Report summary
The IAM HEI is an institution that is difficult to distinguish from its sister higher education
institution, which serves as the entry point for the transition to the higher education
programme and is the most frequent source of its students. It shares the family
management, premises, equipment, library, teaching staff, and non-teaching staff with its
sister institution. The Zakrajšek family, through their part-time employment, collectively
form a mandatory employee for the formal eligibility of the HEI. Due to its extremely
economical approach to organization, the institution often faces obstacles and restrictions
in the field of organization and operation of a higher education institution. Unfortunately,
the legislation does not provide special rules or relief for such “micro-institutions,” which
are common in Slovenia. For this reason, the institution's management could do more to
establish efficient and innovative organization and processes that would allow for intelligent
operation without bureaucratic clutter but in compliance with the law and especially with
its own concept of operation. Its current, messy documentation does not reflect the reality
of the situation and does not contribute to the development or understanding of the
institution, which has as its main objective the acquisition of a concession.
Despite the absence of concrete strategic planning (apart from obtaining the concession),
the Institute has capital, which comes from its excellent involvement in the business
environment and the format of the course, which is adapted to evening work.
Unfortunately, this capital is not used to its optimum extent, as students often only acquire
a new formal qualification rather than new competences – as in the case of the practical
education at their workplace. The institution also struggles to find an educational identity
in relation to its coexistence with the higher education institution and its communication
with the environment, which is minimal despite the direction of study. The management
frequently glorifies the applied technical competences that the institution states are the
most important. At the same time, they are conducting a gradual turn towards theoretical
knowledge (which they claim is encouraged by NAKVIS), employing teachers without
qualifications in AV media, introducing competences in online marketing, public speaking,
and similar accompanying content. Such is not at the heart of audiovisual production.
Although the institution meets most of the formal criteria, this is not essential for its future.
In the face of increasing competition in the field of media communication studies, which is
already experiencing inflation, strategic reflection and concrete planning with concrete
measures is essential. Even in the event of the institute not being granted a concession, it
needs to pursue its objectives and ultimately accredit itself. This planning need not be
dense and scattered among several unrelated documents, but can be tailored to the size
of the administration and can be lean and efficient. A pioneering institution with a strong
tradition in private media education is relatively successful in its business model of offering
higher education alongside work, but it is not developing – as the management claims –
due to the lack of a concession.