AUS Tertiary Update
Universities of technology unnecessary,
confusing
Parliament’s education and science select
committee has been warned that any move to establish a new
category of university, a university of technology, will
further confuse an already highly differentiated
tertiary-education system and exacerbate the problems of the
existing two-tier structure around the research capacity of
institutions.
In a joint submission, the Association of
University Staff and Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education have also told the select committee that the
tertiary-education reforms have provided a plan that
addresses the distinctive contributions made by the
different types of institutions to the sector and that what
are being described as the particular functions of a
university of technology are already well catered-for by
institutes of technology and polytechnics (ITPs).
The
submission emphasises that ITPs have a vital contribution to
make to New Zealand’s society and economy, particularly in
the provision of vocational and professional education and
supporting research and in meeting the educational and
training needs of regional communities. It argues further
that the focus should be on ensuring that all public
tertiary-education institutions are fully funded to
undertake work that accords with their stated distinctive
contributions.
The submission is in response to a bill
sponsored by New Zealand First and currently being
considered by parliament that would establish universities
of technology. The move has previously been described as a
thinly veiled attempt to give Auckland tertiary-education
provider, Unitec, university status after it failed in its
prolonged bid to be awarded full university status.
AUS
national president, Associate Professor Maureen Montgomery,
said that the existing range of tertiary-education
institutions already has sufficient overlap to provide all
of the teaching, learning, and research requirements needed,
and the creation of another type of institution runs the
risk of forcing or encouraging the ITP sector to over-focus
on securing degree and postgraduate provision in order to
gain university of technology status. “Experience had
shown that this would be at the expense of crucial
sub-degree programmes and would result in a loss of
differentiation as different types of institutions compete
to offer the same levels and types of programmes,” she
said.
Dr Montgomery added that the new funding system for
tertiary education is configured on a strategic approach to
the sector and the creation of a new type of university
would contradict the recently introduced tertiary-education
reforms.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Serious
concerns over composition of PBRF review group
2. Glacial
progress for academic women
3. Leave film studies alone,
urges NZUSA
4. “$1.7 million blowout”
questioned
5. New battlefield in Australia’s culture
wars
6. No PhD, no job in Nigeria
7. Luxury library
loos launched at Leicester
Serious concerns over
composition of PBRF review group
AUS has raised serious
concerns about the ability of the Performance-Based Research
Fund sector reference group (SRG), appointed by the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC), fully to represent the diversity
of the tertiary-education sector. The concerns have been set
out in a letter to the SRG chairperson, Professor John
Hattie.
The group is meant to be constituted according to
the following principles: that it represent an appropriate
range of participating tertiary-education organisations
(TEOs); that it have an appropriate balance in terms of
gender, race, and ethnicity; that it have the knowledge and
expertise necessary to provide informed, dispassionate, and
reliable advice; that it represent an appropriate range of
academic disciplines and research managers; that it include
academic staff at different points in their careers; and
that it include some members with non-academic research
backgrounds.
The AUS concerns centre on gender balance,
with ten men and four women appointed; representation of
Māori, with, apparently, only one member; the total lack of
Pasifika representation; and the fact that the group seems
weighted towards senior-management-level representatives and
is lacking in “academic staff at different points in their
careers”.
AUS recognises that it is challenging to
bring together a group that is fully representative but
believes that the present composition limits its ability to
represent the issues and interests of staff in the
sector.
AUS national president, Associate Professor
Maureen Montgomery, said today, “The TEC set itself
laudable principles for the composition of the SRG to take
account of the diversity of participants needed for this
review of the PBRF. It is to be regretted, however, that the
principles could not be met from the nominations that were
put forward by the TEOs as this will undoubtedly have an
impact on the discussions and shape the recommendations of
the group.”
“Given the somewhat predictable
difficulty of honouring the principles, perhaps some thought
needed to go into how the difficulty could be overcome
through asking each of the TEOs to make several nominations
in an identified range of categories enabling the TEC, then,
to ensure adequate representation.”
Glacial progress for
academic women
Although the number of women holding
senior academic positions in New Zealand universities has
increased in the last year, progress toward equity is still
glacial, according to AUS national president, Associate
Professor Maureen Montgomery. Her comment came in response
to this week’s release by the Human Rights Commission of
the New Zealand Census of Women’s Participation 2008,
which revealed that women held just under 20 percent of
senior academic position in New Zealand universities in
2007, up by 2.28 percent from the previous year.
Despite
the fact that women make up nearly half the academic
workforce in universities, they remain clustered in the
lower academic rankings. The proportion of women professors
is only 15.1 percent and that of women associate professors
23.19 percent. Six universities improved their proportion of
women in senior academic positions while two, AUT and
Massey, lost ground.
Dr Montgomery said that, while there
is no quick fix in increasing the proportion of women
employed in senior academic positions, New Zealand
universities could look to Australia, where that country’s
vice-chancellors had undertaken some solid initiatives
towards improving the under-representation of women in
senior academia. “What is needed in this country is a
sophisticated and multi-faceted approach to promoting
equity,” she said. “We need to examine both structural
and cultural barriers, and it would be a welcome sign if New
Zealand vice-chancellors were to demonstrate the same level
of collective commitment to reducing such barriers as their
Australian counterparts are doing.”
The proportion of
women filling ministerial appointments on university
councils ranged from 75 percent (or three out of four
positions) at AUT to none out of four at the University of
Waikato.
Leave film studies alone, urges NZUSA
The New
Zealand Union of Students’ Associations has added its
voice to the voluminous chorus of opposition to Victoria
University’s proposed changes to its film studies
programme. The change proposal would end the teaching of
film production at undergraduate level and see film studies
replaced by cinema studies. The five academic positions in
the programme would be disestablished and replaced with
three new ones.
In a written submission opposing the
proposal, NZUSA expresses puzzlement and concern that such
an internationally successful programme should be under
threat and rejects, in both principle and fact, a number of
justifications put forward by the university. In particular,
the submission draws attention to the need to combine theory
and practice in film studies and the fact that it is
precisely this combination at undergraduate level that has
attracted students to Victoria, both from around New Zealand
and around the world. If the proposal should go ahead, it
argues, hundreds of students will be negatively affected
because the programme for which they originally signed up
would no longer exist.
Noting that the Tertiary Education
Commission specifically identifies students as the most
important stakeholder group in tertiary education, the
submission is scathing about the lack of consultation with
students as well as others in the development of the
proposal. Urging the rejection of the change proposal on the
grounds of both principle and process, NZUSA additionally
demands that a representative of the Victoria University of
Wellington Students’ Association be added to the decision
panel considering its fate.
In other developments, it is
understood that the proposal has been opposed almost
unanimously at both the faculty of humanities and social
sciences board and the university’s academic board and has
been rejected by both bodies.
“$1.7 million blowout”
questioned
As many as twenty-four jobs could be lost at
Victoria University’s faculty of education according to a
report in the Dominion Post and the faculty’s four
schools, which train teachers at early-childhood and school
level, may be reduced to three while more focus is given to
research. The job losses are said to result from what the
paper describes as a “$1.7 million budget blowout”
caused by a 16 percent increase in student enrolments in
expensive courses in one school while another has staffing
levels in excess of budget.
According to the faculty pro
vice-chancellor and dean, Professor Dugald Scott, these
circumstances have been exacerbated by competitive pressures
caused by recent significant but welcome increases in
teacher salaries. Addressing the university’s governing
council this week, Professor Scott celebrated the success of
the former college of education’s merger with the
university but emphasised the importance of paying more
attention to research in the future. He blamed the proposed
restructuring on the government’s tertiary-education
reforms, saying that the switch from student numbers as a
funding basis to quality and relevance places new,
research-related demands on tertiary institutions.
The
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) has
expressed surprise that the pro vice-chancellor seems to
have pre-empted the agreed process of investigation and
consultation over possible job losses. ASTE field officer
Phil Dodds said, “We are disappointed that Professor Scott
has gone public with highly speculative numbers before
consultation has occurred. The $1.7 million figure quoted is
probably too high and he is remiss in publicising even a
guesstimate at this stage.”
Victoria University of
Wellington Students’ Association president and university
council member, Joel Cosgrove, related this restructuring to
that in the film studies programme. “It’s the same sort
of short-sighted, knee-jerk reaction,” he said. Professor
Scott, however, rejected any such connection.
World
Watch
New battlefield in Australia’s culture
wars
Australia’s Young Liberals, undeterred, or perhaps
energised, by their party’s defeat in last year’s
federal election, have opened a new front in the culture
wars that were so much a part of the years of the Howard
coalition government. Whereas previously the Young Liberals
have taken little or no interest in academic issues, they
have started a new campaign, “Education Not
Indoctrination”, intended to root out “left-wing bias”
in academe.
The Sydney Morning Herald reports that a
flood of black posters has suddenly appeared on university
campuses featuring a gagged and wide-eyed youth staring out
of a top corner. “Record biased lecturers,” they
“scream”, to borrow the Herald’s word. “Scan biased
textbooks. Report incidents of bias. Education. Not
Indoctrination.”
Noel McCoy, president of the Young
Liberals, is quoted as saying, “Lecturers and tutors are
brazenly forcing students to agree with their political or
ideological views and we want to catch them doing it.”
While he claims that the campaign is simply a local response
to longstanding concerns, the paper sees it as “a sinister
echo to one waged by conservative students on the other side
of the world”. It cites a variety of organisations in the
United States of America and “right-wing intellectual”
David Horowitz as the sources of the inspiration for the
campaign.
Carolyn Allport, national president of
Australia’s National Tertiary Education Union, dismisses
the accusations as “nonsense”. “This comes from the
United States, directly,” she said. “If a student
isn’t happy with a grade they have been given … every
single university, within their act, has student grievance
procedures and students can contest their grades.”
New
South Wales Greens education spokesperson, John Kaye, goes
further and links the campaign to 1950s McCarthyism. “It
is clear that the Young Liberals have no understanding of
the culture of open inquiry and free discourse,” he
said.
No PhD, no job in Nigeria
Public and private
universities in Nigeria have recently been reminded that, by
2009, all lecturers must possess a doctoral degree or lose
their jobs. The directive has generated a great deal of
controversy within and outside higher education. Both
supporters and opponents of the idea are unanimous, however,
about one thing: to prevent instability and uncertainty in
the fragile university system, the qualifications deadline
should be extended to allow affected academics to obtain
their PhDs.
The executive secretary of Nigeria’s
National Universities Commission, Professor Julius Okojie,
has directed, “If you don’t have a PhD, you cannot
teach. It has been an old regulation in the university
system. If you graduate with a first class or second class
upper, we take you as a graduate assistant. You are a
trainee fellow. You are not a lecturer. When you earn your
masters, you become an assistant lecturer. You are still not
a lecturer. The day you obtain your PhD, even if you have
never worked before, your first appointment is lecturer
grade two.”
Critics argue that, in Nigeria,
postgraduate programmes were undermined to the point of
collapse by the deliberate policy of the military junta that
ruled the country to deny the university system adequate
funding. Dr Benedicta Okon, a lecturer at the Niger Delta
University, explained, “Since the generals considered
university teachers and students as real centres of
opposition to perpetual military rule, there was a
consistent policy to reduce drastically the amount of money
meant for universities. Professors in charge of postgraduate
programmes migrated in their droves to greener pastures
abroad.”
“Today, about a third of university teachers
in Nigeria do not have doctorate degrees,” he added.
“With improvements in the working and living conditions of
lecturers with PhDs, they will be in a position to train
their colleagues with masters’ degrees.”
From
University World News
Luxury library loos launched at
Leicester
Leicester University in the United Kingdom has
stolen a march on other aspirational institutions in that
country. Its new £32m library, opened this week, has the
most amazing loos, with yellow trough-shaped sinks,
automatic taps, and efficient dryers. So enthusiastic are
the students that they have established the Leicester
University Library Toilets Appreciation Society on Facebook,
where they wax lyrical about the beauty of the new
lavatories.
“If these toilets were a bird, they would
be an eagle as they soar above the rest of the
competition,” reads one comment. “If these toilets were
a metal they would be gold. If these toilets were a
footballer, they would be Pele.” And so on.
Louise
Jones, director of library services at the university, is
pleased that the loos have won the students’ approval, but
is hoping that they will also appreciate other aspects of
the new building, particularly its black leather chairs and
sofas, its 350-terminal PC zone, and its thirteen
group-study rooms with plasma screens. “We are a quality
university,” she says. “We want a quality
library.”
Leicester has always been famous for its
library. Until now, its main claim to fame was that poet
Philip Larkin was an assistant librarian from 1949 to 1951.
The new development, called the David Wilson Library after a
local businessman who donated £2 million, is effectively a
makeover of the existing building with an extension which
doubles it in size. Big holes have been knocked in the roof
to bring in the light, walls have been clad in light cherry
wood, and there are four new atria adorned with hanging
sculptures.
The building contains a cafe and a bookshop
as well as careers and student-development centres. There
will be a help zone in which IT and library support staff,
clad in distinctive polo shirts, will roam, assisting
students who can’t find a book or have computer
trouble.
From The Independent
More international
news
More international news can be found on University
World News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
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 inquiries should be
made to the editor, email:
editor@aus.ac.nz.