AUS Tertiary Update
Auckland’s University and College of Education to merge
A
proposed merger between the University of Auckland and the
Auckland College of Education has been given the green
light, and will go ahead from 1 September. Announcing the
merger yesterday, the Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard,
said it would provide clear education benefits, which would
flow on to schools.
“By combining Auckland University’s
research focus with the College’s professional practice
focus we will be able to train high quality teachers that
are better suited to New Zealand’s needs than can be trained
by either institution operating separately,” said Mr
Mallard.
The University and College have been assessing
options for greater collaboration since 2002, culminating in
a joint merger proposal to Government in October 2003. It is
expected that the combined institution will have a total
roll of over 30,000 students.
According to the
Government, the merger will build the professional capacity
of teachers to meet national educational priorities and
support high-quality educational leadership; create a
world-class centre for teacher education research which will
underpin and support educational policy and development; and
produce graduates with the research, subject expertise and
educational understandings to enable them to teach in ways
that will reduce the current disparities in educational
achievement.
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary),
Steve Maharey, said there are substantial benefits to the
College partnering with a research-led institution such as
the University of Auckland. “For example, the business case
submitted by the merger partners outlines plans to develop a
world-class institute with a view to becoming a centre of
excellence that will make a significant impact on
educational policy and practice,” he said. “Post merger, the
University plans to invest the merger’s efficiency gains
into more research and more scholarship.”
The College’s
Epsom site will become the primary home for the new Faculty
of Education, but it will retain current outlying campuses
at Kaikohe and Whangerei, and the University’s programmes at
the Manukau Institute of Technology.
The University
intends to employ all of the College staff on the terms and
conditions of employment existing at the point of
merger.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Four PBRF
complaints upheld
2. Wananga registers university
name
3. Students intensify pressure over loans and
debt
4. Six-figure bill for VCs’ farewells
5. Landmark
settlement at UTS
6. Army OK to defend lab
Four PBRF
complaints upheld
An update on the Performance-Based
Research Fund (PBRF), released this week, shows that four
from a total of forty-one complaints about the PBRF process
have been upheld by the Tertiary Education Commission
(TEC).
The complaints, received from eight tertiary
education organisations (TEOs), were made under the
categories of: consideration of nominated research outputs
by the panels; transfers of evidence portfolios between
panels; panel expertise and specialist advice; data entry
errors; errors in the assessment process; and application of
special circumstances.
One of the complaints which was
upheld was the assigning of a wrong Quality Category to a
researcher because of a data-entry error. As a result of
this complaint, the TEC has checked all the data-entry. No
other details of the complaints have been released, but the
Association of University Staff (AUS) has written to the TEC
to ascertain whether checking data-entry information has
revealed any other errors.
The process for resolving
complaints involved an initial investigation by the PBRF
team, a review by the TEC General Manager, a further review
by two external reviewers and then a formal response to the
TEO concerned.
AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg
said that the grounds for complaint were extremely limited.
They had to be made by the institution rather than the
individual, and could only be related to administrative or
procedural errors. He also said it was a concern that
data-checking hadn’t taken place as a matter of course, and
it shouldn’t have taken a complaint to ensure that the
results were accurate.
No PBRF rankings of TEOs have
changed as a result of the complaints process.
Wananga
registers university name
Te Wananga o Aotearoa has
registered the name “University of New Zealand Ltd,” and
says a bid for formal university status is on the cards,
according to a report in Education Review. The Wananga’s
website uses the translation “University of New Zealand” to
follow its own name, and its Chief Executive, Rongo Wetere,
said he did not see a great deal of difference between a
wananga and a university.
The use of the term university
is protected under the Education Act, with the
characteristics of a university including “having a
diversity of teaching and research, especially at a higher
level, that maintains, advances, and disseminates knowledge
and develops intellectual independence, and assists the
application of knowledge, develops intellectual
independence, and promotes community learning.” A wananga is
“characterised by teaching and research that maintains,
advances, and disseminates knowledge and develops
intellectual independence, and assists the application of
knowledge regarding ahuatanga Maori (Maori tradition)
according to tikanga Maori (Maori custom).”
Education
Review reports Mr Wetere saying that the Wananga understood
what the Education Act said about the use of the term
university, but was of the view that it was discriminatory.
“We have within our powers the ability to put in place
university degrees as well as cover the whole field of
training from community courses right through to tertiary
courses,” he said. “In terms of what we do there is not much
difference between ourselves and a
university.”
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee Director,
Lindsay Taiaroa, said that there is “all the difference in
the world” between that Wananga and a university. “Most of
the Wananga’s courses were at a low level on the
Qualifications Framework, many of them at secondary school
level, whereas most universities had only about 2 percent of
their courses at sub-degree level,” he said.
While the
Wananga may see similarities with a university, a look at
the Companies Office website reveals a significant number of
companies using the name university in a manner which does
not appear to conform with the Education Act. Among these
are the Auckland-based New Zealand University of Golf, the
Tawa-Linden and Tauranga Universities of the Third Age, the
University of Newlands, the Melbourne University Private
(NZ), and Invercargill’s Southern University of New Zealand.
Another, the University of Tamaki, recently folded with
debts of $112,000 after the Director advised that “projects
embarked upon and high research costs were not viable”.
Students intensify pressure over loans and
debt
Students are intensifying the pressure in their
campaign on student debt and loans in the lead-up to the
2005 general election. Yesterday, students with over $30,000
student debt, along with student leaders, presented a
petition with more than 35,000 signatures to Parliament’s
Education and Science Select Committee calling on Government
to introduce a living allowance for all students.
New
Zealand University Students’ Association (NZUSA)
Co-President, Fleur Fitzsimons, said the petition sends a
very clear message to all political parties that a living
allowance for all students is the next step in dealing with
the student debt crisis.
Earlier in the week, a report
was released which said that student debt is putting
borrowers off having babies and shutting them out of home
ownership. The report, The Wealth of a Nation, contains a
number of stories about the negative effects that student
debt has on their lives. “Student debt is acting as a
contraceptive at the very time when young people are looking
to settle down and start families,” claimed Ms Fitzsimons.
“The report backs up research conducted by NZUSA on nurses
and teachers which shows that student debt is a barrier to
borrowers forming families.”
Meanwhile, students are
vowing to continue a discrimination case with the Human
Rights Commission against the student loan scheme, following
a Crown Law opinion to Government which says that the scheme
is not discriminatory and that women are not economically
disadvantaged, despite their longer loan repayment times.
Students will write a formal response to Crown Law’s
opinion, and will then engage in mediation with the Ministry
of Education and Crown Law, expected to be in a few
weeks.
Student debt was $6.2 billion at March 2004, and
Treasury predicts it will hit $10 billion in the next five
years. The average student loan is
$14,559.
Worldwatch
Six-figure bill for VCs’
farewells
Queensland’s Auditor General is reported to
have “fired a salvo” at the Queensland University of
Technology (QUT) and the University of Southern Queensland
(USQ) for running up more than $A118,000 last year on
dinners and farewell gifts to farewell their
vice-chancellors.
An audit report reveals that QUT paid
$A53,000 for a dinner for long-serving Vice-Chancellor
Professor Denis Gibson, and USQ spent $A41,000 on dinner
functions for out-going Vice-Chancellor Professor Peter
Swannell. Each also received art works valued at more than
$21,000. QUT was “ticked off” by the Auditor for presenting
Professor Gibson with a video costing $A16,200 to make and
featuring his farewell events.
The Auditor says the
spending could be considered excessive and wants tighter
guidelines adopted for entertainment expenses which must be
approved by the universities’ councils. Queensland’s
Education Minister has sought assurances from the
chancellors at the State’s six other public universities
that spending on entertainment is maintained at a
“reasonable level”, and has asked USQ and QUT to advise her
on strategies they plan to implement to avoid the same thing
happening again.
Landmark settlement at UTS
The
Australian Industrial Relations Commission this week
certified a new employment agreement for around 1700
academic staff at the University of Technology in Sydney
(UTS) resulting in a salary increase of 19 percent over
three years and up to 26 weeks paid parental
leave.
Conditions for casual staff have also been
improved to include the immediate implementation of a 23
percent loading. UTS has one of the highest levels of
casualised academic work in the State.
Dr Keiko Yasukawa,
the UTS Branch President of the National Tertiary Education
Union (NTEU), said that the agreement delivered a
competitive salary outcome. “NTEU members were keen to
ensure that the new agreement delivered outcomes which did
not diminish conditions for staff, and improved conditions
for staff who have been disadvantaged due to systemic and
historical reasons,” he said.
Army OK to defend lab
The
British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, has given permission for
the Army to assist Oxford University construct a new animal
research facility after threats made by animal rights
activists to disrupt construction. Mr Blair has said the
Army can be deployed to protect the £18 million project at
Oxford if activists make it impossible for building
contractors to complete the work.
It comes as Oxford
confirmed that the construction company in charge of the
project terminated its contract after a campaign of threats
against its shareholders and attacks on its
suppliers.
The Science Minister, Lord Sainsbury, told the
Times Higher that the Government is determined that the
building would go ahead. “We can’t allow it to be stopped by
this kind of terrorism, and we will make sure it is built,”
he said.
One of the country’s top brain surgeons based at
Oxford said the presence of the Army would be welcomed by
researchers. Professor Tipu Aziz said that the activists
were holding the nation’s health hostage. “It would be crazy
to think how much money has to be spent on security that
could be better spent on better facilities and more
research,” he said.
The British Government said today
that new powers to clamp down on animal rights extremists
would be announced later in the
week.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
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the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz