AUS Tertiary Update
Performance-based teaching
funding a step closer
The introduction of
performance-based teaching funding has moved a step closer
with the release of a report from the Technical Working
Group on the Introduction of a Performance Element to
Tertiary Education Funding to Government. It recommends a
package of performance indicators and measures which are
intended to be used to allocate up to 5% of tuition funding
according to provider performance, with a view to enhancing
quality in terms of educational gains by learners.
The
Technical Working Group has developed a set of indicators
which it says provide an “acceptable proxy for educational
gain by learners”. This includes: course retention rates
above 75%; successful courses completion rate above 60%; and
scores from Graduate Experience Questionnaire showing at
least 90% of programmes with positive mean score on all
scales. All graduates will be surveyed to measure their
experience in their particular programme of learning, with
factors to include clarity of teaching, clarity of goals and
standard, assessment of generic skills, and overall
satisfaction.
The Associate Minister of Education
(Tertiary), Steve Maharey, has said he intends to expose the
proposal to scrutiny across the sector and for there to be a
full consultation process. “That will involve a sector
representative group whose job it will be to validate the
proposal and to provide advice on other aspects of the
performance component,” he said. “There will be a parallel
process of full consultation by officials from the Ministry
and the TEC, before the proposal is put to ministers”.
Mr
Maharey said that it is intended to trial the performance
indicators in 2004, but that the first full year of data
collection will be in 2005. “It may be possible to tie in a
small element of funding in 2006 to the information gathered
in 2004, provided it is sufficiently robust,” he
said.
AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said that
while the matter was yet to be discussed by the AUS Council,
he believed there should be outright opposition to
performance-based funding being derived from the existing
funding which was, in itself, already inadequate. He
described it as a punitive approach.
Dr Rosenberg noted
that a wide range of relevant literature indicates the use
of such funding in the education sector is problematic. He
said that the performance indicators recommended by the
Taskforce were open to manipulation, and that a more
positive approach would be to reward developments that
contribute to better student learning such as good staff
development, sufficient tutorials and labs, and good quality
facilities.
The full report and other information can be
found at: www.minedu.govt.nz/goto/performanceelement
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Wananga to be
sued
2. Students: staff voice concern to
Minister
3. National bargaining to
resume
4. Polytechnic union looks to settle national
deal
5. UK higher education shutdown looms
6. American
teachers back Kerry for Democratic selection
Wananga may
be sued
It is understood that a claim will be filed later
this week by Carich receivers, KPMG, against Te Wananga o
Aotearoa over an alleged breach of a joint venture agreement
under which Carich was to train 2500 Wananga students.
Carich Computer Training was one of two private training
establishments which collapsed late last year, owing around
$5 million and leaving thousands of students stranded.
A
KMPG report says that the Wananga pulled out of a deal
leaving Carich short of an expected income of about $1.2
million. Carich receiver, Kerryn Downey is reported by the
Dominion Post saying that the contract was a significant
factor in Carich’s collapse.
Te Wananga o Aotearoa failed
to return a call from Tertiary Update.
The receiver has
also met with the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) to
discuss outstanding funding, argued by Carich to be worth
more than $1 million. A claim of around $750,000 is reported
to have been lodged.
Students: staff voice concern to
Minister
The New Zealand University Students’ Association
(NZUSA) has joined with AUS to write to the Associate
Minister of Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey, expressing
concerns about comments made by Tertiary Education
Commission (TEC) Chair, Dr Andrew West. His comments,
reported in Tertiary Update last week, encouraged students
to carefully consider a path which would lead them to
vocational rather than academic study.
NZUSA
Co-Presidents Fleur Fitzsimons and Andrew Kirton and AUS
National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said that they were
concerned that Dr West’s statement was ill conceived and
fell outside the brief of the TEC. “We believe that the role
of the TEC should be encouraging people into tertiary
education (in all its forms), not discouraging them from
certain aspects of it,” they wrote.
“Despite following
the work of the TEC, none of us have seen evidence of any
discussion or research which shows that there are too many
people with degrees in New Zealand or that increased
enrolments at degree level are responsible for skill
shortages in any other areas”.
Ms Fitzsimons said that
while there has been exhaustive analysis of the tertiary
sector in recent years, none of it points to students
foregoing degree study to enter trades training as the
solution to any skill shortages. “This certainly does
nothing to address shortages in professions where degrees
are a pre-requisite,” she said.
Dr Rosenberg said NZUSA
and AUS were seeking clarification from the Minister whether
Dr West’s statement reflected government policies, and
whether he saw such statements as being part of the brief of
the TEC.
National bargaining to resume
National
employment agreement negotiations between university unions
and employers will resume in Wellington on Wednesday next
week. Negotiations were adjourned late last year after the
parties failed to find sufficient common ground on an
employers’ proposal to renew enterprise agreements on an
interim basis to allow for the development of a joint “white
paper” on university funding.
University employers made
salary offers of between around 2% and 2.8% for between 12
and 15 months during which time independent research on
university funding would be carried out. Most then
stipulated that the research project was contingent on
enterprise bargaining, requiring the unions to back away
from national bargaining for 2004 employment
agreements.
AUS advocate Jeff Rowe said that while union
members had authorised the bargaining team to explore the
possibility of an interim deal, the proposed increases were
insufficient to persuade university staff that their
employers were genuine in trying to resolve long-term salary
concerns. “There is no logical reason why research on
university funding is dependent on site-bargaining. We
cannot see any logical reason that the research cannot
proceed, and we remain willing to work on a collaborative
basis to address funding issues,” he said.
University
employers have advised that their initial proposals for
negotiation, totalling more than 171 claims, are now subject
to negotiation.
Polytechnic union looks to settle national
deal
Union members in six polytechnics will vote next
week on a new multi-employer collective employment agreement
in what has been described by Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education (ASTE) National President, Lloyd Woods,
as a significant settlement for the sector.
The proposed
agreement will cover staff at six polytechnics, UNITEC,
Waikato Institute of Technology, Northland Polytechnic,
Whitireia Community Polytechnic, the Western Institute of
Technology at Taranaki, and Bay of Plenty Polytechnic, and
comes after sixteen months of planning and negotiation.
Mr. Woods said that the negotiation process had been
long and complex with twenty-three days face-to-face
negotiation and several days of strike action, and involving
the assistance of an industrial mediator. He said the new
agreement would provide standardised conditions of
employment, and would set benchmarks for the sector.
If
settled, staff covered by the new agreement will receive pay
increases of between 3% and 5.5% over two years from 2 March
2003.
Worldwatch
Higher education shutdown
looms
Leaders of the Association of University Teachers
(AUT) and National Union of Students (NUS) are planning a
week of strike action in the United Kingdom later this month
in protest at top-up fees and plans to modernise lecturers'
pay. The campaign will include a shutdown of all UK campuses
on 25 February, with lecturers and students mounting pickets
to stop colleagues taking or going into lectures. The AUT
will make a final decision over the strikes next week, when
it receives results of a nationwide ballot.
The NUS
announced its plans on Tuesday this week. They include
demonstrations in support of the lecturers' pay dispute in
Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, as well as walkouts
over top-up fees, which will only affect English
universities.
More than 50,000 university staff are
currently being balloted on action over the pay and salary
grading offer made by university employers in negotiations
which broke down before Christmas. AUT Deputy General
Secretary Malcolm Keight said that the current offer would
lead to many lecturers losing £6,000 over eight years,
researchers losing £17,000 over nine years, and senior
support staff losing £47,000 over 21 years. “The package
would also lead to localised pay bargaining, which would
result in unequal pay for similar work and have a
detrimental effect on recruitment and staff retention across
the country,” he said.
Figures published this week showed
that 65% of students nationwide say they support the staff
action.
American teachers back Kerry for Democratic
selection
The Executive Council of the American
Federation of Teachers (AFT), which represents 1.3 million
US teachers including higher education and academic staff,
yesterday endorsed Senator John Kerry for the Democratic
nomination for President, saying that his vision and record
offer leadership that will enable all citizens to achieve
the American dream and keep the nation strong and
secure.
“Senator John Kerry has demonstrated through a
long and distinguished career of public service that he will
be a strong voice for all Americans, and that he has the
knowledge, background and ability to move this nation
forward,” said AFT President Sandra Feldman.
In
endorsing Senator Kerry, the union concluded that he is best
equipped to develop and defend policies that are priorities
for its members and the nation, from better healthcare to
increased investment in public services and the workers who
provide them, and to champion the right of employees to form
unions and bargain collectively.
Feldman said that
Senator Kerry would fight to maintain equal opportunities in
higher education and to make college more affordable for
all.
The AFT endorsement comes after a vote by its
Executive Council and follows a deliberative process that
included responses from the candidates to an AFT
questionnaire on the issues, an analysis of the candidates’
records and positions, extensive discussions with state and
local leaders, and a number of surveys of the AFT
membership.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
issues are archived on the AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz