AUS Tertiary Update
Tertiary education, student loans take centre
stage
Student loans and tertiary education seem set to
take centre stage in this year’s general election, with
the leaders of New Zealand’s two main political parties
addressing youth and education issues in their first major
speeches of the year. While both parties say that they are
aiming to keep those under the age of eighteen in education,
training or work, they have also gone head-to-head on
student-loan policies.
National leader, John Key, says
that the current interest-free student-loan scheme he once
described as irresponsible will be kept, a reason for the
turn-around being his party’s loss in the last general
election. Mr Key says National will also help students get
out of debt more quickly by means of a repayment bonus of 10
percent for voluntary lump-sum payments of $500 or more in
the first ten years following the start of repayments by the
borrower. “For example, if a borrower pays $800 off their
loan in a lump sum above and beyond the compulsory
requirement, the Government would take $880 off their loan
balance,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Minister for Tertiary
Education, Pete Hodgson, has reminded students that Labour
has improved student support every year that it has been in
government, and has signaled that student living costs will
be addressed in the Budget through increases to student
allowances and loan entitlements and the widening of
eligibility criteria. Mr Hodgson said that improvements made
by the Government to the affordability of tertiary education
started in November 1999 with the reduction of dentistry
fees from $20,000 to $10,000 a year and have gone on to
include controlling tuition-fee rises, removing interest
payments for student loans for most people, introducing an
automatic increase in how much a student can earn without
affecting the allowance and increasing the threshold of
parental incomes for allowances.
Meanwhile, the proposed
improvements to student-loan policies have not been
universally well received. Business New Zealand says that
both parties are vote-buying, with the half-billion dollar
cost per year of the interest-free student-loan policy
diverting money from funding teachers, facilities and
world-class research. According to its Chief Executive, Phil
O’Rielly, tertiary institutions can’t get the funding to
attract and keep key staff. “There is some good work going
on in education policy, but much more needs to be done.
Pouring money into interest-free student loans is not
addressing our fundamental needs in tertiary
education.”
Similarly, the right-wing lobby group,
Education Forum, has described National’s position on
student loans as a barrier to tertiary quality, adding that
National’s backtrack means it has missed a chance to
directly address the problems caused by the interest
write-off policy, providing little incentive to repay loans,
giving disproportionate benefits to better-off students and
increasing financial barriers to the quality and performance
of the tertiary-education sector.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. Jobs marked to go at Canterbury
2. Shadbolt welshes on gaol promise
3. Research shows
massive student-debt increase
4. New boss wanted for
TEC
5. Modern Apprentice target met
6. Links explored
between Lincoln and Polish university
7. Chilling
message on academic freedom
8. Universities assert right
to publish
9. University, Union settle case
10. And
now, for your homework . . .
Jobs marked to go at
Canterbury
As many as twenty-three jobs will be lost
from the University of Canterbury’s College of Arts in a
move described by the Association of University Staff (AUS)
as potentially damaging to the long-term viability of the
College.
Among a number of measures revealed in a
restructuring plan released last week, the University
proposes to axe Theatre and Film Studies and American
Studies and reduce the number of schools within the College
from twelve to eight in a bid to cut more than $2 million
from the College budget. The debate has also raised the
spectre of what University management considers core to the
University’s mission, with the Vice-Chancellor, Professor
Roy Sharp reported as saying the proposed redundancies would
allow for growth in other areas.
AUS Canterbury Branch
President, Professor Jack Heinemann, said, however, that the
decision to cut staff numbers appeared to be largely based
on financial forecasting done under the now-outmoded
bums-on-seats funding model, despite the new
tertiary-education strategy which allows for additional
funding for strategically important areas. “There is no
evidence that the University has worked with the Government
and the Tertiary Education Commission to secure additional
funding for these areas,” he said. “The Government is
trying to reduce wasteful duplication and competition among
universities. A nationally unique programme such as American
Studies neither duplicates nor competes. Senior management
is so focused on cutting that they don't seem to be able to
capitalise on promoting.”
Professor Heinemann said that
University management should be asserting the case for
better funding instead of taking the easy option of cutting
staff numbers to save money. “There must be a case for the
strategic value of our Arts College to be made to the
Government. That is the kind of vision and leadership our
campus needs,” he said.
Professor Heinemann said that
successive rounds of staff cuts, interspersed with hiring
freezes, have pushed the University to a tipping point and
that AUS would be supporting affected staff and fighting to
maintain a strong College. “AUS will be arguing that
management needs to take a long-term approach and reflect on
the implications of disestablishing entire academic
programmes and courses, he added. “If Canterbury is to
maintain a position as a leading and academically vibrant
university, then senior management needs to inspire funding
reforms both locally and nationally, rather than simply
balancing the books.”
Shadbolt welshes on gaol
promise
Invercargill’s celebrity Mayor, Tim Shadbolt,
appears to have backed away from risking gaol as part of his
self-proclaimed campaign to bring down the Labour Government
in protest at cuts of $6.2 million in public funding to the
Southland Institute of Technology (SIT). Late last year, Mr
Shadbolt said he would spend up to $300,000 on
anti-Government advertising, more than twice that allowed
under the new Electoral Finance Act, adding that 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.
Mr Shadbolt subsequently took out a
series of advertisements in newspapers on 31 December 2007
calling on readers not to vote for the Labour Party. “I
have had to publish this appeal to you today, because
tomorrow this will be subject to the Electoral Finance Act,
and I am not willing to register with the Government just
for the right to free speech,” the advertisement reads.
Obviously forgetting that he is able to place advertisements
under his own name, Mr Shadbolt went on to say that the
legal representative of the Council is not the mayor, so it
would be the CEO who would get arrested, not
him.
Meanwhile, the Quality Public Coalition says that Mr
Shadbolt is wrong to complain about the loss of some
government funding for courses run by SIT outside of
Southland. “Narrow parochialism has a limited place in
education and it would be a tragedy for all young New
Zealanders, including those from Southland, if Mayor
Shadbolt’s campaign to undermine the new funding mechanism
is successful,” it says. “We applaud the Government’s
policy to change from “bums-on-seats” funding to funding
based on three-year approved plans for tertiary education
with the focus shifting to quality education rather than
pointless and wasteful competition. Our major criticism is
that it has taken Labour almost nine years of lost time to
implement the policy.”
Research shows massive
student-debt increase
Average student debt has risen by
54 percent since 2004 and is now $28,838 per student,
according to new research released last week by the New
Zealand Union of Students’ Associations (NZUSA). Other
main findings of the research include average student debt
over 147 percent higher than it was in 1998, students
looking beyond the student-loan scheme to pay for essential
living costs, core living costs (food, accommodation,
transport) significantly increased and 88 percent of
students considering that student loans will impact on their
ability to buy a house
NZUSA Co-President, Paul Falloon,
said that, for the majority of students, living expenses now
far outweigh incomes and they are forced to borrow to live.
He said that government policy is still ignoring the key
drivers of student debt: continual increases in tuition fees
and basic costs of living.
Mr Falloon said that the
research showed the student-allowance scheme and the rules
governing eligibility are completely out of line with the
current financial demands on students. “The problem is
obvious,” he said. “The proportion of students with
access to a student allowance is just 37 percent and, of
those, the average student allowance is now only $70 per
week.”
The research was carried out by TNS Conversa and
has been conducted every three years since 1994 following
the introduction of the student-loan scheme in 1992. It
details the financial and socio-economic situation of
students at polytechnics and universities throughout New
Zealand and provides the most comprehensive picture of the
destructive impact of user-pays education.
New boss
wanted for TEC
The Tertiary Education Commission has
started its search for a new Chief Executive, with current
head, Janice Shiner, due to step down in the middle of this
year at the end of her three-year tem and return to the
United Kingdom.
An advertisement, first published last
weekend both in New Zealand and overseas, calls for
applications from an outstanding leader, capable of taking
the organisation and the tertiary-education reforms to the
next stage. The TEC’s Board says it is looking for someone
who can maintain and build good relationships with the
sector, other government agencies and key stakeholders that
are critical to the success of the new way of investing. It
is also looking for someone who can continue to build the
TEC as a high-performing organisation focused on delivery
and improving outcomes for students.
It is expected the
new chief executive will take up the appointment on 1
July.
For those interested, the advertisement can be
found
at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/upload/downloads/vacancies/job-ad-chief-executive.pdf
Modern
Apprentice target met
A government target to have 14,000
Modern Apprentices in place by the end of 2008 has been
reached with more than a year to spare, according to the
Minister for Tertiary Education, Pete Hodgson. The September
2007 quarter statistics show a total of 14,411 Modern
Apprentices, of whom 10,534 are still in training and 3877
have successfully completed their apprenticeships. Industry
Trainee numbers are also up, with 133,412 at 30 September
2007, up from 124,829 for the same quarter a year earlier.
Mr Hodgson said that the Government launched the Modern
Apprenticeships programme in 2000 and set about rebuilding
trade training in New Zealand. “We went on to set the
14,000 goal and we have achieved that ahead of schedule,”
he said. “The 10,534 Modern Apprentices in training today
is a 12.6 percent increase on the 9,355 at the same quarter
last year.”
According to Mr Hodgson, trade training is
a top priority for the Government. “This was reflected in
the Budget 2007 commitment of an extra $53 million over four
years to support increased workforce participation in
industry training,” he said. “The Government’s total
investment in the Industry Training Fund will reach $180
million by 2010 – more than three times what it was in
2000. In the same timeframe, Modern Apprenticeship funding
will have gone from zero to $49 million per
annum.”
Links explored between Lincoln and Polish
university
Connections between Lincoln University and
Poland’s oldest and largest agricultural university,
Warsaw University of Life Sciences (WULS), were marked with
a campus visit by a high-level academic delegation from the
Polish capital. The aim was to identify and discuss
opportunities for future collaboration between the two
universities.
The delegation, comprising the Chancellor,
a faculty dean, two vice-rectors and an administration
official, spent an afternoon at Lincoln University giving
presentations on capabilities, research, programmes and
other aspects of WULS.
Lincoln University and WULS
shared a five- year Memorandum of Understanding, signed in
1999 and at the time believed to be the first such agreement
between any New Zealand university and Poland. Since then,
Lincoln has had some contact with the Polish University
associated with a research project in immunology.
WULS
was founded in 1816 and has a student role of 25,000. A
number of its courses are taught in English and it attracts
a significant number of international students.
Worldwatch
Chilling message on academic freedom
A
professor of Political Science has been convicted of
insulting the legacy of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the revered
founder of modern Turkey, and given a fifteen-month
suspended prison sentence. Atilla Yayla, a professor at Gazi
University in Ankara and head of the Association for Liberal
Thinking, was charged in connection with a 2006 speech in
which he said the era of one-party rule under Ataturk, from
1925-45, was not as progressive as the official ideology
would have Turks believe.
Yayla called the ideology
“regressive in some respects”, and also criticised the
many statues and pictures of Ataturk on office walls, saying
Europeans would be baffled to see so many portraits of just
one man. He insisted that he was not insulting Ataturk but
questioning his legacy. He said he was also challenging the
rigid way in which some followers interpret Ataturk’s
principles as opposing liberal reforms, and their imposition
of strict secular laws such as the ban on head scarves at
universities. “As an academic, I must be free to think, to
search and share findings,” Yayla said. “If Turkey wants
to be a civilized country, academics must be able to
scientifically criticize and evaluate Ataturk’s
ideas.”
Turkey, which aspires to join the European
Union, faces criticism for failing to protect freedom of
expression, with several prominent Turkish journalists and
writers having have been tried for insulting
“Turkishness” and state institutions.
Gazi University
fired Yayla over the controversy, but he was later
reinstated.
From Associated Press
Universities assert
right to publish
The Australian Group of Eight (Go8)
universities have written up a manifesto to ensure the work
of researchers is not interfered with by funders, whether
public or private. The right-to-publish statement was
released last week after Innovation, Industry, Science and
Research Minister, Kim Carr, announced a charter to protect
academic freedom in science agencies.
University of
Sydney Acting Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research and Go8
committee member, Professor Merlin Crossley, said the Go8
document was “preventive medicine”. The statement would
be used as part of contracts between researchers, the
university and the funder to ensure “that academic work is
carried out in an open and independent environment”.
The statement says that the right of university-based
experts to publish the results obtained from properly
constructed research, regardless of the funding source, is a
critical component of academic freedom and one that has come
under some threat in recent years in Australia.
The Go8
says it recognises that backers are entitled to specify the
scope of study and to monitor the work at arm’s length.
However, they would not accept funding where the funder has
the right to interfere in, or alter, the conduct of
sponsored research, or where the funder has the right to
alter, suppress or indefinitely delay publication of all or
part of the outcomes.
Professor Crossley said that, if
it was discovered tomorrow that smoking causes cancer, they
would like to tell the Australian people rather than having
to suppress that because they didn’t read the funding
contract.
The Australian
University, Union settle
case
Staff at the University of Ballarat in Australia
will be able to opt out of Australian Workplace Agreements
(AWAs), equivalent to individual employment agreements in
New Zealand, following an out-of-court settlement between
the University and the National Tertiary Education Union
(NTEU).
The union alleged that the University had
knowingly misled staff in relation to the AWAs and had
breached provisions of the Workplace Relations Act.
The
University has denied that it has knowingly or otherwise
misled staff or breached the provisions of the Act. As part
of the settlement it has agreed that all staff who entered
into an AWA are to be given an opportunity to terminate
their AWA and to move on to a collective agreement.
In a
joint statement with the University, the NTEU Branch
President, Dr Jeremy Smith, said he was glad the Union was
able to put a difficult period behind it and to see people
who were employed on AWAs given the opportunity to move back
to coverage by the collective agreement. “We think this
creates a more positive environment for negotiating the next
enterprise agreement, and ensures that all University staff
have the opportunity to benefit from it,” he said.
And
now, for your homework . . .
Part of a master’s course
at the University of Kent’s School of Architecture has
been described as sick after it emerged that students were
required to design a fully operational torture device.
Illustrated with a skull and a view of a Gestapo electric
torture chamber, the instruction handed to a class of
students was to “design, construct and draw a fully
operational prototype torture device based on ergonomic
principles”. Students were encouraged to “be original”
and told they could use historical precedent as a point of
departure or attempt to develop something completely without
precedent. “Through design development we hope you may
advance your understanding of ergonomics as it pertains to
torture,” the instruction read.
The Head of the
University’s Architecture Department, Professor Don Gray,
confirmed that one of twelve students had complained. “The
only person who has raised any objection has been given the
opportunity to address the project from a different
angle,” he said. “I agree that it is a slightly shocking
introduction to a very serious long-term design project. I'm
neither justifying it or defending it but that is how we are
going about it.”
The two-week project was designed by
course tutor Mike Richards in advance of a project to design
a new headquarters for Amnesty International.
Education
Guardian
More international news
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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
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