AUS Tertiary Update
Staff warn about lowering
university degree standards
The Association of University
Staff (AUS) has warned against dropping the legislative
requirement for degrees to be taught by people mainly
engaged in research, saying that such a move would threaten
the quality of New Zealand academic qualifications and the
international reputation of New Zealand degrees.
The
warning comes after the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC)
yesterday announced a review of the future roles of tertiary
education organisations (TEOs) in New Zealand. A
consultation paper, also released yesterday, provides a
number of ideas the TEC considers would help TEOs align with
the Government’s objectives for the tertiary education
sector. It includes questioning whether all degrees should
be underpinned by research and asks whether the legislative
requirement that all degrees must be taught mainly by people
engaged in research should be revisited.
Responding to
TECs proposal, AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said
that research-informed teaching is vital for undergraduate
degrees. “It is what distinguishes degrees from other
tertiary qualifications,” he said. “Any suggestion that
standards for degree teaching should be lowered contradicts
the Government’s intention to strengthen New Zealand’s
academic reputation.”
“The results of the recent
Performance-Based Research Funding (PBRF) assessment clearly
showed that quality research in this country’s education
institutions was limited to universities,” said Dr
Rosenberg. “Poor PBRF results from the non-university
institutions which teach degrees must not be used to justify
lowering standards,” he said.
Despite concerns about the
future of degree teaching, Dr Rosenberg said the proposed
review of the future roles of TEOs was welcome. “The
competitive market system in education has failed, and it is
increasingly clear that universities have certain roles that
cannot and should not be filled by other education
providers,” he said. “We agree there is a need for greater
differentiation among tertiary institutions. Each has a
unique role and can complement, rather than compete against,
the others.”
“AUS believes that the special role of
universities, particularly in postgraduate research, needs
not only to be recognized, but also adequately funded,” said
Dr Rosenberg.
Other issues raised in the consultation
paper include a proposal that each university should have a
significant proportion of its total students in research
postgraduate programmes; determining where sub-degree
provision should be taught; examining the role of
polytechnics; asking whether colleges of education should
have a closer integration with universities; and
investigating the concept of “dual sector” tertiary
organisations.
The opportunity to comment on the
proposals closes on 20 August. The paper is on the TEC
website: www.tec.govt.nz
Also in Tertiary Update this week
. . .
1. Allegations over integrity of PBRF
scores
2. $40 million international education
package
3. CPIT under attack
4. Salary offers to go to
vote
5. Australian students say funding fails the
test
6. £100m backpay as AUT agrees deal
Allegations
over integrity of PBRF scores
Controversy continues to
dog the release of the TEC’s report on the Performance-Based
Research Fund, this time with allegations that some TEOs may
have deliberately left poorly-performing staff out of the
assessment exercise.
In a letter to staff following the
release of the results, Massey Vice-Chancellor Judith
Kinnear pointed to variability among institutions in the
percentage of academic staff included in the PBRF
assessment. “They range,” she wrote, “from a high of 93.1
percent for Victoria University to a low 45.2 percent in the
case of Canterbury.” The clear inference was that some
institutions excluded PBRF-eligible staff with weak research
records in the interests of boosting their quality scores.
Fewer “R” ratings provide a higher overall institutional
score and, with that, a higher share of funding.
In a
written statement to Tertiary Update, the TEC has said that
a number of public statements have been made which cast
doubt on whether all participating organisations have
complied with the rules. “Such comments not merely call into
question the integrity and professionalism of those charged
with administering the PBRF in TEOs, but also challenge the
results of the staff eligibility audit undertaken by the
Ministry of Education,” wrote the TEC. “They equally have
the potential to undermine the confidence of the tertiary
sector, and the wider public, in the integrity of the
results of the 2003 Quality Evaluations.”
The TEC has
said that the data used by Massey University for its
analysis was not reliable for assessing PBRF compliance. It
has also concluded that no evidence had been found, or
brought to its attention, which suggested that there had
been systematic or widespread non-compliance with the staff
eligibility guidelines.
University of Canterbury
Vice-Chancellor Professor Roy Sharp said he was disappointed
that Canterbury's excellent research-quality rating in the
PBRF had been called into question. The 45.2% participation
figure given for Canterbury in the letter to Massey
University staff was clearly wrong and based on incorrect
assumptions. The correct figure for Canterbury is over 90%.
Professor Sharp said it was also wrong to think that
avoiding submitting portfolios for all eligible academic
staff would benefit an institution. Instead those staff
would have been counted as research-inactive, thus lowering
the institution's quality rating.
$40 million
international education package
In the first of his
pre-Budget announcements, Minister of Education Trevor
Mallard has announced a $40 million package designed to
bolster New Zealand’s international education image, and to
attract overseas students and staff.
Announcing the
package, Mr Mallard said it was “critically important” that
New Zealand has a strong international dimension to its
education system. “Exposure to overseas thinking raises
education standards and international exchanges provide our
own students with a much more diverse range of cultural
experiences than they might otherwise get,” he said.
Main
features of the new package include establishing up to four
education counsellors to work in key markets overseas; up to
200 scholarships to be offered to top international students
by 2007; awards for teachers, students, and researchers to
study overseas; innovation funding to build capacity; and
promotion and marketing of an “NZInc-type” brand for
international education services.
Mr Mallard said the
package represented a five-fold increase in government
spending on international education and recognised the
importance of international education, both socially and
economically, to New Zealand.
The $40 million package
has been welcomed by the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee which says the package represents a shift away
from a strictly commercial approach through industry to an
emphasis on international diplomacy, scholarships,
innovation, and promotion.
The Budget is due to be
delivered on Thursday 27 May.
CPIT under attack
The
Christchurch Polytechnic (CPIT) has been under something of
a sustained attack this week by both The Press and National
Party education spokesperson Bill English. Mr English has
claimed that CPIT received more than $10 million, as part of
the Government’s community education funding, for enrolling
96,000 students in community education courses last year,
including 18,000 in a basic computer skills course called
Cool IT. He said that government funding for community
education courses ballooned from 16 million in 2002 to what
is expected to be a final figure of $115 million for 2003,
funding he says has “just been hosed away.”
Mr English
has also criticised the CPIT for failing to publish annual
reports in the last two years, saying that the failure to
provide any record of its operations or use of public money
was in breach of the Education Act and “an absolute failure
of accountability.”
In an editorial comment, The Press
described there being “the whiff of something rotten down
Madras Street, where the CPIT is based.” It says that after
accusations that CPIT had milked the community education
system with its Cool IT programme, it transpires that CPIT’s
Development Manager, former Christchurch Mayor Vicky Buck,
is a director of the computer software company with which
CPIT is in a joint venture to provide the computer
courses.
The Press also alleges that although CPIT’s
Chief Executive has been given extended sick leave due to
burn-out, “in a bizarre twist he was evidently well enough
to go on a polytechnic business trip to China.”
CPIT
Acting Chief Executive Dean Snelling has rejected any claims
of impropriety, saying the CPIT had not received any money
that was outside the Ministry of Education’s guidelines for
community education. He said he was awaiting an Audit New
Zealand report on the Cool IT course.
In response to
criticism of the failure to provide annual reports, Mr
Snelling accused Mr English of politicking. He said the 2003
annual report had been completed and was due out soon, and
the 2002 report had been held up over the status of two
charitable trusts.
Salary offers to go to
vote
Following discussions between AUS and university
employers, several universities have amended their offers to
staff in an attempt to settle new collective employment
agreements. This follows the decision to defer national
bargaining, reported last week.
Lincoln University
management yesterday increased its salary offer to 3.0%,
from 2.6%, effective from 1 March. Massey University has
amended its general staff offer to a 3% salary increase,
backdated to 1 April. The amended position is the same as
that made to academic staff and removes what had been a
differential offer. The University of Canterbury has advised
that its salary offer of 3.5% will be backdated to 1 May if
accepted.
Ratification meetings will be held at Auckland,
Waikato, Massey, Canterbury, and Lincoln next
week.
Victoria academic staff will also vote on their
offer. Negotiations are continuing for general staff at
Victoria and for both general and academic staff at
Otago.
Worldwatch
Australian students say funding fails
the test
After months of violent protests over rising
tuition fees, the Australian student movement opted for
peaceful methods this week to oppose the Budget, which they
say short-changes the universities.
The Government
allocated $2.6 billion for universities over five years,
including funding for 34,000 new places, but students say
tertiary education had already suffered major cuts in
funding.
The biggest protests were in Melbourne, where
about 250 students marched through the city with a giant
pink pig sporting John Howard's face and chanted “Good for
the rich, bad for the poor.”
At least fifty police
protected office buildings and university campuses in the
city but the students remained peaceful. Protest rallies
were also held in Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, and Canberra.
National Union of Students Education Officer Paul Coats
said the Budget was bad for students. “They haven't given
the universities enough funding, so the universities have
put up fees and students are paying the price. Nothing has
changed that in this budget,” he said.
TAFE students
also hit out at the Budget, saying they had been ignored and
given no funding increases.
This would mean up to 50,000
TAFE students would miss out on a course next year, the
protesters said.
£100m backpay as AUT agrees deal
University academic staff in the United Kingdom will
receive well over £100 million in backpay following the
Association of University Teachers’ (AUT) vote to accept
their pay offer.
More than 84 per cent of union members
voted to accept the improved pay offer. Academic staff will
have the increase backdated to August 1 2003.
The rise
is 3.44 per cent for last year and 3 per cent for 2004. The
AUT estimates this could mean up to £120 million in back
pay.
More than 22,000 AUT members, just over half the
union's membership, voted in the three-week ballot.
The
Union said the improved offer removed the threat of losses
of career earnings and protected the pay and grading link
between academic and related staff. It expected workers at
the bottom end of pay scales in particular to receive
significant pay rises.
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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