AUS Tertiary Update
New Zealand still low in international statistics
Latest
figures from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) indicate that New Zealand’s annual
expenditure per full-time-equivalent tertiary-education
student rose significantly from 2004 to 2005. The 2008 OECD
Education at a Glance report shows that expenditure per
student in 2005, adjusted for purchasing-power parity, was
$US10,262 against the previous year’s figure of
$US8,866.
This level of expenditure, however, must be set
against an OECD average of $US11,512 and $US13,506 for the
UK, $US14,579 for Australia, and a massive $US24,370 for the
US. New Zealand’s expenditure on tertiary-education
institutions as a percentage of GDP is at the OECD average
of 1.5 percent, above the UK at 1.3 but following Australia
at 1.6 percent and the US at 2.9 percent. Cumulative
expenditure in New Zealand over the average duration of
tertiary-education is $US31,298 against $US58,654 in the UK
and the OECD average of $US47,159.
The OECD notes that
university-level entry rates have risen by almost 50 percent
on average across its member countries in the last decade.
It also goes on to observe, however, that different
countries have responded in different ways to this
challenge. Nordic countries, for example, “have accepted
high public spending on tertiary education as an investment
that pays dividends to both individuals and society”.
Other countries, including New Zealand, Australia, the
United Kingdom, and the United States, have, however,
“expanded their university population by making students
pay a larger share of the cost”.
Of the total
population aged 25 to 64 that has attained tertiary
education, New Zealand ranks towards the top at 38 percent
against an OECD average of 27 percent. As to completion
rates in tertiary education in the figures that are
available, New Zealand ranks second to bottom at 54 percent,
just above the US at 47 percent and well below the OECD
average of 69 percent.
The OECD records that more than
2.9 million tertiary-education students are enrolled outside
their countries of citizenship, double the number in 1996
and a 50 percent increase on 2000. New Zealand places second
only to Australia in its proportion of international
students, with nearly one in five in Australian universities
and one in four in New Zealand.
The report is available
at:
www.oecd.org/edu/eag2008
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. AUS General Staff Day a resounding
success
2. National set to undermine public
tertiary-education provision
3. Targeted women’s
scholarships OK
4. Disqualified Otago student president
fights on
5. Rally for academic freedom in
Australia
6. Here comes the “blended
professional”
7. Cash bonuses for US academics
8. My
door is always closed
AUS General Staff Day a resounding
success
Reports from AUS branches have declared
yesterday’s General Staff Day a resounding success,
reports AUS general staff vice-president Cate Bardwell.
“Each AUS branch organised a lunchtime activity to
celebrate the contribution of general staff to our
universities. Activities included barbecue lunches, a
debate, speeches, quizzes, spot prizes, and cake deliveries
for morning tea.”
Across the country general staff
attending the lunchtime events have commented on how much
they have enjoyed the chance to spend time with colleagues
who they otherwise rarely see, even though they work in the
same institution. “The overwhelming response to each
branch’s invitation reinforced for us the importance of
events of this kind as an opportunity for staff and members
to spend time together in a collegial and social setting,”
said Ms Bardwell.
“As well, the event has served to
highlight the huge contribution that general staff make to
university life, a contribution that has been acknowledged
during the campaign by supporting statements from a number
of academic staff and others,” Ms Bardwell added. And one
academic staff member is quoted as saying, “Nobody should
ever forget: [universities] would not function without
general staff. That’s quite simply because, very often,
they really are the people who know how to make it work:
everyday, every place, every time.”
A poster publicity
campaign was held leading up to the General Staff Day, with
posters and other publicity material featuring 32
general-staff members from throughout the country. “Our
limited print run of posters has been very positively
received,” Ms Bardwell noted. “We encourage members and
other staff to visit the AUS website to view all the
profiles and print a copy of their favourite poster. These
profiles give a very real sense of the range of expertise
that is held within the general-staff population of our
universities.”
The posters are available
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/Current/GeneralStaff/default.asp
National set to undermine public tertiary-education
provision
The National party appears intent on
undermining the provision of public tertiary education, with
a statement this week to the effect that private training
providers should receive the same level of funding as
public-sector institutions, according to the Association of
University Staff.
AUS general secretary Nanette Cormack
said that the National party’s tertiary-education
spokesperson, Dr Paul Hutchison, has complained that private
training institutions do not receive public funding to
provide real-estate courses where the same or similar
courses are already being successfully provided by
polytechnics.
Ms Cormack said the suggestion from Dr
Hutchison, that public and private tertiary-education
providers should compete for funding to run the same or
similar courses, revealed that the National party, if
elected to government, was on an ideological course to
return the tertiary-education sector to a free-for-all
competitive environment.
“Considerable time and effort
have been spent over the last few years developing a
tertiary-education strategy that is responsive to the
economic and social goals and needs of the country, and to
ensure that the component parts of the sector complement
rather than unnecessarily compete against each other,” Ms
Cormack said.
“Dr Hutchison clearly wants to return to
the uncontrolled, wasteful, and deregulated practices of the
past; that he is championing the public funding of private
real-estate courses, particularly at a time when the
real-estate market has stagnated, simply serves to
illustrate that the National party cares more about its
private-sector friends than in the quality and relevance of
tertiary education,” Ms Cormack concluded.
Targeted
women’s scholarships OK
The Human Rights Commission has
suggested that women-only scholarships may contravene the
Human Rights Act unless they target areas of education in
which women are under-represented, according to a report in
Education Review. It has added, however, that individual
cases would need to be judged on their own merits.
The
commission has previously said that scholarships offered by
charitable trusts are exempt from the act and has now added
that, while it is unlawful to discriminate in certain areas
on the ground of sex, measures to assist groups to achieve
an equal place in the community are also exempted.
The
commission is quoted in the report as saying, “It follows
that even if women are over-represented in enrolment
figures, ‘women only’ scholarships may still be
justified if the achievement is not reflected in certain
areas.” Citing statistics showing that women are not
necessarily getting the best job value for their educational
qualifications, the commission continues, “This would
suggest that scholarships designed to support women students
in non-traditional areas of study could be justified whereas
a scholarship for women to complete a general arts degree
may not.”
Meanwhile, Education Review reports, the
academic who asked the commission to rule on women-only
scholarships, Victoria University senior researcher Dr Paul
Callister, has asked the commission also to rule on the
legality of men-only scholarships. He is quoted as saying
that the commission’s statement on women-only scholarships
indicates that men-only scholarships for fields such as
early-childhood-teacher training and nursing would also be
legal and he has asked for clarification.
Disqualified
Otago student president fights on
The Otago Daily Times
reports that Jo Moore, until recently president-elect of the
Otago University Students Association (OUSA), yesterday
gathered about 100 signatures from students for a petition
challenging her disqualification as a candidate during the
recent presidential election. Ms Moore, a commerce student,
said she had been getting strong support yesterday from
fellow students who regarded her disqualification as unfair.
If she could gather about a further 100 signatures, she
said, she could call together a student general meeting to
reconsider her disqualification.
Late last month,
association returning officer Kyle Matthews found there had
been some breaches of electoral rules, but upheld Ms Moore's
election, after two complaints, including one by
unsuccessful presidential candidate Timothy Grigg. On
Monday, however, Ms Moore discovered that she had been
disqualified by OUSA’s independent election arbitrator,
Professor Paul Roth, of the Otago University law faculty,
following a further complaint.
Current association
president Simon Wilson is reported as saying that he regrets
that Ms Moore was not informed about the late appeal being
lodged last Thursday, calling it “an oversight”.
Professor Roth, he said, had reviewed only matters
previously considered by the returning officer, including
information provided by Ms Moore.
Legal advice obtained
by the association from law firm Anderson Lloyd yesterday
stated natural justice had not been breached over the appeal
process, and that the association executive did not have the
power to overturn the findings of its independent
arbitrator.
Those findings were that Ms Moore had been
involved in trying to “massage the vote” and had
exceeded the $1000 spending limit imposed on presidential
candidates, partly in respect of a party during which beer
had been provided and voting had taken place on a laptop
computer.
World Watch
Rally for academic freedom in
Australia
A national campaign to promote academic freedom
in Australia was launched this week, with the National
Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) calling on universities and
vice-chancellors to stand by their staff and protect the
vital role they play in public commentary. NTEU president,
Dr Carolyn Allport, said that the universities’ reliance
on government and industry funding for research and new
course development has made some institutions reluctant to
bite the hand that feeds them.
That, however, comes at a
high price, she said, with the vitality of public debate and
commentary increasingly under threat. “There is a concern
about university reputation ... because of money,” she
said. “But the university has a responsibility to support
the public-commentary role played by their staff and
particularly by their researchers.”
A senate inquiry
into academic freedom in schools, universities, and other
higher-education institutions is under way, with a report
expected by 11 November. The NTEU has also urged the Rudd
government to change the 2005 sedition laws to give greater
protection to the right to make public commentary. “People
who work in the universities, the arts, and the media are
all attempting to give information and analysis to the
community and we need to do that in a professional way and
without fear or favour,” Dr Allport said.
The campaign
follows the resignation of prominent public-transport
advocate Paul Mees from Melbourne University in February. Dr
Mees, who now works at RMIT, was told his pay would be cut
by $10,000 a year and his position downgraded after he
ridiculed the authors of a 2007 report on urban transport
issues. The university launched an investigation and found
Dr Mees guilty of misconduct, after the then head of the
department of infrastructure, Professor Howard Ronaldson,
threatened legal action. Dr Mees was among the speakers at
the public forum, which was hosted by his former employer,
Melbourne University.
From Bridie Smith in the Age
Here
comes the “blended professional”
A new breed of
professional manager is moving into areas of university work
traditionally handled by academics, according to a report
from the Leadership Foundation for Higher Education. The
report by Celia Whitchurch, lecturer at the University of
London’s institute of education, says staff are
increasingly being appointed on the basis of previous
higher-education, further-education, or third-sector
experience that allows them to handle “mixed portfolios”
of academic and non-academic work.
The new breed of
manager is likely to hold masters- and doctoral-level
qualifications, to have a teaching or research background,
and to undertake tasks such as offering pastoral advice to
students, speaking at outreach events, and taking part in
overseas recruitment visits and interviews. These staff
members may move into pro vice-chancellor posts with
portfolios such as student life or institutional
recruitment, suggests the report, Professional Managers in
UK HE: Preparing for Complex Futures, which is currently in
press.
Dr Whitchurch interviewed middle- and senior-level
staff in seven institutions in the UK, as well as in the US
and Australia. She found the new type of manager, which she
calls a “blended professional”, in posts such as
director of lifelong learning, director of research
partnership, diversity manager, and learning partnerships
manager.
They have “an ability to work in ambiguous
space between professional and academic domains,
capitalising on a sense of ‘belonging’ and ‘not
belonging’ to both”, her report says. Their work takes
in in-house research on new forms of activity such as
foundation degrees or local business links.
Dr Whitchurch
added, “Professional staff are increasingly working
alongside their academic colleagues on extended projects
such as student transitions and community partnership ... At
the same time as functional specialisation has occurred in
areas such as marketing and enterprise ... ‘blended’
roles and identities have also emerged.”
From Melanie
Newman in Times Higher Education
Cash bonuses for US
academics
Kent State University in the US is trying a new
and unusual tactic to improve its status, retention rate,
and fund raising by paying cash bonuses to faculty members
if the university exceeds its goals in those areas. The
bonuses are built into a contract, approved last month, that
covers 864 full-time, tenure-track faculty members who teach
and do research on the university’s eight campuses.
The
“success bonus pool” will be divided among faculty
members if the Ohio institution improves retention rates for
first-year students and increases the research dollars it
generates and the private money raised through its
foundation. The message behind the institutional-performance
bonuses, which are much more common in private industry and
for university presidents than for professors, is that
faculty members should benefit from the work they do that
influences those measures of a university’s success, Kent
State president, Lester A Lefton, said. “Be a good
partner, and Kent State will be good to you”.
“We’re not asking for extra work, but if operating
results are better, I want to share this with the
faculty,” the president said. “We think this is an
innovative approach that benefits both faculty and
administration, and ultimately benefits our
students.”
Paying faculty bonuses tied to institutional
performance is highly unusual, said Gary Rhoades, director
of the center for the study of higher education at the
University of Arizona and the next general secretary of the
American Association of University Professors. Bonus clauses
tied to institutional performance are more common in
contracts of presidents, provosts, and other senior
administrators.
“I think it’s a creative idea,”
said Dr Rhoades. “Providing incentives for activities that
go beyond an individual faculty member’s duties and that
benefit the institution is a smart move by the university.
If the boat rises, we all rise with it.”
From Kathryn
Masterson in the Chronicle of Higher Education
My door is
always closed
Lizabeth Barclay, grievance officer for
Oakland University’s chapter of the American Association
of University Professors (AAUP), was on her way to deliver a
formal complaint to the university’s senior vice-president
when she was barred from entrance to the office. Outside a
locked door to the university’s chief administrative suite
of offices, she was told by a secretary through a call box
that she could not enter unless she had an
appointment.
Professor Barclay explained that she did not
have an appointment; she had just come to drop off the
grievance paperwork. She pointed out that never before had
she needed an appointment to enter. When someone else walked
out, Barclay entered and delivered her notice. But the
management and marketing professor, as well as many other
faculty members at the university, are outraged that they
can apparently no longer visit the offices of senior
administrators uninvited.
“Universities cannot respond
to isolated acts of violence or even terrorism by denying
such free access and becoming examples of closed
societies,” reads an open letter distributed this month by
the campus AAUP. “Universities must remain symbols of a
free society. Faculty should not be drawn into actions
antithetical to a free society.”
“If senior
administrators choose to respond by walling themselves off
from the rest of the university, they have that right even
if such actions counter the free society we hope to emulate
for our students. However, faculty need not participate in
such actions.”
The AAUP is recommending that faculty
carry out all face-to-face contacts with senior
administrations in “open-university” faculty offices or
conference rooms, said Joel Russell, local chapter
president.
From Inside Higher Ed
More international
news
More international news can be found on University
World News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
AUS
Tertiary Update is published 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