AUS Tertiary Update
Student-allowance move good, but funding must increase
In
light of Monday’s announcement by the prime minister that
the Labour party proposes to phase out parental-income
testing on student allowances, the Association of University
Staff warns that the government must also act to increase
funding to the university sector. AUS academic
vice-president, Dr Grant Duncan, said that, while AUS
applauds moves to keep the cost of tertiary education as low
as possible for students, it is vital that additional
government funding be provided to universities in order to
maintain the high quality and good reputation of the New
Zealand university system.
Dr Duncan said that the cost
of running universities has increased at a rate at least 1.6
times higher than the general rate of inflation for the
economy as a whole, but that university income fell in real
terms by over $20 million per year over the last six years.
“Not only must university education be affordable for
students, it must also be of a high quality if New
Zealand’s goals for economic and social transformation are
to be realised,” he said. “According to research by the
University of Auckland, New Zealand university income was,
in 2006, $2,146 per student or $223 million in total lower
than it would have been if income had been indexed to
increases in university costs since 1991, and this must be
remedied.” Dr Duncan has called on all political parties
to announce policies that would guarantee a greater
investment in universities.
The Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education (ASTE) has also welcomed the phasing out
of parental-income testing while warning that such moves
should not be made at the expense of the tertiary-education
sector as a whole. “Our union has always had the view that
the cost of tertiary education to students must be reduced
and this is a good first step,” said ASTE president Tangi
Tipene. “However, this sector has been woefully
under-funded and, in the case of the ITP part of the sector,
this has had the potential to affect quality. Our young
people deserve, and the country needs, high-quality,
affordable education,” Ms Tipene added.
The New Zealand
Union of Students’ Associations (NZUSA) hailed the
announcement as “brilliant news”. “A universal student
allowance recognises the unfairness of expecting students to
be dependent on their parents till they are 25, and just how
unrealistic and unworkable the current policy has been,”
said NZUSA co-president Liz Hawes.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. University employment agreements
ratified
2. Canterbury appoints new
vice-chancellor
3. Top universities slip
slightly
4. Commonwealth Scholarships partially
restored
5. Women’s under-representation in science,
engineering under study
6. Ranking obsession goes
global
7. Massive rise in student mobility
8. New
indigenous leaders graduating
9. Doing it by the
blog
10. We are the chancellors
University employment
agreements ratified
New collective employment agreements
have been ratified for academic and general staff at five
New Zealand universities, with others expected to follow
soon. Provisional figures show that almost 95 percent of
those participating in ratification ballots voted in favour
of settlements of academic and general staff agreements at
Massey, Canterbury, Lincoln, and Otago universities, and the
academic agreement at Waikato.
The ratification will see
salary increases for academic staff of between 4.68 and 5.23
percent and between 3.63 and 4.61 percent for general staff
over the course of the year. Final results of ballots at the
University of Auckland, AUT, and Victoria University are
expected to be known by the end of this month.
The
settlements comprise one salary component funded by each
university and another from a new government funding package
of $15 million, allocated through the Universities
Tripartite Forum this year to explore and create
opportunities to increase the competitiveness of New Zealand
universities through recruitment and retention strategies.
It brings to a total of $65 million the new funding made
available by the current government over the last three
years to enhance university salaries.
Combined unions
spokesperson, Marty Braithwaite, said that the unions
representing university staff had successfully engaged with
vice-chancellors and the government through the tripartite
process and are making satisfactory gains towards addressing
funding and salary problems in the university
sector.
According to Mr Braithwaite, the settlements
illustrate what can be achieved when unions,
vice-chancellors, and the government work together. “We
know that the tripartite process has been successful in
providing results for university staff,” he said.
Mr
Braithwaite added that, while the salary increases varied
among universities and between academics and general staff,
he believes that union members saw the settlements as a
positive step towards resolving long-term salary problems.
“Union members know that the government money, which
funded a proportion of the increases, was a direct result of
efforts made over the past three years,” he said. “The
ballot result shows strong support for the national approach
to bargaining and gives us confidence to continue with that
process in the future.”
Canterbury appoints new
vice-chancellor
The University of Canterbury has
appointed Dr Rod Carr as its next vice-chancellor. He will
take up a five-year appointment in February 2009. Dr Carr is
currently managing director of Christchurch-based Jade
Software Corporation. Prior to joining Jade in 2003, he was
deputy governor and director of the Reserve Bank of New
Zealand. He has also held senior positions within the Bank
of New Zealand and the National Australia
Bank.
University of Canterbury chancellor, Dr Robin Mann,
says he is delighted at the appointment. “Dr Carr comes to
the university with proven leadership skills and an
impressive academic record.”
Dr Carr has LLB (Hons)
and BCom (Hons) degrees from the University of Otago, an MBA
from Columbia University Graduate School of Business, and MA
and PhD degrees from the Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania.
Dr Mann described Dr Carr is a longtime
supporter of the university. He currently chairs the
advisory board of NZi3, the national ICT Innovation
Institute based at Canterbury. He is also a director of the
Geospatial Research Centre and a member of the college of
business and economics advisory board.
Dr Mann says Dr
Carr has impressed the university council with his
understanding of the broad issues facing Canterbury and the
wider tertiary sector. “We believe his experience dealing
with central government will serve us and the sector
well.”
Dr Carr replaces Professor Roy Sharp, who left
the university after being appointed chief executive of the
Tertiary Education Commission.
Top universities slip
slightly
While three New Zealand universities remain in
the top 200 of this year’s Times Higher Education-QS World
University Rankings, this country no longer has a place in
the top 50. The University of Auckland’s rating has fallen
from 50 to 65 and the University of Otago has dropped from
114= to 124=. The only universities to increase their
placings were Canterbury and Victoria, the former moving
from 188= to 186= and the latter from 234 to 227=.
Massey
University fell from 242 to 283 and Waikato University from
319= to 378=. AUT and Lincoln University did not appear in
the top 400.
Harvard and Yale headed off Cambridge and
Oxford universities in the top four and the Australian
National University at sixteen and the University of Tokyo
at nineteen were the only non-US, non-UK universities to
appear in the top 20.
Martin Ince, contributing editor of
Times Higher Education and co-editor of the Top Universities
Guide, said, “These rankings use an unprecedented and
accurate amount of data to deliver the best overall look at
the strength of the world’s top universities. They are
important for governments wanting to gauge the progress of
their education systems, and are used in planning by
universities across the world.”
Sceptics, however, may
be inclined to place more weight on the words of Nunzio
Quacquarelli, managing director of QS and co-editor of the
Top Universities Guide. He warned, “Rankings are
contentious and QS has always argued that they should be
used with caution, understanding that they cannot reflect
all aspects of university excellence.”
The THE-QS World
University Rankings are based on data from the areas of peer
academic review, recruiter review, international-faculty
ratio, international-student ratio, student-faculty ratio,
and citations per faculty member. Further comment on world
rankings appears in World Watch below.
Commonwealth
Scholarships partially restored
Commonwealth Scholarships
enabling students from developed Commonwealth countries such
as New Zealand to study at top universities in the United
Kingdom have been partially restored for 2009 following a
recent decision by the UK Department for Innovation,
Universities and Skills. Earlier this year, the existing
Commonwealth Scholarships Scheme for developed countries,
which covered both masterate and doctoral study, was dropped
following a decision by the UK foreign minister to cut £10
million of scholarships expenditure.
Both the Association
of University Staff and the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee have welcomed the move by the British government.
Earlier this year, AUS national president, Associate
Professor Maureen Montgomery, described the decision to drop
the scholarships as “short-sighted and insular”. Calling
for their restoration, she said, “Hundreds of New
Zealanders have benefited from these scholarships in the
past and many have gone on to make a great contribution to
this country and the intellectual capital of Britain
itself.”
Strong representations were made by a group of
prominent former Commonwealth Scholars and associated
international interests to restore Commonwealth Scholarships
for developed countries and this has now occurred, on a
partial basis. At a protest meeting in London at the time of
the decision, Professor Germaine Greer told those gathered,
“This so-called financial saving amounts to little more
than the price of a property in Bayswater, yet the
withdrawal will waste untold talent.”
The awards for
developed countries will now be for doctoral study only, and
will be co-funded by UK universities. To date Cambridge,
Edinburgh, Nottingham, and Oxford universities have
confirmed their participation. As well as New Zealand,
countries affected by the decision are Australia, the
Bahamas, Brunei, Canada, Cyprus, Malta, and
Singapore.
Women’s under-representation in science,
engineering under study
A research group at the
University of Canterbury has received a funding award from a
charitable trust for a project investigating the role
stereotypes may play in the under-representation of women in
the fields of engineering and science. Associate Professor
Lucy Johnston of the university’s psychology department
said the number of women participating in engineering and
science, at both educational and professional levels,
remains low despite attempts by training institutes and
professional bodies to encourage more women’s
participation.
Dr Johnston said the research group plans
to look at the problem by investigating whether sex-based
stereotypes, both explicit and implicit, are preventing
women from entering the engineering and science fields.
“What we want to do is look at the beliefs people have
about science and engineering that associate these areas
with men more than women. We want to find out how prevalent
these beliefs are and the extent to which they might be
impacting on women,” said Dr Johnston.
She added that
the message women may be getting is that they are not
capable of a career in engineering or science, or that it is
not an appropriate field for them to enter into. “They
might be getting these messages explicitly from people
telling them directly or they might be being conveyed more
subtly through behaviours,” Dr Johnston said.
“It’s all done very much without anyone being aware
of it and it’s not intentional but these messages could be
having a huge impact. What we want to do is understand how
these messages are being conveyed and picked up. If we can
understand that process, then we can try to come up with
ways of minimising their impact,” Dr Johnston
added.
World Watch
Ranking obsession goes global
A
Chinese list of the world’s top universities would seem an
unlikely concern for French politicians. This year, however,
France’s legislature took aim at the annual rankings
produced by Shanghai Jiao Tong University, which claims to
list the 500 best universities in the world. The
highest-ranked French entry, Université Pierre et Marie
Curie, came in at 42.
Outraged by France’s overall weak
showing in the rankings, which are dominated by US and UK
institutions, the French Senate issued a report arguing that
the researchers were clearly biased in favor of
English-speaking institutions. Gallic pride aside, the
legislators’ concern underscores a fundamental change in
higher education. Simply put, it has become an international
enterprise. The flow of students, researchers, and money now
takes place on a global scale.
“Rankings are now part
of the landscape, whether we like it or not,” says Pierre
de Maret, a former rector of the Université Libre de
Bruxelles and a board member of the European University
Association. He is no fan of the methodology used by the
Shanghai rankings but concedes that the list “has had a
direct impact at the government level and has really shaken
things up”.
International-rankings tables, which did
not even exist a decade ago, are increasingly used by the
world’s roughly three million international students to
decide where to study. “Rankings have gone global at
exactly the same time that universities are fighting over
global students as a resource,” says Robert J. Coelen,
vice-president for international affairs at Leiden
University.
Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Times
Higher Education put out the two most-watched international
listings. More than 30 countries also produce some sort of
national rankings system, says Thomas D Parker, a senior
associate at Washington’s Institute for Higher Education
Policy.
From Aisha Labi in the Chronicle of Higher
Education
Massive rise in student mobility
More than
2.5 million university students are now estimated to be
studying outside their own countries, a 70 percent increase
in the past decade, and the number looks set to continue
rising. A new report confirms that students from China
dominate those studying abroad, far exceeding young people
from India, South Korea, Germany, and Japan.
With nearly
400,000 of its students now enrolled in foreign
universities, China outranks India by more than 250,000.
Because of the huge rise in Chinese student mobility, Asian
students comprise 45 percent of the total studying offshore,
followed by those from Europe with 28 percent, Africa with
12 percent, and the Americas with 10 percent.
A
just-released French-English bilingual paper, Les Etudiants
Internationaux: chiffres clés/International Student
Mobility: Key Figures, published by CampusFrance, the
national agency for promoting French higher education
abroad, provides comparative data based on the most recent
statistics from the Unesco Institute of Statistics and the
French Ministry of Education.
The US remains the most
attractive destination for foreign students, with almost
600,000 enrolled in its universities in 2006. Despite its
small population compared with the giants of America and
Europe, Australia had 260,000 foreign higher-education
students enrolled in 2006, some 14 percent of the total. It
was followed by Japan with 130,000 while other European
nations, including Austria, Switzerland, Belgium, and Spain,
joined the top ten.
Because of its geographical location,
though, Australia was second to the US, and ahead of the UK,
among the top ten host countries in terms of Asian student
enrolments. Japan came in at fourth place in front of
Germany, France, Russia, Malaysia, New Zealand, and
Kirghizistan, which joined the top ten with 27,000 Asians
enrolled.
From Geoff Maslen and Jane Marshall in
University World News
New indigenous leaders
graduating
Indigenous students are graduating from
universities at a record rate in Australia, prompting hope
that a new generation of Aboriginal leaders will bring fresh
ideas and broader experience to efforts to close the
economic and life-expectancy gaps between black and white
Australia. Figures from a Bureau of Statistics and the
federal Education Department research paper show a record
9370 indigenous students were enrolled in universities last
year, with 1495 students graduating.
Indigenous
enrolments at degree-level studies and above rose from 61.5
percent of all enrolments to 80.3 percent between 1997 and
last year, indicating an improvement in the quality of
tertiary study undertaken as well as more students. “There
is every reason to expect graduate numbers to continue to
rise rapidly in the lead-up to 2020,” the research paper
said.
“By 2020, perhaps a third of all indigenous
people will have a graduate in the immediate family. These
are not just role models: they tend to be far more
economically secure, with high rates of home ownership, and,
one suspects anecdotally, far better health, less
addictions, and almost non-existent rates of incarceration,
domestic violence, or suicide,” the paper reported.
The
study found that enrolments in Aboriginal-focused courses
had plummeted since 2000, with the bulk of indigenous
students overwhelmingly moving towards mainstream classes. A
predominance of indigenous women students has been
exacerbated by the consequent winding down of
Aboriginal-focused courses, in which more indigenous men
tended to participate. Indigenous women were enrolling in
university at a rate 14 percent above that of non-indigenous
men, relative to their proportion of the population.
From Pia Akerman in the Australian
Doing it by the
blog
Using his department’s blog, Metaphysical Values,
a lecturer at the University of Leeds posts an early draft
of a paper he is preparing. Another academic, at the
University of Newcastle, polls readers about the United
States election on The Brooks Blog, while Digital Urban, run
by a researcher at University College London (UCL), has a
recent post advertising merchandise, mugs, and messenger
bags bearing the blog’s logo.
Although they are still
lagging behind their colleagues in the US, British academics
are slowly but surely moving into the blogosphere. The
appeal of academic feedback, as well as the opportunity for
public engagement and the potential for enhancing
reputations, has those who blog hooked.
Mary Beard,
professor of classics at the University of Cambridge, has
been blogging since late last year, despite some initial
scepticism. Her blog, A Don’s Life, is one of UK
academia’s most widely read. “When I started blogging,
it was very experimental and I thought it was all rather
‘cheap’, but I have changed my mind completely,” she
said. “One of the things that attracts me is the
possibility of letting a wider community know what it is
like being a university academic.”
“I do it to pin my
ideas down,” explained Ruth Page, a reader at Birmingham
City University, whose blog, Digital Narratives, charts her
current academic projects and attempts at using e-learning
in her teaching. “It is also a useful way of getting
feedback from people working in my field.”
Jennifer
Rohn, a scientist at UCL, whose blog, Mind the Gap, paints a
picture of what it is like to work in a laboratory,
explained, “I was angry that my profession was so
completely invisible to normal people.”
From Zoë
Corbyn in Times Higher Education
We are the
chancellors
The recent installation of Brian May, lead
guitarist of the rock band Queen, as chancellor of Liverpool
John Moores University has sparked interest in the roles of
celebrity chancellors. Such dignatories as Dame Diana Rigg
at the University of Stirling, Bill Bryson at Durham,
Channel 4 newscaster Jon Snow at Oxford Brookes, and Sir
Michael Parkinson, who joins Nottingham Trent next month, go
about their duties with commendable earnestness according to
a new booklet, Beyond Ceremony: On being a chancellor,
published this week by Universities UK.
The booklet
profiles many well-known chancellors, all of whom offer
their own special insights into what Bryson describes as an
unexpectedly “amazing” position. The role has defied
description up until now and, while it has allowed
post-holders the scope to apply their own experience, often
gained from a lifetime in business, politics, and the public
eye, new chancellors are often unsure of what to
expect.
The role is steeped in history. No one knows who
was the first chancellor of a British university because the
title is so ancient, but it may have been Robert Grosseteste
at Oxford in the thirteenth century. Monarchs would appoint
their favourites to chancellorships. Thus Thomas Cromwell,
who advised King Henry VIII on England’s break with Rome,
was chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1535 to
1539.
From Lucy Hodges in the Independent and Anthea
Lipsett in the Guardian
More international news
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News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
AUS Tertiary
Update is published weekly on Thursdays and distributed
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