AUS Tertiary Update
Universities to play a strong role in economic
transformation
Delegates to the Association of University
Staff Annual Conference have been told that universities
have a vital contribution to make towards achieving the
Government’s goals of accelerating the transformation of
New Zealand’s economy and achieving New Zealanders’
broader social and cultural aspirations.
Speaking to the
Conference on Tuesday, Dr Cullen also said that the $26
million funding for salaries achieved through the tripartite
process this year was an initial contribution to address
some immediate funding issues to better enable universities
to remain internationally competitive.
In an address
outlining the Government’s tertiary-education reforms, Dr
Cullen foreshadowed changes to legislation, saying that, at
the moment, the sector is structured for competition among
institutions, rather than for collaboration on national
economic priorities. “The new approach will see the
tertiary sector as a network of collaborating institutions,
not as competitors,” he said.
Dr Cullen said that
proposed legislative changes would give effect to the
Government’s decision to implement the Tertiary Education
Strategy, which contains the Government’s overall
priorities for the sector and three-year plans agreed
between individual tertiary-education organisations and the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC). These plans will set
out what TEC will fund and how the organisation will meet
the priorities identified in the Tertiary Education
Strategy.
As part of the changes, funding will move to a
three-year cycle, no longer shaped ad hoc by current-year
enrolment patterns and inducements.
Conference delegates
were told by Dr Cullen that he expected to see university
staff playing a positive role in the development of plans.
“AUS members are important stakeholders in the process of
achieving these goals,” he said. “Your views are already
influencing the Tertiary Education Commission, and I’m
pleased to see the relationship between you developing
well.”
As well as collaboration among institutions, Dr
Cullen pointed to increased collaboration among colleagues
across the sector and expressed a wish for more
collaboration between staff and management within
organisations. “The Tripartite Forum [among unions, the
Government and vice-chancellors] is a good first step. All
three parties have a commitment to help address the funding
issues of universities, with a view to increasing the
quality of teaching and research,” he said. “I look
forward to continuing my discussions with you and the
vice-chancellors over the next year.”
Dr Cullen’s
speech can be found
at:
http://www.beehive.govt.nz/ViewDocument.aspx?DocumentID=27876
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Single
tertiary-education-sector union proposed
2. University of
Technology Bill on the table
3. Unitec loses final battle
over university bid
4. Summit says financial stress rife
5. Waikato University to introduce “built for
purpose” degrees
6. Dons vote against managerialist
reform
7. Protests over £15m arms shares
8. Supreme
Court refuses to hear professor’s case
9. Mickey Mouse
courses on the rise
Single tertiary-education-sector union
proposed
The prospect of the formation of a single
tertiary-education-sector union has moved forward with a
decision of the AUS Annual Conference to support, in
principle, an amalgamation between AUS and the Association
of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE). As a result, a
working group will be set up early next year and discussions
will be held with ASTE over the likely shape of a new
organisation to represent staff in the country’s
universities, polytechnics, institutes of technology and
wananga.
AUS National President, Professor Nigel Haworth,
said that a catalyst for renewed consideration of a
tertiary-education sector union was the mergers between
universities and colleges of education and the
reclassification of AUT as a university. “Over one-quarter
of ASTE's membership is now employed in universities and
that proportion will increase with the integration of the
last remaining colleges of education at Christchurch and
Dunedin with the local universities,” he said.
“Amalgamation will increase our industrial capacity,
particularly with the potential inclusion of AUT in the
national bargaining process, and it will certainly allow for
a better use of the unions' resources”
Professor
Haworth said that, from a policy and political point of
view, an amalgamation would present some real advantages,
with AUS and ASTE having much in common and both wanting a
strong, well-funded public-tertiary-education sector. “A
new union will create a clearer identity for the
tertiary-education sector as a whole, while also allowing
for the unique characteristics of each part of the sector to
be retained and enhanced.”
It is expected that, by
around May next year, a more detailed merger proposal would
be prepared for discussion at branches, following which a
final proposal would be prepared for discussion at the 2007
conferences of both organisations. Professor Haworth said he
expected that the AUS Council would recommend a process of
balloting AUS members before any final decision is made. If
adopted, the merger would be effected by around November
2008.
Meanwhile, merger discussions are occurring between
ASTE and TIASA, a union representing general staff in the
polytechnic sector and at AUT. Similar mergers have been
completed in both Australia and the United
Kingdom.
University of Technology Bill on the
table
Despite clear indications from the Government that
it does not intend to establish more universities in this
country, New Zealand First Education spokesperson, Brian
Donnelly, is pressing ahead with a private member’s bill
aimed at creating a new category of tertiary institution, a
university of technology.
Mr Donnelly said that the
purpose of the Bill, which was introduced into Parliament
last week, is to amend the Education Act to provide for the
establishment of the new category of institution. He
suggested that the addition of such a category would help to
bridge a significant legal gap within the current structure
of the tertiary-education sector, while enhancing
flexibility and encouraging differentiation. “Universities
of technology will raise workplace skills and knowledge to
meet a broad range of industry, business and community
needs, and place us on a level playing field with overseas
education providers,” he said.
Mr Donnelly said that
the Bill, if enacted, would enable those technical
institutes with strong graduate and post-graduate programmes
to have parity of esteem for their quality degrees without
having to become a fully-fledged university.
Despite it
being clear that the Bill is specifically intended to help
institutes of technology gain the same status as
tech-turned-university, AUT, Mr Donnelly says that his
University of Technology Bill would not open the floodgates
to allow every technical institute in the country to aspire
to become one.
The Chief Executive of Auckland technical
institute Unitec, Dr John Webster, has welcomed the Bill,
saying it would help New Zealand keep pace with
international trends and encourage differentiation among
tertiary institutions. Dr Webster has, for some years,
unsuccessfully attempted to have Unitec classified as a
university. “There is a real need for a university, with
its mission enshrined in law, that offers the vocational and
professionally based education informed by applied research
that traditional universities do not, and at a higher level
than the polytechnic sector is able to,” he said.
Unitec
loses final battle over university bid
The Court of
Appeal has delivered what may be the final word in a
six-year battle between the Government and Unitec over that
institution’s failed bid to become reclassified as a
university. The Court has allowed an appeal by the Attorney
General, on behalf of the Minister and Associate Minister of
Education, challenging an earlier High Court ruling that the
Minister had unlawfully suspended Unitec’s application for
university status between May 2000 and January 2003 and, in
doing so, breached both the Education and Bill of Rights
Acts.
In turn, Unitec cross-appealed, arguing that the
real reason for the suspension of its application for
university status was that there was a government policy
that there be no more universities, and that the High
Court’s finding, that the unlawful suspension was confined
to the period between May 2000 and January 2003, was
wrong.
Unitec did not appeal a final decision by the
Government, that Unitec would not be reclassified as a
university.
In a unanimous finding, the Court of Appeal
has ruled that the Minister was under no time constraint on
making a final decision whether to recommend university
status. “Furthermore, we are satisfied that there was no
legal error in the decision made by the Minister to suspend
the process in that it was open to him to defer making an
eventual decision pending the outcome of the Government’s
policy review,” the ruling said.
The cross-appeals by
Unitec were dismissed.
Summit says financial stress
rife
A one-day summit organised by the Quality Public
Education Coalition has concluded that financial stress is
rife across the tertiary-education sector, with regional
polytechnics continuing to struggle financially and
universities often “technically” bankrupt.
The
summit found that the gap between what it describes as the
birthright and reality of access for all New Zealanders to
free, high-quality public education, from early childhood to
tertiary education, is “frighteningly large” and
increasing in all sectors at an alarming rate. A report from
the summit says that there is an increasing and wasteful
cost of compliance as education moves to a “low trust”
model rather than one based on the professionalism of the
people working in education.
The rising cost of tertiary
education was identified in a report from the summit as a
key area of concern, with tuition fees continuing to
increase alarmingly since the freeze on fees was lifted,
despite the Government’s fee-maxima policy. The report
said that, for every year since the fee freeze was lifted,
the average fee increase has been much greater than the rate
of inflation. “Typical fees are around $4000 per year,
student debt stands at $8.7 billion and the average owed to
IRD by students who have loans is $15,883,” it says.
“New Zealand’s repayment threshold stands at $17,160
while in Australia it stands at $37,335 – this is
particularly harsh on low-income earners.”
The report
concludes that students from low-income communities
increasingly see tertiary education as a burden and a source
of debt rather than as a way forward to better
opportunities. “Tertiary education,” it says “is
increasingly for the rich, with New Zealanders from
low-income communities sidelined.”
Waikato University to
introduce “built for purpose” degrees
The University
of Waikato says it has streamlined its academic programmes
to give students greater interdisciplinary breadth and
flexibility in their subject choices to better equip them to
compete in the global marketplace.
Vice-Chancellor
Professor Roy Crawford says the changes are far-reaching,
aligning Waikato with major institutions such as Melbourne
University, which will introduce a similar model in 2008,
and best practice at many universities in the United Kingdom
and United States.
More than seventy individually named
certificates and diplomas have been replaced by six generic
qualifications, increasing the options available to students
while, at the same time, reducing the level of complexity in
administering these qualifications.
A key change is the
introduction of a standard 120-point requirement for all
three-year bachelors degree majors, overcoming the
difficulties sometimes associated in universities with the
lack of a consistent structure for degree
majors.
Professor Crawford says that the change means
that the silo degree has been superseded by “built for
purpose” degrees. “Streamlining the structure of our
academic programmes heralds a new ethos at Waikato: a
university-wide approach to individual students’ academic
programmes and genuinely interdisciplinary study. This will
enable students to tailor easily their subject choices to
their employment aspirations or interests,” he said.
“Incorporation of work placements in most degrees and
opportunities for overseas exchanges also will allow
students to combine their theoretical learning with
practical experience.”
Worldwatch
Dons vote against
managerialist reform
Academics at Oxford University in
England have voted by a significant majority against
proposed reforms which could have handed financial control
of the institution to outsiders. Vice-Chancellor John Hood
wanted to change the 900-year-old tradition of the
University’s self-governing Council and bring in external
members to oversee finances, but his plans took a hammering
when members of the ruling body voted 730 to 456 against
them.
At present, the University’s principal
decision-making body is the Council, a twenty-six-member
board, including four lay members, charged with overseeing
everything from academic policy to strategic and financial
planning. Council members are appointed by the Congregation,
made up of 3,700 members of the academic staff, each of whom
is attached to one of the University’s thirty-nine
colleges. The Vice-Chancellor proposed transferring control
to a new Council of fifteen trustees, a majority of whose
members would be “outsiders”, that is, individuals with
business and management experience but no direct connection
to the University.
Members have six days to call for the
matter to go to a postal ballot which could potentially
reverse the result.
Meanwhile, academics at Cambridge
University claim that senior managers are quietly trying to
implement governance reforms similar to those at Oxford.
Vice-Chancellor Alison Richard has set up an advisory group
which is understood to have recommended that two more
external members be added to Cambridge’s governing
Council. This could also mean that the number of elected
academics is decreased.
At the moment, Cambridge has
twenty-five members of Council, sixteen of whom are elected
by academics. There are seven members who are not elected by
staff, including two “outsiders”, the chancellor,
vice-chancellor and three student representatives.
From
the BBC and Education Guardian
Protests over £15m arms
shares
Universities in the United Kingdom are facing
mounting pressure from academics and students to call a halt
to their multi-million-pound investments in arms companies.
A report by an organisation, Campaign Against the Arms Trade
(CAAT), published earlier this month, reveals that UK
universities invest more than £15 million in the arms
trade.
CAAT used the Freedom of Information Act to force
universities to divulge how many shares they held in arms
firms.
The highest-reported arms-trade investor is the
University College London (UCL), which holds shares worth
£1.59 million, followed by Cambridge University's Trinity
Hall, which has arms shares worth £1.25 million, and
Liverpool University, which has shares worth £1.21 million.
Other universities with large investments are Hull, York and
Manchester Universities, King's College London and
Oxford’s New College, Nuffield College and St Hilda’s.
Some forty-five universities and university colleges
admitted that they owned shares in at least one top arms
firm, while thirty-three universities refused to divulge the
information.
Although staff at UCL are lobbying senior
management to drop arms investments altogether, the
Vice-Chancellor, Malcolm Grant, has written a defence of
arms investments in a staff newsletter published this week.
In it, he wrote that UCL invested in companies that had
involvement with the supply of strategic parts of weapons
systems, but that did not “manufacture entire weapons
systems themselves.”
From the Education
Guardian
Supreme Court refuses to hear professor’s case
The Supreme Court in the United States has refused to
hear a case filed by a Law professor at DePaul University
who wants the Federal Bureau of Investigation to get rid of
its file on him. The professor was arguing that the FBI
should expunge its records on him, in part because they
describe actions that are protected by the First Amendment
and the Federal Privacy Act of 1974.
The professor
argued that records relating to activities in the 1970s,
which he received in 2001 after filing a Freedom of
Information Act request, were outdated and inaccurate.
Although the professor is not currently the subject of
any investigation, the Court ruled that it is not improper
for the FBI to hold on to the records.
The professor had
previously sued the Central Intelligence Agency, asking that
it expunge its records on him. In 2005 the Supreme Court
refused to hear that case.
From the Chronicle of Higher
Education
Mickey Mouse courses on the rise
Despite
being described as “Mickey Mouse” degrees with little
academic merit, qualifications such as surf science and
technology are riding the crest of the economic wave,
according to the United Kingdom vice-chancellors’
committee, Universities UK. Degrees in computer games
technology, golf management, brewing and distilling and
cosmetic science, developed in consultation with Elizabeth
Arden, are among those flourishing, says the group in a
report aimed at proving how closely higher education is
working with employers to provide vocational skills.
Drummond Bone, President of Universities UK, said
courses once described as ”Mickey Mouse” were now the
“mouse that roared”.
Elsewhere, in Israel, the
University of Haifa is offering a bachelors degree in
medical clowning’ which it says enables the opening up of
avenues of communication with patients that medical staff
don’t succeed with or don’t know how to connect
with.
Italian universities are also reported to have
caught the “wacky degree” bug, with a bewildering range
of unregulated masters that has grown fourfold since 2001
and by 24 per cent in just the past year. They include
courses in international rugby management, language and
values in television films, perfumes, scents and natural
aromas, food design and management of large wild mammals in
the Alps.
From United Press International, Education
Guardian, Times Higher Education
Supplement
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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