AUS Tertiary Update
Staff retention a key issue for universities
The capacity
of the system to attract and retain staff of international
calibre has been identified by the Minister for Tertiary
Education as one of the key issues facing the tertiary
education sector. In his first major speech of the year, Dr
Cullen told the New Zealand University Students’ Association
Annual Conference last week that, while questions of
financing [around student loans and allowances] inevitably
loomed large in student politics, they paled into
insignificance alongside the standard of pedagogy,
international benchmarking of courses and qualifications,
staff recruitment and the capacity of graduates to address
the key social issues facing New Zealand.
“So far I have
focused on the issues that relate to how the total cost of
study is shared. I think it is important to broaden the
context, and to keep in mind the outcomes that individual
students and the community as a whole are seeking out of the
tertiary education system,” Dr Cullen said. “Education is an
investment; an investment of time and financial resources
and foregone earnings on the part of students and their
families; and a major investment of public funds by
government.”
Dr Cullen told the conference that an
objective of the new Tertiary Education Strategy (TES) to be
released during the year will be to shift from a focus on
enrolment to a greater emphasis on teaching quality and on
managing learning programmes toward better outcomes. “We
need to examine course completion rates, and to minimise the
number of students who embark upon programmes of study but
get lost in the system through insufficient foresight and
planning, or through inflexible bureaucratic processes which
do not allow them to customise their study according to
their needs and their family situations,” he said. “The
major outstanding issue is the funding system, and you can
expect further action this year alongside of the development
of the new TES. The current EFTS system is too much based on
funding quantity (‘bums on seats’) and it provides no
particular incentives to pursue relevance and to enhance
quality.”
Meanwhile, Dr Cullen has moved to reassure the
sector that media reports interpreting his speech as saying
that further funding for universities could not be
anticipated was wrong. In a letter to AUS National
President, Professor Nigel Haworth, Dr Cullen said that his
statement, that universities did not have the inside running
for additional funding because he is the Minister of
Finance, should not be construed as saying that there is no
additional money available.
Dr Cullen’s speech can be
found on the AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/news/2006/CullenSpeechNZUSA.pdf
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Canterbury to axe more
staff
2. International PhD students caught in
discriminatory trap
3. Student magazine banned, belatedly
4. New Chief Executive for NZQA
5. TEC allocates
polytechnics $6 million
6. ITP boss steps
down
7. Challenge to US ban on Islamic scholar
8. VCs’
salary figures revealed as pay talks break
down
9. University of London rapped over degree
quality
10. Zimbabwe students ordered to learn
Chinese
Canterbury to axe more staff
The University of
Canterbury is poised to axe more academic staff from its
College of Arts as it moves to cut operational expenditure
by $1.6m over the next two years. Last year, around eight
staff took voluntary severance but it is expected that
around a some twenty more positions will be lost this
year.
A Crisis Committee, including academic-staff
representatives, which has been set up to look at ways of
reducing expenditure, is expected to make recommendations
about cost-cutting to the College of Arts Pro
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Ken Strongman, tomorrow.
Preliminary recommendations will be sent to staff who will
have one week to provide feedback before final
recommendations are released for formal consultation.
In
a letter to staff, Professor Strongman advised that staff
cuts will be necessary as “we” match our resources with the
College’s strategic goals and priorities. “Not knowing which
positions these might be, it is difficult to say exactly how
many staff are likely to be directly affected,” he
wrote.
AUS Canterbury Branch President, Dr David Small,
rejected the need for staff cuts, saying that the University
was on track to return a record financial surplus for 2005,
and the alleged budget crisis was an artificial one created
solely by University management. “Colleges are required to
return more than 40 percent of their income to the central
administration in what is euphemistically called a
contribution margin,” he said. “What that means is a
disproportionate amount of income is siphoned off for
management purposes instead of being used, as it was
intended, for teaching and research.”
Dr Small said the
financial-management model used by the University was in
conflict with the Government’s funding regime, which
provided bulk funding in a manner which allowed high-volume
courses and subject areas to cross-subsidise those which
were specialised and resource-hungry.
It is expected that
a final decision on the number of staff to be shed will be
made in April, with affected staff to leave the University
during the course of the year.
International PhD students
caught in discriminatory trap
A number of existing
international PhD students say they have been caught in a
discriminatory trap following the introduction of a new
policy by the Government which saw tuition fees for new
international students reduced to the same levels as
domestic students from April last year. The Committee on
Equity for International PhD Researchers, which was formed
at the end of last year, says the University of Canterbury
declared that international PhD students enrolled before 19
April last year, will not be included in the new domestic
fee scheme, meaning that they would continue to pay fees for
the duration of their study of up to five times higher than
international PhD students enrolled after that time. For
example, they say that existing Biological Sciences students
would continue to pay tuition fees of $22,225 per year,
while new students would pay up to $4,626 per
year.
Students who contacted University authorities to
explain their case were told that the decision regarding fee
levels for existing international PhD students was not the
responsibility of the University but that of the Government.
They say they were perplexed when the Tertiary Education
Minister and other government officials advised them that
the responsibility for the existing fees lies with the local
universities.
University of Canterbury Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Roy Sharp, told Committee members that, while he
will look into ways of assisting affected students, the
University is unable to lower fees for all international PhD
students without further financial support from the
Government.
In a written declaration, Committee members
say they make a significant contribution to New Zealand's
research environment and that they will work towards a
solution that would encourage these students to continue to
make that contribution. They believe that a unanimous call
from all universities in New Zealand may be what is
currently needed to pressure the Government to address the
inequality of its policy.
The Committee on Equity for
International PhD researchers may be contacted
at:
committee_on_equity@yahoo.co.nz
Student magazine
banned, belatedly
An issue of the Otago University
student magazine Critic has been banned by the Office of
Film and Literature Classification because it tends to
promote sexual violence and criminal activity. The ban will
have little effect, however, because the issue in question
was published in September last year and its distribution
was completed before it was submitted for
classification.
The New Zealand Police submitted the
magazine for classification after it was published,
primarily because it contained an article on how to drug and
rape women written from a drug-rapist’s perspective. The
Classification Office also received submissions from the
magazine’s publisher, and the New Zealand Drug Rape Trust,
Rape Crisis Dunedin and the Society for the Promotion of
Community Standards.
The Classification Office decided
that the magazine is injurious to the public good because it
places an instructional drug-rape article beside a positive
profile of a man who makes a living by filming the extreme
degradation and humiliation of women for sexual
arousal.
The magazine’s editorials ask readers to think
about the nature of offensiveness and the boundaries of what
should be published, and claim to draw readers’ attention
“to what to look out for to combat the sinister and growing
trend” of drug-rape. The Classification Office found that
these claims lacked credibility.
“The magazine asks the
reader to find humour in its demeaning descriptions of women
and its matter-of-fact references to raping them,” said
Chief Censor Bill Hastings. “Because it contains no articles
written from the victim’s perspective to balance those from
the perpetrator’s perspective,” said Hastings, “this issue
of Critic is distinctly uncritical of, and indeed tends to
promote, the very criminal activities it purports to
challenge.”
“The magazine’s claimed ‘theme of
offensiveness’ never discusses the nature of offensiveness,
and does not acknowledge the ability of articles appearing
to endorse sexual violence and misogyny to cause injury to
the public good,” added Hastings.
New Chief Executive for
NZQA
The New Zealand Qualifications Authority has
announced the appointment of Dr Karen Poutasi, the current
Director-General of Health, as its new Chief Executive. She
will take up her new role at the beginning of May. Dr
Poutasi is a medical graduate of Otago University, and holds
Otago University and Harvard University management
qualifications. She has held a Harkness Fellowship and is on
the New Zealand Appointments Committee for Harkness
Fellowships in Health Care Policy.
Dr Poutasi was
responsible for implementing government policy to establish
district health boards and is currently overseeing a major
change to the delivery of primary health care.
NZQA
Acting Board Chair, Catherine Gibson, says the Board is
delighted that Dr Poutasi has accepted the job. “Dr Poutasi
has been Director-General of Health and Chief Executive of
Health since 1995 and has significant management experience
at the highest level. She brings a wealth of experience in
cultural and organisational change,” she said.
Catherine
Gibson also said that Dr Poutasi has considerable
understanding of the education and training needs of the
Health and Health Sciences sector, and is well aware of the
significance of a robust qualifications framework at all
levels.
Dr Poutasi said that she is committed to quality
assurance within education. “Improving access to education
must go hand-in-hand with quality assurance. It will be a
pleasure picking up the reins from Acting Chief Executive
Karen Sewell, and building on the work she has done over the
past few months,” she said.
Karen Sewell will remain
until Dr Poutasi takes over in May.
TEC allocates
polytechnics $6 million
The Tertiary Education
Commission allocated $6 million to Institutes of Technology
and Polytechnics (ITPs) in January to help them build closer
ties with business. The ITP Business Links Fund has been set
up to help polytechnics understand what businesses need so
they can tailor their courses to meet those needs. This
allocation of Business Links funding is the second in a four
year funding round.
TEC Manager National Team Liaison
and Development, Ian Elliott, said that TEC was impressed
with the high calibre of most of the projects in this
funding round. “We agreed to fund sixteen ITPs on the basis
of their initial applications. We are working with another
four, Telford Rural Polytechnic, Unitec, the Open
Polytechnic of New Zealand and Northland Polytechnic, to
ensure their projects align with the aims of the fund.
Funding for these ITPs is conditional on them meeting this
requirement,” he said. “Instead of declining funding
outright, we are giving them this opportunity because we do
not want them to lose the progress they made last
year.”
The maximum allocation is $400,000 while the
minimum is $100,000.
ITP boss steps down
Long-serving
Executive Director of Institutes of Technology and
Polytechnics of New Zealand (ITP New Zealand), Jim Doyle,
has announced that he will leave the organisation on 30
April to pursue other opportunities. He has headed ITP New
Zealand, which acts as the collective voice for the nineteen
institutions, for the past seventeen years.
Chair of the
ITP New Zealand Board, Neil Barns, says that the change will
be a watershed for the organisation. “Jim’s long commitment
and his deep understanding of the sector have been critical
to its development for as long as we have had polytechnics
in their current form,” he said.
Among his many roles,
Mr Doyle was a member of the “Collaborating for Efficiency”
Steering Group, a ministerial steering group that was set up
to look at possible opportunities for efficiency gains. He
is also Chair of the World Federation of Colleges and
Polytechnics and a member of the New Zealand Tertiary
Consultative Group, which provides high-level advice to
government on strategic issues facing the tertiary-education
sector.
Dr Barns said that, over his time at ITP New
Zealand, Mr Doyle had played an important role in developing
and managing relationships with key sector organisations
such as the Tertiary Education Commission, New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee, Industry Training Federation
and, through the Minister of Education, the Ministry of
Education,.
Worldwatch
Challenge to US ban on Islamic
scholar
The American Civil Liberties Union and American
Association of University Professors (AAUP) have filed legal
proceedings to challenge a provision of the United States
Patriot Act that was used to deny a visa to a prominent
Islamic scholar, Tariq Ramadan. They say that the provision
allowed the Federal Government to bar Ramadan solely because
the Bush administration disapproved of his political views.
In August 2004, Mr. Ramadan, an influential Swiss-based
professor of Islamic studies and philosophy, was told that
the United States had revoked his visa, preventing him from
taking a tenured teaching position at the University of
Notre Dame.
Neither he nor Notre Dame was given an
explanation, but a representative of the Department of
Homeland Security said at the time the visa had been
withdrawn on the basis of a provision of the Patriot Act
that allows the government to deny a visa to anyone whom the
government believes “endorses or espouses terrorist
activity” or “persuades others” to do so.
The AAUP has
affirmed many times that the free circulation of scholars is
an integral part of academic and intellectual freedom, and
that the unfettered search for knowledge is indispensable
for the strengthening of a free and orderly world. The AAUP
routinely invites foreign scholars to lecture, attend
conferences and meet with US academics, and has intervened
on behalf of scholars who are oppressed in other
countries.
From the Chronicle of Higher Education and
AAUP
VCs’ salary figures revealed as pay talks break
down
Salary figures released to the two unions
representing university staff in the United Kingdom reveal
that vice-chancellors and principals on the Universities and
Colleges Employers’ Association (UCEA) Board have received,
on average, a pay increase of 32.1 percent over the last
three years. During the same three-year period, pay for
academic and general staff has risen by just 9.44
percent.
The figures, released under freedom of
information provisions, came as pay negotiations between the
higher education unions and UCEA broke down. The unions are
now balloting members over industrial action, which is
expected to include strike action and an assessment boycott.
Association of University Teachers General Secretary,
Sally Hunt, said that, while she should know better than to
be surprised at the double standards employed by the
vice-chancellors when it comes to pay, the sizes of these
increases are staggering. “They promised us they would use
the new money coming into the sector to sort out staff pay,
and then when it arrives they try to wriggle their way out
of that commitment,” she said. “Vice-chancellors have
consistently pleaded poverty when it comes to paying their
staff, yet any suggestion of belt tightening doesn't seem to
extend to their own pay. Our members have little desire to
disrupt the education of millions of hardworking students,
but these new revelations will only harden our resolve.
Unless the employers come back to the table with a decent
offer then industrial action will be the sad inevitability
of their refusal to meet with us.”
University of London
rapped over degree quality
The University of London was
sharply criticised this week by the British Government’s
higher-education watchdog for failing to monitor the quality
of its degrees taken by 125,000 students. The Quality
Assurance Agency (QAA) said it had broad confidence in the
standard of degrees in all twenty member institutions of the
University of London, but expressed “limited confidence” in
the oversight of degrees by the central University.
The
University has, however, rejected the QAA’s verdict, and
insists its degrees are guaranteed by its member colleges,
many of which, such as King’s College or Royal Holloway, are
universities in their own right.
From Education
Guardian
Zimbabwe students ordered to learn
Chinese
Students at Zimbabwe’s seven public universities
will be required this year to begin studying Chinese
language and history as part of President Robert G. Mugabe's
“Look East” policy. The country’s Higher-Education
Minister, Stan Mudenge, has ordered vice-chancellors to
start preparing the new courses because of a pressing need
to bring the people of Zimbabwe and China together and to
promote trade and tourism between them.
Student unions
at Zimbabwe’s universities have criticised the new course
requirement, saying it amounts to Chinese imperialism. In a
telephone interview, Washington Katema, President of the
Zimbabwe National Association of Student Unions, said the
students did not oppose the language as a subject, but they
are against the notion of forcing it on all students.
A
senior lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe, reported by
the Voice of America, said that it is foolhardy to launch
new programmes when old ones are in tatters.
From the
Chronicle of Higher
Education
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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