AUS Tertiary Update
Prestige programmes under threat at University of
Auckland
Senior members of staff at the University of
Auckland say they are outraged that management has refused
to extend consultation over a restructuring proposal that
could destroy prestige programmes in the Faculty of Arts and
cost more than fifty academic jobs across the University.
Association of University Staff Auckland Branch
President, Associate Professor Peter Wills, says that,
rather than allowing adequate time for staff to develop less
destructive alternatives, the Vice-Chancellor appears
determined to proceed with haste on selecting staff for
redundancy.
At a recent Faculty meeting, the Dean of Arts
refused to consider an extension of time for consultation on
restructuring and, in a letter addressed to seventeen
members of Senate, the Vice-Chancellor said that he would
not extend the period of consultation on the Arts
restructuring proposal because the delay would turn out to
be too costly.
Associate Professor Wills said that, in
some departments, the redundancies will have an enormous
effect on the teaching programmes. “They will have a
significant effect even in departments which may lose only
one member of staff,” he said. “The intention to
diminish European language teaching follows the termination
of Indonesian language a few years ago, ignoring indications
from government that more extensive language education
should be recognised as a vital cornerstone in New
Zealand’s economic development.”
According to
Associate Professor Wills, the proposed redundancies in the
Arts Faculty showed that the University had failed to set a
budget that bore any relation to reality, and had then used
bums-on-seats micro-accounting to decide on
academic-staffing levels and the constitution of its
courses. ”They encourage inflated projections of the
likely student market, and then want to sack staff when
their plans come adrift, but large-scale non-academic
expenditure proceeds regardless,” he said. “Some staff
who may lose their jobs have given over forty years of
service to students and their disciplines, and are
world-renowned scholars who have contributed significantly
to creating this University's status and international
rankings. Others with lower profiles are equally dedicated
to an institution that is prepared to discard them with
apparent impunity. Ironically, they may take the
advertising slogan, ’The Number One University in New
Zealand’, with them.”
Meanwhile, Massey University is
reported to be considering retirement packages or
non-renewal of some fixed-term contracts, while Lincoln
University is expected to lose as many as fifteen jobs as
part of a review of academic delivery.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Massey’s fee rise reckless, says
NZUSA
2. Unitec may continue bid for university
status
3. NZ universities in world’s top
200
4. Industry-training numbers continue to
grow
5. ASTE elects first Maori President
6. CQU
expands to New Zealand
7. Shake-up needed for complacent
university councils
8. Uni-Nanny is watching
9. Staff
called on to help out
Massey’s fee rise reckless, says
NZUSA
The New Zealand Union of Students’ Associations
has slammed as reckless a decision by the Massey University
Council to raise student-tuition fees by 5 percent and to
apply to the Tertiary Education Commission for an additional
5 percent increase for 2007. If permission is granted, the
total fee rise will be 10 percent. The Council voted by nine
votes to five in favour of the proposed
increase.
According to Massey’s Chancellor, Nigel
Gould, the increase is necessary to ensure that Massey
retains its position in the top three New Zealand
universities. He said that Massey’s fees are significantly
below the sector average because the fee-stabilisation
legislation introduced in 2003 froze Massey fees at lower
levels than other universities, and that was compounded by
the Council’s decision in 2004 to hold fees for 2005.
NZUSA Co-President Joey Randall said, however, that the
move was reckless in that it enabled the Government to
continue under-funding the sector while further indebting
students. “Massey students will be facing fee increases of
hundreds of dollars next year, with research postgraduate
students facing up to $1500 increases if Massey’s
exemption is approved,” he said. “The Massey Council has
taken the easy way out by forcing government under-funding
onto students instead of attacking the problem at its root
cause.”
In a written statement, Mr Gould said that the
question of whether to increase fees for 2007 and by how
much was considered in the context of future financial
strategies for the University. “The decision to increase
fees and request an exemption to the maxima reflects current
and projected student numbers, the rising costs of providing
quality education to our students and the need for the
University to maintain that quality,” he said.
Mr Gould
says the University expects to incur an operating deficit
this year because the cost of providing a quality teaching
and learning experience exceeded total income from the
programmes offered.
Following a suggestion from the
student representatives, it was also resolved that the
Massey Council, University management and students would
work collectively to address government funding, cost
reductions across the University and opportunities to
increase revenue.
Unitec may continue bid for university
status
A report today in the Dominion Post says that the
Auckland institute of technology, Unitec, may continue its
claim to become a university as legal action continues over
the Government’s decision of a year ago to decline the
institution’s bid for university status.
The report
says that, in a hearing currently under way in the Court of
Appeal, the Attorney General, on behalf of the Minister and
Associate Minister of Education, is challenging a High Court
ruling allowing Unitec to claim $3.6 million over its
long-delayed application to become a university. Although it
was eventually denied university status by the Government,
the High Court found that its application had been
unlawfully suspended between May 2000 and January
2003.
In turn, Unitec has cross-appealed, with its
lawyer, Mai Chen, arguing that the Minister has to continue
considering Unitec’s application for university status
under the rules which existed at the time it was made.
During the period in which Unitec’s application was
suspended, the Government placed a six-year moratorium on
hearing applications for new universities. Ms Chen says that
amounted to an unlawful suspension of a part of the
Education Act, and that the Minister was not able to stop
the process while the law was changed.
The hearing is
continuing.
NZ universities in world's top 200
Two New
Zealand universities have retained their placement in the
world’s top 200, both enhancing their rankings
significantly from 2004 and 2005. In the Times Higher 2006
World University Rankings, the University of Auckland has
improved from fifty-second place in 2005 to forty-six this
year, well up from sixty-seven in 2004. Similarly, the
University of Otago comes in at seventy-nine, well up from
its placing of 186 in 2005 and 114 in 2004. Massey
University, which slipped from 108 in 2004 to 188 in 2005,
does not appear in this year’s rankings.
Auckland is
placed at thirteen and Otago twenty-two in the top fifty
universities in the “rest of the world”, excluding
Europe and America. No other New Zealand university made the
rankings.
For the third year running, Harvard was rated
the top international university, with Cambridge and Oxford
Universities ranked second and third respectively. United
States and British institutions took the top thirteen spots,
with Beijing University taking the fourteenth. The
Australian National University, in sixteenth place, regained
its position as the leading Australian institution ahead of
the University of Melbourne at twenty-two.
The United
States has fifty-four universities in the top 200, the
United Kingdom twenty-eight and Australia thirteen.
The
Times Higher rankings were coordinated by Martin Ince, who
says that the universities are listed according to a range
of qualitative and quantitative criteria, including that of
peer review which accounts for 40 percent of the score
allotted to each university. Data gathered from 3,703
academics from around the world is enhanced by the opinions
of a group of outside observers, and then added to measures
designed to capture the quality of research and
teaching.
Association of University Staff National
President, Professor Nigel Haworth, said that, while it is
pleasing that New Zealand universities are consistently
ranking amongst the world’s best, it is worrying that not
more universities were represented. “This reinforces our
view that funding and salary levels must be improved as a
matter of priority if New Zealand universities are to remain
internationally benchmarked,” he said. “It also argues
strongly for the Government, the vice-chancellors and the
unions to work together in a collaborative way through the
tripartite process to improve funding levels.”
Industry
training numbers continue to grow
The number of Modern
Apprentices in New Zealand at 30 June was 9,171, up 13
percent on the same time last year, and the total number of
industry trainees was 123,202, up 11 percent, according to
figures released by the Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr
Michael Cullen.
According to Dr Cullen, the continued
growth in numbers enrolling for Modern Apprenticeships and
Industry Training underscores the value of these initiatives
at a time when employers are demanding more skilled labour.
“Modern Apprenticeships continues to prove its value with
almost 2,300 having completed since the establishment of the
programme in 2000,” he said. “Just a few months ago I
had the pleasure of congratulating the 2,000th Modern
Apprentice to complete training. I am delighted that this
successful initiative is continuing to make a real
difference in developing the skilled labour force New
Zealand needs.”
Dr Cullen said that Industry Training
and Modern Apprenticeships are central pillars in
transforming New Zealand into a higher-growth and
higher-wage economy by improving achievement in education,
building a skilled workforce and lifting business
productivity. “The schemes’ success is why Budget 2006
allocated an additional $58 million over the next four years
to expand the number of Modern Apprenticeships to 14,000 by
December 2008, and for other industry-training
initiatives,” he said.
ASTE elects first Maori
President
At its annual conference late last week, the
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education Te Hau Takitini o
Aotearoa, announced the election of Sharon Tangi Stevens as
the first Maori National President of the union. Outgoing
President Lloyd Woods said that ASTE members were excited at
the prospect of seeing the partnership principles that their
union espouses being reflected in their choice of National
President.
Ms Stevens, of Te Arawa descent, is a
lecturer in communications at Waiariki Institute of
Technology. She said that she has a fundamental commitment
to ensuring that the tertiary-education sector has a strong
voice through its union in government forums. Sharon said,
“I am proud and honoured to be elected to this
position.”
Sharon Tangi Stevens has held the position
of Vice-President for the past four years and she will be
succeeded in that position by Michael O’Connell, a
lecturer in nursing at UCOL on its Palmerston North
campus.
Lloyd Woods said that Sharon and Michael will
form a strong team leading the union through the tertiary
reforms that will begin to be implemented next year. Both
Sharon and Michael will take up their two-year terms on 1
February 2007.
CQU expands to New Zealand
The
Australian Central Queensland University will offer up to
ten Accounting, Business and Information Technology
programmes in New Zealand when its first intake of students
commences studies in November. In another venture with its
long-standing commercial partner, Campus Group Holdings, CQU
will provide the programmes at the New Zealand International
Campus in Heretaunga, Wellington, formerly New Zealand’s
Central Institute of Technology.
According to its
Vice-Chancellor and President, Professor John Rickard, it is
important for CQU to diversify. He adds that the University
currently has about 12,000 international students, with the
potential to accommodate several thousand more in New
Zealand. “New Zealand and the Wellington region are
extremely attractive to international students. Wellington
is New Zealand’s cultural and political capital. It’s
very close to the coast, safe and affordable. It even gets
more sunshine than Melbourne,” he said.
Geoff Ormandy,
Chief Executive of the New Zealand International Campus,
describes the partnership as “a milestone” in
international education. “The development has the
potential to make a positive contribution to the enrolment
of international students in New Zealand where overall
numbers have reached a plateau over the past two years,”
he said.
Worldwatch
Shake-up needed for complacent
university councils
The Australian Education Minister,
Julie Bishop, has told a national conference on university
governance that councillors’ terms should be shortened and
the bodies they serve on pruned to ensure fresh ideas and
good governance. She said that councillors should not serve
beyond twelve years and that terms of longer than eight
years should be rare.
Ms Bishop is reported to have
criticised universities for their “slack” uptake of the
Government's university-governance professional-development
programme, which is aimed at lifting the expertise of those
who serve on councils. Only six institutions had signed up.
“There appears to be a culture of complacency creeping
into the governance of universities,” she said.
New
government protocols for universities include controlling
the size of council membership and refreshing it regularly,
and introducing and publishing grievance procedures. “With
regard to the size of governing bodies, I don't think the
limit of twenty-two in the national governance protocols has
gone far enough,” Ms Bishop said. “Good-practice models
suggest that ten to fifteen members is the ideal size for
such a body: large enough to benefit from a diversity of
viewpoints, while small enough to facilitate effective
decision-making.”
Ms Bishop chided universities for
adhering only to the minimum of governance requirements
under the protocols.
From The Australian
Uni-Nanny is
watching
Some students in the United Kingdom are being
“electronically tagged” so that their attendance at
lectures and tutorials can be closely monitored as part of
moves to reduce drop-out rates.
An electronic monitoring
system called Uni-Nanny, under which students identify
themselves at every “learning event” with individual
computer chips in their key rings, is already in use at
Glamorgan University, which developed the technology. The
product has just been bought by Napier University, and deals
are set to be signed with two other institutions.
Performance indicators published last month showed that
one in six students drops out, costing an estimated £450
million a year.
Critics say that the phenomenon
represents an alarming trend towards “Big Brother”
surveillance and the nannying of students who should be
self-motivated. But enthusiasts argue that efficient
attendance monitoring is proven to reduce drop-out rates by
quickly identifying students who are failing to engage with
their courses.
Sally Hunt, joint General Secretary of
the University and College Union, said that tagging students
sounds like some kind of Orwellian nightmare. “If the
excuse for their implementation is to cut down on paperwork,
then it is nice that some institutions are starting to
recognise that excessive red tape is a real problem for
staff. However, there are plenty of other avenues they can
explore to slash bureaucracy,” she said.
Times Higher
Education Supplement
Staff called on to help out
One of
Australia's largest, oldest and richest universities has
found a new source of donations: its staff. The University
of Melbourne, which last year booked a budget surplus of
$1.08 billion and which expects to increase that by $31.9
million this year, has launched a staff appeal that urges
employees to give “as little as $2 a fortnight”.
The
University calls on staff to join what it describes as a
national trend of philanthropy described as “the growing
number of Australians answering the call to give back”.
Citing dwindling support from the Federal Government,
the University urges staff to contribute to ”designated
charitable options”, which include the University
scholarships fund and its library and cultural collection.
On a web page dedicated to the 2006 staff appeal,
employees are assured that donated funds will go to the
designated University arm or charity and that there are no
deductions for administrative costs.
National Tertiary
Education Union Melbourne Branch President, Ted Clark, said
staff were bemused by the appeal. “It is one of the many
things at the University that are coming out of left
field,” he said. “My opinion is that staff just won't
contribute. I think it'll just be a bit of a failure.”
The University is offering membership of the
Chancellor's Circle to those who give at least $A1000 ($39 a
fortnight by payroll deduction).
The
Australian
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz