AUS Tertiary Update
Women, minorities disadvantaged in university research
assessment
Men received “A” ratings four times as often
as their women counterparts under the new Performance-Based
Research Fund (PBRF), according to data just released to the
Association of University Staff (AUS) by the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC). Only 2 percent of women received
an “A” rating, compared to 8 percent of men.
A
demographic analysis of the results shows that women are
much less likely than men to be rated as top researchers,
and are over-represented in the “R” category, which has been
described as research-inactive. Just over 16 percent of
women and 36 percent of men received an “A” or “B” rating,
while 53 percent of women and 31 percent of men received an
“R”. Women researchers received an average quality score of
1.69, whereas the average for men was 3.14 out of a possible
10.
The results reinforce similar data from the United
Kingdom which showed that the female researchers there are
almost twice as likely as males to be designated
“research-inactive”. Research activity is one of the
principal criteria for promotion in universities.
AUS
spokesperson Dr Liz Poole said that the release of the data
confirmed previously expressed concerns that the PBRF
process would discriminate against women who had, for
example, taken parental leave or other breaks in duties to
attend to family responsibilities. “For many women, those
years which are often considered to be potentially the most
productive in terms of research are those which coincide
with them being out of the workforce,” she said. “Where this
occurs it will significantly diminish the assessment results
for women staff, and it is difficult to believe that these
will not have an influence on promotion.”
Dr Poole said
that in order to protect against discrimination, the PBRF
should be changed to assess the research performance of
groups and not the performance of individuals.
The
demographic data also highlight similar concerns about the
results for Maori and Pasifika researchers. The average
quality score was 1.45 for Maori staff and 1.41 for Pasifika
staff, while it was 2.58 for those designated
Pakeha/European.
The analysis of data has only been made
available after pressure from AUS which has, from the
outset, been concerned that the individual nature of PBRF
assessment would have a detrimental effect on women, Maori
and Pasifika researchers. The TEC initially decided it would
not release demographic data after the University of
Auckland failed to provide any information about the age,
ethnicity or gender of their staff participating in the PBRF
exercise.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. SIT
rejects Ombudsman’s recommendation
2. TEC impressed by
Cool IT
3. Consultation on College, University
merger
4. Nottingham faces academic boycott
5. Nine
charged over $A30m fraud
SIT rejects Ombudsman’s
recommendation
The Government may change the law after
the Southern Institute of Technology (SIT) refused to follow
an Ombudsman’s recommendation to compensate students for a
cancelled course. Six students complained to the Office of
Ombudsmen that they were not able to enrol for a National
Diploma in Social Services in 2000 after the SIT
discontinued the course at the end of 1999. They all
completed a National Certificate in Social Services in 1999
with the expectation of continuing on to the Diploma
course.
Following the discontinuation of the course, the
students started legal action in the High Court against SIT,
claiming it was liable for ending their study. They dropped
the action after being told it would be unlikely to succeed.
Still aggrieved, the students took their complaint to
Ombudsman Mel Smith. He concurred, and recommended that the
SIT pay the students approximately $21,000 in course fees
and related expenses. The SIT refused, however, saying it
had no legal obligation to pay, and that it would be
inappropriate to do so.
That move appears to have angered
the Ombudsman and the Government. In an unprecedented move,
the Ombudsman has written to the Prime Minister and asked
that his report on the matter be tabled in Parliament. The
Prime Minister, Helen Clark, responded saying that
non-compliance with the recommendation is a serious matter,
and she has proposed a meeting between the Ombudsman and
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary) Steve Maharey
over the issue.
In a statement this morning, Mr Maharey
said that the Government was very disappointed with SIT as
he expected public institutions to comply with
recommendations from the Ombudsman. “Government consulted
with the tertiary education sector over a mechanism to deal
with student complaints,” he said. “After putting money into
the Ombudsman’s office to deal with such complaints, the
Government was of the opinion that the Ombudsman’s
recommendations would be accepted and acted on.”
Mr
Maharey said he would be discussing the matter with the
Ombudsman this evening and that, if institutions were not
going to comply with recommendations, the law may be changed
to require them explicitly to do so. He said that the
Tertiary Advisory Monitoring Unit would also meet with the
SIT Council to see if the matter could be resolved.
TEC
impressed by Cool IT
As reverberations continue over the
level of public funding poured into Christchurch Polytechnic
Institute of Technology’s (CPIT) Cool IT computer courses,
it transpires that the Tertiary Education Commission and the
Tertiary Advisory Monitoring Unit (TAMU) knew about the
nature of the courses from the outset, and that the TEC was
impressed with the “platform”.
The TEC’s review, released
last week, shows that at the start of the project in
mid-2003, CPIT sought to make the TEC aware of the
programme. TEC’s then Chair, Dr Andy West, visited CPIT on
22 September 2003 to “see what they were doing” and was “by
all accounts … impressed with the product”. CPIT maintains
that it invited Dr West to consider the need for a separate
funding category related to e-learning initiatives, such as
Cool IT, but that Dr West advised that the current Community
Education Programme would continue to be the “appropriate
category for this type of initiative”. Public funding was
then pumped in at the rate of $738.80 plus GST for the more
than 18,000 people who enrolled in the programme.
A paper
discussing the intended joint venture to run the Cool IT
programme was presented in the section of the 17 September
2003 CPIT Council meeting from which the public was
excluded. The paper set out potential risks to the
programme, including the concern that the initiative could
be seen by TEC and TAMU as an “EFTS harvesting model”. The
paper then proposed that the product be demonstrated to both
agencies prior to December 2003 to dispel those concerns.
There can be little doubt that it was an EFTS harvesting
model. In its initial consideration, CPIT estimated that the
costs associated with the operation of a pilot programme
would be as little as 10 to 15 percent of income and, on
that basis, would not require any capital investment. The
estimate of an operational profit of between 85 and 90
percent was based on preliminary forecasts of 5,000
enrolments. The margin was improved further by enrolments
over 5,000 because fixed costs had been covered and the
costs associated with each additional enrolment were
limited. Each additional CD-Rom added less than $5 to the
operating costs.
Associate Minister of Education
(Tertiary) Steve Maharey told Parliament last week that
enrolments in the Cool IT programmes were now being
evaluated and, if CPIT could not prove that learning had
taken place, it could be asked to repay some of the core
funding it received.
Consultation on College, University
merger
Education Ministers Trevor Mallard and Steve
Maharey have announced the start of consultation on a
proposed merger between the Wellington College of Education
and Victoria University of Wellington (VUW), due to take
effect on 1 January next year.
“Public submissions on
the proposal are now invited,” said Mr Mallard. “The
proposal suggests that a merger would protect and enhance
the teacher education currently being provided by the two
institutions. They entered into a strategic alliance in 2001
with the view that they would eventually merge.”
Mr
Maharey said that the College would not graduate world-class
teachers unless students gained specialist subject knowledge
as well as strong teaching skills. “A merger will enable the
College to extend its research capability with the support
of Victoria’s internationally distinguished researchers,” he
said.
Under the merger proposal VUW would establish a
College of Education consisting of schools and a Faculty of
Education to oversee the academic programmes taught by the
schools. The current Karori Campus will be retained as one
of the University’s four campuses.
Details on the
consultation can be found at:
www.vuw.ac.nz/home/about_victoria/consultation.html
Worldwatch
Nottingham
faces academic boycott
Nottingham University will face a
global academic boycott within six weeks unless it
negotiates a pay and grading settlement in line with that
agreed in the United Kingdom between national university
employers and the Association of University Teachers (AUT).
The national agreement on pay was reached in March 2004
after AUT members took industrial action across the UK. It
included signing up to a National Framework on new salary
scales and grading structures.
The threatened boycott
follows Nottingham’s latest pay offer, which the AUT alleges
backtracks on the commitment to honour the national
agreement. The current offer introduces performance-related
pay for staff, would lead to reductions in career earnings
of nearly £9,000 over six years for some, and removes the
entitlement to belong to the national university pension
scheme for others.
AUT General Secretary Sally Hunt has
written to the Vice-Chancellor of Nottingham threatening to
“greylist” the University from 20 September unless it is
prepared to negotiate in line with the national agreement.
Greylisting is considered the ultimate professional
sanction in the academic world. It would mean academics
across the globe refusing to cooperate with the university,
in effect banishing it from the global academic community.
For a leading international university like Nottingham this
could have serious implications for its reputation, both in
the United Kingdom and overseas.
More information on the
dispute can be found at:
www.aut.org.uk/index.cfm?articleid=879
Nine charged over
$A30m fraud
Nine former staff and building contractors
collectively face more than 2,000 charges after allegedly
defrauding Australia’s Victoria University of Technology and
its predecessor, the Melbourne Institute of TAFE, of more
than $A30 million over an eight-year period from
1993.
The alleged frauds involved maintenance contractors
who won tenders and then returned “kickbacks” to
administrators and contractors who provided false invoices
for work which was not done. It is believed some money
raised from the fraud was laundered through a stable of
racehorses, with some of those charged allegedly being given
shares in racehorses in return for approving work that was
never done.
University management has told staff that the
fraud is threatening their ability to negotiate a
competitive pay settlement this year. In response, General
Staff Vice-President, Bruce Lindsay, has called on the State
and Federal Governments to provide additional funding to the
University to alleviate the situation, saying that staff and
students should not be disadvantaged by footing the cost of
the
fraud.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz