AUS Tertiary Update
Cullen to focus on quality and relevance (and
salaries)
In his second major speech as the new Minister
for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen has told the
Association of University Staff (AUS) that a key part of his
agenda will be to continue the work of his two predecessors,
Steve Maharey and Trevor Mallard, to get a stronger focus on
the quality and relevance of teaching and learning in
tertiary education.
Dr Cullen told the AUS Annual
Conference, held in Wellington this week, that, while there
were many facets to creating the right environment for that
to happen, four key ones are encouraging a stronger culture
around teaching excellence, supporting high-quality
research, promoting salary regimes that provide strong
incentives for academic staff to work in New Zealand and a
better focus on funding that rewards quality and relevance
rather than raw enrolment statistics.
In defining
quality, Dr Cullen posed the question of how quality would
be benchmarked. “Do we mean comparability with academic
institutions overseas?” he asked. “Or do we mean a more
specific ‘fitness for purpose’ aligned to the set of skills
and competencies that enable people to thrive and adapt in
the workforce?”
With regard to relevance, Dr Cullen asked
whether it meant a response by tertiary-education providers
to the short-term skill needs and research priorities of the
economy, or was it asking for a degree of prescience,
whereby providers are asked to equip students for the world
they will encounter in five or ten years’ time.
“The more
one aims for quality, the more removed one gets from the
real world and its priorities and timeframes. The more
relevant one was to the real world and real-time concerns,
the less one could practice critical thought and
reflection,” Dr Cullen said. “That pointed to the familiar
paradigm of the distinction between universities and
polytechnics; the former turned out graduates with a good
grasp of academic theory while the latter focused on
immediate skill needs with a strong vocational emphasis,
being less concerned with the larger picture. This is a
paradigm that we need to break out of. It has not served us
well. Quality ought not to imply graduates who need to be
retrained by employers in order to be useful. And relevance
means more than just this year’s skills.”
On the
question of promoting salaries and conditions that provide
strong incentives for academic staff to work in New Zealand,
Dr Cullen said that, while he could not at this point make
any specific commitments, he gave his assurance that the
work of the Tripartite Forum would be taken seriously and in
good faith by the Government.
In turn, AUS General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, reminded Dr Cullen that, as both
Minister for Tertiary Education and Minister of Finance, he
was well positioned to mainline the Budget for university
salaries.
Dr Cullen’s speech can be located at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/news/2005/CullenSpeech.pdf
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Wananga being “ethnically
cleansed”
2. Student-loan loophole to be closed
3. New data show university students borrow most
4. Chancellors join forces
5. Open Polytechnic closed
by action
6. NYU teaching assistants threatened with
blacklisting
7. Protests over appointment at
Tehran
8. University’s evolution website sued
Wananga
being “ethnically cleansed”
The Chief Executive of Te
Wananga o Aotearoa (TWOA), Dr Rongo Wetere, told the
Waitangi Tribunal he could not tolerate being part of an
“ethnically cleansed” organisation, according to a report in
today’s Waikato Times.
A three-day Waitangi Tribunal
hearing began in Hamilton yesterday over claims that the
Government has breached the New Zealand Bill of Rights by
trying to cut the size of TWOA by restricting courses to
Maori students only. The claim, which was lodged on behalf
of the Aotearoa Institute, the Wananga’s parent body, argues
that those actions are illegal, racially divisive and amount
to a breach of a Treaty of Waitangi settlement.
The
Waikato Times reports that the lawyer acting for the
claimants, Mai Chen, told the hearing that the Government is
discriminating on racial grounds, saying that Maori have the
right to academic freedom and the Aotearoa Institute the
right to determine its own courses.
The New Zealand
Herald reports Dr Wetere as saying the Government is intent
on reducing the size of the Wananga and forcing it to become
a Maori-teaching-Maori organisation in order to cut tertiary
education numbers and save money. “We have Pakeha managers
in the Wananga going hell for leather making changes, intent
on downsizing us,” he said.
Dr Wetere said moves to
downsize the Wananga would kill the organisation. “We are at
a crossroads. We either are going forward or going down,” he
said. “Let’s have a true partnership. Let us have true
equality. If it is good enough for universities, then it is
good enough for wananga Maori. We are the largest in the
country, and we have earned our right to a
partnership.”
Claims relating to a $20m suspensory loan
withheld by the Government, and compensation for losses
incurred due to the negative publicity surrounding the
Wananga, are not part of the current hearing.
The
five-member Tribunal, chaired by Judge Stephanie Milroy,
will hear further evidence over the next two
days.
Student-loan loophole to be closed
The
Government will close a potential loophole in its
interest-free student-loan scheme by ensuring that refunds
relating to the 2004-05 and 2005-06 tax years remain subject
to interest, preventing refunds being claimed for previous
years unless they have already been lodged, and removing the
opportunity to apply for special deduction rates below the
standard 10 percent rate for the balance of the current tax
year.
The move follows revelations last week that a
former student had reclaimed $15,000 voluntarily repaid off
his student loan a few months previously, so that he could
take advantage of the Government’s new interest-free-loan
policy by placing the money on interest-bearing
deposit.
Under current legislation, student-loan
borrowers who have made voluntary repayments above the
minimum repayment levels are permitted to request a refund
of those repayments up to six months after making
them.
The Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael
Cullen, said that a Supplementary Order Paper would be
introduced during the Committee stages of the Bill, which
would make the changes effective from this week. Inland
Revenue will have the discretion to exempt from interest
refunds made in cases of serious financial hardship.
Dr
Cullen said the aim of the legislation was to prevent people
from trying to “game” the system.
The costings for the
interest-free policy, to be included in the December
Economic and Fiscal Update, assume that the volume of
voluntary repayments will fall to 20 percent of their
present value over three years. According to Dr Cullen,
repayment of the principal will still be compulsory above a
certain income threshold, currently $16,588 a year, and
loans will continue to be available only to cover fees,
course-related costs and, in the case of full-time students,
living costs to a maximum of $150 a week.
New data show
university students borrow most
An “integrated data set”
looking at student loans, released this week by Statistics
New Zealand, shows that borrowers studying at a university
between 1997 and 2003 had a median loan balance of $11,920,
which was higher than for students anywhere else in the
sector. It also shows that male and female students who
borrowed under the Student Loan Scheme had an equivalent
rate of full repayment of 14 percent as at March 2004.
In 2003, borrowers enrolled in a bachelor’s degree had a
median amount borrowed of $5,450, higher than for any other
qualification type that year. Students who took out a loan
between 1997 and 2002 and advised Inland Revenue they were
overseas in 2003 owed $9,880 more, on average, than those
assumed to be residing in New Zealand. Loan holders who were
overseas had a mean loan balance of $20,780 in March 2004,
compared with $10,900 for those assumed to be residing in
New Zealand.
According to the New Zealand University
Students’ Association (NZUSA), the data show how the debt
burden has negatively affected students. “It shows that only
a minority of borrowers have been able to repay their loans,
and that high debt is forcing graduates overseas,” said
Camilla Belich, Co-President of NZUSA. “Those overseas with
the highest debts are those who studied in high-fee courses
like health or medicine. These people are desperately needed
in New Zealand, but these data prove that they are being
forced overseas by their huge loans.”
The report also
shows that only 14 percent of all borrowers, and only 7
percent of Maori and 8 percent of Pasifika students, from
1997-2003 have repaid their loans fully. “There is clearly a
disproportionately negative effect of getting into debt for
Maori and Pasifika students. This shows that the loan scheme
in its current form is just not working for the majority of
borrowers,” said Ms Belich.
The data set can be located
at:
http://www2.stats.govt.nz/domino/external/pasfull/pasfull.nsf/web/Hot+Off+The+Press+Integrated+Data+on+Student+Loan+Borrowers+1997–2003?open
Chancellors
join forces
Education Review reports that the eight New
Zealand universities have decided against setting up an
incorporated body for their chancellors. Rather they will
“power-up” their existing committee in order to give
themselves a national voice.
Massey University Chancellor
Nigel Gould said that university councils considered
creating an incorporated body for chancellors in order to be
able to play a more serious role at a national level.
Concerns, however, that the creation of such a body would be
using a sledgehammer to crack a nut resulted in an agreement
to use their existing committee to provide a better forum
for chancellors.
Mr Gould, who is the committee’s Chair,
said it would meet three to four times a year and would make
public statements on issues, adding that it would use the
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee for some administrative support
and might seek additional funds for one-off projects. He
said the committee was structuring an agenda based on common
interests, which included improving the quality of
governance of universities.
The committee saw a need to
work with government and the broader tertiary sector to
ensure universities delivered a high-quality contribution,
and it recognised government’s desire for greater
differentiation between tertiary institutions.
A national
association of chancellors and the chairs of other tertiary
institution councils was recommended to the government in a
report on governance by Australian expert Meredith Edwards
in 2003, but was never acted on.
Open Polytechnic closed
by action
Union members at the Open Polytechnic of New
Zealand will today consider further industrial action
following strike action last Friday over failed
collective-employment-agreement negotiations. In response to
a claim from the Association of Staff in Tertiary Education
(ASTE) for a 7.5 percent salary increase, the Polytechnic
has offered 2 percent.
ASTE National Secretary, Sharn
Riggs, said that union members were appalled that their pay
offer was less than the rate of inflation. “Effectively, our
members would be taking a pay cut if they accepted this
offer,” she said. “Further industrial action is likely to
follow if the employer does not see fit to make a pay offer
in keeping with the Polytechnic’s resources, and in line
with the kinds of pay increases lecturers in other
polytechnics are getting.”
“The academic staff find it
difficult to reconcile the employer’s offer of 2 percent
with the increases afforded the Chief Executive Officer, and
with the institution reporting surpluses of $4m for the last
two financial years,” said Ms Riggs. “This institution was
among the top seven performers financially in the
polytechnic sector, returning a surplus of 5.6% in 2004. In
addition, the Open Polytechnic Annual Report for 2004 shows
that the institution has nearly $14m sitting as investments
and one of the highest student-to-academic-staff ratios in
the country.”
Ms Riggs said that, while ASTE has offered
to return to negotiations in order to try and find a
solution before today’s stopwork meeting, Polytechnic
management had advised that, although they were looking at
ways to progress negotiations in a “difficult financial
environment” more work was required before getting back into
talks.
Worldwatch
NYU teaching assistants threatened
with blacklisting
Striking graduate teaching assistants
at New York University have been threatened with
blacklisting by the University President, John Sexton, as
industrial action to safeguard conditions of employment and
union rights enters its third week. The University has said
that it will not recognise, or work with, the Union
representing staff; instead it has offered new individual
contracts and made a number of threats against teaching
assistants who do not accept the new agreements.
The
teaching assistants say they will remain on strike until the
University again recognises their union, which is an
affiliate of the United Automobile Workers.
In a letter
to striking staff, John Sexton says that the time has come
for the University to meet the needs of its undergraduates.
Those who do not return to work under the non-negotiated
conditions will lose both their post-graduate stipend
(allowances) and their eligibility to teach.
The American
Association of University Professors has entered the
dispute, saying it deplores the decision of the NYU
administration to sever bargaining relations with its
graduate-student union. It says that, instead of averting a
strike by bargaining in good faith with the democratically
elected union, the NYU administration has chosen to
intensify the crisis, using confrontational language to
mischaracterise the concerns of graduate-student unionists.
“We condemn such inflammatory tactics. Colleges and
universities should be held to a higher standard than
profit-seeking corporations and should serve as models for
our society. It is morally incumbent upon the NYU
administration to honor the democratically determined wishes
of its most vulnerable employees, the graduate teaching
assistants who have expressed their desire to be unionised,”
it says.
Protests over appointment at Tehran
The
replacement of the President of Tehran University by a
conservative cleric at the weekend has prompted student
protests and concerns about academic freedom at Iran’s
leading university. Abbasali Amid Zanjani, who is an
ayatollah and an associate professor of Islamic law at
Tehran, was appointed to the post by the Government of
Iran’s new hard-line President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The
appointment was announced on Friday, and Mr. Zanjani was
installed in a ceremony at the University just two days
later. Outside, some 500 students protested the
“undemocratic way” he had been appointed, according to news
reports.
Observers said the protests were among the
largest in months. Iran’s often-rebellious students have
been quiet following several years of repression by the
security forces, which have arrested several hundred
students for anti-government protests.
In 1994 Mr.
Zanjani was appointed head of the Tehran University’s School
of Law, but was forced from the position soon after
following sustained protests from faculty members and
students who considered him a threat to academic freedom
after he sacked two professors for being
“un-Islamic”.
The Iranian Government has also replaced
the heads of at least a dozen other major universities.
While it is common practice for a new Iranian president to
replace university leaders, critics said they were dismayed
that this time the changes had been made so suddenly.
Critics also charged that a number of the new leaders are
inexperienced.
From the Chronicle of Higher
Education
University’s evolution website sued
Operators
of a University of California-Berkeley website that is
designed to help teach evolution are being sued by a
California couple who say the site improperly strays into
religion. Defendants include two top biologists from the UC
Museum of Paleontology, which runs the Understanding
Evolution website, and an official from the National Science
Foundation, who is named because the Foundation provided
more than $400,000 in public funding for the site.
The
suit, which was filed last month, specifically objects to
portions of the site that deal with the interplay of science
and religion. For example, it challenges the site’s linking
to doctrinal statements from a variety of religions to
demonstrate that “most Christian and Jewish religious groups
have no conflict with evolution”.
The claimants say it
amounts to a government endorsement of certain religious
groups over others, and is an effort “to modify the beliefs
of public school science students so they will be more
willing to accept evolutionary theory as true”.
From
Austin American Statesman and the San Jose Mercury
News
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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