Abstract
Quality audit in higher education is one of those innovations that began to emerge in the form of distinct educational policies and practices during the eighties and nineties of the 20th century. Although quality standards, auditing and accreditation practices came to the educational institutions from other fields, such as industrial engineering and business administration, they have been on the agenda of educational research for over two decades. Nowadays, the audit culture is widely spread in the higher education settings, and quality audit practices have become an integral part of accountability towards stakeholders and academic communities. In line with this trend, many conferences, journal articles and dissertations have emphasized the importance of quality assurance in higher education. This research movement positively assesses quality assurance practices as being implemented in higher education. However, a careful review of the related literature reveals considerable doubts regarding the impact of quality-assurance practices on higher education performance, mainly because audit practices depend on self-study-with-peer-review techniques, which are processes rather than outcome based. Recent research critiques quality audit systems and draws attention to the need for better evaluation metrics, and accurate performance instruments. This study aims to present a critical review for current audit practices research and to propose a framework for future research relating to quality in higher education agenda. This future research agenda focuses on improving quality metrics and performance measurement in higher education. The significance of the study can be postulated as the current need for reshaping quality audit practices. It also responds to one of the most important educational movement during the 20th century "Performance-based Education" that focuses on outcomes and measurable achievements. The study concludes with 10 major drawbacks of current quality audit in higher education and suggests new topics of research related to re-identifying quality in higher education and to focusing on performance-based metrics for quality. This metrics considers the economic measures related to efficiency, effectiveness, cost-benefit and productivity. Such emphasis on performance-oriented measures in university assessment is consistent not only with the "Performance-based Education" trend, but also with the business principle "what we can't measure, we can't manage".