaluated by
significant results (DG EAC, 2020; Mariott and Goy-
der, 2009).
Objectives of the research was to assess outcomes
396
Galaburda, M., Kuzminska, O. and Halaburda, M.
Information and Communication Technologies in Application, Dissemination and Evaluation of Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Activities.
DOI: 10.5220/0010932100003364
In Proceedings of the 1st Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology (AET 2020) - Volume 2, pages 396-402
ISBN: 978-989-758-558-6
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
of the project and value the role of ICT in achieving
the project results: the effect of teaching activities,
dissemination effect of open events, and overall as-
sessment of relevant project outputs by action prior-
ity matrix, judged on the basis of strategy for the dis-
semination and exploitation of project results for Jean
Monnet projects.
2 THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Activities are one of Euro-
pean grant supported programs intended to promote
the benefits of European integration and development
of cooperation, dissemination of European studies in
Europe and other continents. The initiative of the
grant conditions of the program belongs to the Coun-
cil of European Universities and teachers from all
over the world who conduct research in the field of
European integration (Lynch, M., 2018). Grant funds
are earmarked and allocated to universities to start in
the educational process of teaching disciplines that
are directly related to the development of European
law, European economy, education, science, culture,
history, theory and practice of European integration.
The content of the Jean Monnet European Education
Module under the terms of the grant project was to de-
velop and teach specially designed short-term courses
on European integration for a certain category of stu-
dents. Figure 1 describes how the general objectives
of the Jean Monnet Erasmus+ Programme are ad-
dressed in the module activities and ICT integration in
the project “EU Food Safety Control” (587548-EPP-
1-2017-1-EN-EPPJMO-MODULE).
A new training module on EU Food Safety Con-
trol was developed and implemented at the Depart-
ment of Veterinary and Sanitary Examination (cur-
rently Department of Veterinary Hygiene) of National
University of Life and Environmental Sciences of
Ukraine (NULES). The course addressed key ele-
ments of European food law, including the EU’s strat-
egy for food and feed safety assurance and the pro-
cesses of food safety policy integration. The mod-
ule include fundamental questions – theoretical back-
ground of food safety based on risk analyses and prac-
tical application of procedures for official controls in
the food processing chain.
There were three cohorts of participants:
1) students of the fifth term of the Faculty of Vet-
erinary Medicine with similar educational back-
ground;
2) participants of the open events;
3) principal participants of the project (authors of the
project and other experts involved in project man-
agement).
Main research questions of the study aimed:
1. To assess the effect of ICT introduction in the “EU
Food Safety Control” module on knowledge and
skills development of the students.
2. To assess dissemination effect and impact the ICT
make to the open event success.
3. Value the ICT role in achieving project results
from the point of management and implementa-
tion.
3 STUDY DESIGN
3.1 Target Groups, Activities and ICT
Involvement
The main target group of the module educational
activities (first cohort) was Master’s students of the
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine studied the training
course “EU Food Safety Control” (figure 2).
For evaluation of university course efficiency and
the role of ICT in teaching activities, data of the stu-
dents testing were analyzed as a general cohort and
with regard to different conditions of the course de-
livery. For that purpose participants were divided in
three groups: 1-st group studied the course as blended
learning (with both contact lectures and seminars sup-
ported by the course on e-learning platform); 2-nd
group studied the course with both lectures and sem-
inars delivered with Zoom and supported by the e-
learning course; 3-rd one had only Zoom lectures
but seminars were provided only with e-learning plat-
form.
Open activities, like summer school and round ta-
bles, were targeted to students and participants from
outside the department meaning that, all interested
stakeholders who specialize in related issues were in-
vited to take part in. That was the second cohort of
involved participants, that included students and re-
searchers, practicing veterinarians, representatives of
the State Service of Food Safety and Consumer Pro-
tection (SSFSCP), NGOs and other EU projects in
Ukraine.
Principal participants responsible for the project
management and implementation (third cohort of par-
ticipants) were involved in assessment of project man-
agement efficiency by the project outcome.
The readiness for the introduction of digital tech-
nologies in the educational process and project activ-
ities was studied in NULES of Ukraine for designing
Information and Communication Technologies in Application, Dissemination and Evaluation of Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Activities
397
Figure 1: Consistency between programme objectives and design of Jean Monnet Module “EU Food Safety Control”.
the project implementation plan with the maximum
involvement of digital technologies (Kuzminska et al.,
2019). As a result, the digital educational environ-
ment of NULES of Ukraine (https://nubip.edu.ua/en/
node/3033) has the necessary resources for the effec-
tive implementation of the project.
The preparation stage comprised of develop-
ing the content of the web page to be hosted
within the university website (https://nubip.edu.ua/
node/72229) and FoodSaCo site development (http:
//greeneconomy.com.ua).
An e-learning training course “EU Food safety
Control” (erasmusplus.org.ua, 2020) covers the actual
issues of organization of food safety assurance sys-
tem of the European Union and its legislation on the
food safety. The course was developed by the Food-
SaCo team and became one of the modules of the
courses “State Veterinary and Sanitary Control” for
Master’s students in Veterinary Hygiene, Sanitary and
Expertise (VHSE), “State Veterinary and Sanitary Ex-
pertise” for Master’s students in Veterinary Medicine
(VM), and university elective course “EU Food Safety
Control”. According to the plan, the project educa-
tional activities, started in September 2017, included
delivery of the educational course to the Master Stu-
dents of Veterinary Hygiene, Sanitary and Expertise
and Veterinary Medicine.
The Summer Schools “Towards food safety as-
surance: Approaches in Implementing and Enforcing
European Food Safety Control” with round table de-
bate “EU – Ukraine interaction for the food safety as-
surance” was planed for the second (2019) and third
(2020) year of the project as open event for Ukrainian
competent authorities and food business operators,
State Service of Ukraine for Food Safety and Con-
sumer Protection (SSFSCP) inspectors, practical vet-
erinarians, higher school lecturers and researchers,
the public in order to disseminate project results.
First Summer Schools with round table debates
implemented one on May 14–16, 2019 on the ba-
sis of the state institution Scientific and Methodolog-
ical Center for Information and Analytical Support
of Higher Education Institutions Agroosvita” with
50 registered participants, involving teachers of vo-
cational education institutions, representatives of the
SSFSCP, NGOs and other EU projects in Ukraine.
Taking into account special measures at the na-
tional and University level caused by COVID-19 out-
break, open school 2020 was implemented via Cisco
(Webex Event) platform and resulted in better dissem-
ination due to attraction more than 180 participants.
Digital resources that were used in project imple-
mentation could be divided in following categories
(Assar, 2015):
1. Didactic components used to support learning in-
side the course and project events.
2. Communication tools (emailing, messaging, web
conferencing).
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
398
Figure 2: Organization of the educational process and different conditions of the course delivery.
3. Learning Management System (on-line course de-
livery).
Two first years of the project implementation in-
volved digital and ICT tools only as didactic and
supportive. The e-learning course was developed in
accordance with the “Regulations on Organization
of Academic Process in NULES” and was not de-
clared in approved project application. Due to pres-
ence and sufficient development of university digital
learning environment (DLEs) our project continued
to implement the program of action with certain flex-
ibility despite special measures taken at the national
and the university level caused by COVID-19 out-
break. The teaching activities for MSc students in
spring 2020 were delivered on-line with Zoom lec-
tures but seminars were delivered only by the dis-
tant learning course on the university e-learning plat-
form (erasmusplus.org.ua, 2020). Students of Veteri-
nary Medicine in 2019 had blended learning (con-
tact lectures and seminars supported by the course
on e-learning platform), and in autumn 2020 studied
on-line with both lectures and seminars provided in
Zoom, with the support of the university e-learning
platform.
Previously planned Spring school 2020 “Towards
food safety assurance: Approaches in Implementing
and Enforcing European Food safety control” was im-
plemented in Cisco (Webex Event) platform and re-
sulted in better dissemination due to attraction more
than 180 participants.
3.2 Methods and Study Materials
To discover the first research question students’
knowledge on food safety control was assessed prior
to the delivery of the educational Module curriculum
using a pretest that included true/false and multiple-
choice questions. The participants completed the
same food safety control knowledge assessments
(posttest) immediately after course completion via an
online test on the university e-learn platform (eras-
musplus.org.ua, 2020). The homogeneity of entry
tests results were the basic to consider the groups as
homogenous. Collected data were initially summa-
rized in Microsoft Excel and analyzed with Students’
t-distribution.
The second research question dealt with the sec-
ond cohort of participants. Open event held on-
line (in 2020) resulted in involvement of 30 students
and 150 researchers, representatives of the SSFSCP,
NGOs and other EU projects in Ukraine 180 persons
total. For open summer school activity a short ques-
tioner was developed on the attitude and impression
about distance learning activities and events (http:
//surl.li/pqyf). The participants were asked about gen-
eral impressions of the event, their attitude to events
(conferences, etc.) held on-line and the effectiveness
of that kind of activities. The questions of the study
also considered the participants’ perception of dis-
tance learning vs. full-time, and a) main benefits and
b) main disadvantages of distance learning.
Project team (third cohort), including 12 par-
ticipants in total from the Faculty of Veterinary
Medicine, Faculty of Information Technologies, In-
ternational Relation Office, university financial de-
partment and Erasmus+ Office of Ukraine conducted
the assessment of ICT for the project management
success. Impact effort matrix technique was used
for determining the best action taken for achieving
project result. The criteria for assessment project re-
Information and Communication Technologies in Application, Dissemination and Evaluation of Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Activities
399
sults were developed in accordance with Erasmus+
working documents (Bens, 2017; Mind Tools Con-
tent Team, 2015). The impact of each project out-
comes and effort involved were scored from 0 to 10.
By creating a matrix with four quadrants and plotting
the results based on the effort required to implement
(x-axis) and the impact (y-axis), the outcomes falling
into the upper left-hand quadrant are the best action
taken.
4 MAIN FINDINGS
4.1 Evaluation of University Course
Efficiency
Participants’ food safety control knowledge was eval-
uated with a questionnaire before and after the mod-
ule. The results of pre- and post-tests are provided in
table 1.
The questionnaire included questions about dif-
ferent aspects of food safety assurance. Only 3 out
of 100 participants had grades lower than 60% and
9 had minor (i.e. = 60%) food safety knowledge
in the pretest. After the delivery of module, stu-
dents demonstrated certain progress in knowledge.
The progress in case of blended learning, when stu-
dents had contact lectures and seminars additionally
supported with e-learning platform (1st group), was
considerably higher than in case of on-line study in
general, but when lectures and seminars were pro-
vided through Zoom (2nd group) students demon-
strated the slightly lower post-test results. Neverthe-
less, the study indicates that Zoom seminars in the
condition of on-line study could be considered as ef-
fective as contact lessons. Students of 3rd group, who
did not have Zoom seminars, demonstrated the min-
imal progress, although they had the highest pretest
results. The latter corresponds with findings of Mok
et al. (Mok et al., 2015) that the students with lower
initial grade improves at a faster rate than those who
started at a higher level.
4.2 Open School Activities Application
and Evaluation
The main purpose of open events were to disseminate
the results of the project by sharing practices, knowl-
edge and experience gained during the project. Com-
parison of the number of participants and organiza-
tions involved in contact and on-line open event in-
dicated the better dissemination effect of the on-line
meeting.
Participants of on-line event were offered to take
part in survey about their impression and attitude to
the event and to distance learning (http://surl.li/pqyf).
All participants had good impression about the event
emphasizing on high quality of organization and con-
tent. About the efficiency of on-line events (confer-
ences, etc.): 64.5% of respondents reacted positively,
indicating that it is an opportunity to join the discus-
sion of topical issues and save money and time; 20.7%
indicated that the form of communication does not
matter if the topic is interesting and experts are expe-
rienced; 10.7% of participants considered the on-line
communication only in case of force majeure (for ex-
ample, quarantine); and only 4.1% reacted negative,
assuming the face-to-face events are more effective.
The idea of distance learning was clearly sup-
ported by 9.9% of respondents; 36.4% preferred
blended learning; 38.8% considered that the form of
learning is not essential if a person is motivated to
learn; 10.7% believe face-to-face training is always
more effective; 4.1% emphasized the need of support
from administration.
As main disadvantages of distance learning par-
ticipants considered technical failures, lack of contact
with audience and between participants.
4.3 Project Results Impact vs Effort
Evaluation
The evaluation of taken efficiency actions for achiev-
ing project outputs or outcomes that are relevant for
project results (ec.europa.eu, 2020) reviled that most
effective of them involve ICT (marked blue) (fig-
ure 3).
Most of the activities with ICT technologies re-
quired certain effort or better preparedness and skills
from the team involved in project implementation.
5 CONCLUSIONS
The specific targeted impacts of the project was teach-
ing and dissemination the key aspects of the EU food
safety assurance system, contributing to reflection and
debate about food safety official control challenges of
Ukraine.
Methodical support of the teaching activities was
provided through presentation of all teaching materi-
als, including lectures and reports on eLearning portal
of the NULES and project website.
The findings clearly demonstrate the importance
of ICT in successful implementation of project re-
sults. Developed EU food safety official control
AET 2020 - Symposium on Advances in Educational Technology
400
Table 1: Analysis of the success rate of training participants by method of communication during educational process.
Group of students
Pre-assessment Final Progress
test rate test rate rate %
General cohort 21.31±0.47 24.65±0.44 3.33
15.64
% to maximum grade 71.04±1.55 82.15±1.47 11.11
1st (contact lectures and seminars + LMS Moodle courses) 21.38±1.13 28.65±0.47 5.46
25.54
% to maximum 71.28±3.03 89.49±1.39 18.21
On-line (general) 20.83±0.52 23.93±0.55 3.10
14.88
% to maximum grade 69.44±1.73 79.78±1.90 10.33
2nd (Zoom lectures and seminars + LMS Moodle courses) 20.12±0.37 24.88±0.64 4.76
23.68
% to maximum grade 67.06±1.46 82.94±2.13 15.88
3rd (Zoom lectures + LMS Moodle courses) 21.77±0.77 22.69±0.74 0.92
4.24
% to maximum grade 72.56±2.55 75.64±2.47 3.08
Figure 3: Impact effort matrix of project result.
course at NULES LMS Moodle platform and intro-
duction open events via WebexEvent platform, de-
spite the COVID-19 disruption, realized a broad out-
reach to the student community by ensuring the par-
ticipation of all interested stakeholders (i.e. not just
students from the Veterinary Medicine Faculty) as
well as participants from other universities, organiza-
tions and projects in Ukraine, who are and going to be
involved in food safety assurance.
Blended learning, when students had contact lec-
tures and seminars additionally supported with e-
learning platform demonstrated better progress than
in case of on-line study.
Impact effort matrix technique reviled that action
taken with ICT were the best for achieving project re-
sult.
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