AUS Tertiary Update
Stop funding PTEs for research and degrees, says AUS
The
Association of University Staff has told the Government that
it does not support public funding being made available to
allow private tertiary-education providers to offer
research-led degree and postgraduate education and to
undertake research.
The submission comes in response to
a discussion paper from the Tertiary Education Commission
(TEC) which proposes four specific contribution-areas for
which PTEs may be eligible for public funding. The paper
justifies making funding available for degree-teaching and
research on the basis that there are already a small number
of PTEs that offer degree and postgraduate education and
research in niche areas such as theology, computer game
development and teaching. TEC says that this provision is
currently funded from the Student-Component Fund and that
some PTEs also receive money from the Performance-Based
Research Fund (PBRF).
According to the 2005 PBRF Annual
Report, there were only six research degree completions
across the entire PTE sector in 2004 and, among them, the
seven PTEs participating in the PBRF received only 0.06
percent of the available funding.
Other areas where TEC
proposes funding PTEs include the provision of skills for
employment and productivity, for foundation education that
builds literacy, language or numeracy and/or staircases to
higher learning and for teaching and learning environments
based on Maori pedagogy and approaches which enable learners
to re-engage in education.
AUS National President,
Professor Nigel Haworth, said that it is completely
inappropriate for research-led undergraduate and
postgraduate degrees to be included as distinctive
contributions to be made by PTEs. “By doing so, the
reputation of New Zealand university degrees is threatened
and, without any analysis, PTE research is being legitimised
by TEC,” he said. “It also signals to PTEs that, in
order to secure more public funding, they should increase
the miniscule amount of research and research-degree
completions in their sector.”
Professor Haworth said
that the New Zealand Tertiary Education Strategy and reforms
were designed to define the distinctive contributions made
by the various types of tertiary-education organisations and
ensure that each concentrated on recognised areas of
strength and expertise. “Allowing or encouraging PTEs to
engage further in degree teaching and research by making
public funding available to them is an unnecessary
embellishment of their current role, and can only lead to
further duplication and unnecessary competition,” he
said.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Warning of
further redundancies at University of Auckland
2. UNITEC
ordered to consult with union
3. NZ universities leaders
in creating wealth
4. New Centre for Tertiary Teaching
Excellence established
5. Summit on resourcing for public
education
6. AUS vacancy for new Deputy General
Secretary
7. Room for improvement on equity
figures
8. Disparity among efforts required for
university courses
9. Protests scuttle President’s
appointment
10. Golf programme hits the rough
Warning
of further redundancies at University of Auckland
Further redundancies among academic staff at the
University of Auckland are feared if a "risky" venture to
build a new biotech centre at the School of Biological
Sciences falls below budget targets. The Association of
University Staff says that staff there are watching what is
currently happening in the Business, Education and Arts
Faculties, and are worried that they too could lose their
jobs.
The possibility of eventual redundancies among
academic staff cannot be ruled out in the event that plans
to make money from partnerships with pharmaceutical
companies and agribusiness in a proposed
multi-million-dollar Institute for Innovation in
Biotechnology fail.
AUS Auckland Branch spokesperson,
Associate Professor Peter Wills, said that the University is
using completely the wrong model for partnership with
biotechnology business interests. "There should be an
absolute firewall between the academic and business sides of
operations such as this," he said. "Instead, they talk of a
seamless connection with biotechnology companies, they
distort the balance of academic programmes and then they
raise the possibility of redundancies among academic staff.
We are all sympathetic to the University's need to develop
new sources of revenue, but academic autonomy and integrity
cannot be put at risk."
Associate Professor Wills said
that the plan to graft a large business enterprise on to the
School of Biological Sciences was not discussed by the
School’s external Advisory Board when that is precisely
the sort of advice that should have been sought about
entering the risky commercial biotech
arena.
Associate-Professor Wills called on the University
to put the plan on hold until it could guarantee the
integrity of academic programmes and security of tenure for
academic staff.
Meanwhile, the Branch has launched an
email-postcard allowing individuals to register concern that
the University has embarked on an unnecessary and severe
form of restructuring resulting in the loss of fifty-four
faculty positions in Education, Business and Arts. It can be
found at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/postcard.asp
UNITEC
ordered to consult with union
The Employment Relations
Authority (ERA) has issued compliance orders against the
Auckland institute of technology, UNITEC, requiring it to
consult properly with staff and their union before making
any final decisions relating to withdrawing a diploma course
in Design Media and to refrain from shifting the location of
two business courses to its campus in Waitakere.
The
orders require UNITEC to comply with the provisions of the
academic staff collective employment agreement, which
provides for a period of one month for submissions from the
union, the Association of Staff in Tertiary Education
(ASTE), and staff in response to its proposals.
In making
the orders, the Employment Relations Authority rejected
concerns from UNITEC about the effect that having to
undertake consultation at this time of the year would have
on its 2007 planning, saying this was a consequence of its
earlier actions and one which could have been avoided by
measures easily undertaken.
ASTE National Legal Officer,
Mike Dawson, said UNITEC’s decision to close down the
diploma course should have been the subject of full review
involving staff and the union and, similarly, that the move
to shift teaching the business courses to one campus should
have been the subject of formal consultation. In both cases,
the decisions were made without consultation.
Mr Dawson
said that the ERA’s determination confirmed the
requirement for employers to consult appropriately with
unions and their members in a formal and considered manner
when looking to make structural and staffing changes within
their organisations. “These compliance orders highlight
the fact that employers are not a law unto themselves,” he
said. “They need to abide by the terms of the collective
agreements and, most importantly, they need to understand
that reasonable timeframes for consultation, and talking
with and listening to staff and their representatives in a
timely manner, will result in better decisions for
everyone.”
Mr Dawson continued, saying that he hoped
that the Authority’s decision would mean that UNITEC’s
proposals could now be properly considered by staff. “We
hope that this outcome will mean that any future proposals
by UNITEC management will be dealt with through proper
processes and in full consultation with ASTE members through
their union.”
NZ universities leaders in creating
wealth
The market value of companies started by New
Zealand universities grew more than four times between 2003
and 2005 to a total of more than $430 million, according to
figures compiled by Ernst & Young. The findings, when
applied to overseas benchmarks by the University
Commercialisation Offices of New Zealand (UCONZ), showed
that New Zealand universities are matching or significantly
out-performing overseas benchmarks. It says that, per dollar
invested, New Zealand universities produced more than twice
the number of new companies than the United States average
and over 50 percent more than Canada, and that New Zealand
universities produced patent applications on a par with US
performance and 30 percent more efficiently than
Canada.
The range of economic benefits for New Zealand
arising from the universities’ commercialisation activity
as detailed by Ernst & Young include that, between 2003 and
2005, the market capitalisation of companies founded using
intellectual property developed by New Zealand universities
grew from $76m to over $430m, the universities’
commercialisation organisations raised over $100m in capital
for spinout companies and the number of people directly
employed by these new companies grew almost 200 percent,
from 198 to 356.
The Minister for Research, Science and
Technology, Steve Maharey, welcomed the results, saying that
developments in universities to set up organisations that
commercialise intellectual property are part and parcel of a
modern university setting. “The Government applauds this
rapid success,” he said.
UCONZ says that, because
university research has a very high multiplier effect, the
actual gains to the economy go well beyond the direct
figures quoted, with a recent report on the economic impact
of the University of Auckland showing that, for every dollar
generated by university research, another seven dollars of
new value was created in the regional economy.
New Centre
for Tertiary Teaching Excellence established
New
Zealand’s first Centre for Tertiary Teaching Excellence is
under way, with Massey University’s Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Judith Kinnear, signing the funding agreement with
the Tertiary Education Commission last Friday. The Centre
includes AUT University, the University of Canterbury, the
Christchurch College of Education, the Universal College of
Learning and Manukau Institute of Technology.
The Centre,
to be based at Massey’s Wellington campus, is part of a
$20 million, five-year Government initiative intended to
boost the quality of teaching and support the development of
teaching expertise across the tertiary sector. It will have
regional hubs in Auckland, Palmerston North and
Christchurch.
The Centre’s Interim Director, Professor
Tom Prebble, says the new investment in teaching excellence
complements the Government’s focus on research. “The
Centre will help tertiary-education organisations and
educators to deliver the best possible learning outcomes for
students.” He says about half the $4 million annual budget
will be spent on projects, while some of the money will be
spent on research and monitoring and evaluation of effective
teaching.
The Centre 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
The Centre’s
establishment board includes representatives from wananga,
polytechnics, private training establishments and other
tertiary education providers.
Summit on resourcing for
public education
A one-day summit looking at resourcing
for quality public education is to be held later this month.
Its aims are to restate the case for free, high-quality
public education from early childhood to tertiary, outline
areas where current resourcing prevents the sector
delivering the highest quality to everyone and develop means
of applying pressure on the Government to do more to deliver
resources for education in the 2007 budget.
Organised by
the Quality Public Education Coalition, the summit will be
held on Wednesday 22 November at the St Columba Centre in
Auckland.
Included in the summit will be a session on
tertiary education, including an outline of current
resourcing, an overview of the current political direction
and a panel on resourcing. The panel will include AUS
National President Professor Nigel Haworth.
More
information can be found on the QPEC
website:
http://www.qpec.org.nz/
AUS vacancy for new
Deputy General Secretary
The Association of University
Staff has a vacancy for a full-time Deputy General Secretary
working in its National Office in Wellington. This is a
senior position in the organisation, deputising for the
General Secretary and developing, overseeing and
implementing the union’s industrial and professional
strategy. It includes staff-management responsibilities.
The appointee will have extensive industrial experience,
including strategy development, political skills, highly
developed writing and research skills and experience in the
union movement.
Further information and a job
description are available from the Association of University
Staff, P.O. Box 11-767, Wellington, email
Juping.Zhou@aus.ac.nz, Tel: 04 801 4790.
Applications,
including the names of three referees, should reach the
above address by Monday 27 November 2006.
Worldwatch
Room for improvement on equity figures
A
new report released by the American Association of
University Professors (AAUP) shows that, while a greater
proportion of women than men in the United States gain
university degrees, women still occupy only 24 percent of
academic positions at four-year degree colleges and
universities.
The report, AAUP Faculty Gender Equity
Indicators 2006, provides data on four specific measures of
gender equity for staff, both academic and non-academic, at
over 1,400 colleges and universities, with individual campus
listings included to promote discussion of faculty gender
equity at local university and college level.
The four
indicators compared in the report for men and women faculty
are employment status (full- and part-time), tenure status
for full-time faculty, promotion to full professor rank and
average salary for full-time faculty. The report consists of
three sections: an article on “Organising Around Gender
Equity”, aggregate national tables for each of the four
equity indicators by type of institution and an appendix
listing the four indicators for each individual college and
university. Data for the report are drawn primarily from the
AAUP Faculty Compensation Survey, with additional data on
part-time faculty from the US Department of
Education.
The report is the latest in a series of AAUP
initiatives aimed at improving the status of women faculty
dating from the formation of AAUP’s Committee on the
Status of Women in College and University Faculties.
The
report is available on the AAUP Web site at:
http://www.aaup.org/AAUP/pubsres/research/geneq2006.
Disparity among efforts required for university
courses
Undergraduates at different universities are
being awarded degrees in the same subjects after spending
wildly varying times in lectures, seminars and private
study, according to a new report released in the United
Kingdom.
Researchers at the Higher Education Policy
Institute who studied responses from 15,000 students to a
web-based survey last year say the extent of the
“remarkable” differences raises questions about what it
means to have a degree from an English university if it can
apparently be obtained with such very different levels of
effort.
The report, The academic experience of students
in English universities, says that students in Medicine and
Dentistry courses might be working for anything between
twenty-one and forty-five hours a week, those studying
biological sciences between nineteen and forty-three hours
while, in History, the difference ranged from seventeen to
more than thirty-two hours, depending on the university.
Responding to the report, Sally Hunt, joint General
Secretary of the University and College Union, said research
undertaken by the Union, to be released this week, paints a
worrying picture of how much time is spent by lecturers on
teaching and research compared to administrative duties.
“Our members complain of ever increasing bureaucracy and
this combined with rising student numbers puts enormous
pressure on staff, particularly now that students are paying
for their studies,” she said.
The report can be found
at:
http://www.hepi.ac.uk/pubdetail.asp?ID=223&DOC=reports
From
the Education Guardian and UCU
Protests scuttle
President’s appointment
In an abrupt reversal, trustees
at Gallaudet's University in Washington have bowed to
pressure from students and academic staff and have revoked
the appointment of the institution’s controversial new
President, Jane Fernandes. The decision comes after months
of protests, including hunger strikes, occupations of
college buildings, barricading of university gates and mass
arrests, at the country’s premier university for the
deaf.
The protesters said Ms Fernandes, who had served as
Gallaudet Provost, lacked leadership skills. They blamed her
for falling academic standards and said her promotion was
the result of a baroque selection process which denied other
candidates serious consideration. Ms Fernandes hit back,
accusing her opponents of rejecting her for not being
“deaf enough”.
Trouble began in May, when University
administrators selected Ms Fernandes to succeed the retiring
President. Students set up barricades at the main entrance,
demanding her removal. Last month, 82 percent of faculty
voted for her to quit and voted “no confidence” in the
University’s Board of Trustrees..
As the standoff
continued, Ms Fernandes also lost the confidence of the deaf
community, with the National Association for the Deaf
calling for her to go.
It is also the second consecutive
time that protests forced the Board’s hand in choosing a
president. Eighteen years ago, in a struggle that became a
watershed for deaf rights, demonstrators succeeded in
forcing a reluctant Board of Trustees to name Gallaudet’s
first deaf president in more than 100 years.
From the New
York Times and the Guardian
Golf programme hits the
rough
Peking University has shelved plans to build a
practice green for golf after a storm of criticism, with
opponents charging that the sport is too elitist, and
inappropriate at a university serving students from a wide
range of backgrounds.
In August, the University, where
Mao Zedong once worked as an assistant librarian, announced
that it planned to teach China 's intellectual elite how to
play golf as a part of its physical education
programme.
Peking University President Xu Zhihong is
reported as saying the unexpectedly heated public debate
made proceeding with the practice range “too
sensitive”.
Last month, Xiamen University in China’s
southeastern Fujian Province announced it would introduce
golf as a compulsory subject in order to produce “socially
elite”
graduates.
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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