AUS Tertiary Update Vol 5, No 15
In our lead story this
week…..
STUDENT LOAN REPAYMENT TIMES
Latest statistics
from the New Zealand University Students' Association
(NZUSA) show that the average repayment time for male
graduates with student loans has increased from 14 to 15
years while the figure for women remains at 28 years.
Co-president Andrew Campbell says they show that the
government's work to date has done little to defuse the
student debt crisis. "If repayment times are to come down
in the future, work must be done on the root causes of
student loan debt: high fees and a lack of universal living
allowance,” he says. Meanwhile, the Government has approved
funding for the creation of new statistical information on
the student loans scheme. The decision follows criticism in
2000 by the Auditor-General of the level of information
available about the scheme. Statistics New Zealand will
administer the database, which will include information
provided by the Ministry of Education, the Ministry for
Social Development and Inland Revenue. The first statistics
from the project are expected at the end of September.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1. Student summer
jobs help to continue
2. OECD report a cracked record on
tertiary education
3. Student loan proposals
"side-stepping" real issue
4. The message of dental fees
decision
5. Tertiary Education Strategy launch date
6.
Settlement in Healy Legal Dispute a "Vindication"
7. AUT
threat to boycott research assessment exercises
STUDENT
SUMMER JOBS HELP TO CONTINUE
This month's Budget
includes extra money to help tertiary students into skilled
work with businesses during the summer break. The programme
was piloted last year and will be run again next summer,
with refinements. The programme will again operate through
Student Job Search (SJS), which will receive $484,000 to
match students to businesses having problems finding staff
with the appropriate skills.
OECD REPORT A CRACKED RECORD
ON TERTIARY EDUCATION
While the Minister of Finance sees
the recently-released OECD report as a tick of approval for
current government economic policy, its comments on the
tertiary education sector are stuck in the free-market
groove. For example, it supports separating teaching and
research, and equal treatment for private training
establishments, commenting: "The government is considering
changes to funding arrangements for the sector, including
separating funding streams for tuition and research, making
research funding more performance-related and seeking ways
to steer students’ course selections. These moves should
improve the system, but in making any changes it is
important that private and public providers of education be
treated equally." And it also appears to contradict itself
when it comes to the impact of the student loan scheme on
tertiary education participation. It comments at one stage
that the government's "biggest single capital spending
decision" has been to "increase the generosity of the
student loan scheme". It concludes, however, that this is
unlikely to boost tertiary participation, "especially
because funding for private training enterprises has been
restricted.” [A moratorium on new funding is currently in
place – Ed.] Rather, the report says, the move will
"largely benefit" middle-and-higher -income families". But
later it observes: "In the area of tertiary education,
participation has increased dramatically in the past decade,
owing in part to the success of the student loan scheme and
to the growth of publicly-funded private training
enterprises." In either case, no evidence is given to back
up the arguments. "Tertiary Update" trusts that Dr Cullen’s
welcoming of the report does not extend to the comments on
tertiary education. All will be revealed in the Budget on
23 May.
STUDENT LOAN PROPOSALS "SIDE-STEPPING" REAL
ISSUE
NZUSA says a government proposal to reduce access
to the living component of student loans and re-direct
existing funds into private savings schemes to which parents
would contribute are insulting to students and will only
make the current problems worse. The proposals are
contained in a review of the student loan scheme. NZUSA
co-president Andrew Campbell says the proposals "side-step"
the root cause of the student debt crisis: "If Labour really
wants to make a positive change, then it should increase the
current parental income thresholds that haven't been
adjusted in over a decade," he says. And the Alliance
education spokesperson, Liz Gordon has also come out against
the idea of a privatised savings scheme saying it would
reinforce some of the worst inequities created by the
student loan scheme.
THE MESSAGE OF DENTAL FEES DECISION
The Otago Daily Times, in an editorial, says the
landmark high court decision in favour of Otago University
and a group of its dental students "seriously challenges the
thinking that Parliament's decisions on funding can never be
overturned". The paper says the decision rights past
wrongs, pointing out that then minister, Lockwood Smith's
decision to cut dentistry funding so savagely was "so
erroneous that it could only be categorised as irrational".
But it says that while many might have felt it was unfair,
few could have thought it could ever be reversed. "Now it
has," the ODT says, "it is not difficult to see how
scathingly history might judge it, and some other government
decisions on tertiary education, over the past
decade."
TERTIARY EDUCATION STRATEGY LAUNCH DATE
The
government's Tertiary Education Strategy is to be launched
next Tuesday (14 May). It will outline a strategic
direction for the sector, and identify priorities for the
next five years. A full report will be included in next
week's "Tertiary Update". However, the progress of the
Tertiary Education Reform Bill has been delayed, making a
smooth transition to the new Tertiary Education Commission
by 1 July less likely. The delay is because of the
introduction of the government's proposal for a levy on all
institutions that provide education for foreign students.
The Bill will now be reported back to parliament on 20 May.
WORLD WATCH
SETTLEMENT IN HEALY LEGAL DISPUTE A
"VINDICATION"
The University of Toronto has agreed to a
settlement in the highly-publicised case of Dr. David Healy
and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). Dr
Healy initiated legal action last year alleging his contract
had been cancelled over a lecture during which he criticised
the role of pharmaceutical companies in university research.
The Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) says
the settlement is a "complete vindication" for Dr Healy.
AUT THREAT TO BOYCOTT RESEARCH ASSESSMENT EXERCISES
In
Britain, the Association of University Teachers (AUT)
executive is to discuss a call for a boycott of future
Research Assessment Exercises (RAE) unless it is spelt out
in advance how funding money will be allocated. It follows
an outcry from university staff and some MPs over the Higher
Education Funding Council for England's failure to fully
fund the RAE last year. Proponents of the boycott point to
the damaging impact of that RAE on the National Health
Service, where research funding cuts in medical schools will
lead to job losses.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly on Thursdays and
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