AUS Tertiary Update
Separate research fund for
polytechs?
Concern that the Performance Based Research
Fund (PBRF) may result in less money and a diminished status
for polytechnics has resulted in the development of a
proposal for a separate performance-based research fund
exclusively for them.
Association of Polytechnics of New
Zealand Director, Jim Doyle, said polytechnics did not want
to participate in the PBRF as it currently stood, and that
an alternative fund could reward polytechnics not only for
conducting applied research connected to the needs of
industry, but also by using other criteria such as
connections with industry. Polytechnics claim that the PBRF
is designed to reward research using university measures and
would force polytechnics to behave like
universities.
Education Review reports that Associate
Education Minister, Steve Maharey, has said that while he is
willing to discuss the Polytechnics’ concerns he had not
given any approval for work to be done and described talk
about the development of an alternative fund as “unwise,
premature speculation”.
It has been reported, however,
that following discussions with the Association of
Polytechnics, the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) and
the Ministry of Education are preparing a paper on the
subject for the Associate Minister. Mr. Doyle said that
while a proposal could be developed soon it would be
unlikely to be ready for implementation in 2004.
AUS
National President, Dr. Bill Rosenberg, expressed a number
of concerns with the prospect of another research fund,
saying that the establishment of the PBRF acknowledged the
significant additional costs faced by universities running
research programmes, including applied research, and the
infrastructure to maintain them. He said that creating
another new fund would defeat the government’s intention of
differentiating the sector and would leave universities
exposed to the high compliance costs of the PBRF with little
extra funding to show for it.
Dr Rosenberg also pointed
out that fragmentation of the fund would further highlight
the problems raised by having to share the resource with
private training establishments.
It is understood the New
Zealand Vice Chancellors’ Committee also opposes the
establishment of a separate fund.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week:
1. Mediation over polytechnic
collective
2. Waikato enrolments hit budget
3. Raising
the medical enrolment cap
4. Reclaiming public
education
5. UK research assessment exercise report
released
6. Big pay increase for UNSW general
staff
7. Berlin's students protest at threat of fees
Mediation over polytechnic collective
Lack of progress
in collective agreement negotiations between the Association
of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) and seven polytechnics
has resulted in the parties agreeing to mediation. The
mediation, set down to commence on 12 June, will attempt to
break an impasse which has seen the polytechnics all file
separate claims and state a preference for enterprise
bargaining.
ASTE initially filed for an 8% salary
increases to be delivered over two years, but had
subsequently reduced the claim to 7% in an attempt to make
progress. The polytechnic employers are yet to make a salary
offer, but have claimed a number of “clawbacks”, including
changes to hours of work and leave provisions.
Waikato
enrolments hit budget
Falling domestic enrolments and
uncertainty over international student numbers have combined
to hit Waikato University’s finances. Departments are being
asked to cut expenditure by 2.5% and report on their
financial position by July.
The University’s domestic
enrolments are down to 9502, 4% less than in May last year
and the language institute and foundation studies programme
are predicting large falls in enrolment in the second
semester, mainly due the SARS outbreaks. It is now predicted
that against a budgeted surplus of $1 million the language
institute will run at a loss this year.
Raising the
medical enrolment cap
The Associate Minister if
Education, Steve Maharey, has told an audience at the
Christchurch School of Medicine that the 40 new placements
for medical students, announced recently in the Budget, will
be split evenly between the Universities of Otago and
Auckland. It will increase the number of fully-funded
medical student places from 285 full-time students to 325
per year.
The additional funding will be conditional on
the universities implementing a preferential entry system
for rural students and specific career initiatives in
secondary schools.
Mr. Maharey said that it is hoped that
raising the cap will result in greater numbers of graduates,
and that it will complement other strategies including
better access to GP locum services, improved rosters and,
rural workforce retention funding.
Reclaiming public
education
The Quality Public Education Coalition (QPEC)
has organized a conference entitled Reclaiming Public
Education, to be held at Massey University (Hokowhitu site)
between 11 and 13 July. Key presenters will include US
Professor Michael Apple, a renowned international authority
on the politics of education, Professors Jane Kelsey and
Helen May, and Alliance political party leader, Laila
Harre.
Further information, including registration
details, can be found at: www.qpec.org.nz
Worldwatch
UK
research assessment exercise report released
As the PBRF
gets underway in NZ, the just released report of the review
of the UK Research Assessment Exercise [RAE] will be of
interest to many in the sector. The report's recommendations
are presented as a radical overhaul, but not a wholesale
rejection of the principles, of the RAE. Like the PBRF, the
RAE is largely based on a peer review process - however,
there are some significant differences and interested
parties in NZ will be studying the lengthy report to gauge
its significance for developments here. AUS notes, for
example, that while the PBRF is significantly based on
individual assessment, that the report recommends that:
'Research assessment should remain an assessment of
institutional research quality within a subject area, rather
than a review of the performance of individuals'.
The UK
Association of University Teachers (AUT) has criticised the
report saying that it could split the existing university
system and lead to a two-tier sector. It recommends that:
one third of English universities should be taken out of the
main assessment process for research cash; those doing most
research should be scrutinised more rigorously; and the 40
institutions whose research budgets amount to 2 per cent of
overall grants, should be assessed separately. At the same
time, the AUT General Secretary, Sally Hunt said that,
'However, we're glad [the report] has taken on board a
number of criticisms we made about the current RAE, for
example the way it only rewards certain types of
publications. We also welcome the emphasis on improving
equal opportunities and the development of young
researchers.'
The UK RAE report can be found on:
http://www.ra-review.ac.uk/reports/roberts.asp
Big pay
increase for UNSW general staff
General staff at
Australia’s University of New South Wales stand to pick up
sizeable pay increases with the settlement of their
collective employment agreement.
The Agreement provides a
package of pay increases worth between 15% and 25% with an
average increase of 18%.A ballot of staff is expected to
formally approve the Agreement during June.
NTEU General
Secretary Grahame McCulloch said “General staff will be
particularly pleased about this Agreement. As well as the
pay increases, it provides increased job security, a
commitment by the university to maintain the size of the
workforce, better paid parental leave and other
family-friendly improvements. Casual staff will benefit from
a 20% pay rise and many will now be able to convert to
permanent jobs.
“The pay outcome matches the offers
already made to academics, and we are confident of reaching
an early agreement with the university covering academic
staff.”
Berlin's students protest at threat of fees
Thousands of students and staff from Berlin's three
universities and numerous art colleges protested last week
against threatened €200 million (£143 million) educational
budget cuts over the next four years. The crisis is so bad
that the Humboldt University has decided not to admit any
new students in the next academic year; the two others are
limiting their intake to the very top percentage of
applicants. Berlin's 120,000 students currently pay no fees,
just a €150 administration fee per semester that gives them
free travel on all city transport. Until now, the
government's Social Democrat/Green coalition has resisted
calls to put a price on education.
(Guardian)
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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