AUS Tertiary Update
Assessment unit missing from PBRF review
With the first
PBRF assessment not long completed, the Tertiary Education
Commission (TEC) has announced details of the consultation
process for the next round. Missing, however, is any
reference to whether the unit of assessment for the PBRF
Quality Evaluation should continue to be based on the
research performance of individuals, or whether it should be
changed to measure the performance of groups.
A document
released by the TEC last week sets out an indicative
timeline and process for the preparation and implementation
of the 2006 Quality Evaluation, and identifies issues which
have come to the TEC’s attention regarding the design and
initial implementation of the initial PBRF exercise. The
document invites feedback from the tertiary education sector
on the proposed timeline and those issues identified as
having come to the TEC’s attention.
The 2006 Quality
Evaluation paper lists thirty-two separate re-design issues
for consultation, but fails to make any mention of the
individual unit of assessment. Included among the thirty-two
issues are participation, staff-eligibility, assessment
framework, evidence portfolios, moderation process, panels
and funding.
AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg
said that the unit of assessment based on individual
performance had been a fundamental problem for the AUS, many
staff and some of the PBRF panels, and it had been
repeatedly raised with the TEC. “Many of the issues we have
identified with the PBRF, whether they be disadvantage to
emerging researchers, or equity or privacy concerns, could
be partly or wholly addressed through the establishment of a
fairer assessment unit,” he said. “That two of the PBRF
panels have also called for such a change shows that we are
not alone in those concerns.”
Despite declaring the
timing of the 2006 process as an issue for consultation, Dr
Rosenberg says the TEC has advised AUS that considering a
change to the assessment unit had been deliberately excluded
from the consultation document because it says it would not
be feasible to proceed with the 2006 PBRF round if such a
fundamental change was made.
Dr Rosenberg said it is
vital that an examination of the unit of assessment is
included in the consultation process and he urged university
staff to ensure they make a submission to the TEC calling
for this to be considered for the 2006 round. He asked all
those making submissions to address this fundamental
issue.
Submissions on the TEC consultation document close
on 30 September.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Skegg to build different bridge?
2. Trade
negotiations put education control at risk
3. Council
calls in loan for tertiary institution
4. International
students confer at Lincoln
5. Saudis urge boycott of UK
universities
6. Nottingham staff under continued
attack
Skegg to build different bridge?
New University
of Otago Vice-Chancellor Professor David Skegg has taken
little time to distance himself from his predecessor, Dr
Graeme Fogelberg. Just weeks into his new job, Professor
Skegg announced that the University would not proceed with
replacing the historic Leith footbridge with a new
vehicle-capable bridge as part of the University’s proposed
new entranceway.
Replacing the bridge at a cost of
almost $1 million had become something of a long-running
fight between Dr Fogelberg and those opposed to the project
and, in a parting shot, he told detractors that they had
cost the University more than $300,000 in legal costs after
taking steps to halt the bridge project. He was, he said,
determined the project would proceed because more than
$900,000 raised for the project was unable to be used
elsewhere.
Professor Skegg said that the University
Council had decided, however, to relinquish its resource
consents because there was little chance that the University
would proceed with the project in the foreseeable future.
The move has been backed by Chancellor Lindsay Brown, who
says he hopes everyone can now move on to more pressing
matters. He said he believed the money raised for the
project could be diverted to other projects.
Otago
University Students’ Association President Andrew Cushen
said he was delighted with the decision. “The University has
previously ignored the concerns of all significant
stakeholders in pursuing this project,” he said. “Students,
alumni, staff and the wider Dunedin community have condemned
the proposed new bridge, with the University proposing to
ignore them to this point. The project never had any merit,
it was simply an arrogant waste of money.” Mr Cushen is
reported to have said he thought it was no coincidence that
the decision was made so soon after the departure of Dr
Fogelberg.
Professor Skegg has also sent a clear message
to staff that Otago needs to lift its game if it is fully to
recover its reputation after being placed fourth in the
recent PBRF assessments. The Otago Daily Times reports that
University staff have praised what they see as a new spirit
of realism and openness shown by Professor Skegg in
acknowledging the University’s PBRF shortcomings and his
planning positive steps to overcome them.
Trade
negotiations put education control at risk
Trade
negotiations between New Zealand, Chile and Singapore, which
began in Wellington yesterday, will put at risk local
control of key social and public services, including health
and education, according to AUS National President Dr Bill
Rosenberg.
The “P3” talks are based on the New
Zealand-Singapore Closer Economic Partnership Agreement,
which takes a “positive list” approach to trade, specifying
those services which it has been agreed will expressly be
open to international competition and for which a
government’s right to regulate is heavily restricted. In
these talks, however, the Government has put up a “negative
list”, specifying only those services where it wishes to
preserve its right to regulate, either in the public
interest or to provide a public service. Any unnamed
services, including ones not yet thought of, are
automatically subject to deregulation.
Dr Rosenberg said
that a “negative list” approach should be opposed. He said
it would be very difficult to analyse which of the services
deregulated under such an agreement might affect the current
provision of public education, let alone start to predict
the effect of deregulating services not even in existence.
“This is particularly important in areas such as
telecommunications and information technology, both of which
are vitally important to education given the widespread use
of technology in universities,” he said. “Under any free
trade agreement, creating new public services or regulating
new services based on such technologies may well be
impossible.”
Dr Rosenberg described as rubbish a claim by
a spokesperson for the Trade Minister, Jim Sutton, that
negative lists were the norm for trade agreements. Although
Mr Sutton’s office said that the Government had ruled out
public services, particularly health and education, being
included in trade agreements, Dr Rosenberg said that we are
yet to see how this would be done in an enforceable way, let
alone how the Government proposes to protect potentially
important services which don’t yet exist.
Council calls in
loan for tertiary institution
The future of a proposed
West Auckland tertiary institution looks to be in doubt
following a Waitakere District Council decision to seek the
full repayment of a loan to the Waipareira Trust, according
to news website, Korero. The loan, granted in 1998, helped
the Trust purchase 12.6 hectares of land in Glen Eden for
the development of a Maori tertiary education institution.
Korero reports that the Trust has been unable to secure
government support for the proposal, and has been forced to
build housing on some of the land to help pay interest on
the loan.
The Council’s decision to rescind the loan
comes after a report that showed the Trust had entered into
a joint venture to develop three hectares of the land for
residential housing. The Council says it breached its
mortgage conditions and an agreement that the land would be
used for a tertiary institution.
International students
confer at Lincoln
Concerns over tuition fee increases,
restrictions on working hours and the provision of insurance
and pastoral care were the main issues aired at the
first-ever national conference for international students
held at Lincoln University last weekend. The conference, run
by the New Zealand University Students’ Association (NZUSA),
reflects the changing demographic of the student population
and the importance of international students to the New
Zealand university system.
According to an organiser,
Lincoln University Student President Josephine Newman, the
conference was a huge success, with international students
from around the country able to get together to network and
discuss issues of importance on a national level. “The
“grandparenting” of international student tuition fees was
among the key agenda items, with students calling for
international fees to be set for the full duration of study
prior to that study being undertaken.
Delegates to the
conference said that universities are failing to promote the
Code of Pastoral Care for International Students, leaving
them uninformed on grievance procedures against unfair
practices.
As a result of the conference, NZUSA will be
organising a national week of action to raise awareness on
international student concerns and gather signatures for a
petition to support the introduction of grandparenting of
fees across all universities in New
Zealand.
Worldwatch
Saudis urge boycott of UK
universities
The Saudi Arabian embassy in London is to
advise its students to boycott British universities in
protest over financial irregularities, high fees and poor
teaching. Other foreign embassies have told The Observer
that they are unhappy with the way their students are
treated by UK universities but are unwilling to speak out,
fearing their students will face retaliation from the
institutions.
Abdullah Anassah, the Head of Academic
Affairs for the Saudi Arabian Embassy, said they are
currently experimenting with sending students to
universities in New Zealand and Australia instead of Britain
and, if this proved successful, would advise students to go
there instead of the UK. More than 2,500 new Saudi students
come to Britain each year.
The UK is currently the second
most popular destination for foreign students after the
United States, with 270,000 foreigners studying at British
universities. Foreign students pay as much as £16,000, up to
six times the fees of their British
counterparts.
Nottingham staff under continued
attack
Staff at Nottingham University in the United
Kingdom are under further attack this week after the
University published plans to introduce new grading
arrangements for academic and research staff. Following the
University’s imposition of performance pay, new grading
structures and inferior plans for academic-related (general)
staff, the Vice-Chancellor has announced plans to extend the
new arrangements to academic and research staff.
Despite
the threat of a global academic boycott, Nottingham intends
to press ahead with implementing new pay and grading
arrangements which are outside a national deal struck by the
Association of University Teachers (AUT) with university
employers in March. Nottingham’s arrangement introduces
performance-related pay, would reduce 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 Deputy General Secretary Malcolm
Keight has written to the University objecting to its plan
to implement the new arrangements without negotiating and
reaching agreement with the AUT. "We are extremely
disappointed that the University has taken this route given
our recent offers to engage in genuine negotiations to
address the concerns of academic and related staff,” he
wrote.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
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marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz