AUS Tertiary Update
Buchanan dismissal unjustified, says Authority
The
Employment Relations Authority has ruled that the dismissal
of Dr Paul Buchanan from the University of Auckland was
unjustified and it has awarded him more than $65,000 in lost
wages and compensation. In the determination which was
released yesterday, Authority member Vicki Campbell said
that, while there was no doubt that there was misconduct on
Dr Buchanan’s part, it was unreasonable for the university
to have escalated the matter to one of serious misconduct.
She concluded that a fair and reasonable employer would not
have dismissed Dr Buchanan for the reasons it did and the
circumstances that then prevailed.
In a remarkably
high-profile case which attracted international attention in
July last year, the university summarily sacked Dr Buchanan
on the grounds of serious misconduct after sending what was
described in the media as an angry email to a student, a
United Arab Emirates national. In the email, which was
widely reprinted, Dr Buchanan spoke bluntly of the
student’s very weak academic performance and lack of
aptitude for graduate study and said that he did not believe
her excuse for not delivering her final assignment on the
due date.
In her determination, Ms Campbell said that Dr
Buchanan had breached the university’s misconduct rule by
sending email correspondence which appeared to have little
regard for the well-being of that student, but that his
action had not amounted to serious misconduct. Ms Campbell
also went on to say that suggestions made by Dr Buchanan
which would go some way to ensuring that a similar situation
did not recur were completely overlooked or ignored by the
university. “It was open to the university to apply other
sanctions and behavioural correctives and safeguards with a
view to ensuring such misconduct would not recur,” she
said.
Although Dr Buchanan’s dismissal has been held to
be unjustified, the Authority has declined to reinstate him,
saying that it was not practicable for the university to
employ Dr Buchanan in a role where he has failed to
demonstrate a fundamental awareness of how his own actions
and conduct impact upon those he works with and teaches.
Also taken into account were the publicly critical comments
of the university made by Dr Buchanan following his
dismissal. He was awarded $51,000 in lost wages and $15,000
for hurt and humiliation.
Association of University Staff
deputy secretary, Marty Braithwaite, said that reinstatement
was the primary remedy where unjustified dismissal had been
established and the effect of dismissal on Dr Buchanan had
been particularly profound. “Given that the dismissal has
effectively ended Dr Buchanan’s academic career in New
Zealand, we will be considering appealing that part of the
decision,” he said.
The Employment Relations Authority
determination can be found
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/news/2008/Buchanan.pdf
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. “Raft of flaws” in
proposed Canterbury closure
2. AUS welcomes breastfeeding
action
3. TEC funding for innovation
4. Unit-standard
degree knocked back
5. Financial strains in South
Africa
6. “Education passports” on the
way
7. Marking as easy as ABC
8. Watch out for the
“Flutie effect”
“Raft of flaws” in proposed
Canterbury closure
American studies staff at the
University of Canterbury have identified “a raft of
flaws” in both the academic arguments and business case
put forward by the university in support of its proposal to
close that programme as well as theatre and film studies. At
the same time, they say that the change proposal lacks an
adequate understanding of interdisciplinary scholarship and
teaching in the humanities and social sciences today.
The
staff add that the university’s proposal grossly
overstates the potential financial savings from the closure
and grossly understates its potential financial risks and
losses. “American studies enrolments have in fact steadily
increased at the University of Canterbury since 2006,”
says Dr Jessica Johnston, a recent programme coordinator.
“Moreover, the change proposal’s claim that the American
studies programme is overstaffed is based in part on
calculations that erroneously include a former staff member
who died in 2005.”
When accurate figures replace the
erroneous ones in the change proposal, analysis reveals
that, during each of the last four years, the programme has
generated enough income from student enrolments and research
funding to pay the salaries of academic and general staff,
cover operational expenses, fund university overheads (such
as “rental” on office and teaching space), and still
return $700,000 on average per annum to the university’s
coffers.
As to the academic implications of the proposed
closure, a number of international experts in the field have
come to the defence of the programme. Rejecting the
“antiquated” concept of core disciplines, Professor
Nicholas Mirzoeff of New York University says that “ a
university that considers American studies and theatre and
film arts marginal enterprises but places classics at the
core of its humanities practice while based in the South
Pacific in 2008 risks making itself into a
parody”.
Challenging the assertion that the programme
is weak on research, Stanford University’s Professor
Shelley Fisher Fishkin declares that it “boasts a
distinguished faculty that is widely respected around the
world and that continues to make important contributions to
what is now a global cultural conversation about the United
States. They represent a broad range of fields, work well
together, and model interdisciplinary education at its
best.”
Washington State Professor T.V. Reed asks the
university to reconsider its proposal as it would “remove
New Zealand from a key … effort to direct the United
States in less imperial, more socially positive
directions”.
AUS welcomes breastfeeding action
AUS
national president, Associate Professor Maureen Montgomery,
has welcomed the National Strategic Plan of Action for
Breastfeeding launched last week, especially in view of the
increasing numbers of mothers returning to paid work
following parental leave.
This, she says, is an issue for
many women staff at universities who, as a socio-economic
group, constitute a high proportion of New Zealand women
resuming their employment following the birth of a child.
In fact, Dr Montgomery points out, one of the key concerns
identified in the AUS project at Auckland University on
women staff returning to work was the need for support for
breastfeeding in the workplace, both in terms of providing a
positive environment and appropriate facilities.
“This
can only result in a win-win situation for both the employer
and employee,” she says. “The university does not lose
the valuable skills and institutional knowledge of women
staff, nursing mothers are able to have an unfettered choice
about whether they wish to breastfeed their child or not,
and working women do not have to undergo the economic
disadvantage of extending their parental leave without pay
or resigning in order to opt for something which is widely
acknowledged as being of benefit to both mother and
child.”
The Council of Trade Unions (CTU) has also
welcomed the package of reforms of which the breastfeeding
plan forms part. CTU secretary, Carol Beaumont, said,
“Breastfeeding mums need to feel confident that workplaces
have policies in place and a culture that supports them and
their babies in the workplace. Some employers have
recognised the need for this, and a guaranteed work right
will help ensure this is more accessible.”
“These
provisions build on steady progress to improve the lives of
working people, including better annual leave provisions,
fourteen weeks’ paid parental leave, the right to request
flexible work, and a $12 minimum wage coming into effect
next week,” Ms Beaumont added.
TEC funding for
innovation
The Tertiary Education Commission has
announced the awarding of a total of $18.8 million to
twenty-nine diverse projects from the Encouraging and
Supporting Innovation fund. Announcing the funding on
Tuesday, TEC chief executive, Janice Shiner, emphasised the
importance of the fund to New Zealand’s economic
transformation and ongoing social and cultural development:
“We need to find more advanced and sustainable ways of
doing things to ensure New Zealand continues to prosper in
the increasingly competitive global marketplace,” she
said.
“Our tertiary sector has a key role to play in
this. The Encouraging and Supporting Innovation fund
supports tertiary-education organisations to undertake new
projects that will improve the transfer of knowledge between
the tertiary sector and industry and encourage students to
study at higher levels.”
As indicated by the number of
successful applications with joint partners, the fund is
intended to focus on collaborative projects in the hope that
they will then yield the greatest gains for industry,
students, and the wider community. To be awarded funding,
therefore, projects must be new initiatives with strongly
innovative elements.
Successful projects include: Te
Ipukarea: National Maori Language Institute, $1,400,000 to
AUT with Lincoln University; a knowledge hub to aid
engagement between the manufacturing sector and universities
to promote more targeted and responsible partnerships, $594,
871 to Massey University with AUT and NZ Trade and
Enterprise; Nga Tamariki o Awatoru, $1,500,000 to Te
Wānanga o Aotearoa with the business school of the
University of Auckland and Unitec; increasing postgraduate
study and research relevant to the seafood sector, $200,000
to the University of Canterbury with the University of
Otago; establishment funding for the New Zealand Centre for
the Study of Islam and Muslim Cultures, $364,871 to the
University of Otago with Victoria University of Wellington;
and engaging with China, $325,000 to Victoria University
with the Universities of Auckland, Otago, and
Canterbury.
Unit-standard degree knocked back
A
controversial application to register a degree composed of
unit standards has been turned down, according to Education
Review. Instead, the New Zealand Qualifications Authority
(NZQA) is said to have insisted on a course-approval process
different from that required for other programmes registered
on the national qualifications framework (NQF).
The
Extractives Industry Association (Exito) made the
application in 2007, proposing a degree comprising existing
unit standards at levels four to six of the NQF and new
level seven standards based on courses offered by the
University of Queensland. After consultation, the NZQA is
said to have agreed that degrees could be registered on the
framework, but would require an application for course
approval, an application for approval to offer the degree,
and an application for NZQA consent to grant the
degree.
Education Review quotes NZQA deputy chief
executive, quality assurance, Mike Willing, as saying that a
degree provider would also have to satisfy the requirements
for degrees set out in the Education Act, including having
infrastructures that meet its criteria. “An NFQ degree
would have to meet the same quality standards that apply to
all degree applications irrespective of whether the
application is a national degree or not.”
“The
statutory requirements mean such applications need to
demonstrate that the degree constitutes a course of advanced
learning, that degree teaching is underpinned by research
capability, and the degree course emphasises the general
principles and basic knowledge for self-directed learning
and work,” he added.
Exito chief executive Kevin Walker
is quoted as saying that his organisation would seek more
information about the degree-approval process but that it is
possible it would abandon its application because the
process would be too involved and expensive.
World
Watch
Financial strains in South Africa
Fee increases
and the lack of student funding at tertiary-education
institutions are placing severe strain on disadvantaged
students and funding-support schemes, according to South
African education minister, Naledi Pandor. “There is a
tension between the legitimate belief that charging higher
fees is a reasonable way of raising university income and
the certain knowledge that charging fees will deter
qualified students from disadvantaged backgrounds from going
to university,” she said.
Ms Pandor added that the
spate of student protests at various higher-education
institutions in South Africa in 2008 and earlier is proof
that poor students felt an enormous strain in keeping up
with the increasing costs of tertiary education.
She went
on to say that government funding accounted for 49 percent
of the total income of universities and student fees for
only 24 percent in 2000. By 2005, however, the share of
government funding had fallen to 41 percent and the
contribution from student fees had risen to 29 percent. The
effect is that fee-costs per student had risen at rates well
above inflation, meaning that a balance has to be
achieved.
“In 2007, the total subsidy was $NZ189.2
million. In 2008, it is $2197.5 million and in 2010 it will
be $2794.1 million. Increasing funds for higher education
will allow most university managements to balance costs so
that tuition-fee levels are not set out of the reach of the
majority of students or parents.”
She concluded that,
while it is important to acknowledge the private sector’s
contribution to student funding, especially through
scholarships and commercial bank loans, there is scope to
examine the extension of bank loans to students who fall
outside the reach of the student financial-aid
scheme.
From The Mercury
“Education passports” on
the way
The University of New South Wales (UNSW) is
believed to be the first in the Asia-Pacific region to
introduce “education passports”, a key feature of the
Bologna process for harmonising higher education, when it
presents them to about 500 students at a graduation ceremony
later this month.
UNSW deputy vice-chancellor
(academic), Richard Henry, said the passports would “make
it much easier for our graduates to find places in the world
and in universities around the world”. It will accompany
the traditional degree and, as well as detailing the
academic performance of undergraduate, masters or PhD
students, it will verify key graduate attributes such as
leadership, teamwork, and communications activities.
UNSW is one of fourteen universities preparing a
template for graduate statements compliant with the European
standard and the results will be presented to the federal
government for national take-up. According to the project
leader, Professor Grant Harman of the University of New
England, “The feedback from the fourteen vice-chancellors
involved in the project is they are keen on these statements
in terms of improving their international
competitiveness.”
He added that the statements would
be a benefit to overseas students and their host Australian
universities. Unlike an academic transcript, a statement
would verify that a graduate had satisfied the professional
accreditation requirements for entry into a profession such
as accounting or engineering in Australia.
Professor
Harman said the statements were originally intended to shore
up the attractiveness of Australian degrees overseas,
especially Asia, but they were also likely to help young
Australian masters’ students do higher degrees in the
United States.
Since the statements included an
explanation of the academic rigour and quality assurance of
Australian higher education, United States institutions,
notwithstanding their being outside the Bologna process, are
expected to waive key barriers for Australians whose
statements testified to their high performance.
From The
Australian
Marking as easy as ABC
Computer software
that is claimed to make marking students’ work up to ten
times faster will be offered to the university sector after
its University of Manchester creators secured an investment
of $NZ589,000 from the private sector.
While software for
marking multiple-choice questions is common at many
universities, Manchester spin-off company Assessment21’s
product, ABC (Assess By Computer), is designed to handle the
marking of more complex, open-ended questions testing
higher-level skills. It does this by leaving marking
judgments to academics while the machine “takes away the
drudgery” of the process, says the company’s director,
Gerard Lennox.
The software has been developed by
academics and is being used in many departments of the
university, both for final-year exams and coursework.
Students sit their exam at a computer and receive feedback
electronically. The software can highlight key words in
students’ answers, allows easy comparison against a model
answer, lets academics mark questions in their preferred
order, and flags up answers that are similar.
It also
helps to ensure marking consistency through automatic
double-blind marking, with several papers going to every
marker for comparison, its developers say. “The spark of
genius behind this is that it looks at what can be taken
away so that the marker can concentrate on what the marker
is good at,” Mr Lennox said.
Elizabeth Sheader, a
teaching fellow in Manchester’s faculty of life sciences,
has used ABC for assessment of first-year practicals. “It
reduces the logistics of marking. Rather than having to
carry around 500 scripts, you can have it all on a USB pen.
It can also help detect plagiarism because it can order
students’ responses in similarity to each other so you can
see if there is any collusion going on,” she said.
From
Times Higher Education
Watch out for the “Flutie
effect”
It turns out that there is some basis for the
long-held belief among university admissions officials that
the better their teams do in high-profile sporting events,
the more applications for enrolment they will see. Until
recently, evidence about the “Flutie effect”, coined
when applications to Boston College jumped about 30 percent
in the two years after quarterback Doug Flutie’s Hail Mary
pass beat Miami in 1984, had been mostly anecdotal.
So
two researchers set out to quantify it, concluding after a
broad study that winning the National Collegiate Athletic
Association (NCAA) football or men’s basketball title
results in an increase in enrolments of about 8 percent,
with smaller increases for more modest successes.
“Certainly college administrators have known about this
for a while, but I think this study helps to pin down what
the average effects are,” said Jaren Pope, an assistant
professor in applied economics at Virginia Tech who
conducted the study with his brother Devin, an assistant
professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton
School.
The brothers compared information on freshman
classes at 330 NCAA Division I schools with how the
schools’ teams fared from 1983 through 2002. They found
that schools that make it to the Sweet 16 in the men’s
basketball tournament see an average 3 percent boost in
applications the following year. The champion is likely to
see a 7 to 8 percent increase, but just making the 65-team
field will net schools an average 1 percent
bump.
Similarly, applications go up 7 to 8 percent at
schools that win the national football championship, and
schools that finish in the top 20 have a 2.5 percent
gain.
There has been wide debate over the legitimacy of
the Flutie effect, especially when it comes to whether
schools should pour money into athletics programs with the
hope of reaping the benefits of a winning team.
From
Associated Press
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
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made to the editor, email:
editor@aus.ac.nz.