AUS Tertiary Update
Step Up scholarships
announced
Around 500 students will be eligible next year
for new Step Up tertiary scholarships as part of the move to
improve participation by low income people in tertiary
education and the retention of skilled graduates in New
Zealand.
The bonded scholarships scheme, worth as much
as $43,000 over 6 years for some students, was announced
today by Associate Education Minister (Tertiary), Steve
Maharey, and Health Minister Annette King.
The Step Up
scholarships are being piloted with low-income students
studying human and animal health degrees in 2004. Those who
receive a scholarship will pay a flat fee of $2,000
irrespective of their chosen course, with the scholarship
paying the remainder of the tuition fee. The scholarships
will be awarded for the full duration of the degree
programme, subject to satisfactory academic progression.
Students receiving a Step Up scholarship will be required to
work and remain in New Zealand for up to four years after
graduation.
It is expected that around 500 scholarships
will be awarded in 2004, with funding of $15.9 million being
invested in the scheme over the next four years.
Steve
Maharey said the Step Up scholarships are designed to ensure
that people from low-income backgrounds are not deterred by
cost from beginning tertiary study. They will be available
to those students eligible for a student allowance who are
about to leave school or within a year after leaving school
and will be awarded on grounds of academic merit.
“These
scholarships will result in reduced levels of student debt
for health professionals, a factor that has been identified
as an important one in the decision of New Zealanders to
head overseas after qualifying,” Annette King said.
AUS
National President, Dr Bill Rosenberg said he welcomed the
introduction of the scholarships which were an important
move in improving access for students from low income
families into high cost university courses such as medicine.
He said the retention of qualified health professionals in
New Zealand was an important issue being addressed through
health workforce planning and he expected similar planning
to occur with the recently announced tertiary sector
workforce review.
Dr Rosenberg also said that while
scholarships would (rightly) assist a number of individual
students, the overall levels of funding to Universities
needed to be lifted significantly to ensure that students
continued to receive a high quality of education in the long
term.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Waikato
expansion moves frustrated
2. Research consultation
proposal rejected
3. Lincoln, Massey talks
resume
4. Degree online for global
university
5. Cambridge to extend rights to academic
research
6. UK battle to stave off fees defeat
Waikato
expansion moves frustrated
Several attempts this year by
Waikato University to expand into new centres have been
frustrated by delays and changes of mind by potential
partners. In the latest move, the Auckland University of
Technology (AUT) has pulled out of talks about a possible
merger.
AUT Chancellor Wyn Hoadley said that after
spending the past six weeks considering the academic and
business case for a merger, the Council had decided it was
not compelling enough to come ahead of the appointment of a
new Vice Chancellor. “We know from the investigative process
we have worked through that to remain on our own path of
consolidation and individual development is a strong and a
viable one. We have confidence in our own capacity to grow
and succeed into the future,” she said. “The AUT Council now
intends to proceed with the appointment process of a new
Vice-Chancellor prior to Christmas”.
Waikato
University’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould, said he
remains open to holding further discussions with AUT about a
closer relationship.
An earlier proposal in March by the
Manukau City Council, to establish a “leading university
campus” in the city with Waikato as the “preferred
provider”, was delayed after competing proposals by other
tertiary providers led the Council to seek advice from the
Tertiary Education Commission. It is unlikely there will be
a decision until early next year after the completion of a
$30,000 study to identify the tertiary education needs of
the city.
Another plan, by the Lake Taupo Development
Company to develop a tertiary education facility in Taupo,
into which Waikato University would provide the teaching
staff, has been delayed until a strategic review of Taupo’s
airport is completed. It was proposed to build the facility
on a leased 50 hectare block of Council-owned land near the
airport, but submissions to the Council have questioned both
the lease and the impact it would have on airport
development.
Waikato remains in discussion with the Bay
of Plenty Polytechnic about an “integrated relationship” in
Tauranga.
Research consultation proposal rejected
Plans
at the University of Otago to introduce a requirement for
consultation with Maori over research failed to get support
after a passionate debate at the University Council meeting
this week. The recommendation, which had come from the
University’s senate, was referred back for further
consideration.
Under the proposal any planned research
would be scrutinised by a Maori research facilitator. If the
facilitator decided detailed consultation was needed a Ngai
Tahu committee would comment on the plan before it was
approved by the University. Ngai Tahu would not have the
right to stop research it did not approve.
Vice
Chancellor, Dr Graeme Fogelberg, said the recommendation had
been supported overwhelmingly by senate, a senior academic
advisory board where it had been fully discussed. However
one staff representative on Council attempted to confine the
consultation to topics directly involving Maori, while
another said there was no legal obligation for the
University to consult.
In response to claims that such
consultation would curb academic freedom, Edward Ellison, a
Council member and Te Rununga O Ngai Tahu deputy chairman,
said Ngai Tahu wanted to add value to the research process
and strongly supported academic freedom.
Lincoln, Massey
talks resume
Lincoln and Massey University have resumed
discussions about a merger or alignment. A discussion paper
has been released outlining the rationale for talks and the
benefits both institutions see in collaborating in
scientific areas. The two universities have previously held
informal talks but they had not progressed after what was
described by Lincoln’s Vice-Chancellor, Dr Frank Wood, as
“unfortunate speculation”. Dr Wood told the University
Council this week that the universities had resumed
discussion, but stressed that these were still
informal.
Dr Wood said that any merger would require the
support of government and industry, and would require
financial support similar to that obtained for the Auckland
School of Business.
Associate Education Minister
(Tertiary), Steve Maharey, welcomed the talks and said
government was keen to encourage the kind of partnership
envisaged.
Worldwatch
Degree online for global
university
Students in India and China are the primary
target of an on-line MBA course being launched by
Universitas 21 Global, a joint venture between Universitas
21 and a US company, Thompson Learning. U21 Global is aimed
at making university education accessible to students unable
to study at traditional universities, with students and
lecturers communicating through email, on-line chat, and
threaded discussions.
Following the establishment of the
on-line MBA, U21 Global hopes to offer a Masters of Business
Information Systems next year.
Universitas 21 is a
network of 17 universities worldwide, part-owned by the
University of Auckland and chaired by its Vice-Chancellor,
Dr John Hood. Auckland University sources say that New
Zealand students are not a target for the on-line
university, but it was not impossible they could enroll.
Cambridge to extend rights to academic research
Cambridge University will extend the rights to ownership
of intellectual property generated by researchers under
proposals published this week. If accepted by the
university's ruling Regent House, the blueprint could
underpin the generation of billions of pounds worth of
commercially exploitable intellectual rights in coming
decades. The new agreement specifically leaves the ownership
of copyright with the academic - covering books, teaching
materials, databases and even software. While the university
would have the ownership of patents, the proceeds from them
would be shared with academics, and other partners, on a
formula basis or through specific negotiations.
UK battle
to stave off fees defeat
The UK government and
universities will join forces to save Labour's plans for
top-up fees from the growing prospect of defeat this autumn.
Ministers, desperate to build support for £3,000 top-up fees
in the face of a threatened rebellion by Labour
backbenchers, have found natural allies in universities'
leaders, who see higher charges as their only realistic
chance of increased income.
Writing in the Times Higher
Education Supplement, Philip Cowley, an authority on
backbench rebellions, says fee legislation could produce the
government's first parliamentary defeat. In a fight for the
hearts and minds of Labour MPs, ministers and universities
will be competing against the National Union of Students and
trade unions, which will be lobbying backbenchers to vote
against top-up fee legislation due to be introduced in the
autumn.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
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http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz