AUS Tertiary Update
New Zealand-Chile exchanges arranged
Up to 300
tertiary-education students a year from Chile may study in
New Zealand under a new arrangement signed yesterday by the
tertiary-education minister, Pete Hodgson, the education
minister, Chris Carter, and the Chilean foreign minister,
Alejandro Foxley. Under the arrangement, the Chilean
government will also facilitate visas and permits for New
Zealand students, researchers, teachers, and their
dependants for entry into Chile and provide guidance to New
Zealand students for their enrolment in tertiary-education
institutions in Chile.
“The Chile-New Zealand
Arrangement on Human Capital Development Scholarships is
only the beginning of a programme that will bring Chilean
and New Zealand students, researchers, and institutions much
closer,” said Pete Hodgson.
The agreement is part of
Chile’s $NZ7.8 billion Bicentennial Fund for Human Capital
Development under which 300 scholarships a year will be
offered by the Chilean government for students from Chile to
study at a range of New Zealand universities, institutes of
technology, polytechnics, and private training
establishments. New Zealand is among the first five
countries to be included in the arrangement, along with
Australia, Canada, Great Britain, and the United States.
The Chilean government says that its purpose in pursuing
the arrangement is to provide the framework to strengthen
human-capital development and improve the scope and quality
for education through access for scholarship students to
vocational and technical training, postgraduate, doctoral,
and post-doctoral education, language courses, and
teacher-education studies.
“Chile is the strongest
education relationship New Zealand has in Latin America,”
said Chris Carter. “The links between our two countries go
back to the nineteenth century and include trade and a
shared Polynesian heritage with Māori and the people of
Rapa Nui. The agreement signed today demonstrates the
strength of our education and research ties and sets the
platform to take our relationship into the twenty-first
century.”
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. New
teaching and learning funds announced
2. Canterbury
super-computer update
3. English-language students on the
rise again
4. New report traces different student
tracks
5. Arbitrary action sparks tea-room
rebellion
6. Australian higher-education system at
“tipping point”
7. New vetting system for research
staff
8. European network of children’s
universities
9. Mixed picture on casualisation in
UK
10. Routledge recycles without credit or
royalties
New teaching and learning funds announced
Ako
Aotearoa, the National Centre for Tertiary Teaching
Excellence, has announced the introduction of two new
funding initiatives: Good Practice Publication Grants and a
National Project Fund.
There will be 35 publication
grants of up to $5000 available for groups or individuals to
develop material on their own proven good practice for
publication on the Ako Aotearoa website. The scheme is open
to both academic and general staff who support student
learning. It is intended to provide a mechanism by means of
which tertiary educators can be recognised for the positive
impact they have on learners as well as offering an
opportunity for exciting and innovative practice to be
shared across the tertiary-education sector.
The project
fund has been established to support “use-inspired
research projects and sustainable implementation projects
which are likely to have a significant strategic impact and
benefit learners”. It has four funding streams: research
and implementation projects, Māori initiative projects,
doctoral scholarships, and collaboration projects. Ako
Aotearoa also intends to commission research and
implementation projects of strategic relevance and introduce
funding for Pacific peoples’ initiative projects.
Welcoming the new funding, Association of University
Staff academic vice-president, Dr Grant Duncan, said,
“Universities have been rather obsessed lately with the
PBRF and the drive to improve academics’ research
track-records. Many people in universities, including
students, have wondered if this may have come at the expense
of teaching quality.”
“The projects and funding
announced by Ako Aotearoa will stimulate us to reflect on
and to enhance the best teaching practices, and to consider
how they contribute to positive results for students,” he
added.
Canterbury super-computer update
The University
of Canterbury has advised that the reporter responsible for
the article in The Press to which last week’s “Blue
Fern” super-computer story was attributed has told it that
“her story was substantially cut by the sub-editors,
resulting in an unbalanced reflection of detailed material
provided in an open meeting of the university
council”.
Acting vice-chancellor, Professor Ian Town,
has since said in a statement to university staff that the
story in The Press failed to mention that, in addition to
the $203,000 operating income, the university also received
a $700,000 capital grant from the Tertiary Education
Commission to provide access for researchers from the
MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and
Nanotechnology.
Professor Town added that the detailed
report presented to the council included information about
the “many research successes and collaborations made
possible through access to this world-class computer
resource”.
English-language students on the rise
again
International students studying at English-language
schools spent $242 million in New Zealand in the year ended
March 2008, according to figures released yesterday by the
government statistician. This expenditure is $7 million
higher than that for the year ended March 2007.
According to the English Language Providers (ELP)
survey, there were 39,668 international students enrolled in
English-language schools in New Zealand in the year to March
2008, an increase of 1,940 (5.1 percent) from the previous
year. Expenditure on tuition and related fees was $121
million in the March 2008 year, up $3.7 million from the
previous year.
The March 2008 year is the second
consecutive year in which expenditure on tuition and related
fees has increased. These increases, however, followed a
56.7 percent decline between the March 2003 and March 2006
years.
The biggest single increase in expenditure on
tuition and related fees this year was by students from
Saudi Arabia. Their expenditure increased $3.9 million (68.8
percent), reflecting an increase in student numbers.
Expenditure on tuition and related fees by Saudi Arabian
students has increased $8.6 million since the March 2004
year.
The Republic of Korea surpassed China as the
largest contributor to expenditure on tuition and related
fees for both the March 2007 and March 2008 years.
Expenditure by South Korean students increased $8.6 million
(47.5 percent) from March 2006, while expenditure by Chinese
students decreased $10.8 million (31.3 percent).
The
estimated total value of expenditure by all international
students studying in New Zealand was $1,514 million for the
year ended March 2008, down $36 million from the previous
year. Total expenditure by all international students
includes the expenditure by students measured by the ELP, as
well as the expenditure of students enrolled at primary and
secondary schools and tertiary-education institutions.
New
report traces different student tracks
A new report
prepared by the Ministry of Education shows that students
changing tertiary-education institutions becomes more common
as they progress through their academic careers. Different
Tracks – a look at the diffferent ways New Zealanders get
tertiary qualifications looks at the extent to which
tertiary-education students change qualifications or
providers during the course of their study and the impact
this has on overall tertiary-system performance.
The
report finds that changing qualifications has become common.
In particular, 22 percent of students changed qualifications
before completion, with 5 percent of students completing a
higher-level qualification than that with which they had
started, and between 5 and 10 percent completing a
lower-level one.
Changing providers is also common. The
report estimates that 19 percent of students transferred to
a different provider before they completed a qualification
and 52 percent who progressed to higher-level study after
completing a qualification also changed
providers.
Students who transfer before finishing a
qualification are significantly less likely to complete a
qualification at the same level as or higher than their
original qualification and are more likely to complete a
lower-level qualification or still be studying. For example,
the degree-completion rate after ten years for students who
transferred was 35 percent, compared with 67 percent for
those who didn’t transfer.
However, when transferring
students who completed lower-level qualifications or were
still studying are considered, both groups had the same
level of non-completion after ten years, 30
percent.
Individual-provider completion rates, which
exclude students who transfer and complete at a different
provider, were between 6 and 8 percentage points lower than
system-completion rates, which include transferring
students. Specifically, 8 percent of university-degree
students who start at one provider, and 6 percent of
institute of technology and polytechnic diploma students who
start at one provider, complete at a different one.
The
complete report can be found
at:
http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/29313/29314
Arbitrary action sparks tea-room rebellion
A recent
email and assault on the registry tea room at the University
of Canterbury has sparked a rapid rebellion and back-down by
university management. The email, sent by the university’s
facilities manager to registry staff said, “The work
commencing tomorrow involves the reduction in size, by one
office bay and an access corridor, of the staff tea room.
The opportunity will be taken to refresh the décor and to
enhance lighting levels within the tea room.”
Upon
arrival the following day, however, the 178 staff who use
the tea room, including the registrar and human resources
managers, discovered that it had been halved to make room
for a “management office”. As a result, the staff found
themselves in cramped, shoulder-to-shoulder conditions and
unable to find room in which to take their meals, as well as
running the risk of getting a hot cup of tea or coffe poured
over them.
In response to the consequent uproar,
Association of University Staff Canterbury branch organiser,
Gaby Moore, wrote to the facilities manager requesting that
the arbitrary action be immediately reversed. He, however,
replied that, “The work we are involved in with respect to
the tea room in Registry is routine and not related to
employment conditions so much of your e-mail regarding
consultation in an employment contract sense is not
relevant.”
It appears, however, that wiser heads
eventually prevailed and the AUS has now secured agreement
from the university that no further work will take place
without consultation. The branch will be seeking alternative
space for the office and a guarantee from the university
that it will not interfere with members’ right to take
their legitimate breaks in comfort and that, before future
decisions of this sort are made, management will actually
speak to the staff and the AUS.
World Watch
Australian
higher-education system at “tipping point”
Australian
universities have warned the federal government not to
squander its chance to overhaul the higher-education sector,
saying the system is at a “tipping point” with a
dangerous reliance on international students. Universities
Australia (UA), which represents the country’s 38
universities, said their future is uncertain because market
conditions could reduce philanthropic and investment
returns, the academic workforce is ageing, they rely on
international students, and they expect a fall in the level
of the school-leaving population.
“Urgent remedial
action is therefore needed or we will fall far behind the
countries in our region,” UA said in a recent submission.
The submission recommended devoting 2 percent of gross
domestic product to higher education by 2015, removing the
income assessment from scholarships, and lowering the age of
independence from 25 to 18 so younger students could receive
income support.
The University of New South Wales (UNSW)
vice-chancellor, Professor Fred Hilmer, said the system is
geared towards growth at all costs and universities have
more incentive to increase students in lucrative disciplines
such as business or law, where the Higher Education
Contribution Scheme is highest, than in areas with genuine
skills shortages, such as engineering. He added that a
“perverse” incentives system means funds are available
for new buildings but not to fix old ones, and grants for
research are not accompanied by the laboratories needed to
conduct it.
“There are ticking time bombs that, if we
don’t deal with them, are going to make it … a seriously
impaired system,” Professor Hilmer said in a video on the
UNSW website. “The stability of our funding base has
changed dramatically and we are now very like the mining
industry where, if the exchange rate changes, the ability of
our universities to attract the foreign students that are
absolutely vital is going to be severely affected. So what
we’re trying to do is fund long-term, enduring
institutions on the basis of a short-term, volatile
market,” he concluded.
From Harriet Alexander in the
Sydney Morning Herald
New vetting system for research
staff
A new research-integrity body, which would have
powers to investigate allegations of misconduct and create a
database of cases to allow universities to vet would-be
academic staff, could soon be in operation in the United
Kingdom. The idea is set out in a consultation document on
how to improve the conduct of research released by Research
Councils UK, the umbrella organisation for Britain’s seven
research councils.
The paper suggests that, “in the
absence of any clear national advisory or governance
framework”, a new body could be set up to cover all
academic disciplines. It might also offer independence to
counter concerns that individual institutions, currently
left alone to investigate allegations, “may have, or be
perceived as having, their own interests in such
matters”.
As well as an advisory function, the new
national body could also “oversee investigations of the
most serious complaints” and “provide a central record,
for consultation by employers, of all proven cases of
misdemeanour or misconduct, and of resulting penalties and
sanctions”. At the moment, there is no national repository
of known cases, and individuals may move from one research
organisation to another without cases against them being
disclosed, the document notes.
Harvey Marcovitch, chair
of the Committee of Publication Ethics, said he supported
the formation of a national body to undertake
investigations, but said universities are “unlikely to
accept an over-riding of their autonomy”. Andy
Stainthorpe, director of the UK Research Integrity Office,
welcomed discussion on the issues. “There are situations
where a case might be such that it would benefit from being
investigated outside the organisation. I think there could
be situations where the organisation would agree with that
itself - but to impose it might not be the right step at
this time,” he said.
From Zoë Corbyn in Times Higher
Education
European network of children’s
universities
The European Commission is backing the
formation of the European Children’s University Network,
or EUCUNET, with a grant of $NZ112,000 over the next two
years. The money has been allocated through the
commission’s science-in-society theme, part of its Seventh
Framework Programme.
The network’s objective is to
create a database of activities that are currently or have
already been undertaken in Europe in the area of
children’s universities, a commission release said. From
this, an interactive web portal will open and international
symposia be held to stimulate “the transfer of know-how
and the exchange of existing expertise”.
“The concept
of children’s universities represents the most radical
opening towards the general public that universities can
undertake,” says a statement by the network. “The basic
intention is to counteract a falling interest in science and
research among the young, and help overcome stereotype
notions as well as widen participation across diverse
sectors of Europe’s populations.”
The first
children’s university was founded in 2002 at the
University of Tübingen in Germany. As a result of its
efforts, the children’s university was awarded the
Descartes Prize for Science Communication. Since then, other
children’s universities have been set up in Basel,
Bratislava, Strasbourg, and Vienna.
The University of
Vienna established the Vienna Children’s University in
2003 and, each summer, the gates of four of the city’s
universities open to 3,500 children between the ages of
seven and twelve for two weeks. Children are able to
participate in some of the 350 lectures and workshops as
well as having personal contact with researchers.
The
children’s office at the University of Vienna says that
the youngsters who take part “experience the university
with all that comes with it: the record of studies, student
ID, lunch at the cafeteria, and finally the degree
ceremony”.
From Geoff Maslen in University World
News
Mixed picture on casualisation in UK
Increasing
numbers of staff at English universities are being given
permanent contracts, according to the latest official
figures. A report of the Higher Education Funding Council
for England (HEFCE) on staff in higher education shows that
the proportion of academic staff on permanent contracts rose
from 63 to 70 percent in the three years from 2003-04 to
2006-07, while professional and support staff with permanent
contracts increased from 84 to 87 percent.
Earlier this
year, Andrew Ball, a University of Aberdeen researcher who
was employed for nine years on a series of temporary
employment contracts, won the right to be made permanent in
a landmark case. The tribunal said the short-term nature of
the funding for his post was not a sufficient justification
for keeping him on temporary contracts.
The University
and College Union (UCU) said the increase in permanently
employed staff is encouraging. “However, we are under no
illusion as to the extent of the problem with the continuing
casualisation culture at some institutions,” said Sally
Hunt, UCU general secretary. “Casualisation in our
universities remains the unacceptable underbelly of higher
education and it is a pity that so much of the HEFCE report
focuses only on permanent staff.”
Ms Hunt welcomed the
increase in staff numbers, but said, “Going on a headcount
basis, it must be noted that students in higher education in
England increased by 10.3 percent during the same
period.”
The UCU has asked members to step up a
campaign against contracts with unfavourable variable hours.
In a circular to members, it says that it is union policy
that “variable-hours contracts should only be used to
improve the position of our members, in other words, limited
to those who would otherwise be employed on part-time,
hourly, fixed-term contracts”.
From Melanie Newman in
Times Higher Education
Routledge recycles without credit
or royalties
When William E Deal casually flipped through
Theory for Performance Studies: A Student’s Guide,
published this year by Routledge, he noticed a few familiar
sentences. After taking a closer look, Dr Deal, a professor
of religious studies at Case Western Reserve University,
discovered whole paragraphs and even entire pages that had
been lifted directly from a book he co-wrote, Theory for
Religious Studies, published by Routledge in 2004. “My jaw
dropped,” he recalls. “My stomach turned
flip-flops.”
Professor Deal and his co-author, Timothy
K Beal, a professor of religion at Case Western, estimated
that roughly 80 percent of their book had been copied, word
for word, without credit of any kind. Their names did not
appear in the new book.
However, this isn’t the average
plagiarism case. Back in 2005, Professors Deal and Beal
signed an agreement with Routledge, allowing the company to
use the material in their book however it saw fit, provided
they were given credit and royalties. Routledge planned a
series of introductory books, entitled Theory 4. Theory for
Religious Studies would be the first volume.
The authors
had never thought the agreement, which they now regret
signing, meant that their work could be lifted more or less
wholesale and put under someone else’s name. And the
authors received neither the promised credit nor, initially,
the promised royalties, they said.
Even more
disconcerting, according to Professor Beal, was
Routledge’s response to their complaint, which he regarded
as dismissive. “They insist in our conversations that
they’ve done nothing wrong,” he says. “I think presses
are used to authors simply rolling over when they’ve been
misused.”
From Thomas Barlett in the Chronicle of
Higher Education
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
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editor, email:
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