AUS Tertiary Update
New Zealand found wanting in international
comparisons
Although New Zealand has increased its
investment and participation rates in tertiary education,
this country continues to rank poorly internationally in its
investment in tertiary education and in the proportion of
students who complete qualifications, according to the
latest data from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development. New Zealand is also one of a few countries
reported to have expanded participation in higher education
by relying more on the financial contributions of students
and households.
The latest edition of the annual OECD
report, Education at a Glance, shows that New Zealand
consistently ranks around the middle of the thirty OECD
countries compared across a variety of measures in what is
described as a compendium of international education
indicators looking at the quality, quantity, equity and
efficiency of education systems.
While the figures used
are generally from either 2004 or 2005, they show that this
country’s expenditure per student on tertiary education,
adjusted for purchasing-power parity, is $US8,866 against an
OECD average of $11,100. The United States leads the field,
investing $US22,476 per full-time student.
In terms of
the cumulative expenditure per student over the average
duration of tertiary-education studies, New Zealand spends
$US27,042 against an OECD average of $44,394. Switzerland
leads this field, with expenditure of $$US79,611.
On the
brighter side, New Zealand is named as one of nine countries
in which more than 40 percent of young people complete
university courses, with graduation rates reported as
highest in countries where the degree programmes tend to be
of short duration. Higher-education enrolment across all of
the OECD countries is continuing to grow, with more than 50
percent and, in some cases, 75 percent participating in some
form of tertiary education. Unfortunately, New Zealand ranks
bottom of nineteen countries listed in terms of “survival
rates”, that is, the proportion of students who enter
tertiary education and go on to graduate.
In terms of
student-to-staff ratios, New Zealand again falls well below
the pack. Against an OECD average of 15.8 students to one
staff member, New Zealand records 18.2 students per staff
member. It is the fifth-worst student-to-staff ratio
recorded, although a significant way behind Greece at thirty
to one.
The full OECD Education at a Glance report can be
found
at:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/4/55/39313286.pdf
Summary
information can be found
at:
http://www.oecd.org/document/30/0,3343,en_2649_39263294_39251550_1_1_1_1,00.html
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. New boss for
NZVCC
2. Universities anti-Semitic?
3. New figures
show NZ has more scientists
4. Report looks at
integration of skills training with regional
development
5. AUSA welcomes freedom for “Algerian
Affairs” Spokesperson
6. Scarfies’ flats under
spotlight
7. Elite universities plot to scuttle national
pay structure
8. University teachers to boycott
classes
9. Universities in good financial
health
10. Survey exposes high levels of abuse of
staff
11. Prosecutors raid Dongguk University
New boss
for NZVCC
The New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee
will have a new Executive Director from next year, with the
announcement last Friday of the appointment of Penny Fenwick
to the position. Ms Fenwick, who has twenty years’
management experience in the public and university sectors,
will take over the role from the long-serving Lindsay
Taiaroa who is due to retire at the end of the
year.
Announcing Ms Fenwick’s appointment, NZVCC Chair,
Professor Roy Sharp, said her work as Assistant
Vice-Chancellor (Academic) at Victoria University of
Wellington and service on the Committee on University
Academic Programmes meant that she was ideally suited for
the post.
Ms Fenwick started her career as a Sociology
lecturer at the University of Canterbury and subsequently
held management positions in the Department of Social
Welfare, Ministry of Women’s Affairs, Ministry of
Education and NZ Council for Educational Research.
After
serving as Academic Registrar at Victoria for three years,
Ms Fenwick later took up the role of Assistant
Vice-Chancellor with responsibility for academic matters and
managed the establishment of the New Zealand School of
Music, a joint venture with Massey University. The
implementation of a strategic partnership between Victoria
and the Wellington College of Education is listed as a
further achievement.
Ms Fenwick holds an MA with
first-class honours in Sociology from the University of
Canterbury and has served on numerous professional,
research, policy and international bodies. In recent years
she has worked as an independent consultant in the
tertiary-education and public sectors, with clients that
included the Department of Labourand its Pay and Employment
Equity Unit, the Foundation for Research, Science and
Technology and the Wellington Institute of
Technology.
Association of University Staff National
President, Professor Nigel Haworth, welcomed the
appointment, saying that Ms Fenwick appears to have the
right credentials to address the many challenges facing the
universities and to engage constructively with unions in the
sector.
Universities anti-Semitic?
A wide-sweeping
claim that New Zealand universities suffer from chronic
anti-Semitism has been made in a book, World’s Apart: The
Re-Migration of South African Jews, by a South
African-Australian academic, Colin Tatz, and reported in the
current issue of Education Review.
Education Review says
that, in a section on contemporary anti-Semitism in the
book, Tatz describes two controversial cases, one each at
the Universities of Waikato and Canterbury, and what he says
was the associated “ill grace, impatience and disdain of
senior academics with Jews”.
The first case, that of
Joel Hayward’s 1993 MA thesis on the fate of Jews in
German hands, was contested in 1999 by the New Zealand
Jewish Council, which unsuccessfully asked the University of
Canterbury to revoke the thesis because of it’s
Holocaust-denying nature The second case, an acceptance by
Waikato for Hans Kupka to undertake a PhD study on the
German language in New Zealand, including interviews with
Holocaust survivors, provoked an outcry in 2000 when it was
alleged Kupka had neo-Nazi links and ran a Holocaust-denying
website.
Asked if his conclusions about New Zealand’s
universities were too harsh, Tatz told Education Review that
the Hayward and Kupka cases had precedent, including a call
by the University of Otago Medical School in the 1930s for
New Zealand not to accept Jewish doctors.
Tatz told
Education Review that a “wide supporting cast” of
academics and managers in the universities involved had been
guilty of failing to take the concerns of Jews and others
seriously.
Despite his claim of chronic anti-Semitism,
however, Tatz goes on to say that his verdict on New Zealand
universities is generally positive as the two cases cited
were not swept under the carpet, university staff were not
punished for whistle blowing and the processes that
surrounded the cases were remarkably open.
The University
of Canterbury told Tertiary Update that it stands by the
statement it made on 20 December 2000 on the release of the
report by the Hayward Thesis Working Party that it does not
support Holocaust revisionism and does not harbour
anti-Semitic feeling.
New figures show NZ has more
scientists
Latest figures from Statistics New Zealand
show an increase in the number of scientists and other
research staff working to advance innovation and keep New
Zealand at the cutting edge of research and development,
according to the Minister of Research, Science and
Technology, Steve Maharey. The Research and Development
Survey 2006 reveals a 7 percent increase in research staff
since 2004.
Mr Maharey says this shows that the
Government’s commitment to innovation is paying off.
“This Government is committed to building a talented skill
base to increase our knowledge base and today’s figures
prove that’s working,” he said. “With international
competition for talented people it is great to see we are
able to attract and retain valuable research staff.”
An earlier summary of the survey released in June showed
that total spending on research and development increased 10
percent since the last survey in 2004 to $1.8 billion. That
includes public and private expenditure.
Mr Maharey said
the figures show private funding is increasing, but much
more investment is needed to bring New Zealand businesses
into line with other OECD countries. “The Labour-led
Government aims to boost private investment with a $630
million tax incentive announced in Budget 2007 for
businesses to carry out their own research,” he said.
“This will make New Zealand more internationally
competitive, overseas companies will find it more attractive
to invest in R&D here and it will help our businesses be
more innovative and successful.”
The survey shows
Government is still the largest funder of research and
development, providing $785 million, or 43 percent of
funding, in 2006. That figure is up 8 percent on 2004.
Report looks at integration of skills training with
regional development
Significant progress has been made
in the last seven years in integrating labour-market
policies and vocational-training policies with regional
economic development, according to a new report prepared by
Lincoln University economist Professor Paul Dalziel for the
OECD.
The report, Integrating Employment, Skills and
Economic Development, says that, while there was little
central-government attention paid to regional economic
development between 1984 and 1999, there has been a large
amount done at both regional and national levels since then
by the current Government.
Responding to the release of
the report, Minister for Tertiary Education Dr Michael
Cullen said that, since 1999, New Zealand has seen more
people in work than ever before, more people in industry
training, more young people getting skills through
apprenticeships and record levels of participation in
tertiary education. “The OECD report finds that the
Government’s work with councils, businesses, unions and
the training sector has been a major driver of this success.
But the OECD is correct in its call for further action,”
he said. “One of the consequences of our record-low
unemployment rate has been persisting skills shortages.
While we continue to see more and more New Zealanders enter
the workforce and more gaining qualifications, we need to
grow those numbers and ensure people have the right skills
to meet industry demands.”
Among the core
recommendations of the report are that the Tertiary
Education Commission develop specific guidelines to require
high-level statements of regional-education needs, gaps and
priorities to take into account relevant regional economic
development strategies and that a multi-agency working group
be created to consider how current government resources
could be pooled to produce more sophisticated regional
labour-market analysis.
The full report can be found
at:
http://www.dol.govt.nz/publications/general/iesed/summary.asp
AUSA
welcomes freedom for “Algerian Affairs”
Spokesperson
University of Auckland students have warmly
welcomed the recently won freedom of Algerian refugee Ahmed
Zaoui and say they look forward to hearing from their
long-lost Algerian Affairs Spokesperson. Ahmed Zaoui was
appointed the Auckland University Students’ Association
(AUSA) Honorary Algerian Affairs Spokesperson at a Special
General Meeting in October 2004 attended by hundreds of
students.
AUSA President, Lesieli Oliver, said that
students are pleased that Mr Zaoui now has the ability to
live a full life unencumbered by legal uncertainties and
that he may someday be reunited with his family. “Mr Zaoui
has a real contribution to make in promoting interfaith
dialogue and understanding between Muslims and non-Muslims
in New Zealand. AUSA shares Mr Zaoui’s commitments to
peace and social justice,” she said.
AUSA Education
Vice-President David Do said that Mr Zaoui’s wisdom would
be welcomed by many at the University of Auckland, a campus
with over 5000 international students and an increasing
number from countries like Pakistan, Malaysia, and Saudi
Arabia. He said that Mr Zaoui could come to campus and to
AUSA for any seminars or lectures he might like to hold,
should he wish to enlighten students on Algerian affairs or,
indeed, anything at all from his wide breadth of knowledge
and experiences.
Scarfies’ flats under
spotlight
Television New Zealand reports that, for the
first time in a decade, the Otago University Students’
Association is running a house and garden contest, putting
the best and worst of Dunedin's student flats under the
spotlight.
There are the outstandingly good, such as
that of the six female law students who have created a home
away from home, and there's the absolutely shocking such as
a flat with six male commerce students that has perhaps
never seen a clean cloth or vacuum cleaner and has only an
informal cooking roster of sorts.
Competition judge Sandy
Adams says some of the entries in the Scarfieville section
leave plenty to be desired. “Some students live in hovels
and that’s really disappointing, and that’s probably a
combination of environment and obviously their own doing,”
she said.
However, the house and garden contest
apparently also reveals lots of students take pride in their
places and, after the recent rioting, restoring pride around
campus is said to be high on the agenda.
Dunedin’s
house and garden student flat winners will be announced
tonight.
One News
Worldwatch
Elite universities
plot to scuttle national pay structure
The University and
College Union (UCU) in the United Kingdom says that leaders
of an elite group of universities are sharing strategy ahead
of an effort to try to break out of national pay talks. UCU
representatives within the Russell Group universities have
called a “council of war” on 17 October in response to
reports of alleged deal-making by vice-chancellors on
industrial action and national pay bargaining, with reports
that human resources managers have already approached branch
representatives to sound them out about breaking away from
the nationally negotiated pay structure.
UCU says the
vice-chancellors are “networking like mad” and have
agreed on strategy to take the union on, including plans to
dock the salaries of any staff taking industrial action by
10 percent of their annual salary.
Talks with employers
in July on the review of the Joint Negotiating Machinery for
Higher Education Staff were suspended until November.
UCU General Secretary, Sally Hunt, said that national
bargaining provided the best protection to staff and that
vice-chancellors could not be trusted to offer fair local
deals. “Many of them have poor records when it comes to
the pay and conditions of their staff and to ensuring
equality of treatment for all,” she said.
Ms Hunt
acknowledged, however, that current bargaining arrangements
do need reform and that the UCU was committed to “moving
the process forward with employers”.
From The Times
Higher Education Supplement
University teachers to boycott
classes
The Federation of All Pakistan Universities
Academic Staff Association (FAPUASA) has said that it will
boycott classes for two hours in all public universities
this week and the same next week in protest against the
country’s Higher Education Commission’s (HEC) refusal to
accept a number of its demands. The demands include
upgrading teachers, stopping the implementation of a Modern
University Ordinance in the Balochistan University,
discouraging the appointment of retired soldiers as
vice-chancellors and reducing the HEC’s interference in
universities’ internal matters.
The HEC has called the
protests “propaganda” against the commission.
Around
400 teachers in public universities are waiting for an
upgrade, saying that, despite an agreement in January that
this would happen, the HEC had done nothing. In turn, the
HEC has accused FAPUASA of trying to save the jobs of
teachers with fake degrees.
Negotiations held in Peshawar
earlier this week have failed to resolve matters.
From
the Pakistan Daily Times
Universities in good financial
health
The Australian university sector ended 2006 in a
particularly sound financial position, with increased assets
of $2.6 billion and revenues up by 11 percent to a total of
$15.5 billion. Investment income, which grew by 20 percent,
and consultancy and contracts, which were up by 21percent,
were among the strongest revenue-growth areas. Overall fees
and charges rose 8 percent to $3.43 billion and government
grants were up 10.6 percent. The operating surplus across
the sector rose by what has been described as a remarkable
51 percent.
Australia’s Federal Education Minister,
Julie Bishop, has described the increases as reflecting a
very healthy state and strong performance and said that the
larger operating surplus showed much greater efficiencies in
the management of the country’s universities. “For so
long [the sector] has had a culture of crying poor,” Ms
Bishop said, but now universities are embracing “some of
the standard business practices that the corporate sector
embraces as a matter of course. We are seeing the results
and it is wonderful.”
The latest figures extend a
long-term trend of reduced university reliance on government
income. Five public universities earned more in 2006 from
fees and charges than they did from government grants.
Sector-wide, reliance on government funding has declined
from 56.7 percent in 1996 to 42.2 percent ten years later.
The proportion of university revenues from fees and
charges has risen from 13.4 percent a decade ago to 22.2
percent last year.
The report made no mention of
academic or research performance.
From The
Australian
Survey exposes high levels of abuse of
staff
The first survey of students’ behaviour towards
university staff in the United Kingdom has revealed the
extent to which staff are subject to harassment, verbal
abuse and assault.
More than half the staff responding
to a National Student Conduct Survey had experienced student
misbehaviour at least five times, while a quarter had
encountered physical, verbal or written threats. For 11
percent of staff experiencing a series of incidents, such
events occurred on a daily basis.
The survey was carried
out by a team at Nottingham Trent University, led by Deborah
Lee from the School of Social Sciences.
Dr Lee presented
her findings to the annual Universities Personnel
Association (UPA) conference last week, saying it is time
that universities start to take the issue seriously.
In
2005, figures gained through the Freedom of Information Act
showed there had been 1,000 incidents of student aggression
towards staff in the previous five years.
Malcolm
Keight, the University and College Union’s Head of Higher
Education, said that union members are experiencing an
increasing lack of respect and, on occasion, this can lead
to aggressive and threatening behaviour. “The findings of
the report therefore are disturbing but not altogether
surprising,” he said.
From The Times Higher Education
Supplement
Prosecutors raid Dongguk University
The
Seoul Western District Prosecutors’ Office in Korea has
raided the offices of both the Dongguk University Board
Chair and President to secure evidence that some directors
and officials of the University agreed to employ a disgraced
curator, Shin Jeong-ah, as an assistant professor despite
knowing that her Yale doctorate was bogus.
Three
prosecutors and five investigators from the Central
Investigation Bureau of the Supreme Prosecutor’s Office
were due to seek an arrest warrant for Shin on Tuesday this
week on charges of forging academic credentials and
obstructing official business, in this case the
administration of state-run institutions like the Gwangju
Biennale, where she was also a director.
After arresting
Shin, the prosecutors were to question the University Chair
again to find whether he abused his authority to help
Shin’s career. Prosecutors said that Shin submitted a fake
Yale degree certificate when she applied for the jobs at
Dongguk and the Gwangju Biennale, the country's biggest
contemporary art exhibition.
From Englishnews -
Chosun.com
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz