AUS Tertiary Update
Boost to international education
In an address to the
annual Education New Zealand International Education
Conference this morning, the Minister for Tertiary
Education, Dr Michael Cullen, has outlined a new direction
and additional promotional spending for the international
education sector.
The new direction will be based on four
distinct goals: that New Zealand students will be equipped
to thrive in an inter-connected world; that New Zealand’s
education providers will be strengthened academically and
financially through international links; that international
students will be enriched by their educational and living
experiences in New Zealand; and that the direct economic and
social benefits to New Zealand from international education
activities must grow to their full potential.
Supporting
the new agenda, Dr Cullen has announced that the Government
will re-allocate $1 million in Export Education Levy funds
in this and the next financial year towards supporting
additional promotion and marketing activities. An extra
$200,000 will also be provided this year from Vote Education
to support more promotion and marketing work in India.
The Government will also undertake ministerial missions
in 2006/07 to North Asia (including China) and Northern
Europe and in 2007/08 to South East Asia and the Middle
East, improve the effectiveness of quality-assurance and
pastoral-care policies, implement an effective international
media and communications strategy and investigate other
promotional and marketing ideas. Dr Cullen said he has also
asked his officials to investigate proposals to expand
existing scholarship programmes.
Dr Cullen told the
Conference that New Zealand must do much better at
attracting high-calibre international students and
researchers. “We live in a world that is hungry for
education. I firmly believe that New Zealand can meet some
of that demand, and establish itself as a premier provider
in a number of high-value niches in the international
education market,” he said. “This is a $2 billion a year
industry which provides important opportunities for
educators here and offshore. The thousands of overseas
students here enrich our communities and help raise the
standards of our domestic students.”
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Tertiary providers rapped over
student care
2. He maemae aroha
3. Massey awarded
tertiary-teaching-centre contract
4. Two new centres of
research excellence to be established
5. Otago
Polytechnic to increase fees
6. Top scholarships
awarded
7. University of Sydney rolls out
AWAs
8. Canadian universities boycott ranking
9. Plummeting numbers jeopardise sciences
10. AVCC
labelled whingers
Tertiary providers rapped over student
care
Private Training Establishments were the subject of
two-thirds of the number of complaints made by international
students last year, according to the latest report of the
International Education Appeal Authority. The Authority
received sixty-two complaints related to breaches of the
Code of Practice for the Pastoral Care of International
Students for the period 1 October 2004 to 30 September 2005,
down from 101 complaints the previous year.
The Code of
Practice sets out minimum requirements for
tertiary-education providers which are designed to go some
way to providing the conditions required for the experience
of international education to be a positive one for both
students and their host country.
Of the latest
complaints, forty-one were against private training
establishments, ten against universities, and a further
eleven against schools, polytechnics and colleges of
education. In all, complaints were received about
forty-three different providers by students from Canada,
China, Germany, India, Japan, Korea, Russia, Saudi Arabia
and the United States.
The report said that, while it was
evident that many providers had excellent systems in place
for dealing with international students, some providers
appeared to be acting with little regard for the Code. “It
is disappointing to discover that some large institutions
are not fully meeting their obligations to provide
appropriate services for their international students,” it
reads. “If the international education sector is to
flourish it is essential that providers enrol students who
are well-informed about the courses they propose to
participate in, that they select only those students who are
going to be able to participate effectively in their courses
and that they provide appropriate support services once the
students are in New Zealand.”
The types of complaint
received included poor course quality, inappropriate course
placement, poor quality of homestay accommodation,
inadequate information about course costs, expulsion and
threats of expulsion, provider failure to pay refunds where
due, provider failure to record and maintain information
about the student and a lack of fairness in the way requests
for refunds were dealt with.
In its report, the Authority
took the unusual step of directing that the Capital Language
Academy be named, along with the particulars of a complaint
laid against it, after it was ordered to repay a student
$3277 in fees and $750 in compensation because it took
nearly seven months to refund the fees to the student, who
was unable to attend a course in 2004.
He maemae
aroha
The Association of University Staff and Te
Kahurangi Whāiti are mourning the loss of the Māori Queen,
Te Arikinui Dame Te Atairangi Kāhu.
Crowned on May 23
1966, Dame Te Ata was the Kingitanga movement’s first
Māori Queen. The Kingitanga movement was formed in 1856 as
a way of protecting Maori land under the mantle of a King,
the first of whom was Pōtatau Te Wherowhero, an ancestor of
Dame Te Ata. During her forty-year reign she was involved
in local, national and international politics and an avid
and staunch supporter of indigenous development.
Dame Te
Ata was awarded an honorary doctorate from Waikato
University in 1973, and an honorary Doctor of Laws from
Victoria University in 1999. She was one of the first
inductees of the Order of New Zealand when it was
established in 1987. She was also the first Māori woman to
be made a Dame.
Dame Te Ata is (was?) very well respected
within the university sector. She is (was?)a strong
advocate for Māori women and is (was?) regarded within
Maoridom as a great and influential leader.
AUS Māori
Officer, Naomi Manu, said today that Dame Te Atairangi Kāhu
is a person that Aotearoa will stop to mourn. “Her
untimely death is a loss for a country that needs leaders
like her,” she said. “The fact she was awarded two
honorary doctorates by two universities in this country
shows how important she was to university staff members and
she will be remembered. Her death is sadly
mourned.”
Massey awarded tertiary-teaching-centre
contract
A Massey University-led consortium has won the
contract to establish the new National Centre for Tertiary
Teaching Excellence. The Government will spend $4m a year
on the Centre, which will be hosted by Massey University in
collaboration with Auckland University of Technology,
University of Canterbury, Christchurch College of Education,
Universal College of Learning and Manukau Institute of
Technology.
The Centre will be based at Massey’s
Wellington campus with regional hubs in Auckland,
Christchurch and Palmerston North. The hubs will work with
tertiary-education providers to fund and support a range of
services, activities and projects throughout the
country.
Making the announcement yesterday, the Minister
for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, said that the
Centre would promote and support effective teaching and
learning across New Zealand’s tertiary sector. “It will
assist tertiary-education organisations and educators to
deliver the best possible learning outcomes for students,”
he said. “The Centre will also support and challenge
tertiary-education organisations to enhance the
effectiveness of teaching and learning practices. This will
undoubtedly have a positive impact on the quality of
teaching and will result in students achieving their full
potential.”
The National Centre for Tertiary Teaching
Excellence will establish benchmarks to improve teaching
practice; support the development of subject expertise in
tertiary teaching; research, identify and share effective
teaching and learning practices; explore the need for
professional standards, including entry requirements to the
tertiary-teaching profession; and administer the Tertiary
Teaching Excellence awards
Dr Cullen said that
encouraging excellence in teaching would reinforce the
Government’s reforms of the tertiary-sector-funding
framework as it strives to lift quality across the sector.
“High-quality teachers producing high-quality, work-ready
students where the economy needs them most is vital for
economic transformation,” he said.
Two new centres of
research excellence to be established
The Government is
to set up two new research centres and increase funding to
existing Centres of Research Excellence, according to an
announcement by the Minister for Tertiary Education last
Friday.
In June, Dr Cullen said that the Government
agreed to support the existing seven centres, known as
Cores, beyond 2008, and an additional $10m in operating
funding and one-off capital funding of $20m from 2007/08 has
now been allocated.
The Cores were set up in 2002 and
2003 with the aim of producing world-class research that is
focused on New Zealand's future development.
Dr Cullen
said that he is extremely pleased to be able to confirm that
further funding will be available for current Cores if
successful in the next selection round and that he is
excited by the prospect of New Zealand having up to two
additional Cores.
Dr Cullen said the Cores had created
collaborative scientific networks and their work was
supporting industry and impacting positively on the economy.
The Royal Society of New Zealand will conduct the
funding-allocation round on behalf of the Tertiary Education
Commission with proposal applications starting next
month.
Otago Polytechnic to increase fees
In a move
described by the New Zealand Union of Students Co-President,
Conor Roberts, as extremely disappointing, the Otago
Polytechnic will increase its 2007 domestic tuition fees by
up to 5 percent on current levels. It is the maximum
permissible increase under the Government’s fee-maxima
policy.
Mr Roberts said that students should not be
forced to pick up the slack because of the Government’s
under-funding of the public tertiary-education system. “Dr
Cullen is currently undertaking a review of how tertiary
education is funded in New Zealand, but is omitting to look
at the actual levels of funding for our institutions,” he
said. “Last year, students at Otago Polytechnic borrowed
over $8.5 million simply to pay for fees, students are
frustrated that it will be even higher next year.”
Mr
Roberts said that, if high quality tertiary education is
wanted in this country, then the Government must take
responsibility to fund it properly, as current funding
levels are outrageously low. “High fees act as a barrier
to tertiary education for many people and high debt has a
host of negative outcomes for students and the wider
society,” he said. “As we go into the fee-setting
season, students are calling on tertiary institutions to not
raise fees and send a message to the Government that they
cannot get away with simply passing the buck on to
students.”
Top scholarships awarded
The recipients
of the twenty-four Top Achiever Doctoral Scholarships were
announced this week by the Minister for Tertiary Education,
Dr Michael Cullen. The twenty-four scholars will get almost
$2.8 million over the next three years of their study and,
while most will undertake their research at a New Zealand
university, some will carry out their studies at an overseas
tertiary institution. On the completion of the scholarship,
students conducting research overseas must return to New
Zealand for a period equal to that of the
scholarship.
According to Dr Cullen, the scholarships
have been set up to nurture high-quality research in all
disciplines, and support development of internationally
competitive researchers and graduates. “The research
supported by the scholarships shows how tertiary education
can be a driver of innovation and improved productivity, and
underpin this country’s economic transformation,” he
said.
Top Achiever Doctoral Scholarships are administered
by the Tertiary Education Commission. The next round of
applications for the scholarships closes on 15 December
2006.
Worldwatch
University of Sydney rolls out
AWAs
In a move that has angered staff, the University of
Sydney yesterday began what it has described as the roll-out
of Australian Workplace Agreements. In a broadcast email to
the University’s 5,500 staff, the Vice-Chancellor, Gavin
Brown, has announced that all staff will be offered the AWAs
or individual employment agreements in place of the current
collective agreement, negotiated by the National Tertiary
Education Union (NTEU).
The email says that the
introduction of the arrangements offers the University the
opportunity to further strengthen its flexibility and
efficiency in an increasingly competitive environment, but
does not say how. It says that the University is committed
to maintaining fair, reasonable and competitive salaries and
conditions which both reward and recognise the contributions
of staff, and adds that complying with the Government’s
wish to have staff on individual agreements will result in
an additional $A15 million in government
funding.
Describing the offer as provocative, the
President of the NTEU University of Sydney Branch, Michael
Thompson, says that University management are trying to lure
staff on to AWAs with a non-guaranteed 6 percent performance
bonus, while at the same time stripping significant
conditions currently provided for under the current
collective agreement. Core conditions at risk include all
leave arrangements, “draconian” constraints on academic
freedom, increased powers to sack staff and reduced access
to arbitration procedures.
New South Wales NTEU State
Secretary, Chris Game, said that the Union was not aware of
any other university actively pushing AWAs in this way.
“It is a shame that, instead of leading the way with pay
and conditions, we have a University pushing a
worst-practice industrial model,” she said
Canadian
universities boycott ranking
Eleven Canadian
universities are refusing to participate in an annual
university ranking survey, saying that the magazine
conducting the survey uses flawed methodology.
On
Monday, the universities sent a joint letter to the
magazine’s publisher saying they would not participate in
a questionnaire used to compile information for the popular
Macleans University Ranking Issue. In the letter, the group
reiterated an ongoing concern “about the methodology used
in the ... survey and the validity of some of the measures
used”. The letter also stated that the universities’
“serious concerns have gone largely unaddressed, and there
is still no evidence that Macleans intends to respond to
them”.
Despite the boycott, the Macleans Managing
Editor of Special Projects, Tony Keller, said the eleven
universities will still be included in the issue.
“Journalists don't stop covering stories and subjects
because the stories and subjects criticise them,” he said.
“This information is all available. It’s all publicly
available from third-party sources, from university
consortia, through access to information, from annual
reports. It’s all there, so we'll be continuing ... to use
all that information.”
In an earlier letter in March,
four of the eleven universities voiced their dissatisfaction
with the magazine's data-collection methods. The letter was
accompanied by a boycott from the four universities of the
magazine's University Student Issue and its graduate survey.
From CTV Canada
Plummeting numbers jeopardise sciences
Research released in the United Kingdom this week
asserts that student numbers for Physics degrees are in
“terminal decline” and that other science subjects
including Chemistry and materials-based subjects such as
Metallurgy and Forensic Engineering, are under serious
threat.
One study, focusing on university student
numbers since 1996, showed that, while there had been a 6
percent drop in the number of full-time undergraduates
studying Physics, there had been a 20 percent decline in the
number of chemistry students and a 24 percent decline in the
number of students on materials-based courses.
Earlier
in the week, it had been reported that the number of
students taking A-level Physics had dropped by almost half
since 1982, and more than a quarter of universities with
large Physics departments have given up teaching the subject
since 1994
The research confirms concerns voiced earlier
this week by business leaders that Britain is in danger of
running out of scientists because of flaws in its
secondary-education system. Thousands of potential
physicists, biologists and chemists were being put off
because of a “stripped-down” science curriculum, a lack
of specialist teachers and uninspiring careers advice.
From Education Guardian
AVCC labelled whingers
A
review by education consultant PhillipsKPA has concluded
that the Australian Vice-Chancellors’ Committee
“brand” has become tarnished and carries negative
connotations with some stakeholders. It recommends that the
AVCC change its name to Universities Australia to better
reflect the nature of its membership.
Senior politicians
told PhillipsKPA they thought the AVCC was “a negative
organisation, characterised in its dealings with government
by political naivety and whingeing self-interest”. They
held a perception that the AVCC was “never satisfied with
government decisions”.
The review says a future
university “peak body” should make advocacy its chief
function, followed by analysis and services. It also says
the peak body needs to “embrace the diversity of its
membership and accept that a shared view will not be
achieved on all issues”.
The report says the AVCC
leadership team should comprise a part-time, paid,
non-executive chair of the Board and a full-time chief
executive.
The current AVCC Chief Executive, John
Mullarvey, offered no comment on the report, while the AVCC
President, Gerard Sutton, said the Board supported the broad
directions the report laid down for the sector. He added
that the perceptions held by politicians must be
addressed.
Vice-chancellors will discuss the report at a
retreat next month.
From The
Australian
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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