AUS Tertiary Update
Separate PBRF assessment for college staff to follow
mergers
Staff from the Auckland and Wellington Colleges
of Education will be assessed separately from their
university colleagues in the next Performance-Based Research
Fund quality evaluation exercise if mergers proceed between
those Colleges and Auckland and Victoria Universities.
It
is understood that the assurance was given to the
Universities, anxious to protect their PBRF rankings, after
recent discussions with the Acting Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary), Margaret Wilson, and the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC). The TEC has told the Association
of University Staff (AUS) that following those discussions
it was decided to report the quality evaluation results
separately for all newly-merged institutions for one quality
evaluation round following any merger.
TEC General
Manager Ann Clark has said that separate reporting would not
have financial implications, and that all eligible staff in
the merged institutions would be assessed. PBRF funding
would continue to be based on the overall assessment of an
institution, including the results of those former college
staff eligible for assessment.
It had earlier been
understood that merging colleges would not participate in
the next quality evaluation exercise to ensure that the
proposed merger between the Auckland College of Education
and the University could proceed without prejudicing
Auckland’s PBRF ranking. Both the Government and the TEC are
saying this is not correct, and the issue of excluding
college staff has not been discussed between the
parties.
Ann Clark said the separate reporting was being
done at the request of the Universities, and would allow
them to accurately measure their improvement between
assessment rounds. This varies considerably from an earlier
reason given to AUS by a senior TEC official, who said the
reason was that college staff could not be expected to be
fully research-productive following the upheaval of a merger
process.
AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said
neither reason given by the TEC was very convincing.
“Universities are already able to track improvements in
particular divisions of a university, without the need for
separate reporting,” he said. “If the real reason is, as
first given, that a merger will upset research output, the
TEC should examine why institutions such as the Auckland
College of Education are performing poorly in terms of
research output and put measures in place to ensure
improvement.”
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Government announces $20 million for Auckland
projects
2. Free computer (course) attracts
hundreds
3. SIT remains defiant
4. Export education
levy becomes law
5. Harvard and Princeton top
rankings
6. Half of Australian V-Cs overpaid
Government
announces $20 million for Auckland projects
The
Government announced this week that it will give the
University of Auckland $20 million for two projects under
its Partnership for Excellence scheme, a public-private
sector tertiary education investment scheme which enables
tertiary institutions with private sector funding to seek
matching funding from Government for large-scale projects.
The University’s new Institute for Innovation in
Biotechnology will receive $10 million to turn research
ideas into business propositions, while its Starpath project
will receive another $10 million for an “innovative”
programme to encourage students to enrol in tertiary
study.
Prime Minister Helen Clark said the Government is
supporting both projects because it wants to ensure the
tertiary education sector makes a bigger contribution to New
Zealand’s economic and social development. “The University
of Auckland’s Biotechnology Institute will provide a centre
for graduate training and research,” she said. Graduate
students will be immersed in an entrepreneurial environment
where research and its translation into commercial
applications are co-located.”
Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey, said the Starpath
project aims to attract to university studies students who
have the ability to succeed, but who have no role models or
who face barriers in accessing university. “Close working
relationships between the University’s Starpath advisors and
local schools and other community organisations will be the
key to making university study attractive and accessible to
those students,” he said.
The Government’s contribution
to both programmes will be offered as no-interest loans
which will be converted into capital injections when the
initiatives are up and running. The money will be paid in
instalments over the next three years at a rate which
matches the University’s fundraising in the private
sector.
Eleven Partnerships for Excellence proposals were
received from tertiary education organisations in this
funding round. An assessment panel, set up by the TEC,
evaluated proposals against criteria set by the Ministers of
Education, and Cabinet accepted the panel’s
recommendation.
Free computer (course) attracts
hundreds
A free computer course being offered by
Northland Polytechnic, in which students who complete the
course get to keep their computer, is reported to have been
inundated by more than twelve hundred inquiries from
prospective students in just a few weeks. It has also become
the latest focus of attention by Bill English, the National
Party spokesperson on education, who says the Polytechnic is
shamelessly breaking the rules on inducements for student
enrolments.
The Certificate in Generic Computing is a
one-year, full-time course which requires the students to
attend the Polytechnic for two hours and study at home for
twelve hours per week. According to The Northern Advocate,
the Northland Polytechnic has an arrangement with IBM to
supply the computers for the TEC-funded course. Those
students who pass the course are entitled to keep their
computers; those who don’t must return it.
Bill English
says that the TEC introduced new rules prohibiting the use
of inducements following ongoing controversy surrounding
offers of vouchers, cash, computers, cell phones and
computers all at the taxpayers’ expense. “The Government
said it would put a stop to this type of behaviour, but
while they talk tough we haven’t seen a lot of action,” said
Mr English. “Northland Polytech is thumbing its nose at the
TEC and they are getting away with it because the
bureaucrats are too weak to enforce their own rules.”
A
spokesperson for Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary)
Steve Maharey refuted Mr English’s allegations, saying that
the current funding guide only prohibits the use of public
funds for inducements, and in this case the computers had
been paid for by the trust fund of an external organisation.
Mr Maharey said that the Government was opposed to tertiary
providers using rewards and inducements to encourage
enrolments as it wanted students to think carefully about
what study they embarked on, free of influence from free
goods or other offers.
“I asked the TEC to rewrite the
tertiary funding guidelines to ban the use of inducements of
any kind, irrespective of how they are funded,” said Mr
Maharey. “This means that it will not be possible to use any
funds, including those from third parties, to pay for
inducements while receiving any public funding for the same
course.”
SIT remains defiant
The Southern Institute of
Technology continues to defy an Ombudsman’s recommendation
that it pay approximately $21,000 in compensation for a
cancelled course. The Ombudsman upheld a complaint by six
students that they were not able to enrol for a National
Diploma in Social Services in 2000 after the SIT
discontinued the course. They completed a National
Certificate in Social Services in 1999 with the expectation
of continuing on to the Diploma course.
In a snap debate
in Parliament last night a resolution calling on SIT to
comply with the Ombudsman’s recommendations was carried,
with only the eight ACT MPs voting against it. Invercargill
MP Mark Peck said that if the SIT continued its stance it
would be defying Parliament, something he described as
extremely serious. Mr Peck said he had written to the
Speaker, Jonathon Hunt, suggesting that the SIT be summonsed
to Wellington to explain why it would not comply with the
Ombudsman’s recommendation.
The SIT earlier angered the
Ombudsman and the Prime Minister, saying it had no legal
obligation to abide by the recommendation and that it would
be inappropriate to do so. In turn, the Prime Minister told
the SIT that non-compliance with the recommendation was a
serious matter and suggested that the law would be changed
to ensure compliance if the matter was not
resolved.
Subsequent discussions between the SIT and the
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey,
appear not to have resolved the matter. Education Review
reports SIT Chief Executive Penny Simmonds saying that,
while SIT gave due respect to the Ombudsman’s opinion, it
has declined to pay the money on legal advice and “on the
grounds that it is given public money to provide public
services and meet obligations.” She said the easy option for
the Institute would be to pay the money, but in doing so it
would set an unfortunate precedent.
Mr Maharey told
Parliament yesterday that he had met the Ombudsman and had
taken advice on what steps need to be taken to ensure “that
we have integrity” around the Ombudsmen’s decisions.
Export education levy becomes law
Parliament passed
the Education (Export Education Levy) Amendment Bill this
week, allowing Government to levy private education
providers in order to protect international students against
their collapse. The introduction of the Bill followed the
high-profile collapse last year of Carich and Modern Age,
which saw the Government reimburse foreign students left out
of pocket by the collapse. Education Minister Trevor Mallard
said that in future the industry, and not the public, would
ensure that the interests of students were protected in such
situations.
Under the provisions of the Bill, Government
reserves the right to use levy money to reimburse caught in
future collapses.
Worldwatch
Harvard and Princeton top
rankings
Harvard and Princeton Universities have tied for
the top spot in the United States college rankings compiled
by US News and World Report, with Yale and the University of
Pennsylvania following in third and fourth places
respectively. The University of California at Berkeley was
the top public university, with the University of Michigan
at Ann Arbor and the University of Virginia tied for second.
Williams College topped the rankings of the liberal arts
colleges.
The rankings, which are released with the US
News annual college issue and in the book America’s Best
Colleges, prompt criticism by many university administrators
who argue that they ignore crucial characteristics about
institutions and rely too heavily on colleges’ reputations.
Research shows, however, that only about one in four
students who are about to enrol look at rankings, and fewer
consider rankings when choosing a college to attend.
Half
of Australian V-Cs overpaid
According to a study
comparing the salaries of vice-chancellors with business,
more than half of Australian vice-chancellors are overpaid.
Topping the list is the University of Queensland’s
Vice-Chancellor who is overpaid by 51 percent when compared
with a business of similar size and annual revenue.
University of Western Australia Honours student Lisa Soh
analysed the salaries of thirty-four vice-chancellors over a
five year period, and used a mathematical formula for the
comparison with business. She concluded that half the
vice-chancellors were overpaid and half underpaid.
Most
vice-chancellors receive a remuneration package valued at
between $A300,000 and $A500,000, with the Vice-Chancellors
of the Universities of Sydney and New South Wales receiving
$A771,000 and $A750,000
respectively.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz