AUS Tertiary Update
Misuse of PBRF data has
consequences for funding
The misuse of individual
Performance-Based Research Funding (PBRF) scores potentially
has consequences for an institution’s funding, according to
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary) Steve Maharey.
Speaking recently to the Association of University Staff
(AUS) Council, Mr Maharey said that tertiary institutions
had been written to on more than one occasion warning them
to respect the privacy of PBRF scores.
Letters
subsequently released to AUS by the Tertiary Education
Commission (TEC) stress the need to maintain the
confidentiality of Quality Category Information collected
from staff, and caution against the use of that information
for purposes other than for which it was intended.
In
letters to tertiary institutions, the TEC General Manager,
Ann Clark, says that the PBRF Working Group has stated that
tertiary providers should not use individual staff PBRF
quality scores unless prior permission has been obtained
from the individual concerned. She goes on to say that the
TEC relies “on the internal ethical and policy frameworks of
institutions to ensure the confidentiality of Quality
Category Information, and that it is not used elsewhere or
for unintended purposes.”
Ann Clark says that the
evaluation is “a summative assessment of achievement over
the previous six years and takes no account of current
research activity or the potential future research
contributions of staff members. Neither does the PBRF assess
the contributions to teaching, the wider community or
administrative functions that may be valuable components of
staff performance.”
The comments were echoed by the then
PBRF Implementation Manager, Roger Staples, who wrote that
institutions should be very cautious when drawing
conclusions from the results of the first quality
evaluation, and particularly from the individual
scores.
AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said
that despite the warnings from the Minister and the TEC,
some universities have engaged in behaviour which could
place PBRF money at risk.
Dr Rosenberg said he was
pleased to hear the Associate Minister’s statement that
funding to those institutions which misuse the results may
be at risk. “AUS has seen too much evidence to date of such
caution being ignored by university managers,” he said.
“However, concerns about putting their research funding at
risk could see the adoption of better practices around the
confidentiality and use of the individual PBRF scores. We
would like to see the TEC make it clear to institutions that
research funding is at risk for institutions that break the
rules. The absence of enforcement will reinforce our view
that the next round of the PBRF should not use the same
individually-based methodology.”
Dr Rosenberg said the
TEC’s letters emphasise that PBRF results are unlikely to be
suitable for other purposes, especially any kind of
assessment of the performance of university staff. “AUS
branches have been resisting attempts by some university
managements to use PBRF data for non-PBRF purposes, and to
widen distribution of individual scores, and we will
continue to do so,” he said.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week . . . . . .
1. AUS launches
ejournal
2. University staff take top tertiary-teaching
awards
3. Victoria general staff to vote on new pay
offer
4. Manukau identifies tertiary education
needs
5. A clarification
6. New York students to be
tested on academic skills
AUS launches ejournal
The AUS
has launched an electronic journal, The New Zealand Journal
of Tertiary Education Policy – Nga matauranga hikohiko o
Aotearoa, which is intended to provide a forum within which
issues concerning tertiary education in Aotearoa/New Zealand
can be identified, discussed and debated.
The journal’s
Executive Editor, Neville Blampied, says that since
“Learning for Life”, in 1989, tertiary education in New
Zealand has experienced fifteen years of constant
re-examination and review – the Green paper, the White
paper, the four reports of the Tertiary Education Advisory
Commission – as well as many other policies and proposals.
“Shifts in policies have had major effects on students, on
staff and on the character and operations of tertiary
education institutions themselves, sometimes for the better,
often for the worse,” said Mr Blampied. “Policy development
and implementation have run well ahead of analysis, critique
and evaluation.”
AUS has supported the development of
the new journal because it is committed to improving and
sustaining a quality higher education sector for New
Zealand, and because part of its mission is to help
formulate policy and assist union members in their role as
critic and conscience of society.
The first issue of the
Journal features articles by former AUS National President,
Dr Grant Duncan, The Tertiary Education Strategy and the
will to know, and an investigation of university research by
Auckland University of Technology academic, Keith Rankin,
entitled Where Gift and Market Economics Meet.
The next
issue will be published in the last quarter of 2004, and is
planned to have a focus on the Performance-Based Research
Fund and its future implications and effects.
The
journal, with full editorial details, can now be viewed on
line at:
www.aus.ac.nz/publications/Ejournal/Titlepage_issue1.htm
University
staff take top tertiary-teaching awards
University staff
have taken the top awards at the 2004 Tertiary Teaching
Excellence Awards ceremony held at Parliament last night. Dr
Gary Bold, a physics lecturer at the University of Auckland,
received the Prime Minister’s Supreme Award worth $30,000 in
prize money. He was one of twelve academics from nine
tertiary institutions presented with the awards designed to
celebrate excellence in tertiary teaching, promote good
teaching practice and enhance career development for
tertiary teachers.
In addition to the Supreme Award,
Sustained Excellence Awards, worth $20,000 each, were
presented to tertiary teachers showing sustained excellence
and excellence in innovation. All seven winners in this
category came from universities. Four other teachers were
presented with Excellence in Innovation Awards.
The Prime
Minister, Helen Clark, said the awards are an important
element of the Government’s aim to enhance the quality of
tertiary education. “These teachers make an important
contribution to New Zealand, and inspire others to lift
their own teaching practice,” she said. “Great teachers
attract students to tertiary education. The group of award
winners selected this year are of a very high calibre and
highlight the strength of the staff at New Zealand’s
tertiary institutions.”
Acting Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary), Margaret Wilson, said the winners were
required to report back to Government on what they had spent
the award money on. She said it was common for recipients to
spend money on new equipment, research and attending
conferences so that they could enhance their knowledge and
find new ways to share it with students.
Supreme Award
winner Dr Bold said that after forty-three years grappling
with university teaching, he finally felt that he was
getting the hang of it.
Victoria general staff to vote on
new pay offer
General (non-academic) staff at Victoria
University of Wellington (VUW) will consider a fresh pay
offer tomorrow, after VUW management increased its salary
offer this week from 2.5 percent plus a one-off payment of
$350, to 3 percent. General staff took strike action and
voted on a campaign of sustained disruption after an initial
pay offer of 2.2 percent was rejected. Staff have been
claiming a 4 percent increase, in line with their academic
colleagues.
Association of University Staff General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, said that the meetings on Friday
would determine whether the offer would go to a formal
ratification ballot.
Informal discussions are continuing
at the University of Otago in an attempt to resolve an
impasse in the negotiation of new collective employment
agreements for academic and general staff. AUS Branch
President, Dr Shef Rogers, said that union and University
representatives met for three and a half hours on Monday and
were continuing to talk in an attempt to secure a
deal.
Manukau identifies tertiary education
needs
Existing tertiary education institutions do not
adequately serve the diverse needs of the City, according to
a report commissioned to examine the possibility of having a
second tertiary institution in Manukau City. The report, A
Review of Tertiary Education Supply and Demand Relevant to
Manukau, which was released this week indicates that the
City can support increased university-level education.
The report was commissioned early last year after moves
by the Manukau City Council to establish a “leading”
university campus in the area. At that time Waikato
University was named as the “preferred provider”, but all
moves were put on hold after the TEC and other providers
entered the debate about who should provide public tertiary
education in the area.
While the new report says that the
population of Manukau is expected to grow by 110,000 over
the next two decades, it also says there are a number of
challenges facing the area. Unemployment rates are high,
with a quarter of the unemployed people under the age of
twenty-five. A quarter of the population has no
qualifications, more than a third have no post-school
qualifications and only 7 percent have a degree.
The
report says, however, that a wide range of education and
training will be needed if Manukau residents are going to be
sufficiently skilled to meet future employment demands.
Current projections reveal there will be more than 40,000
jobs created over the next eight years, of which almost 60
percent will require post-school qualifications. It also
says that while a high proportion of the population may not
be ready for university-level study, the only gap in
tertiary education in Manukau is the absence of a local
university. It remains the largest population centre in New
Zealand without a university.
While the report says that
existing institutions in the wider Auckland region can
absorb some of the expected future demand, a local
university would bring economic benefits to the City,
provide easier access for local students and may alleviate
perceptions that existing universities in the region do not
adequately cater for Maori and Pasifika students.
The
Council is to organize a forum for stakeholders later in the
year, following which any decisions will be made.
A
clarification
In last week’s Tertiary Update we stated
that a report, which showed the amount of money the
Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology (CPIT)
spent on incentives for people enrolling in its Cool IT
computer courses, was written by the Tertiary Education
Commission (TEC). The TEC has advised that the report was,
in fact, written by CPIT for the Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary).
Worldwatch
New York students to
be tested on academic skills
The State University of New
York will require each of its sixty-four campuses to
regularly test a representative portion of its undergraduate
students.
The proposal calls on the system’s four-year
institutions and two-year colleges to test 20 percent of
their undergraduates every three years to measure their
writing, critical-thinking and quantitative skills. The
testing is scheduled to begin in the autumn of 2006.
Results of the new tests would be used to track how well
individual campuses meet the University’s educational
standards, and how much the campuses are able to improve
their instruction over time. The results also would be used
to identify effective teaching practices that might be
shared across the system.
The tests would not be used to
establish requirements for students to graduate or to enter
specific university programmes, officials added. Nor, they
said, are the tests being created for use in any kind of
performance-based budgeting process.
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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