School of Pedagogical and Technological Education


The School of Pedagogical and Technological Education or ASPETE is a Greek University which specializes in training teachers.

Overview

ASPETE was founded in 2002, and took over from SELETE, a teacher training institution founded in 1959. It is a self-administered public legal entity operating in accordance with article 16, para. 5 of the Constitution, the provisions of Law 3027/2002, and the School’s Regulation. Following from the adoption of Law 3549/2007 sailer is clear that the Higher Education Institute University and B) Technological Educational Institute.
ASPETE belongs to the University and particularly the technology sector, together with the TEI.
The General Departments operate in accordance with the provisions of article 5, para.3 of Law 1404/1983 and are not authorized to issue degrees. The degree issued by the Departments of ASPETE qualifies its holders to teach in the corresponding discipline in secondary education; it is awarded following the completion of a course of study of eight academic semesters including the submission of a thesis and the practical work experience in the field, and is equal in status to that of TEI-s. In order to obtain a degree equivalent to that of TEI-s in the specific discipline, the graduates of ASPETE may attend a 1-Year Programme of Special Studies at ASPETE.
ASPETE also offers:
Apart from Athens, 1-year programmes of pedagogical training are also delivered in Thessaloniki, Patras, Volos, Ioannina, Heraklion-Crete, and Sapes.
ASPETE's establishment in 2002 was paved by SELETE, a Technical and Vocational Teacher Training Institute, founded in 1959. SELETE's growth and mission was closely related to the economic development of Greece in the fifties. Right after World War II, the Greek government became aware of the need to place particular emphasis on the provision of vocational training in several traditional and new technical specialties. This meant developing and planning a system of Technical and Vocational Education in both, the public and private sector. Such an institutionalization entailed the systematic training of teachers of technical and vocational subjects, and it was to this end that SELETE was founded by state-law in 1959.

When SELETE was first founded, the prevailing trend for the education and training of Technical and Vocational Teachers was that of the "add on" approach. That is, the focus was primarily on pedagogical training and only a small component of the curriculum pertained to technical or vocational subjects. Later, in the seventies, a parallel approach was adopted, that urged integrating pedagogical training with technical and vocational training. This new approach led to the establishment of two separate Schools under SELETE:
1. The Pedagogical Technical School, which maintained the tradition of the "add on" pedagogical approach and included the following Departments:
2. The Higher School of Pedagogical & Technical Education, which adopted the same approach at the level of Tertiary Education and included the following Departments:
There is an option of following the Structural Engineering principle and/or
Transportation Engineering & Hydraulics Instructors

Academic evaluation

An external evaluation of all academic departments in Greek universities will be conducted by the Hellenic Quality Assurance and Accreditation Agency in the following years.