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Separate certificate

The separate certificate includes the name, scope, grade and completion date of the study module and, if necessary, a professional qualifications clause.

Before filling in the application form for a separate certificate, make sure that all courses in the study module have been recorded in the study register. Before applying for a separate certificate, contact the department/school/unit responsible for education and ask for the study module to be compiled and assessed. Once the study module has been compiled and assessed, the transcript of records shows the compiled study module and individual courses with grades. A transcript of records is attached to the separate certificate.

The delivery time of the separate certificate is approximately three – four weeks. During the summer and Christmas holidays the delivery of the certificate may be delayed.

Application form for a separate certificate issued by the faculty

Application form for a separate certificate issued by the Centre for Continuous Learning


Mentoring programme

An annually recurring mentoring programme helps international students get to know Finnish working life and build their networks. Mentors are working life professionals from several different fields in Eastern Finland.

Mentoring is carried out in small groups, which guarantees the opportunity to participate for as many international students as possible.The mentoring language will be mainly English.

Get help with your career planning

Mentoring can help you find your strengths and areas for development and encourage you to take on new challenges. Also, the mentors can get new energy and fresh perspectives on their work through mentees aka actors.

By taking part in the mentoring programme, you will improve your skills in

  • job search and getting to know different career options and paths
  • developing professional expertise and finding your strengths
  • communication and interaction with others
  • building professional networks
  • developing self-confidence and self-knowledge

In addition to the mentor’s support, mentoring gives peer support and new views on topics discussed in the group.

What we expect from you

As an actor, we expect you to

  • commit to the mentoring programme and group meetings
  • take an active role in the group
  • share your expectations and goals with other participants
  • to understand that mentoring is about sharing working life experiences and spurring you in the first steps of your career, not getting a job offer or an internship from a mentor

How to apply

Application for the spring 2025 group mentoring programme will open in autumn 2024. International degree programme students in Eastern Finland are eligible to apply.

You can apply if you are ready to actively plan your future and share your career aims in a group. In addition, you commit to taking part in mentoring meetings from January to May approximately once a month.

The mentors leading the groups are professionals from different fields and diverse backgrounds. You will be placed in a mentoring group according to the following criteria:

  1. Your preference of the mentor
  2. Your commitment and motivation to the programme
  3. Registration order

In the application form, we will ask for your personal and study information, your motives for participating and your expectations for mentoring. The information you provide is very important as it will be used in group formation. Some of the answers will also be sent to your mentor.

The schedule of the programme is annually as follows:

  • Online mentoring training for actors in December
  • Online kick-off meeting in January
  • 4 to 6 mentoring meetings with your group. The group will agree on whether the meetings will be held face-to-face or online.
  • Online intermediate meeting for both mentors and actors in March
  • Final meeting in May

Further information:
minna.tarvainen@savonia.fi (Savonia students),
marko.pietila@uef.fi (UEF students)

Curricula of Previous Years (2010 – 2021)

The study guides for all degree programmes and academic subjects for the academic years 2010-2021 that include information on curricula, course descriptions and degree structures and were previously published in WebOodi, are available on this website. The study guides are in PDF format and are not accessible in all respects. As of the academic year 2021–2022, the study guides are available in Peppi. WebOodi has been removed from service.

If the information is not available in an accessible format in the study guides of the faculties, departments and units for the academic years 2010–2021, the unit responsible for teaching must be contacted, in which case the information can be provided in an accessible format where necessary.

Academic Year 2020 – 2021

Academic Year 2019 – 2020

Academic Year 2018 – 2019

Academic Year 2017 – 2018

Academic Year 2016 – 2017

Academic Year 2015 – 2016

Academic Year 2014 – 2015

Academic Year 2013 – 2014

Academic Year 2012 – 2013

Academic Year 2011 – 2012

Academic Year 2010 – 2011

Support for students and studying arrangements related to the war in Ukraine

Russia’s military attack on Ukraine is causing concern in the UEF community. At the same time, the international sanctions against Russia affect the studying arrangements of the university. This website contains information about support channels for students, arrangements related to studying and useful links to sources of information.

The university has set up a team to coordinate actions resulting from the situation in Ukraine on 24 February 2022. Besides coordinating necessary actions, the team is preparing support measures for the students and staff. The team is led by Rector of the university.

Ministry of Education and Culture will distribute up-to-date information about the situation to the Finnish universities, and the University of Eastern Finland will follow national and EU policies in its actions and inform the UEF community about them.

The university will distribute relevant information to the students on uef.fi website, in the News section on Kamu and in the students’ Yammer group (signing in with UEF credentials required), and on Heimo website for university staff and students (UEF login required). Changes in the restrictions and sanctions may occur rapidly.

Support channels for students

If the war causes concern and students need help and support, the university offers its students a variety of support channels. We have compiled providers of help and support on the Kamu service. The students may utilise the services of FSHS, campus chaplains and educational psychologists.

In addition, providers of help include several national services such as crisis counselling by MIELI Mental Health Finland. Familiarise yourself also with the online material of Mielenterveysseurat.fi here and here Serenas materials.

Educational psychologist Katri Ruth has written about living with the feelings of concern and anxiety in the Puheenvuoroja blog of the university. The blog text mentions support channels and options for further reading.

The University of Eastern Finland emphasises that hate speech will not be tolerated in our international scientific community.

Questions about students and studies can be sent via email: studysupport@uef.fi. General questions relating to the situation in Ukraine and the security can be sent to email: ukraine@uef.fi.

In the current situation of war, student mobility programmes to and from Russia are suspended. For the present, no scholarships are available for student mobility to Russia and Belarus.

Due to the sanctions imposed on Russia and Belarus, the University of Eastern Finland will block access to its electronic services requiring authentication with the university’s username and password from the Russian and Belarusian territory, effective from 23 March 2022.

Travelling to Russia and Belarus is not recommended in the current time of crisis.

As for Ukrainian students studying in Finland, the studies will continue normally. Ukrainians studying in Finland will not be repatriated even if their residence permit is about to expire.

For the present, the EU sanctions against Russia will not affect student admissions of the degree programmes, and the decisions will be made normally according to existing legislation.

Quality Management

What does quality management mean at the University of Eastern Finland?

Quality at the University of Eastern Finland means aligning performance with the objectives to achieve top level education and research that has societal impact.

University’s mission is to educate experts and people with competence who have needed skills for society’s different tasks. The education and research must be high quality and fullfill the criterias set to the content, quality and learning outcomes of the degrees. It is the society’s guarantee that the university can be trusted. Quality management is embedded in all the university’s activities. For the students it shows for example so that the teaching responds the criterias and learning outcomes set from the authorities and working life.

Quality management is a way of ensuring that the right things are done at the right time in the right way. It ensures that the university has justification for its practices and is in control of them. Quality management lets us know whether we are achieving our objectives or if we need to change our approach.

The university’s quality culture refers to the supportive atmosphere of the university community. The quality culture reflects the commitment of the university’s staff and students to their work and studies. Together they uphold and work by the common values and objectives set for the university. Common practices are developed on the basis of feedback from customers and continuous evaluation, and those deemed good are efficiently shared within the university.

Quality policy sets the quality objectives, principles and division of responsibilities governing the university’s activities. Under the quality policy, the university’s activities are based on openness, equality, participation and communality. The university promotes the well-being of its staff and students and takes into consideration the principles of multiculturalism, global social responsibility and sustainable development.

For the students this shows by taking into account student well-being and multiculturalism in different ways, for example they are supported in several ways at the university, with the support of many actors, and through various services and as a increase of the amount of the courses in english. The principles of the sustainability and responsibility are to be seen in the contents and methods of the teaching and in the amount of the sustainability and responsibility related courses. These themes are shown in the strategic focuses of the research. Also the goal of the university becoming carbon neutral by 2025 is a part of this.

Quality System

The quality system (i.e., integrated management system) provides the framework and assigns the responsibilities and procedures for effective quality management, which we use to maintain and improve the quality of the university’s activities. The policies and procedures recorded in the university’s quality system help us ensure that we are on the right path and will achieve our strategic objectives. The quality system’s descriptions and metrics enable us to react to the targets for development identified.

The university’s activities and their development are based on the principle of continuous improvement
Plan – Do – Check – Act and Improve (i.e. the Deming cycle).

Quality management and the principle of the continuous improvement shows in different phases of the studies througt the whole studies. It shows in the fair and appropriate student selection processes having clear selection criteria and in the contents, quality and diverse teaching methods and in the support services of the teaching. Students are involved in institutional and performance development groups and they can especially influence the quality of teaching by giving the feedback from teaching and its support services, which is utilized in developing these prosesses.

Study regulations (mainly revoked 31.12.2023)

1 August 2022

I General

Section 1. Scope of application of the Study Regulations

Under Section 14 of the Universities Act (558/2009), the Board of the University of Eastern Finland has, on 14 December 2020, adopted the following Study Regulations which are applied at the university, alongside the provisions laid down in acts, decrees and the university’s rules of procedure.

These Study Regulations apply to degrees completed at the University of Eastern Finland (UEF) and the studies leading to the degree, and, where applicable, to specialisation studies, other studies not leading to a degree, and studies organised as Open University education and continuing professional education. Where applicable, the Study Regulations also apply to entrance examinations. In these Study Regulations, the term ‘faculty’ refers to the university’s faculties and, where applicable, to the Language Centre, the Library and the Centre for Continuous Learning.

The Rector decides on the general policies for lower university, higher university and postgraduate degrees after consulting the faculties. More detailed provisions concerning degrees, the studies included therein and the contents of the education offered are provided in faculty curricula. Independent institutes and service centres issue more detailed provisions concerning the education they offer.

These Study Regulations serve as the university’s degree regulations referred to in Section 41 of the Universities Act.

Section 2. Definitions

In these Study Regulations,

  1. ‘student’ refers to a person who has been granted the right to complete a degree or the right to pursue studies at the university
  2. ‘right to study’ refers to the right to complete a degree and the right to pursue studies
  3. ‘degree programme’ refers to a study programme, education organised based on a subject and other education entities for which the faculty awards a lower university degree, higher university degree or a postgraduate degree
  4. ‘faculty curriculum’ (Section 9 of the university’s rules of procedure) refers to a description of the educational mission of the faculty and its departments/schools, defining, inter alia, the degree-awarding education that can be completed in the faculty and the languages in which the degrees can be completed
  5. ‘degree programme curriculum’ refers to the entity comprising the degree structure, degree requirements, and the learning objectives, contents, assessment methods and modes of teaching for the degree and its components
  6. ‘syllabus’ refers to teaching offered over the course of an academic year or a longer period of time
  7. ‘study attainment’ refers to a course or study unit completed by a student, the extent of which is measured in ECTS credits. A study attainment may be an examination, an assignment, an essay, a learning diary, a demonstration of skills or other mode of completion defined in the curriculum, and any combination of these.  It may also refer to studies recognised as completed elsewhere or other demonstrations of learning required by the curriculum (e.g. a maturity test, licentiate thesis or doctoral dissertation).
  8. ‘subject’ refers to an entity which is taught and included in faculty curricula

II Degree education, specialisation studies and education

Section 3. The university’s educational responsibilities

According to Section 7 of the Universities Act, educational responsibilities are enacted by the Ministry of Education and Culture Decrees. After consulting the faculties, the Board decides on proposals on educational responsibilities, for submission to the Ministry.  After educational responsibilities have been conferred upon the university by Decree, the Rector determines how these responsibilities are assigned to the faculties.

Section 4. Establishing and discontinuing degree programmes

According to Section 9 of the University Regulations, the Faculty Council makes decisions on the introduction and discontinuation of a major subject within the scope of educational responsibility. Provisions on the discontinuation of education and the related transition period are laid down in Section 7b of the Universities Act.

If a degree programme is discontinued, the faculty shall provide all students who have been granted the right to study in the programme to finish their studies while taking into account the normative duration of the relevant degree studies and the possibility to be granted an extension for completing the degree. If a subject other than a major subject is discontinued, the faculty shall provide all students who have begun studying the subject as a minor subject with the possibility of completing their studies within a reasonable time. In both cases, the Faculty Council shall determine arrangements for the transition period.

During the transition period due to changes to the degree structure or academic subjects affecting Open University or commissioned education, as defined in Section 9 of the Universities Act, students participating in Open University or commissioned education shall be provided with the opportunity to study in accordance with the curriculum and transitional provisions in force.

Section 5. Tuition fees and the scholarship system

The provisions on charging a tuition fee per academic year are laid down in Section 10 of the Universities Act. The Board decides the amount of tuition fee to be charged. The Rector decides on the university’s scholarship system, the related policies and the amount of tuition fee charged per academic year per programme, and makes the decisions to grant scholarships.

Section 6. Organisation of specialisation studies and commissioned education

Specialisation studies are governed by Section 7a of the Universities Act, and commissioned education by Section 9. The Faculty Council decides on the specialisation studies and commissioned education organised at each faculty, the curricula and admissions criteria for these studies, and the maximum number of students for the taught courses. The Dean accepts the students for the taught courses.

Section 7. Higher education cooperation

According to Section 7a of the Universities Act, universities may organise education in cooperation with another university or university of applied sciences or procure it from one of these institutions to meet their educational responsibility. Higher education cooperation may be arranged with both Finnish and foreign higher education institutions (HEIs). Higher education cooperation (including joint degree programmes) is subject to separate agreements between the universities involved.  Students participating in education organised through higher education cooperation are subject to the administrative authority of the HEI that offers the education.

Section 8. Open University studies and continuing professional education

The university shall organise Open University education for the degree components specified in the faculty curricula. The university shall also organise continuing professional education. Unless prohibited by law, fees may be charged for Open University studies and continuing professional education.

Section 9. Summer School

The university has a Summer School, which is tasked with promoting the university’s internationalisation, international mobility, and the provision of summer courses to degree students. The Summer School’s courses are offered in English, and they are comprised of teaching offered by the university’s academic units. The Summer School has a steering committee, whose task it is to compile the teaching offered at the Summer School together with the academic units and to issue general guidelines concerning the Summer School’s operations. Decisions about the Summer School’s fees and student admissions are made by the Rector.

Right to study

Section 10. Right to study

Students must have the appropriate right to study required for the study attainment.

Section 11. Changing to another degree programme or faculty

As part of the admission criteria, the Faculty Council shall define the principles based on which students may change to another degree programme within the faculty, and the principles based on which students from other faculties may be admitted to pursue a degree at the faculty.

Section 12. Separate right to study for the faculties and the Language Centre

For a justified reason, the faculties and the Language Centre may grant a separate right to study for their taught courses. A separate right to study shall only be granted for a specific course or programme and it shall be in force for a limited time. Unless prohibited by law, a separate right to study may be subject to a fee.

With the exception of the Summer School, a separate right to study is granted by the faculty’s Dean or the Director of the Language Centre. The Faculty Council shall confirm the admission criteria concerning a separate right to study, except in cases where the right to study is based on an agreement for higher education cooperation or the arrangement of education, on a student exchange agreement, or in cases of complementing a completed degree in accordance with the principles set out by the Faculty Council.  A separate right to study granted for the Language Centre’s taught courses shall be based on the agreement for higher education cooperation.

Where applicable, the provisions of the Study Regulations shall apply to persons who have been granted a separate right to study.

Studies may only be pursued by students who have been registered as attending students in the university’s student register, and who have been granted the right to study required for the study attainment.

Section 13. Pedagogical studies for teachers

The Philosophical Faculty shall organise pedagogical studies leading to a teacher’s qualification, decide on the student admission criteria for these studies and grant the right to pursue these studies.

The Faculty of Health Sciences shall organise teacher training in health sciences for students majoring in nursing science. The Faculty Council of the faculty that organises the training shall decide on the distribution of study places after hearing the other faculties.

Section 14. Right to pursue minor subject studies

Minor subject studies at the university are open to students without any limitations, with the exception of fields in which the student admission procedure involves an aptitude test or an entrance examination, or if there is some other justifiable reason to limit the right to pursue minor subject studies. Possible limits to the right to pursue minor subject studies are defined in the curriculum. Minor subject studies may also be offered in the form of cooperation between academic subjects, or as separate minor subject modules tailored for certain major subjects.

Section 15. Limiting the right to study

A student may only hold one right to study at a time, leading to the same lower or higher university degree within the same major subject, or to an academic or professional postgraduate degree of the same level, at the University of Eastern Finland.

A new study right with a similar content shall not be granted to an applicant for the same or similar degree programme or other academic education referred to above which the applicant in question has already completed, unless otherwise set forth in the admission criteria of the faculty.

Section 16. Termination of the right to study

The right to complete a degree terminates when the degree for which the right has been granted has been completed. A student, who has completed a Licentiate or Doctoral degree, Master’s degree or a Bachelor’s degree with no right to complete a Master’s degree at the University of Eastern Finland has the right to complement their studies free of charge during the academic year in which the degree was completed and the following two academic years by enrolling as a student (continued right to study).

Section 17. Waiver or forfeiture of the right to study

A student may waive his or her right to study by submitting a written notice to the university. In such a case, the right to study shall be recorded as having terminated on the date on which notice was sent, and the right to study cannot be restored.

According to Section 43 of the Universities Act, students forfeit their right to study if they neglect to enrol with the university after accepting a study place, neglect to register as attending or absent at the beginning of each academic year, fail to complete the degree within the time or extended period of time specified in the Universities Act, or have not been granted an extension to the duration of their studies.

Students may apply for an extension to the duration of studies for completing the degree in accordance with Section 42 of the Universities Act. An updated study plan and a statement on the reasons for the delay in completing the degree must be attached to the application for an extension to the duration of studies.

If a student who has lost their right to study due to neglecting to register as attending or absent later wishes to start or resume their studies, they must reapply for admission to study at the university with Student and Learning Services. Reinstating the right to study does not require participation in the student admissions procedure. If a year or longer has passed since the student’s previous registration as attending or absent, Student and Learning Services shall consult the faculty before reinstating the student’s right to study. The student is required to present an updated study plan.

III Teaching and studies

18 § Application of the regulations on teaching and studies

The following provisions apply to the right to complete a degree and the right to pursue studies referred to in these Study Regulations.

Section 19. Student enrolment

The Rector shall decide on the enrolment of students who have been admitted to the university and on their registration as attending or absent for each academic year.

Organisation of teaching and planning of studies

Section 20. Curricula and syllabus

The faculty curriculum defines the degrees that can be completed at the faculty and the languages in which the degree programmes are offered. The faculty curriculum comprises the curricula for each degree programme and common provisions that apply to all degree programmes.

A curriculum shall be prepared for each degree programme, and these curricula shall be evaluated and developed regularly. Statistical data and feedback on teaching, studies, guidance and degrees are utilised in the development work.

The degree programme curriculum shall include the following information:

  1. the task of education
  2. the academic and professional goals of education
  3. the degree structure (i.e. courses and their extents), the degree requirements, and the learning objectives, contents, assessment methods and modes of teaching for the degree and its components
  4. the names of the degrees, study modules and courses in Finnish and in English
  5. the course descriptions in Finnish and in English
  6. a plan for major and minor subject student guidance and the organisation of student guidance
  7. the provisions concerning studies and degrees, such as the principles of recognising studies completed elsewhere, and the provisions on the expiration of studies, the number of completion attempts per study attainment and exams conducted for distance education
  8. Transitional provisions, if any.

Every year, by the end of October, the Rector will issue instructions regarding the curricula and syllabi, including common guidelines and regulations on studies. The Rector shall confirm the curricula of the faculties’ jointly offered education for the coming academic year by the end of February.

Faculty Councils shall confirm the coming year’s curricula and syllabi for the faculties in accordance with a schedule determined by the Rector. The curriculum, or part thereof, may be confirmed for more than one academic year at a time.

On the basis of faculty decisions, the Centre for Continuous Learning, shall confirm the Open University’s action plan for the coming academic year. The action plan shall include all Open University education organised by the university, either independently or in cooperation with partner institutions.

Where applicable, the above provisions shall also apply to education not leading to a degree.

Section 21. Organisation of teaching

The faculties shall organise teaching and study guidance so that full-time students are able to complete each degree in the normative time laid down in the Universities Act, in an appropriate order and without interruption. Teaching shall be organised in line with the approved curricula. The teacher in charge of the course, in an individual case, may give permission to deviate from the method of completion described in the curriculum for a very compelling reason. However, even then, the learning objectives set for the course concerned must be attained. A student may be granted individual arrangements upon application.

The university’s academic year shall be divided into four teaching periods. Teaching may also be organised in the summer.

If all the students who have signed up for a teaching group cannot be admitted to the group, the students must be admitted based on uniform criteria. When deciding who to admit to the group, priority shall be given to students for whom participation in the course is compulsory on the basis of their right to study and the related curriculum. If all the students falling into this category still cannot be admitted to the teaching group, the students must be admitted based on uniform criteria. Faculties and academic units may issue more detailed provisions on the admission criteria for teaching groups and other relevant signup practices.

Section 22. Courses

The university organises education in the form of taught courses. Continuing professional education curricula shall always be structured in the appropriate manner.

Academic units shall define the way of completing studies (individual courses and theses) in their curricula. Students may complete studies on their own or in groups orally and in writing in the form of, inter alia, lectures taken during a course or based on reading materials, essays, seminar work, work carried out during an internship or in a laboratory, e-learning, or work placement, and as various combinations of these.

With the exception of the maturity test, the extent of each course shall be at least one ECTS credit. Each course may comprise smaller partial attainments.  Learning objectives and a designated person in charge shall be determined and recorded for each course. Each course description shall indicate the language of instruction. If the language of instruction is other than Finnish, the course description shall indicate in which language the student can take an exam or complete other study attainments included in the course. With the exception of the maturity test, doctoral dissertation and licentiate thesis, the extent of each course shall be expressed in the form of ECTS credits.

Section 23. Internship included in studies

The faculties shall prepare their curricula in a way which allows an internship to be included in Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees, as a compulsory or an optional part of the studies. An internship included in a degree may be completed according to the curriculum, either in Finland or abroad.

Students from the UEF’s international partner universities, who are completing their internship at the UEF may also be enrolled at the UEF.

Section 24. Study guidance for lower and higher university degree students

Students must be provided with study guidance at all stages of their studies.  The Faculty Council shall decide on the principles of study guidance, including the rights and obligations of teachers and supervisors, and the instructions for the drafting, approval and updating of personal study plans. The principles of study guidance may constitute part of the curriculum or a university-level overall guidance plan approved by the Rector.

Personal study plans shall be drafted in accordance with the curriculum so that the plan matches the scope of the degree.

Section 25. Study guidance for postgraduate degree students

Postgraduate degree students shall be provided with guidance for both their research work and their postgraduate degree studies. At least two supervisors, one of whom is the main supervisor, shall be appointed for each postgraduate student.

Section 26. Academic postgraduate degree education

The university has a Doctoral School, the task of which is to provide transferable skills studies to all of the university’s doctoral students and to prepare common operating principles for the doctoral programmes. Academic postgraduate degree education shall be organised in the form of doctoral programmes. The faculties may organise doctoral programmes independently, or joint national or international doctoral programmes in cooperation with other faculties. Each doctoral programme shall have a director and a steering committee. The task of the doctoral programmes is to arrange discipline-specific scientific doctoral studies at the university and to ensure that a main supervisor in charge of study guidance is appointed for each postgraduate student.

Steering Committee of Doctoral Programme

  1. is responsible for the organisation of studies in its discipline and field of research and for developing postgraduate education within its sector
  2. handles the preparation of the doctoral programme’s student admission criteria and curricula for the Faculty Council
  3.  evaluates the applications for the doctoral programme and drafts a proposal on the eligible candidates to the faculty

Monitoring the progress of studies

Section 27. Monitoring the progress of studies

The study progress of a student pursuing a lower university degree, and a higher university degree or a postgraduate degree shall be monitored at predefined stages, or at different stages of the studies.  The Rector shall define how the progress of studies is monitored.

Language of instruction and studies

Section 28. Language of instruction and degrees

The language of instruction and degrees at the University of Eastern Finland is Finnish. The Faculty Council may decide on the use of an additional language for degrees when approving the curriculum, while taking into account the duty to fulfil its educational responsibility in Finnish. Otherwise, students are mainly required to be able to complete their studies leading to a degree in Finnish.

Section 29. Language of studies

Students shall have the right to pursue their studies, both orally and in writing, in Finnish or in some other language specified in the curriculum, unless the purpose of the study unit requires otherwise.

Theses shall be written in the language specified in the curriculum.  The head of the unit in charge of the studies concerned decides whether the student has the right to use a language other than the one specified in the curriculum.

IV Assessment of learning outcomes and grading scales

Section 30. Storage of study attainments

Study attainments must be stored for at least six months from the date on which the results are made public. In systems for electronic exams (e.g. EXAM), study attainments shall be stored for eight months from the date of taking the exam. Documents related to studies are stored in accordance with the university’s regulations on document management.

Section 31. Opportunities for completion

Students shall be provided with sufficient opportunities to successfully complete a study unit while taking into account the normative duration of degree studies. The number of attempts that students are given to complete a study unit or raise grades may be limited in the curricula.

If the opportunity to complete a study defined in the curriculum is cancelled due to an unforeseen event, students must be guaranteed the opportunity to complete the study unit in another appropriate and non-discriminating manner.

Section 32. Examinations and their organisation

The time and duration of exams shall be determined in the curricula.

Written or other corresponding exams related to instruction shall be held at least twice within the period of one year after the instruction was given.  Written and other corresponding exams shall be organised in a way which allows students sufficient preparation time.

If, for compelling reasons, the time of the exam needs to be changed, the exam must be postponed until a later date, and all students who have signed up for the exam shall be notified of the postponement two weeks before the exam, if possible.

Students may only leave the exam after thirty (30) minutes, after which students arriving late will no longer be allowed to take the exam.  Students may only bring the equipment and supplies needed to take the exam.  When a system for electronic exams is used, students may leave after they have completed the exam.

Electronic exam systems have real-time, recording camera surveillance. Students taking an electronic exam are obligated to prove their identity if requested to do so in the manner specified.

Students must request the individual arrangements granted to them to be implemented no later than 10 days before the teaching/study attainment.

Students taking an exam must be able to prove their identity, if necessary. When an exam is held, a list of the participants shall be compiled. The identity of students who took an electronic exam can be verified by comparing access control, camera surveillance and exam system data.

The faculties shall issue more detailed provisions on the organisation of exams for distance education courses in their curricula.

Students shall sign up for exams included in the curriculum ten days before the exam date. Deviating or clarifying provisions may be issued in the curriculum while taking into account the best interests of the students. Sign-up for electronic exams shall take place in the electronic exam system, and the deadlines are dependent on the system.

Section 33. Grading scales and grades used in the assessment of study attainments

Study attainments, including Bachelor’s and Master’s degree theses and theses included in minor subject studies, are assessed using a 0–5 scale, which includes the following grades:  5 = excellent, 4 = very good, 3 = good, 2 = satisfactory, 1 = sufficient and 0 = fail. When it is not appropriate to use the numerical grading scale, the study attainment may be graded pass or fail.  Grade 1 equals pass. The minimum requirements for passing are defined in the curriculum.

Approved licentiate theses and doctoral dissertations can also be assessed using the following seven grades: approbatur, lubenter approbatur, non sine laude approbatur, cum laude approbatur, magna cum laude approbatur, eximia cum laude approbatur and laudatur, or on the scale pass–pass with distinction.

The assessment of language skills in the second domestic language uses the scale satisfactory–good, as laid down in the Act on the Knowledge of Languages Required of Personnel in Public Bodies (Laki julkisyhteisöjen henkilöstöltä vaadittavasta kielitaidosta 424/2003) and the Government Decree on the Demonstration of Proficiency in the Finnish and Swedish Languages in the Civil Service (Valtioneuvoston asetus suomen ja ruotsin kielen taidon osoittamisesta valtionhallinnossa 481/2003).

Section 34. Assessment of study attainments

The assessment of study attainments is based on the course description confirmed in the curriculum. Study attainments or parts thereof must be completed and submitted by the deadlines specified.

If a student has retaken a study attainment and received a different grade or a different number of ECTS credits for the one and the same study attainment, the study attainment with the most ECTS credits shall be the final one, regardless of the grade. If the number of ECTS credits are the same, the study attainment with the highest grade shall be the final one, unless otherwise requested by the student.  If both the ECTS credits and the grade are the same, the latest study attainment shall be the final one.

Section 35. Publication of exam results

The results of a study attainment shall be published no later than three (3) weeks after the exam, in the university’s electronic student and study register. For a special reason, the teacher defined in the syllabus as the teacher responsible for the course may extend the publication of the results by one (1) week. The extension of the deadline and the grounds for extending the deadline shall be communicated to the students enrolled on the course as soon as the need for extension is discovered, no later than within three (3) weeks of the exam date.

The Dean or the director of the unit responsible for the teaching may still grant an extension to the publication deadline, when there are particularly weighty reasons for doing so. However, the result shall be published no later than five (5) weeks after the exam date. The extension of the deadline and the grounds for extending the deadline shall be communicated to the students enrolled on the course as soon as the need for extension is discovered, no later than within four (4) weeks of the exam date.

As regards electronic exams (e.g. EXAM), more detailed information about deadlines is available in the procedural instructions for electronic exams.

Both passed and failed study attainments are recorded in the electronic student and study register. Information on the breakdown of grades and the number of study attainments graded fail shall be posted on an electronic platform. Students will receive notification of their study attainment being recorded in the electronic student and study register to their email account provided by the university.

The grounds for the assessment of study attainments are public information. Students shall have the right to review their assessed study attainments and the grounds for the assessment. To do so, they must contact the teacher who assessed the study unit concerned. Students must be given the opportunity to review their study attainment after it has been assessed. The assessment shall be in writing or recorded by other means. Students are entitled to a copy of their answers or other results of studies free of charge.

The above deadlines do not apply to times when teaching is not organised in accordance with the Rector’s decisions, or to the period from 15 June to 15 August.

If an exam has been assessed by several teachers and they have not done so collaboratively, the names of the teachers who participated in the assessment shall be indicated.

Section 36. Examination and assessment of thesis included in advanced studies

Students may complete the thesis included in advanced studies independently, in pairs or by participating in a broader research project. This shall be decided by the main supervisor of the thesis within the limits specified in the curriculum. In the case of collaborative theses and research projects among two or more students, the input of each student must be distinguishable, so that it can be assessed.

A thesis included in advanced studies may be accepted as the final thesis for two different major subjects (“double thesis”). The prerequisites for a double thesis shall be decided by the Faculty Council as part of the curriculum.

Theses included in advanced studies are public final theses and they shall be published with the student’s permission in the Library’s electronic publication system.

Two examiners shall be appointed for theses included in advanced studies. As a rule, the thesis supervisor should be one of them. If the thesis supervisor is disqualified under Section 28 of the Administrative Procedure Act, the director of the unit shall appoint another examiner in their place.

Examiners shall be appointed as soon as the student has submitted the final version of their thesis for examination. The examiners for theses included in advanced studies shall draw up a written statement on the thesis, and in the case of a Master’s thesis, propose a grade within one month of the examiners’ appointment.

The student shall be given the opportunity to write a rejoinder before a decision on the assessment of the thesis is made. Enough time shall be reserved between proposing the grade and submitting the rejoinder so that the student can properly review the grounds for the assessment. The decision shall be delivered to the student electronically.

The originality of Bachelor’s and Master’s theses shall be tested by using an electronic plagiarism detection system selected by the university. The student shall answer for the originality of their final thesis.

Section 37. Examination and grading of licentiate theses and doctoral dissertations

The faculty’s Dean shall appoint two examiners for the examination of a licentiate thesis.

The faculty’s Dean shall appoint two examiners for the preliminary examination of a doctoral dissertation.

The preliminary examiners of licentiate theses and doctoral dissertations shall make their statements within two months of the final thesis’ being sent to them. The Dean may extend this time, if necessary.

Licentiate theses and doctoral dissertations are public final theses. Doctoral dissertations shall be made available for public viewing at the university’s Library as an electronic or paper version no later than 10 days before the public examination.

Each doctoral dissertation shall be submitted for a public examination. The faculty’s Dean shall appoint at least one opponent from outside the University of Eastern Finland, who should hold at least a docent’s qualification or a corresponding academic qualification. The faculty’s Dean shall appoint a custos to represent the university at the public examination.

Within two weeks of the public examination, the opponent(s) appointed by the faculty shall issue a written statement to the faculty on the doctoral dissertation and its defence. Any remarks presented in the public examination shall be delivered in writing to the faculty, within two weeks of the public examination.  Faculties may issues more detailed instructions on any other statements required.

The opponent or a member of the Faculty Council who is entitled to make decisions concerning the doctoral dissertation in question may make a written, justified proposal for rejecting the dissertation.

The originality of licentiate theses and doctoral dissertations shall be tested by using an electronic plagiarism detection system selected by the university. The student shall answer for the originality of their final thesis.

Section 38. Interrupting the thesis assessment process

When the student receives notification of the examiners’ statement and proposed grade, they have the opportunity to interrupt the thesis assessment process (not applicable to Bachelor’s thesis). by submitting a request in writing. The process shall then be halted.

A student may halt the assessment process for their final thesis only once.

The student may resubmit their final thesis for assessment, provided that it has been at least partly rewritten. The extent of the rewritten section shall be assessed by the thesis supervisor.

If the thesis is not accepted for assessment, the related decision shall be open to appeal.

Section 39. Recognition of studies completed elsewhere or prior learning demonstrated in some other manner

Studies completed elsewhere or prior learning demonstrated in some other manner may be counted towards a university degree. This shall require that the studies completed elsewhere or prior learning correspond to the learning objectives set for the degree and its components.

V Quality and quality management

Section 40. Quality management responsibilities in education

The university shall be responsible for the overall quality of its education and for the resources allocated to it.  Each faculty shall be responsible for the quality of the degrees it confers, for ensuring that the agreed objectives are met and

for appropriately focusing and prioritising the funds allocated to the faculty. Each academic unit shall be responsible for the quality of the education it provides.  Each academic unit and its director shall be responsible for the quality of the education the unit provides and the related study attainments.

Each academic subject shall have a person in charge of the quality of the subject’s teaching and the coordination and development of the quality of teaching, in particular.  Each teacher shall be responsible for the quality of teaching situations, the development of teaching methods and the assessment of learning.  Each student shall be responsible for their own learning and advancing their own studies.

Section 41. Management of teaching activities and expert bodies

The Rector shall be in charge of the development and evaluation of teaching and guidance. The Rector may set up committees for development and evaluation purposes.

Teaching activities shall be managed at university level, in the faculties, departments, schools and other units offering education.  The university has a Council for Teaching and Guidance appointed by the Rector, which is tasked with the preparation and particularly the follow-up of strategic policies concerning teaching at the university, dealing with the university’s policies concerning studies and teaching, and the promotion and monitoring of the quality of teaching, guidance and learning.  Each faculty, independent institute and service centre has one or more committees appointed by the Dean or the director. The committees are tasked with the preparation of matters related to teaching and guidance in the said faculty. The Dean responsible for education shall lead the faculty’s committee for the development of education. The Council for Teaching and Guidance and committees shall include representatives of the student body. The Dean responsible for education shall lead the faculty’s committee for the development of education.

Section 42. Assessment of education

The university’s education shall be assessed periodically, in pre-determined years. The Rector shall decide on the execution of the assessment.

VI Revocation of the right to study and ethical principles

Section 43. Revocation of the right to study and requesting an extract of a student’s criminal record

The revocation of the right to study is regulated by Section 43a, revocation-related access to information by Section 43b and the return of the right to study in Section 43c of the Universities Act. Section 2 of the Government Decree on Universities (valtioneuvoston asetus yliopistoista, 770/2009) defines the degrees which shall be subject to the sections regulating the revocation of the right to study.

The Rector shall issue separate procedural guidelines for revoking the right to study and requesting a criminal record extract.

Section 44. Ethical guidelines for teaching and studying

The Ethical guidelines for teaching and studying shall be confirmed by the university’s Committee on Research Ethics. The faculties shall ensure that the ethical principles of teaching, studying and research are known.

Cheating  in studies

Section 45. Procedures in cases of cheating and disturbance

A study attainment may be rejected if a student is guilty of study-related or research-related misconduct, while completing the study attainment in question.  The exam’s supervisor shall have the right immediately to remove from the exam any student who is suspected of cheating or otherwise disturbs the exam.  The study attainment shall also be failed in cases where cheating is only discovered after the exam. If cheating is suspected when an electronic exam system (e.g. EXAM) is used, the suspected cheating shall be evaluated by reviewing the video recording of the exam. If the exam supervisor has interrupted a student’s exam due to disturbance or suspected cheating, the supervisor shall enter the reason for the interruption into the student’s exam papers, and also whether the student admits or denies making the disturbance or cheating.

In a case where a student is suspected of cheating or disturbing an exam, they must be offered the opportunity to be heard.  If proven, the student’s misconduct shall be reported in writing to the Dean or the director of the academic unit concerned, who shall decide whether any further measures need to be taken.

The Dean or the director of the academic unit may, at their discretion, report the cheating to the Rector, who may take the disciplinary measure(s) referred to in Section 45 of the Universities Act.

VII Certificates and registration of study attainments

Section 46. Degree certificates

When a student completes their degree, the faculty shall issue a digital degree certificate to the student. Upon request, the student shall have the right to obtain a printed-out degree certificate. A Diploma Supplement for international use shall be automatically enclosed with all degree certificates. The Diploma Supplement includes all the necessary information on the university issuing the certificate, the content and results of the studies referred to in the degree certificate, and the status of the studies completed by the holder.

Section 47. Registration of study attainments

The exam date or the date of submitting a written assignment for examination shall be the completion date of the study attainment. The completion date of theses (excluding Bachelor’s theses) shall be the date of the decision on the grading of the thesis. If a study attainment has several parts, the date of the final part shall be the completion date of the study attainment.

Section 48. Rectification of study attainment data

The provisions of Section 29 of the Personal Data Act (523/1999) shall apply to situations where a controller of a register, on its own initiative, rectifies study attainment data. Students shall request that the unit that graded their study attainment rectify a flaw or defect, which the student has noticed. The request for rectification shall be made in writing. The request shall be handled without undue delay. If the student is not satisfied with the rectification decision, they may apply for a rectification from the Board of Appeal.

VIII Rectification procedures

Section 49. Rectification procedure in a case of forfeiture of right to complete a degree

According to Section 82(2) of the Universities Act, a student may apply to the university in writing for a rectification of a decision concerning the forfeiture of the right to study within 14 days of receiving notification of the decision.  The request for rectification must be made to the university’s Board of Appeal.  The student may lodge an appeal to the Administrative Court against a rectification decision made by the Board of Appeal within 30 days of receiving notification of the decision.  The Administrative Court’s decision is not subject to appeal.

Section 50. Rectification procedure in a case of study attainment assessment

According to Section 82(4) of the Universities Act, a student dissatisfied with the assessment of a study attainment other than a doctoral dissertation, a licentiate thesis, a thesis included in advanced studies or a corresponding study attainment, may make a request for rectification of the assessment orally or in writing from the teacher who made the assessment.

The student must make the request for rectification within 14 days after having been given access to the results of the assessment and the grounds on which the assessment was made.

If the teacher who made the assessment is not available when the request for rectification is made, the request for rectification shall be submitted in writing to the university’s Registry Office. A decision concerning the request for rectification must be made within 14 days of submitting the request.

If the student says they are not satisfied with the decision made on the request for rectification, the teacher who made the assessment must put the decision in writing. During the rectification procedure, the student is entitled to receive a copy of all the papers related to their completed studies or any other corresponding documents free of charge.

A student dissatisfied with the decision made on a request for rectification may apply to the university’s Board of Appeal for rectification within 14 days of receiving notification of the decision.  Requests for rectification addressed to the Board of Appeal shall be submitted to the Registry Office.

A student dissatisfied with the assessment of a doctoral dissertation, licentiate thesis or a thesis included in advanced studies may apply to the Board of Appeal for a rectification within 14 days of receiving notification of the decision.

The Board of Appeal’s decision is not subject to appeal.

Section 51. Appeals on decisions concerning the recognition of studies completed elsewhere

According to Section 82, subsection 4 of the Universities Act, a student dissatisfied with the recognition of studies completed elsewhere or of prior knowledge demonstrated in some other manner as part of their completed degree or studies may lodge a request for rectification of the decision orally or in writing. The request for rectification shall be submitted to whoever made the decision within 14 days of receiving notification of the decision.

The student may apply to the university’s Board of Appeal for a rectification of a decision made concerning the original request for rectification within 14 days of receiving notification of the decision. The Board of Appeal’s decision is not subject to appeal.

Section 52. Appeals on decisions concerning the choice of a major subject or specialisation

A student dissatisfied with a decision, made during their studies with respect to the subject which the student has applied to study and concerning their choice of a major subject or specialisation, may apply to the Board of Appeal for a rectification within 14 days of the decision being issued.

Section 53. Appeals on university decisions concerning a revocation of the right to study

A student may apply to the Students’ Legal Protection Board for a rectification of a decision concerning a revocation of the right to study referred to in Section 43a of the Universities Act within 14 days of receiving notification of the decision.

Section 54. Leave to appeal

According to Section 84 of the Universities Act, appeals against decisions made in a rectification procedure shall be lodged with an administrative court. However, leave to appeal shall not be granted for decisions on the assessment and recognition of study attainments made by the Board of Appeal in a rectification procedure.

IX Entry into force

Section 55. Provisions on the entry into force

These Study Regulations enter into force on 1 August 2022. These Study Regulations repeal the Degree Regulations adopted by the university’s Board on 1 January 2021.

Education regulations

1 January 2024
Pursuant to Section 14 of the Universities Act (558/2009), the Board of the University has, on 12 December 2023, approved these Education Regulations, which shall be applied in the university’s operations in addition to what is laid down in the acts and decrees, and in the University Regulations of the University of Eastern Finland.

I General

Section 1 Scope of the Education Regulation

These Education Regulations shall apply to the degrees completed at the University of Eastern Finland and to the studies included in them and, where applicable, to other education, including joint degrees. These Education Regulations shall also apply to entrance examinations where applicable.

The Vice Rector for Education shall decide on the general policies concerning Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees and postgraduate degrees after consulting the faculties. More detailed regulations concerning the degrees and the studies included in them, as well as the contents of the education shall be given in the faculties’ curricula. The faculties may also issue standing rules related to education. The university’s service centres shall provide more detailed provisions on their education and training.

These Education Regulations shall be the university’s degree regulations referred to in Section 41 of the Universities Act.

Section 2 Definitions

For the purposes of these Education Regulations:

  1. a student refers to a person who has a right to study at the university,
  2. a right to study refers to the right to complete a degree and other right to study,
  3. a degree programme refers to a degree programme, subject-based education and other training module for which a faculty grants a Bachelor’s or Master’s degree or a postgraduate degree,
  4. a faculty’s curriculum (Section 9 of the University Regulations) refers to the description of the educational mission of the faculty and its departments and units, which determines, among other things, which degree programmes can be completed in the faculty and in which languages the degrees can be completed,
  5. a degree programme’s curriculum refers to the entity composed of the degree structure and the learning outcomes, contents, methods of completion and assessment methods of the degree and its parts as separately decided by the Vice Rector for Education (the curriculum also includes a syllabus which is confirmed separately),
  6. a syllabus refers to the provision of teaching during an academic year or a longer period,
  7. an academic subject refers to an entity that is included in the curriculum of a faculty,
  8. a teacher in charge is the teacher assigned to the position in the syllabus, and
  9. a study attainment refers to a course completed by the student, the scope of which is defined as credits. The form of the study attainment may be an exam, a learning assignment, an essay, seminar work, lectures, exercises and laboratory work, practical training and their different combinations, or other methods of completion specified in the curriculum as well as a combination of these. A study attainment may consist of partial attainments. A study attainment may also refer to recognised studies or other demonstration of competence required by the curriculum (e.g., a maturity test, licentiate thesis or doctoral dissertation).

II Management of education and quality work

Section 3 Management of education

The Vice Rector for Education shall be responsible for the development and evaluation of teaching and guidance. To support development and evaluation, the Vice Rector for Education may set up committees.

The university shall have a steering group for education appointed by the rector whose task is to prepare and monitor the university’s strategic policies related to teaching, to discuss the university’s common policies on studies and teaching, and to promote and monitor the quality of teaching, guidance and learning.

The faculties shall have a dean responsible for education and a dean responsible for postgraduate education. The tasks can be performed by one or more persons. The faculties and the service centres shall have one or more committees appointed by the dean or the director whose task is to prepare matters related to the teaching and guidance of the faculty/unit. The Faculty Education Development Committee shall be chaired by the dean responsible for education.

On the basis of a proposal by the head responsible for education of a school or a department, the Faculty Councils shall confirm the admission criteria as well as the curricula and syllabi for the faculties’ teaching of the next academic year, in accordance with an annual schedule approved by the Vice Rector for Education.

The schools and the departments shall have a head responsible for education and a head responsible for postgraduate education. The tasks can be performed by one or more persons. The schools and the departments shall decide how the coordination and development of Finnish-language and other-language education will be organised.

The steering group for education and committees must have student representation.

The doctoral programmes shall have a director and a steering group. A specific task of a doctoral programme’s steering group shall be to organise studies in the discipline and in the field of research, and to develop researcher training in its field, to prepare the admission criteria and curricula of the doctoral programme for the Faculty Council, and to be responsible for the evaluation of applications received to the doctoral programme. The director of a doctoral programme shall make a proposal to the dean on the persons to be admitted as postgraduate students, and on their supervisors.

Section 4 Responsibilities in the quality management of education

The university shall be responsible for the overall quality of education and its resources. The faculties shall be responsible for the quality of the degrees they award, and for ensuring that the agreed results are achieved and that the resources the faculties have received for education are appropriately allocated and prioritised. The heads of the schools and the departments shall be responsible for the quality of teaching in their unit.
A teacher in charge shall be responsible for ensuring the quality of the course material and assignments to ensure the learning outcomes specified in the curriculum, and for the assessment of learning. A teacher shall be responsible for the quality of the teaching and the development of teaching methods. A student shall be responsible for learning, the quality of their study attainments and the progress of their studies.

Section 5 Evaluation of education

The university’s education shall be evaluated periodically. The Vice Rector for Education shall decide on the implementation of the evaluation.

III Degree programmes and other education

Section 6 Establishment and termination of a degree programme

After hearing the faculties, the UEF Board shall decide on proposals of change to the educational responsibilities to be submitted to the ministry.

Within the framework of the educational responsibilities, the Faculty Councils shall decide on the establishment and termination of major subjects. Section 7b of the Universities Act contains provisions on discontinuing degree programmes and the related transfer of education. If a degree programme is discontinued, the faculties must provide students with the right to study in said degree programme with an opportunity to complete their studies, taking into account the target times for completing the degrees and the possibility to receive an extension for completing the degree. If the teaching of another subject is discontinued, the faculties must provide minor subject students who have started their studies in said subject with an opportunity to complete their studies within a reasonable timeframe. In both cases, the Faculty Councils shall decide on the transitional provisions. The right to study associated with a discontinued degree programme shall end after the end of the transition period.

In case a transition period change of a degree structure or a subject affects open university education or commissioned education organised in accordance with section 9 of the Universities Act, the possibility of studying for students in the Open University or in commissioned education shall be arranged during the transition phase in accordance with the current curriculum and transition provisions.

Section 7 Tuition fees and scholarship system

Section 10 of the Universities Act contains provisions on the collection of tuition fees. The Vice Rector for Education shall decide on the university’s scholarship system and related policies, the amount of tuition fees per programme, and the granting of scholarships.

Section 8 Teaching collaboration

According to Section 7a of the Universities Act, a university may carry out teaching in accordance with its educational responsibility independently or in cooperation with another higher education institution or acquire it from another higher education institution. Teaching collaboration is agreed upon in separate agreements between higher education institutions.

Section 9 Non-degree education and commissioned education

Section 7c of the Universities Act contains provisions on professional specialisation programmes and Section 9 on commissioned education. The Faculty Councils shall decide on the professional specialisation programmes and commissioned education organised by the faculty, the curricula of the programmes, the admission criteria and the number of students admitted to them. The dean shall admit the students to the programmes.

The university shall organise teaching in modules included in the degrees in accordance with the faculties’ curricula as open university education. The university shall also organise continuing education. Fees may be charged for open university education and continuing education if permitted by provisions of law (Government Decree on fees for university services 1082/2009).

The university shall organise specialist training programmes in medicine and dentistry as well as specialist training in general practice, which are postgraduate professional training programmes not leading to a university degree.

Non-degree studies shall be organised at the university.

IV Study rights

Section 10 Right to study

A student must have the right to study required for the study attainment. Only students who are registered as present in the university’s student register and have the right to study required for the study attainment may participate in its completion.

The right to study may be revoked if it turns out that, when applying for the right to study, an applicant has provided incorrect or incomplete information that may have had an impact on the outcome of the student admissions.

The study rights related to professional specialisation programmes, open university education, continuing education, non-degree studies, commissioned education and teaching collaboration are limited in terms of content and time.

Participants in continuing education shall be admitted in the order of registration. If necessary, an admissions process can be arranged. In this case, the dean of the faculty organising the education shall decide on the student admissions, and the Faculty Council on the criteria to be followed.

Admission criteria for studies provided as open university education may be specified in the curriculum. In this case, the decision on the admission to the study module shall be made by the director of the Centre for Continuous Learning on the basis of a statement from the head responsible for education of the department or the school. Otherwise, participants in open university education shall be admitted in the order of registration.

In teaching carried out as teaching collaboration, a student is subject to the administrative authority of the higher education institution providing teaching. When the right to study is based on a national agreement on teaching collaboration or the organisation of teaching, no decision is made on the right to study, but the right to study is registered on the basis of the agreement on cooperation between higher education institutions.

For a justified reason, the faculties and the Language Centre may grant separate study rights for studies provided by their unit. The right to study applies to certain studies and is valid for a limited period of time. Fees may be charged for separate study rights if the provisions so permit.

Except for the UEF Summer School, separate study rights shall be granted by the deans of the faculties or the director of the Language Centre. The Vice Rector for Education shall decide on the fees charged for the Summer School education and on the admission of students. The Faculty Councils shall approve the admission criteria for separate study rights, with the exception of cases that do not include student admissions in accordance with the Universities Act. The provisions of the Education Regulations shall apply to students with separate study rights as applicable.

Section 11 Changing a degree programme and a faculty

As part of the admission criteria, the Faculty Councils shall decide on the principles on the basis of which a student can change degree programmes in the faculty, and on the principles on the basis of which a student from another faculty can transfer to the faculty to complete a degree.

Section 12 Teacher’s pedagogical studies

The Philosophical Faculty shall organise pedagogical studies that lead to a teacher’s qualification, decide on the admission criteria for these students (incl. subject-specific intake) and grant the study rights.

The Faculty of Health Sciences shall organise teacher training in health sciences for students majoring in nursing science.

Section 13 Rights to minor subject studies

Minor subjects may be studied freely at the university with the exception of fields which require an aptitude or proficiency test for student admission, or which have other justified reasons for restricting the right to study minor subjects. Any restrictions on the right to study minor subjects shall be laid down in the curriculum.

Section 14 Limiting the right to study

A student may only hold one right to study in the same major or similar subject leading to the same Bachelor’s or Master’s degree at a time, or a right to study at the University of Eastern Finland leading to a similar level of scientific or professional postgraduate degree.

A new right to study with the corresponding content cannot be granted for the completion of such an aforementioned degree or training in the same field of education or similar subject which the applicant has already completed in the national higher education system, unless otherwise determined by the admission criteria of the faculty.

Section 15 Termination of a right to study, waiver of a right to study, and forfeiture of a student place

Under Section 38 of the Universities Act, a student shall forfeit the student place offered to them, unless they accept it in a manner specified by the university.

The right to complete a degree shall terminate when the degree for which the right has been granted has been completed.

A student who, at the University of Eastern Finland, has completed a postgraduate degree, a Master’s degree or a Bachelor’s degree that does not grant them the right to complete a Master’s degree, shall have the right to complement their studies free of charge during the academic year of completing their degree and during the following two academic years by registering as a student (alumni study right). The alumni study right allows a student to complete studies organised by the University of Eastern Finland in accordance with the free minor subject right, or to complete minor subject studies for which they have obtained a minor subject right during the completion of their degree, or to complete other studies that are freely available.

A student may waive the right to study by notifying the university in writing. In this case, the right to study is marked as terminated on the day of the notification.

In situations specified in these regulations, the right to study cannot be restored.

Section 16 Loss of right to study

According to Section 43 of the Universities Act, a student shall lose their right to study if they, after accepting their student place, have neglected their registration at the university in accordance with Section 21 of these Education Regulations, or the annual registration. An undergraduate student shall lose their right to study if they have not completed the degree within the time limit laid down in the Universities Act or within an extension granted, or if they have not been granted an extension to complete the degree. A student may apply for an extension for completing a degree in accordance with Section 42 of the Universities Act. The Vice Rector for Education shall decide on more detailed provisions concerning the extension of the right to study.

If a student who has lost their right to study later wants to start or continue their studies, they must apply for the right to be re-admitted through Student and Learning Services. If one year or longer has passed since the student’s previous registration, Student and Learning Services shall hear the faculty before reinstating the right to study. If the right to study is not reinstated, the dean shall decide on the matter. The right to study shall not be reinstated if the student has completed a corresponding degree at another university.

A transfer student who accepts a new right to study shall lose the right to study on which the transfer is based. A student’s right to study lost through a transfer application procedure cannot
be reinstated.

Section 17 Revocation of the right to study and request for an extract from the criminal record

Provisions on the revocation of the right to study are laid down in Section 43a of the Universities Act, related access to information in Section 43b, and the reinstatement of the right to study in Section 43c. Section 2 of the Government Decree on Universities (770/2009) specifies the qualifications to which the sections on the revocation of the right to study apply.

The Vice Rector for Education shall issue separate guidelines for revoking the right to study and for requesting an extract from the criminal record.

V Organisation of teaching and planning of studies

Section 18 Curricula and syllabus

The faculties’ curricula shall specify which degrees can be completed in the faculty and in which languages the degrees can be completed. The faculties’ curricula shall contain the curricula of the degree programmes and the common regulations for all degree programmes. Students and teachers must comply with the curricula.

A curriculum, which is a competence-based tool for teaching, study planning and guidance, shall be drawn up for each degree programme. The faculties, schools and departments shall develop and evaluate the curricula regularly. This development shall be based on feedback and statistics on teaching, learning, guidance and degrees.

The curriculum of a degree programme must indicate the following:

  1. the scientific and professional objectives of the education,
  2. the degree structure (including the courses and their scopes), learning outcomes, contents, methods of completion and assessment of the degree and its parts,
  3. the names of the degrees, study modules and courses in Finnish and English,
  4. the course descriptions in the language of instruction of the course,
  5. a plan for the guidance of major and minor subject students and the arrangement of guidance
  6. the regulations concerning studies and degrees, such as the grounds for recognition of prior learning, the expiration of studies, the number of attempts to complete and repeat studies, the organisation of exams, and any transitional provisions.

The Faculty Councils shall confirm the curricula and syllabi in accordance with a schedule confirmed by the Vice Rector for Education. The curricula or parts of them may be confirmed for several academic years at a time. After hearing the faculties, the Vice Rector for Education shall decide on the curricula periods and their common guidelines.

By the end of October each year, the Vice Rector for Education shall provide more detailed instructions on curricula and syllabi, which include common guidelines and regulations on studies. The Vice Rector for Education shall confirm the curricula for joint teaching in the faculties for the next academic year by the end of February.

The Centre for Continuous Learning shall confirm the Open University’s action plan for the next academic year on the basis of decisions made by the faculties. All open university education organised by the university itself, or together with partner institutions, shall be included in the plan.

Where applicable, the aforementioned shall also be observed in education that does not lead to a degree.

Section 19 Provision of teaching and courses

The faculties shall organise teaching and study guidance so that it is possible to complete the degrees through full-time study within the target time laid down in the Universities Act, in the appropriate order and without interruption. Teaching shall be organised in accordance with the approved curricula. In individual cases and for a particularly weighty reason, a teacher in charge of a course may grant an exception to the method of completion defined in the curriculum.

The university’s academic year shall be divided into four teaching periods. Teaching may also be provided during the summer. Teaching shall be implemented as courses. The curricula for continuing education shall be implemented as appropriate curriculum structures.

The scope of a course shall be indicated in credits, with the exception of the maturity test, the doctoral dissertation and the licentiate thesis. A course shall consist of at least one credit, with the exception of the maturity test. A course may consist of smaller partial attainments. The learning outcomes and the appointed teacher in charge shall be indicated in the course description. The course description shall indicate the language of instruction. If the language of instruction is other than Finnish, the course description shall indicate the language in which a student can take the exam or complete some other attainment related to the course.

Section 20 Publicity of teaching

Teaching shall be public. The education provider may restrict publicity only for justified reasons and in exceptional cases, such as practical training or when publicity endangers the achievement of learning outcomes. Organising teaching as distance learning may limit the realisation of publicity. Publicity may also be restricted in training organised on business grounds.

Section 21 Student registration

The Vice Rector for Education shall decide on the registration of students admitted to the university, and on the registration of students as being present or absent each academic year.

Section 22 Practical training included in studies

The faculties’ curricula shall be drawn up in such a way that the undergraduate studies include the possibility of a practical training period completed in Finland or abroad, either as a compulsory or optional part of the studies.

Section 23 Guidance

Students completing a higher education degree shall receive guidance at all stages of their studies. The Faculty Councils shall decide on the principles of study guidance, which include a student’s and a supervisor’s rights and obligations as well as instructions for drawing up, approving and updating a personal study plan. The principles of guidance may be part of the curriculum or the university-level overall guidance plan, which shall be approved by the Vice Rector for Education.

Students shall prepare a personal study plan for completing studies leading to a degree and update it if necessary. The study plan shall correspond to the curriculum of the degree programme.

Postgraduate students shall receive guidance in both research and doctoral studies. At least two supervisors shall be appointed for a postgraduate student, one of whom is the principal supervisor and one of whom must belong to the university’s staff.

The progress of the studies of a student completing a Bachelor’s, a Master’s or a postgraduate degree shall be monitored.

The university shall promote the dual career of top athletes.

Section 24 Scientific postgraduate education

The university shall have a doctoral school whose task is to organise transferable skills studies for students on doctoral programmes and to prepare common operating principles for doctoral programmes. Scientific postgraduate education shall be organised in doctoral programmes. Doctoral programmes may be a faculty’s own programmes, joint doctoral programmes across the faculties, national or international programmes.

Section 25 Individual arrangements in studies

Students may be provided with individual study arrangements for completing their studies, for example, on the basis of health or disability. It must also be possible to achieve the learning outcomes set for the course using methods that differ from those stated in the curriculum.

A student must request that the granted individual arrangements related to the organisation of teaching be implemented no later than 10 days before the study attainment.

Section 26 Language of degrees and instruction

At the University of Eastern Finland, the language of instruction and the language of degrees shall be Finnish. The Faculty Councils may also decide on the use of another language as the language of a degree in connection with the adoption of the curriculum, taking into account the implementation of the Finnish-language responsibility for education. The majority of the compulsory part of a degree programme must be provided in the language of the degree. In a Finnish-language programme, a student has the right to use Finnish or another language in accordance with the curriculum in both written and oral attainments.

The language of instruction of a course is the language in which most of the teaching is organised.

As a rule, the thesis included in the Bachelor’s or Master’s degree is written in the language of the degree of the degree programme or the language specified in the curriculum. Decisions on the right to use another language in the thesis shall be made by the head responsible for education of the department or the school. The language of the licentiate thesis and the doctoral dissertation is Finnish, English or another language approved by the dean responsible for postgraduate education.

Section 27 Ethical and responsible studies

Teachers and students shall act ethically and follow good scientific practice. The faculties shall be responsible for ensuring that the ethical principles of teaching, studying and research are known.

Section 28 Student fraud and disruptive behaviour

Disruptive behaviour refers, for example, to situations when a student interferes with teaching, acts violently or threateningly, acts fraudulently or otherwise violates the university’s order. A situation in which a student bullies or discriminates against another student or a staff member is considered a violation of the university’s order.

Fraud is a deliberate, fraudulent act or method done through neglect or with the purpose of misdirection that is intended to give a false impression of one’s or another’s competence. A study attainment and an answer to an entrance examination may be rejected if a student has committed fraud or an offence when completing it.

A teacher or a supervisor may immediately order a student to leave the space if the student is subject to a strong suspicion of fraud or if the student disturbs the event, acts violently or threateningly, or endangers another person’s life or health. This also applies to the entrance examination.

A student may be banned from attending teaching for a maximum of three working days if there is a risk that the safety of another person will be affected by the student’s violent or threatening behaviour, or if the teaching or related activities become unreasonably difficult due to the student’s disturbing behaviour.

In relation to disruptive behaviour and student fraud, a student may be subjected to disciplinary measures in accordance with Section 45 of the Universities Act, which include a written warning and temporary dismissal. Students who are suspected of fraud or disruptive behaviour must be given an opportunity to be heard. Fraud can be investigated, for example, by means of a plagiarism detection system and video surveillance. The dean shall decide on the follow-up measures. The dean may, at their discretion, report fraud to the rector for the purposes of disciplinary action under Section 45 of the Universities Act.

The Vice Rector for Education shall issue instructions and regulations for dealing with fraud and disruptive behaviour.

VI Study attainments and evaluation of competence

Section 29 Retention of study attainments

Study attainments shall be retained for at least six months from the publication of the results. Documents related to education and studies shall be retained in accordance with the university’s information management plan, taking into account legislation on the processing of personal data and the university’s instructions.

Section 30 Study attainments and opportunities to complete them

Students may complete their study attainments alone, in pairs or in groups in writing, orally or in other ways specified in the curriculum or by the teacher. If the curriculum does not include a decision on completing a course or a study attainment remotely, the teaching shall take place on campus. The obligation to be present related to completing the course shall be laid down in the curriculum.

In order to complete a course, a student must be enrolled in the course. If it is not possible to include all enrolled students in the teaching group, students shall be admitted on equal grounds. Students for whom the course is compulsory in accordance with the right to study leading to a degree and the related curriculum shall be given priority in the group. If it is still not possible to include all these students in the teaching group, students shall be admitted to the group on equal grounds. More detailed provisions on the criteria for admission to teaching groups and other enrolment practices may be given in the curriculum and in a decision by the head responsible for education of the school or the department.

Written or other learning assignments to be evaluated related to teaching must be submitted at the end of the course or at a time specified by the teacher. A student must be given reasonable time to prepare for and complete the study attainment.

A sufficient number of opportunities to complete the study attainment must be reserved for a student by taking into account the target times set for the degrees. A student shall have the right to raise the grade of a passed study attainment and to re-take a failed study attainment at least once. Taking this into account, the number of times the grade has been raised and the number of times the course has been re-taken may be limited in the curriculum. Raising a course grade and re-taking the course is achieved by re-taking the entire course or completing a partial study attainment. Raising grades and re-taking courses take place at the beginning of a course in a manner specified in writing by the teacher in charge of the course. A graded and approved thesis cannot be re-taken or its grade raised.

If the possibility of completing a course specified in the curriculum is cancelled unpredictably, or the time of the course has to be changed for a compelling reason or the cancellation is affected by both aforementioned reasons, students must be guaranteed the opportunity to complete the study attainment in question in an appropriate manner that safeguards equality.

Electronic communication related to the completion of the course shall be implemented in the manner specified in the curriculum or as indicated in writing by the teacher at the beginning of the course. Bilateral electronic communication between a student and a teacher shall be carried out through the e-mail address provided by the university. Electronic communications shall be implemented in accordance with the provisions of the Act on Information Management in Public Administration (906/2019) and the regulations and instructions issued by the university.

Section 31 Examinations and their organisation

The dates, duration and form of exams shall be decided in the curricula. An exam related to teaching must be organised at least twice a year from the beginning of the teaching. Provisions on registering for and leaving the exam are laid down in the curriculum or in the learning environment of the course in writing as determined by the teacher in charge of the course before the beginning of the course.

An exam may be supervised in real time or through recording, taking into account the privacy of students. Only the equipment needed to complete the exam may be used in the exam.

Students completing an exam shall be listed. If necessary, a student’s participation and identity may be verified by combining information from access control, video surveillance and the examination system. If necessary, a student taking an exam must verify their identity.

If the date and time of an exam have to be postponed for compelling reasons, the exam must be reorganised at a later date and all those who have registered for the exam must be informed of it. If possible, the postponement must be announced two weeks before the exam.

Section 32 Scales and grades used in the assessment of study attainments

The numerical scale 0–5 shall be used in the assessment of study attainments, including Bachelor’s and Master’s theses and theses written for a minor subject. Grades have the following meaning: 5 = excellent, 4 = very good, 3 = good, 2 = satisfactory, 1 = sufficient and 0 = fail. Study attainments may be graded on a scale of Pass – Fail. The minimum requirements for passing shall be laid down in the curriculum.

Approved licentiate theses and doctoral dissertations shall be evaluated as pass with distinction, pass, or fail.

The scale for evaluating the proficiency in the second national language shall be fail, satisfactory or good, as laid down in the Act on the Knowledge of Languages Required of Personnel in Public Bodies (424/2003) and the Government Decree on the Demonstration of Proficiency in the Finnish and Swedish Languages in Civil Service (481/2003).

Section 33 Assessment of courses

The teacher in charge shall be responsible for the assessment of the study attainment. If there are several implementations of the course, the teacher who was responsible for the implementation shall be responsible for the assessment.

The assessment of a study attainment shall be based on the course description confirmed in the curriculum. Learning outcomes must be set for each course. The assessment of learning shall focus on the learning outcomes specified in the curriculum, and the grade shall be given on the basis of the assessment scale laid down in the curriculum. A student demonstrates their learning through study attainments. The time allowed for completing a study attainment must be proportional to the level and extent of the required attainment. Study attainments or parts thereof must be completed and submitted within the set deadline.

If a student has retaken a study attainment and received different grades for the same study attainment, the highest grade shall be the one recorded.

Section 34 Publication and registration of study attainment results

Course assessment results shall be published no later than three (3) weeks after the completion of the course by entering the grades in the university’s student and study register. For a special reason, the teacher in charge of the course may extend the deadline for one (1) week. Students who have enrolled in teaching must be immediately informed of the extension and its grounds. The dean or the head responsible for education of the department or the school that is in charge of teaching may extend the deadline for publishing the results on the basis of particularly weighty reasons. Students who have enrolled in teaching must be immediately informed of the extension and its grounds.

The deadline for publishing the results of electronic examinations shall be calculated from the 15th day of the month in which the examination was taken if the examination was taken before the 15th day. The deadline for publishing the results of examinations that took place on or after the 15th day of the month shall be calculated from the first day of the following month.

Information on both passed and failed study attainments shall be entered in the student and study register. The distribution of grades and the number of failed attempts can be seen on the electronic platform. A student shall receive a notification of the study attainment once it is recorded in the student and study register to the e-mail address provided by the university.
The assessment criteria for a study attainment shall be public. A student shall have the right to be informed of the application of the assessment criteria by contacting the teacher who completed the assessment of the course. They shall be given the opportunity to view the graded written or otherwise recorded study attainment. A student shall have the right to receive a copy of their study attainments free of charge.

The deadlines do not include periods during which teaching is not provided in accordance with the decision of the Vice Rector for Education, nor the period between 15 June and 15 August.

Section 35 Examination and assessment of theses

The form of the thesis for advanced studies shall be decided by the principal supervisor within the limits specified in the curriculum. The thesis for advanced studies shall be completed independently. The thesis may be completed in pairs or by participating in a larger research project if the curriculum allows this. In a joint work or research project of two or more students, it must be possible to demonstrate each student’s contribution so that it can be assessed. A thesis for advanced studies may be accepted as a thesis in two different majors (a so-called double Master’s thesis). Decisions on the prerequisites shall be made by the Faculty Council as part of the curriculum.

Two examiners shall be appointed for the thesis for advanced studies, one of whom, as a rule, must be the student’s supervisor. The examiners must give their written statement on the thesis and a proposal for a grade within one month of the appointment of the examiners. The deadlines do not include periods during which teaching is not provided in accordance with the decision of the Vice Rector for Education, nor the period between 15 June and 15 August. The author of the thesis for advanced studies must be given an opportunity to submit a rejoinder before the decision on the assessment of the thesis is made. A student is notified of the decision electronically.

Theses for advanced studies shall be public theses, and they shall be published in the library’s electronic publication system with the student’s consent.

The originality of Bachelor’s and Master’s theses is examined using the electronic plagiarism detection system chosen by the university. A student is responsible for the originality, content and compliance with good scientific practice of their thesis.

Section 36 Examination and evaluation of a licentiate thesis and a doctoral dissertation

The dean of the faculty shall appoint two examiners to examine a licentiate thesis. Two preliminary examiners shall be appointed by the dean of the faculty for the preliminary examination of a doctoral dissertation. The examiners of a licentiate thesis and the preliminary examiners of a doctoral dissertation must give their written statement within two months of the date on which the thesis was sent to the examiners. If necessary, the dean may grant an extension.

A licentiate thesis and a doctoral dissertation shall be public theses. A doctoral dissertation shall be made publicly available on the university’s network as an electronic version no later than seven (7) days before the public examination of the thesis, or as a printed version in the university library, if no electronic version of the doctoral dissertation is available.

A doctoral dissertation shall be examined at a public examination. The dean of the faculty shall appoint at least one opponent, who must be a person outside the University of Eastern Finland and who, at a minimum, is required to hold the title of docent or be a person with equivalent scientific competence. For the public examination, the dean of the faculty shall appoint a custos to represent the university.

After the public examination, the opponent(s) shall issue a written statement on the dissertation and its defence within two (2) weeks. Any remarks presented in the public examination shall be submitted in writing to the faculty within two weeks of the public examination. The faculty may provide more detailed instructions on other statements to be issued.

The opponent or a member of the Faculty Council who is entitled to make decisions on the study attainment in question may submit a written request for the dissertation to be rejected with justifications.
The originality of licentiate theses and doctoral dissertations is examined using the electronic plagiarism detection system chosen by the university. A student is responsible for the originality, content and compliance with good scientific practice of their thesis.

Section 37 Interrupting the thesis assessment process

When a student receives a notification of the examiners’ statement and grade proposal, the student can interrupt the assessment process of the thesis once (except for the Bachelor’s thesis). Postgraduate students can interrupt the assessment process once. The interruption shall be requested in writing.

A student may submit their thesis for reassessment after rewriting the thesis, taking into account the content and formal observations of the thesis supervisor responsible for the thesis for advanced studies, the examiner of the licentiate thesis or the preliminary examiner of the doctoral dissertation. If the thesis is not accepted for assessment, the related decision shall be open to appeal.

Section 38 Recognition of study attainments and other prior competence

Both prior studies and other prior competence may be recognised and transferred toward studies and a degree completed at the university. Recognition requires that the studies or other prior competence to be transferred meet the learning outcomes set for the degree and its parts.

VII Certificates and registration of study attainments

Section 39 Certificates

Once a student has completed their studies in accordance with their personal study plan, they must submit an application for the degree in accordance with the university’s instructions. The faculty shall provide the student with a digital degree certificate and, at the student’s request, a paper copy of the degree certificate. A Diploma Supplement, which is intended for international use, is issued as an appendix to the degree certificates. It provides sufficient information about the university as well as the studies and study attainments referred to in the degree certificate and their status in the education system.

The university may also issue other certificates, such as certificates of professional qualification.

Section 40 Registration of study attainments

The date of an exam or the date on which a study attainment was submitted for examination shall be the completion date of the study attainment. The completion date of theses (excluding the Bachelor’s thesis) shall be the date of the decision on grading the thesis. If a study attainment has several parts, the date of the final part shall be the completion date of the study attainment.

Section 41 Correcting inaccurate study attainment data

The data subject shall have the right to obtain from the controller without undue delay the rectification of inaccurate study attainment data entries in the study register (Article 16 of the EU General Data Protection Regulation, EU 2016/679). A student shall demand the correction of an inaccurate register entry they have observed immediately in writing from the unit that carried out the assessment.

VIII Rectification procedures

Section 42 Rectification procedure on student admissions and on admissions to major subjects or specialisation studies

A person who has applied for admission may request a rectification of the student admission decision from the dean of the faculty within fourteen (14) days of the publication of the results.

A student dissatisfied with the decision on a major subject or specialisation studies within their degree programme may request a rectification of the decision from the dean of the faculty within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the decision.

Section 43 Rectification procedure on forfeiture of the right to complete a degree

A student may lodge a rectification request with the University’s Board of Appeal to seek redress for a decision on forfeiture of the right to study within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the decision. The decision issued by the Board of Appeal may be appealed to the Administrative Court within 30 days of receiving notification of the decision. The decision of the Administrative Court is not subject to appeal.

Section 44 Rectification procedure on the assessment of study attainments

A student dissatisfied with the assessment of a study attainment other than a doctoral dissertation, licentiate thesis and equivalent final project included in the advanced studies may lodge a rectification request orally or in writing with the person responsible for the assessment of the course within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the results of the assessment and the application of the assessment criteria. The assessment of a study attainment refers to the overall assessment of a course.

If the teacher is not available at the time of lodging a rectification request, the rectification request intended for the teacher must be submitted to the university’s registry office.

The teacher in charge must respond to the rectification request within fourteen (14) days of it being submitted. If the teacher does not rectify the assessment as requested by the student, the teacher who completed the assessment must make a written decision on the matter. The student may request rectification of this decision from the University’s Board of Appeal within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the decision. A rectification request addressed to the Board of Appeal must be submitted to the university’s registry office.

A student dissatisfied with the assessment of a doctoral dissertation, a licentiate thesis or a thesis for advanced studies may lodge a rectification request with the Board of Appeal within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the assessment of their study attainment.

A decision of the Board of Appeal is not subject to appeal.

Section 45 Rectification procedure on decisions on the recognition of prior learning

A student may lodge a rectification request orally or in writing if they are dissatisfied with the decision on the recognition of studies completed elsewhere or prior competence demonstrated in some other manner as part of a degree or study attainment. A rectification request is lodged with the party that made the decision within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the decision.

A rectification of a decision made on a rectification request by a student may be appealed to the University’s Board of Appeal within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the decision. A decision of the Board of Appeal is not subject to appeal.

Section 46 Appeals against decisions revoking the right to study

A decision on the revocation of the right to study referred to in Section 43a of the Universities Act can be appealed to the national Students’ Legal Protection Board within fourteen (14) days of receiving a notification of the decision.

Section 47 Appeal to the Administrative Court

A decision made by the university in an administrative matter other than that specified in this chapter and a decision issued on a rectification request by a student may be appealed to the Administrative Court.

A decision made by the Board of Appeal in the rectification procedure on the assessment of a study attainment and the recognition of prior learning is not subject to appeal.

IX Entry into force

Section 47 Provisions on entry into force

These regulations shall enter into force on 1 January 2024. Chapters I, II, III, IV, V, VII, VIII shall apply from 1 January 2024, however, sections 14 and 15 shall apply from 1 August 2024 and sections 18 and 26 shall apply from 1 August 2025 at the latest. Chapter VI shall apply from 1 August 2025 at the latest. Sections concerning the duties of the Vice Rector for Education shall apply from 1 January 2025.

These Education Regulation repeal the Degree Regulations approved by the UEF Board on 21
June 2022.

New Open University Student

We welcome you to start studying at UEF’s Open University! On this page, you will find instructions on how to get you started with your studies. Please read the instructions carefully.

Here’s how you start your studies:

  1. Activate your new UEF user account or change the password of your existing account.
  2. Activate your UEF student email, where communication regarding your studies will be directed.
  3. Log in to your study’s online learning environment using the dropdown menu below.

If you have any questions, please contact Open University avoinyliopisto@uef.fi. We are here to help you!

Log in to the online learning environment as soon as your UEF account is available. Please read the course’s or study module’s instructions carefully. There are two types of online learning environments: eLearn Moodle and Digicampus. More information on logging into online learning environments can be found in KAMU.

AI POLICY FOR STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF EASTERN FINLAND

An AI policy, which is introduced briefly on this page, is followed at the University of Eastern Finland. The full version of the AI policy is available on the university’s intranet.

The use of AI does not absolve students of responsibility as regards the content and quality of their study attainments.

Guidelines in brief:

  • AI can be used to support learning in study attainments, unless forbidden by the teacher.
  • The use of a generative AI application or similar to support the preparation of study attainments must always be mentioned.
  • If AI is used against the teacher’s instructions or the use of AI is not mentioned, the matter will be investigated in accordance with the university’s fraud process.
  • The university recommends using the Copilot AI application that can be found in the app launcher via UEF login.
  • An UEF email address must not be used when registering to external AI applications.

The use of AI to support learning

As a rule, AI can be used to support learning and the preparation of study attainments.

In these guidelines, AI and AI applications refer, in particular, to generative artificial intelligence that is based on large language models (both separate AI applications and add-ons integrated into other software that utilise generative AI) or similar AI applications. Such AI applications include ChatGPT and Copilot. Such AI applications exclude the spell check in Word.

The use of AI applications in study attainments may be prohibited in the course description or by the teacher in charge at the beginning of the course in writing if there is a risk that the use of AI might have a negative impact on achieving the learning outcomes.

The teacher may instruct on the use of AI, e.g., in the course description, in the learning environment (e.g., eLearn Moodle), by email or in the instructions of an individual assignment.

The teacher may instruct, e.g., on how AI applications can be used in the brainstorming or information acquisition phase or in language checking, stylistic improvement or translation during the course.

If an AI application is used in the preparation of study assignments or other assignments, the student must report, in writing, which application was used and in which manner it was used.

Students should, therefore, always report how a generative AI application or similar was used in the study attainment. If a student uses an AI application during a course or as part of a study attainment (e.g., an exam, assignment) where the use of AI has been forbidden in advance, the student’s activities are deemed to be fraudulent and will be treated in the same way as other cases of fraudulent conduct. The same applies to situations where the student does not report the use of AI. The use of AI applications can be investigated, e.g., by means of an electronic plagiarism identification system or by using suitable random checks.

If there is a reason to suspect an AI-related fraud, the teacher will first investigate the nature of the fraud (the scope, intent, recurrence, systematic nature of the fraud). Depending on the nature of the fraud, the teacher either instructs the student on the use of AI or transfers the matter to the Dean of the faculty for investigating the necessary disciplinary measures (including a written notification, a written warning and a fixed-term suspension). The fraud investigation process of the university is described.

Where required, the faculty, unit or independent institute (e.g., the Language Centre) may issue supplementary guidelines on the use of AI in their own teaching.

AI applications

The university offers Microsoft Copilot Enterprise for students over 18 years of age. Copilot refers to the Copilot service that is available via UEF login (login to UEF Microsoft account), not to any other AI application known as ‘Copilot’.

The Copilot service can be accessed through the app launcher.

Students may also use other AI applications than those provided by the university. In such cases, students are responsible for ensuring the lawfulness of their activities (including how the information provided is used in the service) and for finding user instructions for the application. The UEF email address or the same user ID and password combination as when logging into the university’s network must never be used when logging into these external AI applications.

Teachers may only require their students to use AI applications that are free of charge to them. Teachers cannot require their students to create user IDs for AI applications that require the disclosure of personal data (e.g., an email address and contact information that can be linked to a person).

The use of AI in theses

If an AI application is used in a thesis, the student must report, in writing, which application was used and in which manner it was used.

Theses must not be completed entirely by using an AI application. Each thesis must include a sufficient amount of independent work to ensure that the learning outcomes set for the thesis are achieved.

The sufficiency of the independent part of the thesis is assessed as part of the evaluation process of the thesis.

When AI is used in thesis work, particular attention must be paid to legislation related to copyright, personal data processing and confidential information, as well as to university’s instructions. The thesis must be drawn up in accordance with the relevant sections of the AI policy on research. The AI policy is available on the university’s intranet.

Maturity tests must be carried out in such a way that students cannot use AI in writing them.

Faculties and departments/schools will provide more detailed instructions on the maturity test.

Responsibility for content produced by using AI

The content and accuracy of materials produced by using AI is the responsibility of the student or other person who produced or published them. Artificial intelligence can make up information (hallucinate).

The university is not responsible for the content, reliability or ethics of the material produced by AI applications. The user of AI is always responsible for the use of AI and for assessing its ethicality and reliability.

As a rule, AI tools should not be used to produce material the accuracy of which cannot be verified by the student concerned.

Copyright and rights of use

AI must not be listed as the author of texts or other outputs.

AI applications may have different terms and conditions as regards the rights of use. When AI applications are used, it must be ensured that the terms and conditions of the application allow for the material to be used in the manner wished by the user.  

The copyright of a work produced by an AI application (e.g., image, text, video or audio recording, composition) does not always belong to the user of the AI application, such as the student. In order for the work to be protected by copyright, the share of the work that was done by the author must be visible in the resulting work.

The ownership of the work/material that is used as background material will always remain with the original owner/author, regardless of the use of an AI application. When prompting an AI application, it must be ensured that no material for which the user of the AI application does not have a copyright or a licence granted by the copyright holder be fed into the application as background material, unless the work is available publicly and without restrictions.

Typically, this applies, in particular, to scientific texts, study materials, imaging materials and images, such as paintings and photographs.

AI applications may require that the application owner be granted, e.g., a parallel right of use to results generated by AI. 

Personal data processing in AI applications

Personal data means any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person.

Material that contains personal data must not be exported to AI applications, except when the university has concluded an agreement with the provider of the AI application that contains conditions related to the processing of personal data (e.g., Copilot used under the UEF Microsoft account).

If the material contains personal data, the analysis of the research data cannot be completed by using an AI application without conducting a data protection impact assessment (PIA/DPIA), which must be completed in accordance with the case-specific purpose. Students often process personal data in connection with their thesis, and in such cases, they must carry out a data protection impact assessment.

Data subjects (e.g., research subjects, students and job applicants) must always be informed of the processing of their personal data by means of AI.

Processing of confidential information

No confidential information must be entered into nor processed in external AI applications. Confidential information can also be fed into Copilot when Copilot is used via UEF login (UEF Microsoft account). The same applies to other AI applications and application add-ons that have been procured in a centralised manner through Digital Services.

Confidential material includes, e.g., research plans and research material (e.g., interview transcripts), study attainments (e.g., assignments, essays, examination answers and learning diaries), and research background material. Confidential materials are defined, in particular, in the Act on the Openness of Government Activities (621/1999, section 24).

Sustainability and responsibility

The goals and obligations related to sustainability and responsibility should, therefore, be observed in the use of AI.

The use of AI consumes considerably more energy than ordinary online searches. For example, an AI-based search can consume up to ten times more energy than a traditional search engine.

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