AUS Tertiary Update
University investigation a sop, says QPEC
The Quality
Public Education Coalition says that a decision by the
University of Auckland Council to set up an investigation
into the impact of its decision to restrict entry to
undergraduate degree courses is a sop, and students say they
are outraged that the University’s taskforce to look at
these implications may have only one student representative.
These reactions follow a decision by the University
Council on Monday night, by fourteen votes to two, to give
itself the power to restrict entry to all undergraduate
courses from 2009. The decision pre-empts an expected
announcement by the Tertiary Education Commission of new
three-year funding allocations for tertiary-education
institutions which are widely expected to cap public funding
on student numbers.
Since announcing its intention to
limit undergraduate entry, the University of Auckland has
come under widespread criticism, with many alleging that it
could became a “university of the advantaged” in which
disadvantaged communities, especially Māori and Pasifika
and those from lower socio-economic backgrounds, would miss
out.
The University’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Stuart
McCutcheon, is reported as saying that the University would
continue to seek a diverse range of students with the
ability to succeed at an institution that prides itself on
excellence. To this end, he says, a taskforce has been set
up to ensure prospective students from all backgrounds have
equal opportunity to achieve their potential.
However,
QPEC says that the establishment of a taskforce had only
come as an afterthought and shows how distanced the
institution is from the public it is supposed to serve.
“An investigation such as this should have been conducted
well before the decision,” said QPEC spokesperson, John
Minto. “The University has been blinded by self-importance
and the mythology that it must compete with overseas
universities. Kiwi kids with the greatest capacity to
benefit from university education are to be
sacrificed.”
Students are demanding that they have
three representatives on the taskforce, saying that being
limited to one would shut out the input of Māori and
Pasifika students, who would be most disadvantaged by these
schemes. “We call on the University to give students a
fair say on this issue by allowing more than one student
representative on this taskforce,” said Reina Harris,
Auckland University Students’ Association Co-Māori
Students Officer.
Meanwhile, the University of Otago has
become the latest university to announce it will consider
further limits on student numbers.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. Tertiary-education reforms become
law
2. AUS member New Zealander of the Year
3. AUS
asks for Court to consider dismissal case
4. New Zealand
university research measures up
5. Impact of PBRF on
retention of doctoral students analysed
6. Ministerial
briefings
7. A regal president for
Waikato?
8. Academics warn of physics-funding
crisis
9. Privatisation opponents speak out
10. Iranian students protest at university
11. Coffee
rings not best marks
Tertiary-education reforms become
law
Reforms that will change the way in which
tertiary-education institutions are funded were passed into
law on Tuesday night with the passing of the third and final
reading of the Education (Tertiary Reforms) Amendment Bill.
Under the amended legislation, tertiary-education
institutions will be funded on the basis of three-year
investment plans rather than the current model, which has
been described as the “bums-on-seats” approach, where
funding is allocated on the basis of enrolments.
Future
funding will be based on set numbers of students, rather
than allowing for the unrestricted growth of the past, and
it is this that has prompted the University of Auckland to
adopt, and other universities to consider adopting,
restrictions on their future intakes of undergraduate
students.
In his speech for the final reading of the
Bill, the Minister for Tertiary Education, Pete Hodgson,
told Parliament that, under the reforms, tertiary education
would make the shift from participation to achievement,
focus on the long-term needs of New Zealand and ensure that
tertiary-education organisations are able and motivated to
adapt to changing needs.
Mr Hodgson said that government
expenditure on tertiary education would no longer be driven
just by “bums on seats”, but will be set as a three-year
funding path that takes account of inflation pressures,
expected demographic change, student demand and competing
priorities within and outside the education sector.
A key
aspect of the reforms will be the role of the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC) in working with organisations to
approve and develop their three-year plans and to ensure the
qualifications that result are relevant and useful to
students and stakeholders and that taxpayers are getting
value for money from their contribution to the tertiary
sector.
The reforms will take effect from 1 January
2008.
The TEC is expected to publicly release the
three-year investment plans for tertiary institutions
tomorrow afternoon.
AUS member New Zealander of the
Year
Professor Philip Bagshaw from the University of
Otago has been named as New Zealander of the Year by North
and South magazine. The award was announced at a breakfast
in Christchurch last Thursday by the magazine’s editor
Virginia Larsen.
Professor Bagshaw, a medical academic at
the Christchurch School of Medicine, was adjudged the top
New Zealander from more than fifty nominees and described by
the magazine as a surgeon, humanitarian and reluctant
activist.
The award follows the opening this year of the
Christchurch Charity Hospital which has been the culmination
of a career in which Professor Bagshaw has been renowned for
fighting for the rights of hospital patients and working
people. “Some call him a saint, others a Samaritan, while
he labels himself a socialist,” says North and
South.
In 1997, Professor Bagshaw was one of three
Christchurch doctors to receive an Association of University
Staff Academic Freedom award following the publication of a
damning report, Patients are dying, which outlined chronic
failures at Christchurch Hospital.
In accepting his
award, Professor Bagshaw said that, in the 1990s, social
engineers tried to destroy the community spirit of New
Zealanders and replace it with a selfish, self-centered
view. “But the message is clear,” he said. “They
failed. The flame of community spirit is still alive and I
hope it will spread like a contagion throughout
society.”
AUS National President, Professor Nigel
Haworth, congratulated Professor Bagshaw on his award,
saying that his actions were in the best traditions of
academic freedom and engagement, particularly in his
willingness to confront politicians and bureaucrats with
powerful, evidence-based arguments in favour of the
public-health system, and medicine in general. “Added to
that, he is recognised as a superb university teacher,
taking out top teaching awards on a number of occasions,”
he said.
AUS asks for Court to consider dismissal
case
The Association of University Staff is applying to
the Employment Relations Authority (ERA) this afternoon to
have a personal grievance action being brought by a senior
staff member against Lincoln University transferred to be
heard in the Employment Court. The application follows the
summary dismissal of Associate Professor Stewart, a highly
respected scientist with a more than thirty-year career in
Ecology and Conservation, in late July after an
investigation by the University into a complaint of alleged
serious misconduct.
At the time of Dr Stewart’s
sacking, the AUS says that the University acted unfairly and
that the Vice-Chancellor should not have dismissed.
The
case was set down to be heard in the Employment Relations
Authority last week, but was delayed in order that the
application for removal to the Court could be heard. In its
application, the AUS says that Associate Professor Stewart
was a senior employee and, while the allegations made
against him were of a serious nature, the University did not
disclose vital information prior to the dismissal and has
continued to make fresh allegations since. It also says that
the University has failed to respect its obligations of
natural justice towards Associate Professor Stewart,
including being late to file documentation in the ERA. AUS
says the University must now seek the leave of the Court or
Authority to defend its actions.
It is likely this case
will now be heard in the New Year.
New Zealand university
research measures up
New Zealand universities perform
above the world average in their areas of research
specialisation and at a level comparable with the leading
Australian universities, according to a Ministry of
Education report released late last week.
The report,
Comparing the academic impact of research by New Zealand and
Australian universities 1981-2005, examines the number of
times New Zealand university research publications are cited
by subsequent researchers over a twenty-five-year period.
Citation counts are an internationally recognised way of
assessing the academic impact of research
publications.
The report is one of a series that explores
a newly available bibliometric database to analyse the
research performance of New Zealand universities. This
report complements an earlier one, (ex)Citing research,
which examined the academic impact of research by New
Zealand universities.
According to the new report, the
academic impact of the research at New Zealand universities
was, on average, below that of the Australian
research-intensive Group of Eight (or G8) universities but
above the non-Group of Eight universities. In a number of
individual universities and in narrow subject areas, New
Zealand universities outperformed the G8 university
grouping. This would imply that the New Zealand universities
have several specialised pockets of high-impact
research.
The Ministry of Education Manager, Tertiary
Sector Performance Analysis and Reporting, Roger Smyth, said
that the report shows that New Zealand universities do very
well in selected areas but tend to be more specialised in
their research than the leading Australian G8
universities.
The report can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/16362
Impact
of PBRF on retention of doctoral students analysed
Since
the introduction of the Performance-Based Research Fund,
there has been a higher likelihood of doctoral students
continuing with their studies, particularly for younger
full-time students, according to another new report
published by the Ministry of Education.
The report,
Persistence in doctoral research: analysing the impact of
the PBRF on the retention of doctoral students, examines the
factors that influence the retention of doctoral students in
tertiary study, where retention is defined as a doctoral
candidate continuing in study in the next year or completing
the doctorate. In doing so, the study analyses what initial
impact, if any, the introduction of the Performance-Based
Research Fund has had on the retention of doctoral
candidates in study.
A summary of key findings of the
report suggests that the introduction of the PBRF has been
associated with a small but statistically significant impact
on the likelihood of the retention of doctoral students in
New Zealand; that the likelihood of a higher retention rate
for younger full-time students may reflect better pastoral
care and/or selection of doctoral students; that Pasifika
and Asian students had a slightly lower likelihood of
retention than European students; and that students who
studied in the fields of science, agriculture and health had
a slightly higher likelihood of retention than students in
the subject area of society and culture.
This study has
been developed by the Ministry of Education as part of a
larger evaluation of the effects of the PBRF on research
performance being led by the Tertiary Education Commission.
The report can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/16344
Ministerial
briefings
Briefings to the new Minister for Tertiary
Education from the Tertiary Education Commission and the
Ministry of Education are now available on line.
The
briefing from the Ministry of Education is described as
providing a snapshot that outlines the tertiary reforms that
have been planned over the last two years and the associated
implementation process taking place for the system to
operate from 2008; setting out the Government’s strategic
vision and priorities for what it wants to see achieved by
the tertiary-education sector as set out by the Tertiary
Education Strategy and Statement of Tertiary Education
Priorities; providing an overview of central agency roles in
tertiary education and how these agencies relate to each
other; and including summary information on the overall
performance of the tertiary-education system.
The
Ministry briefing also provides an overview of the key
issues facing the sector, including the implementation of
the tertiary reforms, the role of fees and student support
in the new tertiary system, management of funding within a
constrained baseline, monitoring progress against the
Tertiary Education Strategy, skills, especially the
upskilling of the workforce and realising youth potential,
research and Māori education.
The TEC briefing describes
the tertiary-education reforms that the Government has
introduced over the last two years and outlines issues
relating to each tertiary-education sub-sector, particularly
in relation to the implementation of the reforms. It also
discusses what it describes as a number of pan-sector issues
and the role of TEC within the tertiary-education
system.
The Ministry of Education briefing can be found
at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=12411&data=l
The
TEC briefing can be found
at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/upload/downloads/bim-november-2007.pdf
A
regal president for Waikato?
In what must rate as one of
the more curious decisions of the year, the University of
Waikato Council has agreed to let its Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Roy Crawford, use, at his discretion, the title
“President”.
If the decision seems curious, the
explanation is positively odd. In a broadcast email, staff
have been told that the term vice-chancellor is not
understood in many Asian countries and in North America and
that, in those countries, it is assumed the chancellor is
the chief executive and that the vice-chancellor deputises
for the chancellor. “This can cause confusion and
embarrassment,” the email reads. “The title of President
is commonly used and understood in tertiary education
sectors globally, and its use serves to eliminate the
potential for misunderstanding in international contexts.
Consistent with our Vision, its use would also reinforce the
concept of international connectedness for the University of
Waikato.”
One wag has suggested to Tertiary Update
that, as the name Roy is derived from the French word Roi,
meaning King, there is good reason for Professor Crawford to
set his sights on a regal rather than a presidential
title.
Worldwatch
Academics warn of physics-funding
crisis
A group of thirty-six physicists from the United
Kingdom’s leading universities, including Oxford and
Cambridge, have voiced concern over a funding shortfall they
say has resulted in physics departments facing their worst
funding crisis in twenty years. They say that the Government
has left the Science and Technology Facilities Council
(STFC) with an £80 million ($NZ209m) shortfall.
The STFC
was formed earlier this year by the merger of the Council
for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils and the
Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council.
The
deficit will result in a 25 percent cut in the number of
grants the STFC can award for research projects and reduce
the number of new PhD students and post-doctoral researchers
universities can enrol. The United Kingdom’s involvement
in international projects in astronomy, space exploration
and particle physics will also be affected.
Physicists
say the Government gave assurances that the merger to form
STFC would be properly funded and would not adversely impact
on research in university departments. The groups says,
however, that the 25 percent reduction in grants and the
cancellation of existing research programmes will adversely
affect the finances of many of the country’s leading
physics departments at a time when the Government is
encouraging an expansion in physical sciences.
From The
Times Higher Education Supplement
Privatisation opponents
speak out
Educators in Vietnam say they are opposed to a
proposal by the Government to “equitise” state-owned
universities, equitisation being a synonym for
privatisation. Following a resolution at recent Communist
Party Congress, which included a plan to equitise
state-owned universities on a trial basis, a Ministry of
Education and Training conference in February, chaired by
the Prime Minister, will discuss an equitaisation proposal
The Government had previously assigned the Ministry to
draw up a detailed equitisation plan, which proposed to
privatise fifteen universities, but it now says that
privatisation will first be tested on one or two
universities.
The University Teachers’ Association sent
a dispatch to the Government, strongly protesting the idea,
saying that the purpose of universities should be education,
not money. Equitised, or privately owned, universities, like
enterprises, will seek profits. The Association says that,
while non-state universities report fat profits, their
education quality remains low and their students pay high
tuition costs.
Similarly, Professor Pham Phu, a member of
the National Education Committee, said that, once
universities are equitised, their operating goal will be
profits and that is not good. “Some universities that
operate for profit exist in the world, but they are few and
do not have very good reputations,” he said.
Tien
phong
Iranian students protest at university
Hundreds
of Iranian students, angry over a crackdown on activists,
have protested at Tehran University, according to Iranian
news media. Tehran’s state-run radio reported this week
that students chanted slogans against officials and the
station said that a group of non-students entered the
University after breaking one of the gates.
The protests
were held to mark National Day of Students, which has been
celebrated since 1953 when three Iranian students were shot
to death by police during a protest against a visit by then
United States Vice-President Richard Nixon.
State
television also announced that Iran’s Intelligence
Ministry had detained a group of activists it described as
hecklers who planned to stage an illegal gathering at Tehran
University. Quoting a statement by the Ministry, the TV
report said the activists, who came from various cities,
entered the University using fake identification cards
before they were detained. The report said intelligence
officers confiscated concussion grenades, illegal books and
alcoholic beverages from the detainees.
Last week,
thirty-three students and activists were detained after they
staged a protest on the Tehran University
campus.
Students were once the main power base of
Iran’s reform movement but have faced intense pressure in
recent years from President Ahmadinejad’s hard-line
Government, making anti-government protests rare. Since
October, students from different universities have staged
occasional protests over educational shortages, firings of
liberal teachers and detention of activists. About 100
students staged a rare protest in October against
Ahmadinejad, calling him a “dictator” as he gave a
speech at Tehran University marking the beginning of the
academic year.
Associated Press
Coffee rings not best
marks
Academics at the University of the West of England
have been warned about the dangers of providing students
with “subliminal feedback” after one undergraduate
complained when her essay was returned with a coffee stain.
In a case held up as an indication that students’
enthusiasm for making complaints has reached
“ridiculous” proportions, a nursing student made a
written complaint to her course leader, claiming that she
was offended by a coffee ring on her essay. The student said
it showed a lack of respect for her work.
An academic
within the Healthcare division who saw the complaint said
that she was surprised at students’ ability to complain
about pretty much everything. “The student saw this as a
slight on her work, which had been treated with blatant
disrespect in someone’s home. She would have expected an
apology to have been appended to her essay when it was
returned and was now seeking one from the course leader,”
she said.
After circulating the student’s complaint,
the course leader asked all staff to ensure that this
particular form of subliminal feedback was avoided in future
The 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