AUS Tertiary Update
Few surprises in funding announcement
The long-awaited
details of new funding arrangements for the
tertiary-education sector which were released last Friday
contained few surprises. Universities will receive an
additional 5.4 percent, or $60 million, in funding next year
while polytechnics will receive an additional 1.2 percent,
or $6 million, and wānanga an additional 8.7 percent, or
$11 million.
The funding deals, most of which will cover
a three-year period, were part of investment plans
negotiated between the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC)
and 110 tertiary-education organisations, including all of
the country’s universities, polytechnics and institutes of
technology, wānanga, industry training organisations, some
private training enterprises and other tertiary-education
providers.
The investment plans outlined how each
institution will meet the education and training needs of
students, employers, iwi and community groups and deliver on
the country’s development priorities. In addition, each
organisation has included information on how it will
continuously improve the quality of its teaching and
learning.
The TEC says it will no longer fund most of
the education and training that some institutes of
technology and polytechnics (ITPs) have been offering
outside the region in which they are based. TEC says that,
often, such provision is “cherry-picked”, resulting in a
negative impact on the viability of the local ITP. TEC also
says that having ITPs focus on their home region will
improve the quality and relevance of the education and
training and provide students with real
choice.
Association of University Staff National
President, Professor Nigel Haworth, said it is encouraging
that, in its broad overview, the TEC says that high-quality
tertiary education is vital for New Zealand’s economic
transformation and social development goals, and that
universities will be expected to provide a broad mix of
education.
Professor Haworth said that staff would be
particularly pleased that the Government has set out its
clear intention that students who want to go to university
can continue to do so. “Given recent speculation that
enrolments may be limited at some universities, it is
heartening to see that they are being required to look at
ways to increase the participation and achievement by
under-represented groups, particularly Māori and
Pasifika,” he said. “An enrolment-management process
will be put in place which will not permit equity programmes
to be compromised.”
Details of the investment plan
announcements can be found
at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/templates/NewsItem.aspx?id=2701
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Shadbolt versus the
Government over SIT funding cut
2. Union tells Mayor to
get facts right
3. New Director for NZVCC, and other
prominent changes
4. Overview of Māori education
released
5. TEC Annual Report for 2006/07 published
6. Israel strike rolls on
7. Donations roll in from
academe for presidential campaign
8. Support for women
academics
9. Get PhD or be demoted, Nigerian academics
told
10. Chronicles from beyond the grave
Shadbolt
versus the Government over SIT funding
cut
Invercargill’s Mayor, Tim Shadbolt, has threatened
to campaign to bring down the Labour Government over the
decision by the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) to cut
the public funding of the Southern Institute of Technology
by $6.2 million from next year. Added to that, the celebrity
Mayor says he will spend up to $300,000 on anti-Government
advertising, meaning that he will breach the new Electoral
Finance Act, thereby risking imprisonment.
The cut in
funding to SIT relates mainly to the provision of
out-of-region courses, in particular for its trade-training
programme in Christchurch where it competes with the
Christchurch Polytechnic and Institute of Technology.
Mr
Shadbolt is reported as saying that the funding cut is a
direct attack on everything that had been done for and
everything achieved by SIT in the last five years.
“There’s an election coming up and we’ll be doing
everything we possibly can. We’re going to launch a
campaign to bring down this Government if they are going to
launch a campaign to bring down our province,” he said.
Commenting on the limit of $120,000 on election-year
spending, Mr Shadbolt said he had been to gaol twice before,
spent five years doing periodic detention and had been
arrested thirty-three times. “I’m not going to be
intimidated at this stage of my life,” he told The
Press.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Helen Clark has said
that there will actually be more student places funded in
Southland next year under the new arrangement. “I think
it's important that the facts go on the table,” she is
reported in The Press as saying. “The issue for [SIT] was
out-of-area provision and it was able to compete in the
Christchurch market against the polytechnic there with zero
fees with support from Southland community capital. Now, in
essence, [SIT] is being told that its prime responsibility
is to Southland.”
Miss Clark said the TEC had written
to SIT in 2006 and advised it not to pump up numbers in 2007
because funding decisions would be based on the 2006
numbers. “Notwithstanding that, [SIT] did bump up numbers
considerably, including through an internet-based course. So
it's quite clear that [SIT] has behaved in a way that is not
consistent with the advice that it received.”
Union
tells Mayor to get facts right
The National Secretary of
the Association of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) Te Hau
Takitini o Aotearoa, Sharn Riggs, says that it is time
Invercargill Mayor Tim Shadbolt got his facts right about
funding changes for the Southern Institute of Technology and
the effect of those cuts on the Southland Province.
Ms
Riggs said that enrolments for SIT’s Invercargill campus
courses have fallen, rather than grown, as the institution
had increased its focus on distance learning and
out-of-region activities. “Very few, if any, of those
out-of-region students will ever end up contributing to the
Invercargill economy because they will never even go there,
and claims to the contrary by SIT Chief Executive, Penny
Simmonds, are simply nonsense,” she said. “The plain
fact is that more students are being funded to attend SIT in
Invercargill and that will benefit the regional
economy.”
According to Ms Riggs, the failure of SIT
management to respond to changes foreshadowed for the
tertiary-education reforms and accept a tertiary-education
model based on collaboration and cooperation rather than
competition and unjustifiable growth was demonstrated by Ms
Simmonds refusal to open SIT’s books to the Tertiary
Education Commission. “This is taxpayers’ money that the
polytechnic is refusing to be accountable for and it is not
acceptable that a public institution funded from public
money should be allowed to conduct its business in
secret,” she said.
Ms Riggs said that, while the union
is obviously concerned about the job security of its members
across the whole of the polytechnic sector, it had been
saying since 2000 that, until the sector adopted a more
collaborative and strategic approach, the quality of
programmes and the reputation of the sector would be at
risk. “These reforms should have been brought in years
ago, and chief executives like Penny Simmonds and mayors
like Tim Shadbolt should support them,” she
concluded.
New Director for NZVCC, and other prominent
changes
In what will be a major change for the
tertiary-education sector, the long-serving Executive
Director of the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee,
Lindsay Taiaroa, has retired after a thirty-three-year
career with the organisation. He was farewelled with
cocktail and dinner functions last week - and a most
illuminating interview in Education Review in which he
disarmingly rated his “best education moment” as
teaching a student to swim. He will be replaced by Penny
Fenwick.
The Vice-Chancellor of Lincoln University,
Professor Roger Field, will be Chair of the NZVCC for 2008
and 2009. He takes over from University of Canterbury
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, who will serve as
Deputy Chair for 2008.
At Massey University, Professor
Ian Warrington will take up the position of Acting
Vice-Chancellor from 3 March 2008 when the current
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Judith Kinnear, retires. That
University’s Chancellor, Nigel Gould, has told staff that
it has not been possible to finalise the starting date for
incoming Vice-Chancellor Steve Maharey. Although he has
relinquished his Cabinet duties, Mr Maharey remains a
Government Member of Parliament at present.
Robin Hapi
(Ngati Kahungunu) has been named by the Minister for
Tertiary Education, Pete Hodgson, as a new Commissioner of
the Tertiary Education Commission. He will fill the vacancy
created by outgoing Commissioner Tina Olsen-Ratana for a
term of three years. Mr Hodgson says that Robin Hapi has a
strong knowledge of tertiary education needs for Māori:
“His input will serve the education and training
aspirations of Māori, which are important to the
Government’s Tertiary Education Strategy and the tertiary
reforms,” he said.
Overview of Māori education
released
In probably the last of its reports to be
published this year, the Ministry of Education has released
Ngā Haeata Mātauranga – the Annual Report on Māori
Education, which provides an overview of Māori education,
including the tertiary-education sector.
The report
reflects on the policies, programmes and initiatives with
particular significance for Māori learners in a given year.
Statistical analysis is included and several case studies
provide readers with tangible examples of Māori educational
success. It is apparently the only report in which readers
can find such a range of information on Māori education in
one place. As such, the report provides the sector with an
important resource for tracking the education system’s
performance for Māori and will be an important touchstone
in the future of progress against the goals and targets
outlined in the draft Māori Education Strategy, Ka Hikitia
– Managing for Success, due to be implemented in
2008.
Included in the key findings of the report are that
participation by Māori in formal tertiary education
remained higher than for other populations, despite a 5.4
percent decline in 2006; that, in 2006-07, the percentage of
Māori aged fifteen years or older in formal tertiary study
was 20.3 percent compared to 13.7 percent for all New
Zealanders; that the proportion of Māori student moving
directly on to higher-level study the year after completing
a level one to three certificate was 25 percent compared to
18 percent for all students; and that wānanga and
universities had the highest qualification-completion rate
between 2002 and 2006, with 47 percent of all students
completing qualifications over this period. The completion
rate for all Māori was 47 percent compared to 44 percent
for all students.
The report can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/rss_feeds/rss_manual_update/16867
TEC
Annual Report for 2006/07 published
The Tertiary
Education Commission Annual Report for 2006/07, which charts
progress on implementation of the tertiary-education reforms
and the new way of investing in tertiary education, is now
available on-line. It can be found
at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/upload/downloads/annual-report-tec-2007.pdf
Worldwatch
Israel
strike rolls on
The presidents of Israel’s public
universities met early this week with that country’s
Finance Minister, Ronnie Bar-On, to try to bridge the
differences between the Finance Ministry and the Senior
Lecturers’ Union (SLU), whose members have been on strike
for ten weeks.
The meeting came after Committee of
University Presidents Chair, Professor Moshe Kaveh, told the
Prime Minister’s Office that, if the strike wasn’t over
by the end of this week, the entire academic year may be
lost, resulting in billions of shekels forfeited from the
economy due to the gap of an entire class of trained
professionals.
On Sunday, the SLU expanded its strike to
include not only formal courses and extra-curricular
activities in the country’s eight universities, but also
the participation of professors in renowned Israel Defence
Force courses such as the Israel Airforce pilots’ course
and the naval ship commanders’ course.
The SLU, with
the support of the Committee of University Presidents, is
claiming that academic salaries have been eroded by 35
percent but Treasury officials say that wages have lost only
3 percent of their value.
The last collective employment
agreement expired in 2001.
From the Jerusalem
Post
Donations roll in from academe for presidential
campaign
College administrators, faculty members and
other educators have donated more than $US6.2 ($NZ8.2)
million to presidential candidates in the United States so
far this election “season”, with more than
three-quarters of the donations going to
Democrats.
Senator Barack Obama is the clear favourite of
academics, receiving about one-third of the total or
slightly more than $US2.1 million, according to data
collected by the Center for Responsive Politics, a
Washington-based research group. The amount donated to Mr.
Obama is nearly 30 percent more than the $US1.6-million
received by the second-ranked recipient, Senator Hillary
Rodham Clinton. Mitt Romney, a former governor of
Massachusetts and the top Republican on the list, has raked
in close to $US564,000 from higher-education sources.
If
recent trends in political giving among academics continues
into the rest of the 2008 campaign season, fund-raising
strategists for presidential campaigns may need to get more
comfortable among the tweed jackets of the professoriate.
During the last presidential election year, in 2004, college
professors and administrators gave nearly $US37 million in
donations to all federal campaigns, which include candidates
for president and for Congress, according to the Center for
Responsive Politics. That amount was more than double the
level in the previous presidential election year in
2000.
By institution, the employees of Harvard, Stanford
and Columbia Universities top the list of total donations to
current presidential candidates. Harvard’s employees were
the top donors to Mr Obama, Ms Clinton and Mr Romney. Mr.
Obama is also drawing a significant amount of support from
the nation’s historically black colleges, including the
presidents of Hampton, Howard, and Norfolk State
Universities.
From the Chronicle of Higher
Education
Support for women academics
The German
Government is to create 200 additional positions for women
university professors over the next five years from a new
allocation of €75 million ($NZ143 million) of funding.
Universities which receive a positive approval of their
approach to equity issues will be able to create up to three
positions for women professors. An approved university will
receive up to €150,000 a year over a five-year period for
each position created.
Announcing the new scheme, the
German Minister for Education and Research, Annette
Schavaan, said that, under the new programme, the country
would be able to increase significantly the number of women
professors and to provide young women scientists with models
for their own careers.
Positions for women professors may
be either entirely new posts or openings where a current
professor, either male or female, is approaching retirement
over the next five years, in which case a woman would be
appointed to take over in due course. In all, a maximum of
three positions can be applied for by women.
Only 14.3
percent of professors in Germany are women, compared to 49.5
percent of graduates.
University World News
Get PhD or
be demoted, Nigerian academics told
The National
Universities Commission (NUC) in Nigeria has warned that
university teachers who fail to bag their doctorate degrees
before 2009 may lose their positions as lecturers and cease
to exercise full rights over their students’ course
work.
The warning came on the heels of the submission of
a policy document by the International Labour Organisation
to guide the introduction of entrepreneurial studies in
institutions of higher learning to ensure a reduction in
graduate unemployment in Nigeria.
NUC Executive
Secretary, Professor Julius Okojie, who gave the warning,
said there would be no further compromise on the issue of
minimum academic qualifications for teaching in the
nation’s ivory towers. Okojie stated that, although the
non-possession of a doctorate degree will not be the end of
the teaching career of such academics in the universities,
his organisation may resort to the American model where such
teachers are graded as tutors and their authority over
academic programmes restricted to an auxiliary level. Okojie
added that the requirement and the directive that lecturers
acquire doctorate degrees to boost their capacity to impart
knowledge have been in the statute books since 1989 and
added that those who had failed to heed the warning will
have themselves to blame when the hammer falls.
From This
Day, Lagos
Chronicles from beyond the grave
The
“glittering achievements and charmed lives” of the
twentieth century’s academic elite were laid bare last
week in a study of recent obituaries entitled Dead
Academics. The author of the research paper, Malcolm Tight,
a professor of Higher Education at Lancaster University,
said he was “awestruck” by the achievements of those
deemed worthy of posthumous celebration.
The paper,
presented at the Society for Research into Higher Education
conference, looked at 100 obituaries published in the first
nine months of this year. Most of the academics commemorated
were men, their average age was seventy-nine and almost half
had studied, and a quarter had worked, at Oxford or
Cambridge Universities.
Professor Tight said the sheer
quantity of obituaries illustrated the “high regard” in
which academics are held. The majority, eighty-one, had been
professors; six were vice-chancellors; there were five Nobel
laureates and six had been knighted. In addition,
twenty-five had chaired academic societies, eleven had
edited journals and at least thirty had served in the Second
World War.
Noting the monastic origins of academia, the
study revealed that thirteen had never married and a quarter
had had no children - although one made up the numbers with
seven offspring.
From The Times Higher Education
Supplement
More international news
More international
news can be found on University World
News
http://www.universityworldnews.com/
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
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the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz