AUS Tertiary Update
New tertiary-education union another step closer
The
formation of a new union in the tertiary-education sector
has moved a step closer with adoption of a set of draft
rules by representatives of the Association of University
Staff and Association of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE).
The new union will be the largest operating in the
tertiary-education sector and will represent the industrial
and professional interests of more than 11,500 academic and
general staff.
Proposed rules for the new union were
adopted at a one-day conference held in Wellington last
Friday, following an earlier planning meeting between the
council and national executive of the two existing
unions.
AUS and ASTE national presidents, Associate
Professor Maureen Montgomery and Tangi Tipene said that the
successful adoption of proposed rules for the union
reflected how well AUS and ASTE had worked together to
create a new, democratic union which would advance the
industrial and professional interests of tertiary-education
staff throughout the country. “This is an historic
occasion and makes the new organisation among the largest
unions in the country,” they said.
“This amalgamation
will not only increase the influence of staff within the
tertiary-education sector through building industrial
strength and advancing professional and education issues,
but it will also ensure the better use of resources.” Both
national presidents expressed satisfaction that member
participation was positive and that many felt they were
already amalgamated.
The two meetings also saw the
preliminary presentation and acceptance of the new union’s
logo and ingoa Māori, Māori name, by ASTE tauheke, Te
Huirangi Waikerepuru, on behalf of the two existing
unions’ Māori executive committees. In presenting the
name, Te Hautū Kahurangi o Aotearoa, Te Huirangi explained
that hau refers to wind, breath, and vitality. Hautū means
to guide or lead and when prefixed with the word kai, as in
kaihautū, it refers to the person who keeps the timing for
the paddlers on a waka.
Tū means to stand, set in place,
or establish. In this way, hautū refers to the union, its
members and staff standing strong and unified to protect one
another in the face of the four winds and whatever they
carry. Kahurangi is a term given to something precious or
distinguished and also refers to the translucent, highly
valued variety of pounamu.
Given the multiple meanings of
these kupu, Te Hautū Kahurangi o Aotearoa can mean the
distinguished leaders, TEU members and staff, positioned and
cloaked in the TEU korowai, guiding and protecting against
the elements.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Media reports inflate universal student
allowance
2. NZVCC concerned over new immigration
licensing provisions
3. New health centre for South
Auckland
4. Otago hackers send 1.55 million spam
emails
5. Return of the riot rally
6. US again
dominates world university rankings
7. US lacks recipe
for true harmonisation
8. UAE universities warned against
student “gold rush”
9. Voluntary student unionism
hits universities
10. Where students grade their
lecturers
Media reports inflate universal student
allowance
Ministry of Education (MoE) documents sourced
under the Official Information Act by the New Zealand Union
of Students’ Associations (NZUSA) reveal that the cost of
a universal student allowance is significantly lower than
figures cited recently in some media reports. “Since the
government’s interest in a universal student allowance
became public,” said NZUSA co-president, Paul Falloon,
“there has been much confusion regarding the cost of this
policy. The public deserves to know that the costs are
actually rather modest, while the benefits are immense.”
“Various media reports have put the total cost of
providing full-time domestic students with a living
allowance at $728 million per year,” he continued.
“However, an MoE paper obtained by NZUSA estimates the
actual net extra cost of the policy to be significantly
less, at an average of just $182 million per year, or $728
million over four years,” Mr Falloon continued.
“The
document also reveals that the policy would result in a $33
million reduction in operating expenditure over the same
period as some existing costs of the current student-loan
scheme are removed and total borrowing declines, providing
significant social and financial benefit for both
individuals and the economy,” Mr Falloon added.
“Lack
of allowances is the key contributor to high student debt,
as students are forced to borrow to meet basic living costs.
New Zealand loses millions of dollars a year through the
loss of skilled graduates pushed overseas by these
unmanageable debts hampering their futures. $182 million a
year to support the living costs of students is a bargain in
return for the benefits this initiative would have for the
country,” Mr Falloon concluded.
NZVCC concerned over new
immigration licensing provisions
The New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee has drawn attention to policy
and regulatory concerns over immigration issues expressed at
the recent New Zealand International Education Conference.
In support of those concerns, the NZVCC cites the Education
New Zealand (ENZ) report, Immigration Policy Benchmarking
– Implications for Competitiveness of New Zealand’s
Export Education Sector, as indicating “that New Zealand
had fallen behind its major competitors in some of its
immigration policy settings – particularly with respect to
the work rights of international students”.
The NZVCC
reports that delegates to the conference expressed serious
reservations about the impact of the new
immigration-advisers licensing regime on education
providers, labelling the new Immigration Advisers
Authority’s expectations for staff interaction with
students “unworkable”. Representatives of the Authority
assessed that a “significant” amount of the advice that
education institutions provide on immigration is excluded
from coverage. However, this suggests that not all advice is
excluded and education institutions are not exempt from the
act’s coverage in the same way that lawyers and staff in
MPs’ offices are exempt.
Education institutions,
according to the NZVCC, are left uncertain about how many,
if any, of their staff need to register as immigration
advisors by 4 May 2009, at an initial cost of $1995 per
person and a recurring annual levy of $1105. Only
individuals can register, and staff who register will be
individually liable for the advice that they provide.
Since the conference, ENZ has asked public-law
specialists Chen & Palmer to undertake an independent
analysis of the application of the Immigration Advisers
Licensing Act to the export-education industry.
New health
centre for South Auckland
A new health-research and
teaching centre in South Auckland has been hailed as a model
for others to follow, reports Radio New Zealand. Counties
Manukau District Health Board (DHB) this week announced
plans for the establishment of a new Centre for Health
Services Innovation involving the University of Auckland,
AUT University, and the Manukau Institute of
Technology.
Health groups say the project is exactly what
is needed to address chronic shortages in the workforce and
create long-term jobs in South Auckland. Medical Association
chair, Peter Foley, is quoted as hoping that the centre will
encourage other DHBs to do more to meet training
needs.
The centre will be in new buildings at Middlemore
Hospital housing the combined teaching and research
resources of all three institutions. Under the $40 million
plan, the University of Auckland will relocate its South
Auckland clinical school, with trainee doctors and four new
research chairs, to the new centre. The university’s dean
of medical and health sciences, Professor Iain Martin, has
said that preparatory work on the new centre has been
carried out over the last twelve months and, if funding is
approved by the Ministry of Health, it will open in
2011.
That funding is the one question still hanging over
the centre. The government recently gave AUT University $25
million for a new campus in Manukau City. AUT dean of health
and environmental sciences, Professor Max Abbott, has warned
that the government has not yet agreed to provide the
necessary funds to expand its health-training programmes.
Counties Manukau DHB chief executive officer, Mr Geraint
Martin, however, has insisted that the new project can be
fully funded by redirecting the money it already receives
from the government and drawing on the existing funding of
the three tertiary-education institutions.
Otago hackers
send 1.55 million spam emails
The Otago Daily Times
reports that hackers who recently gained access to the
University of Otago staff email server used it to send out
an estimated 1.55 million spam emails in 60 hours after
tricking four staff members into revealing their login
details. The huge volume of spam mail resulted in legitimate
emails being rejected or delayed by other systems, according
to the university’s information services manager, Mike
Harte. They were re-sent once the spam attack was over.
The four staff members, according to the report,
responded to “spear phish” emails which claimed to be
from the IT department and asked people to reconfirm their
user names and passwords or their email access would be
withdrawn. Armed with their login details, hackers could
compromise an email address within a couple of hours and use
it to connect to computers outside the university and send
out further phish or spam emails.
The four staff members
who revealed their passwords have not been disciplined, Mr
Harte said. “The information-security office has a policy
of having a good discussion with campus users whose accounts
have been compromised. Rather than issue warnings, [we]
discuss what actually happened, why it happened, what the
implications are, and how users can prevent anything similar
happening again,” Mr Harte is quoted as saying.
A
warning given to staff last April not to fall for the hoax
emails, after similar emails turned up at some New Zealand
universities, has now been repeated. All staff have been
told to assume any requests for their login details are
“most likely fraudulent”, said Mr Harte. “To prevent
falling victim to these kind of scams, the key message for
any computer user is that they must treat all their logins
and passwords with the same care as [with any other] PIN:
never give it out to any other person.”
Return of the
riot rally
Police are bracing for hundreds of University
of Canterbury students to defy authorities and converge on
Dunedin in a rogue Undie 500 car rally this weekend. Last
year, 69 people were arrested and charged over rioting in
Dunedin streets the day after the rally arrived in the city
and an entire Dunedin courtroom was cleared to deal with the
charges. The year before, 25 of the 56 students arrested for
disorderly behaviour over the Undie 500 weekend were from
Christchurch.
The Undie 500 was previously organised by
the Canterbury University Engineering Students’ Society
(ENSOC). Since 1989, students have bought cars valued under
$500, decorated them to a theme, and driven to Dunedin,
stopping at designated pubs along the way. ENSOC and the
University of Canterbury Students’ Association tried to
organise another event this year, but gave up when Dunedin
mayor Peter Chin refused to support their proposals. In
July, when ENSOC president Graeme Walker formally withdrew
support for the event, he warned that an alternative event
would go ahead regardless.
This year’s event will
proceed despite the urging of student and civic leaders, the
university, and police. “All the Undie 500 does is cause
us a considerable amount of grief,” said Dunedin and
Clutha police area commander Inspector Dave Campbell.
“It’s bad for the city, bad for our reputation, and we
don’t need it.”
A spokesperson for the University of
Canterbury said that the university does not support the
unofficial event. “We deplore any anti-social and illegal
behaviour, and would like to remind students of the
consequences this can have in their personal and
professional lives,” the spokesperson said. Director of
student services at the University of Otago, David
Richardson, said the university would respond to any
situation as appropriate at the time. “Whatever the
situation, the safety and well-being of students and staff
are paramount,” he said.
World Watch
US again
dominates world university rankings
Universities in the
United States have again dominated the world’s top 500 in
the latest rankings by Shanghai Jiao Tong University. It is
the sixth year since the Chinese university began listing
the world’s top higher-education institutions and, once
more, US universities have taken seventeen of the first 20
places and 55 of the top 100. This compares with the US’s
main competitor, Britain, which managed to squeeze only two
of its universities into the top 20 and a mere ten in the
first 100.
Harvard University was ranked number one in
the world with a total score of 100 on Jiao Tong’s
calculations, followed by Stanford and the University of
California at Berkley. Britain’s Cambridge University came
in at fourth place while its main UK competitor, Oxford,
just made it into the top ten behind MIT, CalTech, Columbia,
Princeton, and Chicago.
Germany had six of its
universities in the first 100, Japan, Canada, and Sweden
four apiece, and Australia, France, and the Swiss three
each. Other countries to make it to the top 100 were Denmark
and the Netherlands, with two apiece, and Finland, Israel,
Norway, and Russia with one each. New Zealand’s
highest-rating institutions, the Universities of Auckland
and Otago, were ranked at 201st-equal along with 100
others.
While China did not have one university in the
top 100, Simon Marginson, a professor of higher education at
the University of Melbourne and a well-known international
commentator, noted that the number of Chinese universities
in the top 500 has jumped from 25 to 30 in only one year.
“In future years, we can expect to see Chinese
universities bulking larger in the top 200 and then the top
100 as the hyper-investments in R&D of the last ten years
begin to bear fruit in stellar research performance,”
Professor Marginson said.
The Shanghai Jiao Tong top 500
is available at
www.arwu.org
From Geoff Maslen in
University World News
US lacks recipe for true
harmonisation
It may have the most successful
higher-education system in the world, but the US is being
urged to look to Europe to safeguard its position at the
head of the global pack. A report from the US Higher
Education Policy Institute (HEPI) says the harmonisation of
higher education in Europe through the Bologna process
“has sufficient momentum to become the dominant global
model of higher education within two decades”.
In a
European system that, with 4,000 institutions and sixteen
million students, is of a similar size to that of the US,
the report says Bologna is “standing 800-year-old
traditions on their heads” and is already being replicated
in Latin America, Africa, and Australia. Making a direct
plea to the US university sector, Clifford Adelman, the
report’s author, urges it to “learn something from
beyond our own borders” from an initiative that is
“extraordinarily relevant to the accountability challenges
that face US higher education”.
The Bologna process
aims to create a “European space of higher education” in
which undergraduate education is easily comparable across
the Continent. Mr Adelman says it is succeeding in
articulating what qualifications represent and what students
must do to earn them, an area in which initiatives in the US
have failed. The US’s HEPI policy briefing, he says,
“contends that none of the major pronouncements on
accountability in US higher education that we have heard in
the recent past ... even begin to understand what
accountability means.”
While acknowledging that efforts
have been made to address these issues in the past, the
report says they have tended to offer a watered-down version
of accountability, adding, “None of it says what
credentials represent or what students must do to earn
them.”
From John Gill in Times Higher Education
UAE
universities warned against student “gold rush”
The
United Arab Emirates risk having too many money-making
branches of foreign universities, increasing the likelihood
of closures that would leave students in the lurch, the new
registrar of the British University in Dubai (BuiD) has
warned. A string of foreign universities have launched
campuses in the UAE and numerous others are due to open over
the next decade.
Martin Prince of the BUiD, based in
Dubai Knowledge Village, said the sector might have to
undergo “rationalisation” if too many institutions began
operations. In his native UK, he said, there are more than
150 higher-education institutions, which is “an awful
lot”. He added, “For the UAE to follow a similar path
would be a mistake. We could go through a painful few years
of successes and failures. Those failures would be at a
considerable cost to students, the credibility of the
higher-education system, the [education authorities], and
the nation,” Mr Prince said. “I think there’s an
element of the gold rush mentality. It’s not just in the
UAE.”
Within a decade, Dubai International Academic
City aims to have 40 universities with 40,000 students, and
Ras al Khaimah plans an education park on a similar scale.
Abu Dhabi has attracted the Paris-Sorbonne and New York
University, both of which are moving into purpose-built
campuses funded by the capital.
Mr Prince’s concern
centres not on such government-funded campuses, but on
branches that are funded by the parent institution and so
expected to turn a profit. One, the University of Southern
Queensland in Dubai, closed in 2005. Closures “dent the
credibility of higher education” and are “a great
shame” for students who had invested time and money, he
said. “It makes sense to have a more rational approach to
maximise the credibility and potency of the
sector.”
From Daniel Bardsley in The
National
Voluntary student unionism hits
universities
The introduction of voluntary student
unionism (VSU) has cost Australian universities $NZ190
million a year since it came into effect in 2006. A
federal-government report has highlighted its devastating
impact on campuses, where basic services have been cut due
to lack of funding. Higher-education institutions in New
South Wales, for example, have lost $NZ66.7 million in
student-union fees per year, although this has been offset
by university contributions of $NZ28.8 million and
approximately $NZ1.8 million in student
contributions.
The findings are revealed in the
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations’s summary report on the impact of the voluntary
scheme. The report, which was compiled in March and April
from 162 submissions from higher-education stakeholders,
paints a grim picture of campus life.
“Most submissions
concluded that the abolition of up-front, compulsory,
student-union fees had impacted negatively on the provision
of amenities and services to university students, with the
greatest impact at the smaller and regional universities and
campuses,” the report said. While universities and
students had contributed funds to prop up services, the
shortfall was still significant. “Many noted that the
current arrangements were not sustainable in the medium to
long term,” the report said. “In many instances,
assistance was provided by the university, but these funds
were redirected from other uses such as teaching, learning,
or research.”
The University of Western Sydney (UWS)
was particularly badly hit, with its submission reading,
“The loss of the services fees (approximately $NZ10.6
million a year) with the imposition of VSU was disastrous
for UWS and its students, coming as it did in a context of a
government grant that was not increasing in real terms.”
Some of the services which have been lost include subsidised
childcare, transport, emergency loan facilities, and
disability services.
From Rachel Browne in the Sydney
Morning Herald
Where students grade their lecturers
As
feedback goes it’s a bit on the harsh side: “She is very
kind and can be helpful but, boy, is she insane. The
insanity leads to volatility sometimes which leads to her
being not very kind.” Welcome to ratemyprofessors.com -
the website which lets students grade their tutors. It has
been the scourge of university professors in the United
States and now it has reached Britain and is being embraced
by undergraduates.
Nearly 1300 British academics have
been ranked on the website, where they are marked on
“easiness”, “helpfulness”, “clarity” - and
whether they are “hot”. Some of the comments are
controversial. One tutor is described as “arrogant, rude,
unhelpful, and supremely egotistical. His specialist field
is himself.” Another is damned with, “Ignores her
students mostly, a very false personality and especially
when handing out praise. Incredibly patronising and not very
bright.”
The website has received approximately six
million postings about 750,000 academics since 1999. Since
it was extended to cover England, Scotland, and Wales, the
number of British lecturers on the site has reached
1284.
The ratings, however, have been controversial, with
academics protesting about bullying and derogatory comments
from anonymous students. One of the main criticisms has been
that there is no way to tell if a comment comes from a
vindictive student, a student happy about getting an A on an
otherwise disappointing course, or the academics
themselves.
New research published this month in the
journal Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education
suggests that the ratings may not be biased and could even
be used by universities in hiring and promotion. However,
Sally Hunt, general secretary of the University and College
Union, said, “If students have concerns about lecturers,
they should go through proper channels.”
From Sarah
Cassidy in 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.