AUS Tertiary Update
Wananga likely to remain in the news
The release of the
Auditor-General’s report this week into certain aspects of
Te Wananga o Aotearoa is likely to ensure that the
beleaguered institution remains in the news for some time to
come. The report, which documents serious failings of
management at the Wananga, identifies the Tumuaki (Chief
Executive Officer), Rongo Wetere, as primarily responsible
for the management failings, and the Council as providing
inadequate governance for the period under
investigation.
Despite claims from Dr Wetere that no
evidence of fraud, corruption or nepotism had been found,
the report describes recurring themes of poor
decision-making practices for significant expenditure,
inadequate identification and management of conflicts of
interest and unacceptable practices in senior management
expenses concerning international travel and credit card
expenses.
In response to statements from the Minister for
Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, that it would now be
in the best interests of the Wananga for him to resign, Dr
Wetere has said that he will not go. “While I respect that
Dr Cullen has the right to his opinion, issues surrounding
my employment will be determined by the Council of Te
Wananga o Aotearoa.”
For its part, the Council, which was
downsized from fourteen to five members in June, began its
own inquiries into Dr Wetere’s behaviour and placed him on
paid leave pending the outcome of those inquiries. That
action was unsuccessfully challenged by Dr Wetere in the
Employment Relations Authority, but he has appealed to have
the matter heard in the Employment Court. While it is
expected the case will be heard next week, and a decision
released before Christmas, the matter is not likely to end
there.
Dr Wetere is questioning the legality of the
five-member Council, saying that, as there are no
representatives from staff, students, local kaumatua or iwi,
the Council is no longer constituted in accordance with the
Education Act and is, therefore, unlawful. “When the Council
is no longer dominated and controlled by Government
appointees, we will be able to sit down and have
constructive discussions about the issue of my employment
and the future of the Wananga,” he said.
Meanwhile, Dr
Cullen has advised that he has decided not to continue, at
this stage, the process started by his predecessor, Trevor
Mallard, to appoint a statutory commissioner to the
Wananga.
The Auditor-General’s report on Te Wananga o
Aotearoa can be located at:
http://www.oag.govt.nz/2005/twoa/default.htm
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Open Polytechnic staff back
on strike
2. PBRF performance analysed
3. TEC
announces scope of 2006 PTE review
4. Wide-ranging
factors involved in completing studies
5. New campus
planned for Manukau
6. University takes “stingy”
title
7. Overwhelming vote for new UK higher-education
union
8. Senate called on to reject
voluntary-student-union legislation
9. University leaders
pledge to help women in academia
10. Employment tribunal
rules lecturers unfairly dismissed
Open Polytechnic staff
back on strike
Academic staff at the Open Polytechnic are
back on strike, having walked off the job at lunchtime
yesterday following the breakdown of collective employment
agreement negotiations.
Members of the Association of
Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) rejected an offer by Open
Polytechnic management to increase salaries by 3 percent,
made at negotiations which resumed yesterday morning. The
offer followed previous offers of 1.5 percent and then 2
percent, both of which had been rejected, resulting in
protest action.
ASTE Field Officer, Phil Dodd, said that
union members were furious at the renewed offer which,
despite the Polytechnic recording operational surpluses of
more than $4m in the last two years, was less than the rate
of inflation. He said that the Polytechnic has investments
of more than $14 million, and was in a healthy financial
situation compared with other polytechnics.
Meanwhile,
union members at the Auckland University of Technology have
settled a new collective employment agreement with salary
increases of between 4.5 and 8.1 percent next year.
PBRF
performance analysed
Research performance is influenced
by the tertiary organisations staff are working at, with
those at the more established metropolitan universities
having the highest output, according to an analysis of the
2003 Performance-Base Research Fund Quality Evaluation
published by the Ministry of Education.
Those employed
at polytechnics, wananga and private training
establishments, where degree teaching may only form a
fraction of teaching, tended to perform less well than staff
at the universities. While the performance of staff at the
Auckland University of Technology was significantly less
than that of their counterparts at other universities, it
was consistent with expectations for a newly established
university.
The report, What determines the research
performance of staff in New Zealand’s tertiary education
sector? was developed from examining the research
performance of around 7,700 PBRF-eligible staff who had
their research performance measured across a number of
dimensions during the 2003 Quality Evaluation. The
statistical modelling used allowed the research performance
of certain subgroups to be estimated once other demographic
and employment-related differences were taken into
account.
Analysis showed that the higher the
full-time-equivalent status of staff, the higher was the
level of research performance; professors generally had the
highest level of research performance, followed by associate
professors, senior lecturers and then lecturers; research
performance peaks for staff aged in their late thirties and
early forties; men achieved a slightly higher level of
performance than women; ethnicity had no statistically
significant impact, although Maori staff performed better
than staff from other ethnic groups; subject area was found
to impact on research performance, with those in the science
area generally having the highest level of performance; and
staff in some subjects could perform well in one measure of
performance but not in others.
The report says that
analysis of the research performance of staff in the New
Zealand tertiary education sector was previously limited by
a lack of available data and universally accepted measures.
The introduction of the PBRF has resulted in a dataset that
allows for more detailed analysis.
The full report can be
located
at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=10914&data=l
TEC
announces scope of 2006 PTE review
The Tertiary
Education Commission has announced that it will review
alternative therapies, computing, business administration,
sport and outdoor leadership, hospitality and primary,
secondary and early childhood education teaching courses in
2006 in the second stage of its three-year review of private
training establishments’ (PTE) qualifications. The
qualifications will be assessed on four dimensions of
strategic relevance. They are need, outcomes, performance
and point of difference.
Around 300 qualifications will
be evaluated to ensure the quality and relevance of PTE
provision and, where appropriate, TEC will shift funding
from qualifications of low strategic relevance to those of
higher strategic relevance.
“The overall aim is to
ensure that qualifications funded by the TEC meet the needs
of learners, employers, their communities and New Zealand as
a whole, says Clare Ward, TEC Steering and Investment Group
Manager. “It is also to ensure that learners and taxpayers
get value for their investments in education and so the TEC
can be assured it is funding quality, relevant,
value-for-money qualifications.”
The four largest areas
of PTE provision, tourism, business and management,
philosophy and religion and personal services, were reviewed
this year.
The remainder of PTE provision, graphic
design, arts, primary production, automotive engineering and
transportation, media studies, carpentry, welding,
aeronautical engineering, fashion and garment making,
languages, security and private investigation, social
services and architecture and interior design will be
reviewed in 2007.
All PTE provision funded through the
Student Component pool is being reviewed to ensure it is
aligned with the Tertiary Education Strategy and the
Statement of Tertiary Education Priorities.
An
announcement confirming the results of this year’s review
will be made in December once PTE Profiles have been
approved by the TEC.
Wide-ranging factors involved in
completing studies
Study load is a highly influential
factor in the likelihood of a student to complete studies,
according to a new Ministry of Education report, What
factors made a difference to getting a degree in New
Zealand. It concludes that the more full-time a student
was, the higher their likelihood of completing; similarly,
fully intramural students did five times better than
extramural, as did those who started their studies straight
from school.
The study, which looked at 37,893 students
who started their bachelor’s degrees in 1998 and whether
they had completed six years later, in 2003, also found that
students with Year 13 school qualifications were 1.4 times
more likely to complete than someone entering with no school
qualification. Women were 1.2 times more likely to complete
their degrees then men, international students more likely
than their domestic colleagues.
Those studying in health
and education had the highest six-year completion rates,
with those in natural and physical sciences and information
technology the lowest. College of education students
generally had the highest completion rates, followed by
those at universities and then those at polytechnics.
The
aim of the study was to model the probability of completing
a bachelor’s degree, and the factors that influence it in
New Zealand, in order to aid the decision-making of
students, institutions and government with the aim of
improving educational outcomes for students wanting to
complete a degree.
While showing that only 49 percent of
those who started their degree studies in 1998 had completed
in 2003, the study acknowledged that not everyone that
undertakes study does so with the intention of completing a
qualification. Many try study and find it is not for
them.
The study can be located
at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=10823&data=l
New
campus planned for Manukau
A new tertiary education
campus is planned for Manukau City by 2007, the result of a
joint project between Manukau Institute of Technology (MIT),
the Auckland University of Technology University (AUT) and
the Manukau City Council. It is proposed the campus will
start up with 500 equivalent full-time students (EFTS) in
2007 and could develop into a 15,000 EFTS facility by 2050,
when Counties Manukau is projected to have a population of
400,000.
The new campus will cater for the education and
skills needs of New Zealand’s fastest growing city and would
develop in pace with the population growth, says a
discussion paper prepared by MIT and AUT senior
management.
The Council and MIT have a strong ongoing
relationship and signed a Partnering Agreement on August 22,
2005. The University of Auckland has endorsed in principle
the collaboration
Announcing the plan for a new campus,
Manukau Mayor, Sir Barry Curtis, said there is a great need
for more education options for the city’s young people.
“Education is the key to a better future and there will be a
close alignment between the skills and qualifications of the
graduates and the needs of our city’s business community,”
he said. “This facility will be great for the city centre as
it will bring a totally new atmosphere. Students add life
and a buzz wherever they are and I'm looking forward to the
impact they’ll have. It’ll transform the city centre.
They’ll also be spending money, and I expect the campus will
eventually bring in around $150 million a year to our local
economy.”
Mr Curtis said the long-term vision for the
campus is that, as the campus grows, it will become a
pivotal part of a new city centre for Manukau and in the
development of the greater Auckland region. It addresses the
role that a comprehensive range of tertiary-education
provision could play in enhancing economic and community
development.
University takes “stingy” title
The
University of Canterbury has been outed as stingy by the
Christchurch Press in a list of five “Scrooge” employers
whose Christmas parties it describes as miserly or
non-existent. In an article published at the weekend after
an “exhaustive inquiry”, the Press says cleaners at the
University will bear the full brunt of their employers’
largess again this year at their 6.00am “bring a plate”
party. If it follows last year’s theme, there will be a draw
of cleaning products donated by a chemical company. “A
person sitting close to me won a pail of urinal blocks last
year,” an unidentified employee is reported as
saying.
Reinforcing the stingy epithet, the Press
understands that the University has no official Christmas
function, and that the cleaners’ pre-Christmas breakfast,
including supplied savouries, is paid for by managers. And
yes, prizes do include cleaning products.
The University
is anticipating an $11.4m surplus for 2005, about $4.5m
ahead of budget.
Worldwatch
Overwhelming vote for new
UK higher-education union
Members of the two main
higher-education unions in the United Kingdom, NATFHE, the
university and college lecturers’ union, and the Association
of University Teachers (AUT), have voted overwhelmingly for
their unions to merge.
The proposed union, the
University and College Union (UCU), will represent further
and higher-education lecturers, managers, researchers and
many academic-related staff such as librarians,
administrators and computing professionals across the UK.
It will be the world’s largest higher-education union, with
more than 116,000 members.
The two unions will
amalgamate on 1 June 2006, and then enter a transitional
year until full operational unity is achieved in June 2007.
In a joint statement, Paul Mackney and Sally Hunt,
General Secretaries of NATFHE and AUT, said that the new
union would be a potent force for change in further and
higher education. “No longer will universities and colleges
be able to divide our members over their pay and
conditions,” they said. “Our priorities now will be to
improve our members’ salaries, end the scandal of pay
discrimination on the grounds of gender and ethnicity, and
defend the core values of education such as academic
freedom.”
Meanwhile, in New Zealand, National Executive
members from the two main unions representing staff at New
Zealand polytechnics, institutes of technology and wananga
met for two days last week to discuss plans for
amalgamation. The Tertiary Institutions’ Allied Staff
Association, representing administrative staff, and the
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education, representing
teaching staff, say that a merged union, with over 6,000
members, would provide opportunities to increase their
influence in the tertiary education sector.
Senate called
on to reject voluntary-student-union legislation
The
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has called on the
Australian Senate to reject the Government’s legislation to
abolish compulsory student-union levies when it goes before
the upper house later today.
The call comes as the
Government promotes a number of last minute proposals and
amendments to the proposed legislation in an attempt to gain
the support of its own Party and a number of Coalition
senators who have expressed concerns about the detrimental
impacts of the Bill. “On Monday, Federal Education Minister
Brendan Nelson proposed a nationwide student referendum on
the issue, which was criticised, not only by virtually the
entire higher-education sector, but also by members of his
own party as costly, ineffective and unnecessary,” said Mr
Andrew Nette, NTEU Policy and Research Coordinator. “Now the
Coalition Party has mooted an eleventh-hour plan, which
proposes to establish [an $A80m fund] to assist those
universities that could demonstrate that the viability of
their sporting and recreation facilities are at risk as a
result of a decline in the number of students paying
compulsory fees.”
Mr Nette said the continued existence
of strong, vibrant and independent student organisations is
vital to the educational experience of Australian students,
the culture of Australian universities and their
international reputation and should not be put at risk for
the sake of the Government’s ideological
obsession.
University leaders pledge to help women in
academia
Leaders of nine premier research universities in
the United States announced on Tuesday that they will
undertake further efforts to remove barriers that “still
exist to the full participation of women, not only in
science and engineering, but also in academic fields
throughout higher education.”
Making academic careers
compatible with family responsibilities is essential if
universities are to achieve gender equity, they said in a
joint statement. All pledged that their universities will
develop academic personnel policies and institutional
resources, and take steps to improve campus cultures to
better support family commitments.
While women now make
up nearly half of PhD recipients in the United States, they
comprise only about one quarter of professors. Studies
published by researchers at University of California,
Berkeley, found that women PhDs who were married or have
young children were far less likely to secure tenure-track
jobs, and eventually achieve tenure, than men who are
married or have young children or single women without
children. Other studies suggest that many women may be
disadvantaged early in their careers by competing demands of
academic and family responsibilities, and some may be
negatively stereotyped because of their family status.
The pledge was signed by the Presidents of the
California Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, University of California, Berkeley, and
Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Pennsylvania and
Michigan Universities.
From UC Berkeley
News
Employment tribunal rules lecturers unfairly
dismissed
An employment tribunal yesterday ruled in
favour of members of NATFHE, the United Kingdom university
and college lecturers’ union, who claimed that they were
unfairly dismissed by London Metropolitan University.
The
tribunal upheld a claim brought by twenty-three lecturers
that they were unfairly dismissed after London Metropolitan
University (LMU) imposed a new, inferior employment
agreement on 387 academic staff in order to “harmonise”
terms and conditions of employment after LMU was created
through a merger of London Guildhall University and the
University of North London.
On 2 April 2004, LMU issued
dismissal notices to 387 members of academic staff, who were
previously employed by London Guildhall University who did
not accept the new terms and conditions.
The row sparked
a sixteen-month dispute between NATFHE and the
University.
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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