Report summary
The second cycle study programme Informatics in contemporary society is a proven study
programme that is well integrated into the relevant economic environment, as the Faculty
works well with relevant stakeholders in the field. As an educational product, it is well
known among employers, but it is still not well differentiated from the other educational
programmes offered by the faculty, which should be addressed in the future. The Faculty
is becoming an increasingly robust and well-established educational institution, and as it
develops, this brings with it the need to build a programmatic identity and its external
visibility, as well as the need to monitor competition (institutions and programmes)
nationally and internationally. In addition to offering research opportunities and a variety
of experiences in direct contact with future employers, the institution is very sensitive to
the needs of students, keeping them well informed and also strongly supporting them with
all the high-quality facilities and equipment available for organised and individual forms of
study. The Faculty also ensures that students are kept in touch with current developments
in the field through their participation in the annual ITIS conference organised by the
Faculty. However, adapting to the needs of students has led to the introduction of the so-
called 'hybrid' mode of study, which needs further formalisation and concretisation,
including appropriate adjustments to the curricula, etc. At the same time, the desire to use
human and financial resources efficiently has led to sub-optimal grouping of full-time and
part-time students, which in turn reduces the degree of student-centred and needs-
oriented study. A quality study programme also needs an optimally completed feedback
loop, on the basis of which study programmes are updated and modified, notably in the
light of self-evaluation data. In this segment, the programme under assessment is not yet
at an adequate level.