AUS Tertiary Update
Two key meetings advance amalgamation
The amalgamation of
the Association of University Staff and the Association of
Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) towards the formation of
the new Tertiary Education Union takes several steps forward
this week with the holding of two key meetings in
Wellington. Today the AUS council and ASTE national
executive meet together for the first time to discuss the
draft rules for the new union, its inaugural conference in
November, and the transition process through to April next
year.
On Friday, 35 members from each existing union will
meet to examine the draft rules in detail and recommend a
final version for adoption at the November conference. The
Friday meeting is also expected to receive ingoa Māōri,
Māori names, for the new union and its constituent parts as
well as its new logo.
The Tertiary Education Union will
initially comprise approximately 11,400 members in
universities, institutes of technology and polytechnics
(ITPs), wānanga, rural education activity programmes, other
tertiary-education providers, and a number of associated
organisations. More than 700 of those members identify as
Māori and over 50 percent are women. The union will cover
all categories of employees within the tertiary-education
sector, including lecturers, teachers, researchers, library
staff, academic support staff, technicians, cleaners, and
administrators.
The planned structure of the new union is
designed to ensure that the interests and concerns of all
members in the sector, as well as its 42 branches and
worksites, are represented. The supreme decision-making body
will be the annual conference, with delegates from all
branches and representative groups. Between annual
conferences, a council with broad representation will be the
governing body.
Māori members from all branches will
come together annually in a hui-ā-tau and a fono of
Pasifika members will be held biennially. Sector groups
representing university, ITP, and general-staff members will
have the power to determine issues exclusive to their
sectors and speak on their behalf. Similarly, a national
women’s committee will ensure that the union is
representing the interests of women members in both policy
and industrial spheres and a rūnanga the interests of
Māori members as well as taking responsibility for the
management of all matters Māori. There will also be a
kāhui kaumātua to provide guidance and support and a
Tiriti o Waitangi partnership group.
The new union will
come into existence on 1 January 2009 with all
office-holders and structures in place by 1 April.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. ASTE welcomes ITPs’ skills
strategy
2. WITT recovery supported
3. Research
collaboration with the EU
4. $2.3 billion
export-education industry
5. Lag claimed in medical
research
6. Australian universities’ dangerous
dependence
7. High anxiety for young
academics
8. Liberalisation on ice
9. Research
misconduct not the end
10. An extreme degree of
education
ASTE welcomes ITPs’ skills strategy
The
national secretary of the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education, Sharn Riggs, has said that union members welcome
the initiatives contained in the Institutes of Technology
and Polytechnics (ITPNZ) strategy paper Building Skilled
Communities that was released on Tuesday. “The paper’s
direction is one which the union has been advocating for
some time,” Ms Riggs said.
The paper is ITPNZ’s
response to a government call to create an internationally
competitive ITP sector. It describes current practice in the
sector and five areas of challenge facing it: skills
development, foundation education, regional impact, funding,
and accountability.
“Now is exactly the time for ITPs
to be clear about their role in the development and delivery
of first-class professional and vocational education and
research,” Ms Riggs said. “This paper takes the
initiatives contained in the New Zealand Skills Strategy
Action Plan and maps out the role of the ITPs in being the
first place of choice for education for a future workforce,
whether the students are straight out of school or already
in paid employment,” Ms Riggs continued.
She went on to
say that a collective vision for the ITP sector is long
overdue and applauded ITPNZ for putting ITPs in the
forefront of the tertiary-education landscape. “We want
ITPs to become the first choice when workers look at
upskilling, and we want ITPs that can really make that
distinctive contribution that the government is looking for.
This paper is an excellent first step” Ms Riggs
concluded.
WITT recovery supported
Western Institute of
Technology at Taranaki chief executive, Richard Handley, has
credited the good work of WITT staff for a government
decision to reconstitute the institution’s council and
write-down significant historic debt. Mr Handley’s praise
followed the decision by tertiary-education minister, Pete
Hodgson, to reconstitute the WITT council and convert up to
$18 million in outstanding Crown debt to equity over a
five-year period.
“The announcements are a major
endorsement for the strong recovery that has continued at
WITT in the last eighteen months,” Mr Handley said. “The
return of a full council and the write-down of debilitating
historic debt adds further momentum to our recovery, and
will continue to bolster community confidence around
WITT’s ability to continue to meet the educational needs
of the region.”
Mr Handley said that WITT is now able
to focus on providing solutions to meet the educational and
training needs of the region. “We have a fresh new
leadership team that will ensure that the gains at WITT and
the current momentum will continue.”
Responding to the
minister’s decision, Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education Eastern Central field officer, Russell Taylor,
said, “The potential wiping of the significant accumulated
debt, even though it is conditional, will assist management
and staff to refocus on tertiary education in the region. It
is clear that the new CEO has grasped the nettle and is
proceeding to consolidate as well as looking for
opportunities for growth.”
Remarking that staff have
already been somewhat reassured by the new regime, Mr Taylor
added, “We need to see increased community engagement with
the polytechnic to participate, to progress, and to pay for
delivery. That will be the test.”
Research collaboration
with the EU
Thanks to a newly signed co-operation
agreement, New Zealand researchers will gain access to more
European Union science and technology programmes, according
to a report by John Gerritsen in University World News.
Signed in July, the New Zealand-EU Science and Technology
Cooperation Agreement is expected to take effect from the
end of this year once it has been ratified by the EU.
New
Zealand minister of research, science and technology, Pete
Hodgson, has said that the agreement would broaden New
Zealand’s collaboration with the EU’s science community.
“One of the most significant aspects of the agreement is
that it will allow New Zealand researchers to be eligible
for European Union programmes that wouldn’t otherwise be
accessible, said Mr Hodgson. “Links to European research
are very important for New Zealand as the European Union is
investing heavily in research areas critical to our future
economic and social development.”
The minister made the
point that Europe would also benefit from the agreement,
noting that New Zealand has a recognised reputation in a
number of research fields that are of interest to the EU.
These include the natural-resource-based sciences such as
agriculture, plant and animal science, and environmental
science, medicine, and information and communications
technology research.
New Zealand researchers already have
strong links to Europe, with a 2003 survey by the Ministry
of Research, Science and Technology revealing that over half
the country’s researchers were actively involved in
collaborative research activities with European partners. In
addition, more than 20 teams from New Zealand participated
in projects under the Sixth Framework Programme, mostly in
the fields of food, agriculture, and biotechnology.
The
report indicates that the agreement has, however, already
had an impact as its negotiation allowed New Zealand to
participate in the EU’s International Research Staff
Exchange Scheme, which supports collaboration between
institutions based in Europe and countries such as New
Zealand.
$2.3 billion export-education
industry
Education New Zealand and the Ministry of
Education have co-sponsored a major independent analysis
into the economic impact of international education. The
study, undertaken by research company Infometrics, was
commissioned to examine in some detail the current impact on
the New Zealand economy of international students and the
export of education services.
Among the interim results
of the study are that $2.3 billion of foreign exchange was
generated in the 2007-08 year; that $70 million of that was
generated by offshore provision; and that China is currently
the main source of offshore provision earnings and the
largest source of foreign students, although the number is
about half that of the 2003-04 peak.
The study also found
that English-language schools have the largest number of
students over the course of a year, but that universities
generate the highest per-student earnings, accounting for
approximately 32 percent, with institutes of technology and
polytechnics at 9.6 percent, schools at 18.6 percent,
private tertiary-education providers at 10.8 percent, and
English-language providers at 23 percent.
Announcing the
preliminary results of the survey, Education New Zealand
(ENZ) chief executive, Robert Stevens, said, “It is vital
for industry, government, and other stakeholders such as
local authorities to know exactly what this business is
worth. Institutions, ENZ and the Ministry of Education need
robust, accurate, and assessable information based on sound
data collection and analysis.”
“Twenty years ago,
[international education] was a very modest industry,” Mr
Stevens continued. “In the last decade, foreign earnings
have gone up over 400 percent. Markets have ebbed and
flowed, but the industry has emerged from an unhealthy
dependence on China and developed into a robust and diverse
supplier of top-quality education services both at home and
abroad, with major scope for further expansion into a
willing and receptive global market,” he concluded.
Lag claimed in medical research
Health-research
funding in New Zealand is twelve times less than that in
some OECD countries, and may soon affect the health of the
population, claims a report by researchers at the University
of Auckland and the University of Otago. Health Research: A
critical investment for New Zealand shows that funding
provided by the New Zealand government for health research
is currently equivalent to $10.20 per capita. In comparison,
funding in Australia is around $34.60 per capita, with
$54.30 per capita in the United Kingdom and $126 per capita
in the United States.
In New Zealand, medical research is
primarily funded through the Health Research Council (HRC),
which invested $63 million in this year’s recent round.
This funding, according to the report, has remained at a
static level for the past four years, despite research costs
rising by almost 9 percent per year. About 85 percent of
submitted projects do not receive funding.
“The lack of
health-research funding in New Zealand needs to be
addressed,” said Professor Peter Joyce, deputy dean of the
faculty of medicine at the University of Otago. “Over the
next two years, this lack will translate to more of the
health workforce moving overseas, attracted by higher levels
of funding and the facilities these can provide. This will
not only have a huge impact on the level of care available,
but will also affect the ability of the academic sector to
train new doctors,” Professor Joyce added.
“New
Zealand has a unique position in the medical-research field,
with a highly trained local workforce, and a different
disease profile to other OECD countries,” said Professor
Ian Reid, deputy dean of the University of Auckland’s
faculty of medical and health sciences. “To keep up this
record, and retain our workforce, we need an immediate 20
percent increase in HRC funding, followed by consistent
annual increments of 30 percent.
World Watch
Australian
universities’ dangerous dependence
Australia has been
stunningly successful in its ability to recruit foreign
students, with an estimated 250,000 of them studying at
Australia’s 39 universities and their offshore programmes.
That is estimated to be 6 percent of the world market. As
Australia has gained admiration overseas for its recruiting
successes, however, university administrators and professors
here have become increasingly worried that their
higher-education system has developed a dangerous dependence
on foreign students.
About 25 percent of the public
system’s budget comes from foreign-student tuition. That
revenue proved to be a blessing for much of the 1990s and
the early 2000s as federal support declined. But enrolment
numbers have dropped from their double-digit increases.
Growth during the 2006-07 academic year was 6.6 percent and,
as a result, several universities have found themselves in a
financial crunch.
One of the first warning signs appeared
in 2004, when the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
had to take out a loan to meet a shortfall of $NZ35 million.
Among other troubles, it had overestimated the number of
foreign students who would enrol. Last year, a $NZ6.9
million hole appeared in the University of Melbourne’s
arts-department budget, partly for the same reason. At
Central Queensland University, where nearly half of the
25,000 students are from overseas, falling international
enrolments forced administrators to dismiss 200 staff
members last June.
Professor John Hay, who retired this
year after twelve years as vice-chancellor of the University
of Queensland, says many of the less competitive
universities have reduced their entrance standards in order
to raise overseas enrolments, appointed part-time staff to
teach those students, and made do with inadequate
infrastructure. “In short,” he says, “they are being
taught in an often inappropriate context for higher
education, in numbers that are too large. It sends a bad
message.”
From Luke Slattery in the Chronicle of Higher
Education
High anxiety for young academics
The pressure
to publish and chase research grants, and with fears over
job security and concerns about “fitting in”, the trials
and tribulations of being a young academic are exposed in a
new research paper published by Louise Archer, reader in
education policy studies at King’s College London. Dr
Archer found that young academics did not define success in
“careerist or instrumental terms” but saw it as
achieving self-fulfilment through their work. However, they
were “regularly compelled to engage in behaviours and
practices that were unrelated to, or which could even
counter, their own notions of authenticity and
success”.
Dr Archer found high levels of anxiety over
their ability to “perform” in terms of publishing papers
and bringing in research grants. Interviewees recounted
instances of “non-research-active” members of staff in
their department having their contracts revoked, while those
who had not yet begun to publish experienced “considerable
stress and pressure ... and found their academic ‘worth’
questioned and considerably diminished”, Dr Archer writes
in the paper, “Younger academics’ constructions of
‘authenticity’, ‘success’ and professional
identity”, in Studies in Higher Education.
One
academic, who presented herself as a “passionate,
innovative and committed” lecturer, found that the
pressures in the run-up to the research assessment exercise
were so intense that she began to look for work elsewhere.
“I felt I may as well jump before I was pushed,” she
told Dr Archer. Another, who worked in a top-rated
department at an elite university, “felt compromised by a
greedy and insatiable system, which renders success fragile
and tenuous”.
The process of bidding for research
grants was often seen as “unfulfilling and
soul-destroying” by young academics, according to Dr
Archer. “They were highly critical of the pervasive
pressure on academics to ‘bring in the money’ for its
own sake, suggesting that this represents an
‘anti-academic’ ethos which is symptomatic of the
attempt to make universities more corporate and
‘business-like’,” she writes.
From Rebecca Attwood
in Times Higher Education
Liberalisation on
ice
Proposals to remove some restrictions preventing
private universities and higher-education service providers
from teaching, researching, and examining in foreign
countries have been put on ice at the World Trade
Organization. This follows the collapse of negotiations on
liberalising the trade in all goods and services at the July
ministerial meeting of the WTO in Geneva. The talks
foundered over the protection of developing country food
producers.
However, the WTO’s Doha Development Round
has not been abandoned and talks will resume, probably at a
technical level, in the autumn. This is important because,
ahead of the argument that ended the talks, WTO Director
General Pascal Lamy staged a “signalling conference” of
some key member countries where they made informal
commitments to liberalise their services under a revised WTO
General Agreement on the Trade in Services.
Participants
included the USA, the European Union, Brazil, Canada,
Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Switzerland, and
20 other members. According to a report on the meeting
drafted by Lamy, “a few participants indicated readiness
to undertake new commitments in private education services
and to remove a number of existing limitations, which
discriminate against foreign education providers”.
He
said new commitments were envisaged for private primary,
secondary, and tertiary education, as well as for language,
corporate, and technical and vocational training. Lamy also
noted that one un-named member was prepared to remove “all
limitations on cross-border supply and commercial presence
for (non-public) higher education services”, allowing a
free-for-all for its private tertiary-education
market.
From Keith Nuthall in University World News
Research misconduct not the end
Just because
scientists fabricate, falsify, plagiarise, or misrepresent
their work doesn’t mean their careers are over. Many stage
comebacks. An article in the new issue of Science shows that
nearly half of the faculty members and staff scientists who
committed such acts during an eight-year period continued to
publish at least one paper per year, a sign of an active
research career, after they were found guilty of
misconduct.
Between the start of 1994 and the end of
2001, 43 faculty members and research scientists in both
university and non-academic positions received verdicts of
misconduct, according to the federal Office of Research
Integrity. For the Science paper, Jon F Merz, an associate
professor of medical ethics at the University of
Pennsylvania, and Barbara K Redman, dean of Wayne State
University’s college of nursing, searched for articles
those researchers had written before and after their cases
were decided, and tried to find out where they ended up
working.
As punishment, most of the researchers were
excluded from receiving grants for several years, many
received institutional oversight, and fourteen had to
retract or correct publications.
Of the 37 researchers
who had published in biomedical journals prior to their
misconduct judgments, 25 published at least one paper
afterwards, and nineteen continued publishing at an average
rate of one or more articles per year. Dr Merz and Dr Redman
located 28 scientists and found that ten of them had
academic jobs and another eight were working in industry.
Just seven of the researchers agreed to speak to Dr Merz
and Dr Redman. “They suffered pretty greatly, financially,
emotionally, and professionally,” Dr Merz said. “But
there is a chance for redemption. People can come
back.”
From Lila Guterman in the Chronicle of Higher
Education
An extreme degree of education
When Benjamin
B Bolger declared himself the most credentialed person in
modern history in a recent edition of the Chronicle of
Higher Education, he was wrong. Mr. Bolger holds eleven
advanced degrees. Michael W Nicholson, however, has
24.
Dr Nicholson, whose father was a third-grade dropout,
finished a doctorate in education at Western Michigan
University in 1977. He angled for a job in student affairs,
but nothing eventuated and he was disheartened. So he went
back to graduate school. “That seemed to be more
comfortable,” he says.
He took a job as a security
guard and earned an MBA from Western Michigan and a
master’s in library science from Wayne State University in
Detroit. Then, for eleven years, he wrote parking tickets at
Western Michigan, once 420 in a single day, and took
advantage of the tuition discount there, earning nine more
master’s degrees, mostly in education.
After that, he
worked as a substitute teacher and collected more master’s
degrees, in education and public administration, at Indiana
University at South Bend, Oakland University, and Grand
Valley State University. He regularly sent transcripts to
Guinness World Records, despite its decision to discontinue
the serial-student category out of concern over diploma
mills.
Dr Nicholson, 67, is pursuing two more degrees
between leading music services at rural churches and doing
research on presidential assassinations and 9/11, which,
incidentally, he thinks was an inside job. He prepares his
assignments on a Smith Corona manual typewriter and
doesn’t go beyond what’s asked of him.
“I’m more
interested in getting through the class as quickly and
efficiently as possible,” he says. His mission is to earn
more degrees than anyone he’s heard of, like the Indian
man who had 25, according to Guinness officials.
From
Sara Lipka 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
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.