AUS Tertiary Update
New Zealand gets first half-million-dollar VC
Despite his
university having slipped fifteen places in the Times Higher
Education-QS World University Rankings, the University of
Auckland’s vice-chancellor, Stuart McCutcheon, has become
New Zealand’s first half-million-dollar VC. According to
the 2008 State Services Commission’s annual report,
Professor McCutcheon received a remuneration package in 2007
worth between $520,000 and $529,999, up by an estimated
$50,000 or more than 10.6 percent over his 2006
remuneration. His increase was more than twice that paid to
his staff and follows his increase of more than 14 percent
between 2005 and 2006.
Professor McCutcheon becomes the
second-highest-remunerated public servant, among those whose
packages are reported by the State Services Commission, just
behind the chief executive of the Ministry of Social
Development, who received between $530,000 and $539,999.
During the same period, the prime minister was paid
$375,000.
Also receiving more than $520,000 in 2007 was
Massey University’s former vice-chancellor, Professor
Judith Kinnear, but, according to the report, that total
included payments relating to previous periods. She received
remuneration of $320,000 in 2006.
The
next-best-remunerated vice-chancellor in 2007 was Professor
David Skegg from the University of Otago, who received
between $460,000 and $469,999, up 15 percent on 2006,
followed by the recently departed University of Canterbury
vice-chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, who received between
$450,000 and $459,999, an increase of around 12.5
percent.
The biggest increase went to Lincoln
University’s Professor Roger Field, whose total
remuneration jumped by a staggering 23 percent, from between
$280,000 and $289,999 in 2006 to between $340,000 and
$349,999 in 2007. At the same time, Lincoln University’s
staff received the lowest overall salary increases of any
New Zealand university at 5.2 percent for academic staff and
3.73 percent for general staff.
The remuneration packages
paid to other vice-chancellors were between $400,000 and
$409,999 to AUT’s Derek McCormack (up 14 percent), between
$360,000 and $369,999 to Victoria’s Professor Pat Walsh
(up 11 percent), and between $340,000 and $349,999 (up a
modest 6.25 percent) to Waikato’s Professor Roy Crawford.
All are included in the top-ten remuneration packages paid
to the chief executives of tertiary-education
institutions.
The State Service Commission’s annual
report also reveals that, excluding chief executives, more
than 2,700 people employed in tertiary-education
institutions in 2007 received more than $100,000, up from
2,100 in 2006.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Students ask “malicious” VCs to tell the
truth
2. New Zealand among most prolific university
producers
3. Waikato celebrates
Kīngitanga
4. International doctoral scholars
selected
5. “Future proofing” by cutting
staff
6. Icelandic freeze on Oxbridge funds
7. Medical
school bans gifts
8. Blacklist under fire
9. British
academic calls for Christian universities
Students ask
“malicious” VCs to tell the truth
Student
representatives have taken issue with what they consider
misrepresentation by the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee (NZVCC) of student-support spending. The New
Zealand Union of Students’ Associations (NZUSA) has urged
the NZVCC to come clean on the real figures revealing that
universities receive huge funding injections every year off
the back of young New Zealanders who go into debt simply to
get an education.
“The misleading and malicious
comments from the NZVCC regarding universal student
allowances are inappropriate, inaccurate, and will do little
to win them any public sympathy,” said NZUSA co-president
Liz Hawes. “Yes the entire sector is under-funded; however
a policy win for students should be applauded for what it
is: a worthy principle and a step in the right direction. We
look forward to the rest of the sector in time getting the
support they also deserve,” Ms Hawes added.
According
to NZUSA, Ministry of Education documents clearly show that
only 23 percent of New Zealand’s tertiary-education budget
is spent on student support, not 42 percent as NZVCC
asserts. The rest comes in the form of student loans paid
directly to tertiary-education institutions to pay for
tuition fees. NZUSA says that this is basically a fee
subsidy from government to the vice-chancellors, which
individual students have to go into debt to fund. Once this
is adjusted for, New Zealand is only just spending over the
OECD average of 18 percent.
“The vice-chancellors
would do better to encourage more government spending on
tertiary education overall, rather than initiating
in-fighting in the sector and denigrating good policies that
benefit their key stakeholders, students, and that are being
warmly welcomed across the country,” Ms Hawes concluded.
A recent Ministry of Education research report indicated
that receiving a student allowance has a direct and positive
impact on student academic performance.
New Zealand among
most prolific university producers
An analysis by John
Gerritsen in University World News indicates that New
Zealand, Finland, Ireland, and Australia are the most
efficient producers of top universities, according to the
latest Times Higher Education-QS ranking of the world’s
top 500 universities. Those four nations not only had more
universities per head of population than any others, they
also produced more such institutions in terms of their
percentage share of global GDP than other
countries.
According to the analysis, New Zealand and
Finland also featured in the top three when population and
GDP measures were applied to Shanghai Jiao Tong
University’s ratings published earlier this year. In the
latest THE-QS World University Rankings, Ireland had more
top 500 universities per head of population than any other
nation. New Zealand, however, was well ahead with its top
universities when its share of global GDP was taken into
account.
With seven institutions in the top 500 and a
population of 4.15 million, Ireland produced one top 500
university for every 593,000 people. Close behind was New
Zealand, with one top 500 university for every 695,000
people, and Finland with one for every 749,000. Only two
other nations required fewer than one million citizens to
produce a top 500 institution: Australia, with one for every
936,000 people, and Switzerland with one for every
947,000.
Considered by share of global GDP, a figure
provided with the Shanghai rankings, New Zealand was by far
the most efficient producer of top 500 institutions. Its six
institutions in the THE-QS rankings equated to one for every
0.03 percent of global GDP, twice as effective as
second-placed Finland with one for every 0.06 percent of
global GDP. Ireland and Australia were equal third with one
THE-QS top 500 institution for every 0.07 percent of GDP,
followed by Israel with one for every 0.08
percent.
Waikato celebrates Kīngitanga
Sir Douglas
Graham and Koro Wetere are among panellists gathering at
Waikato University this month for three evenings of
discussions to celebrate Te Kīngitanga. Sir Douglas, a
former Treaty negotiations minister, and Mr Wetere, a former
Māori affairs minister, will be part of the sessions which
aim to acknowledge 150 years of Te Kīngitanga movement
1858-2008.
The seminars will run over three evenings, on
28, 29, and 30 October, and will feature discussions on the
achievements of Te Kīngitanga, its meaning, and its
relevance and role in contemporary times. Kīngi Tuheitia
has confirmed his attendance at each of the
evenings.
University vice-chancellor, Professor Roy
Crawford, said that the university is immensely proud of its
links with Tainui and the Kīngitanga and feels it is
important to be able to gather people together to celebrate
the achievements of the Kīngitanga and plans for the
future. “It’s a great honour that Kīngi Tuheitia
himself will be present at all the discussions, and the
calibre of panellists shows how highly the movement is
regarded,” Professor Crawford said.
Other panellists
and guests include Nanaia Mahuta, MP; Emeritus Professor
James Ritchie; educator and founding school of education
dean at Waikato, Charmaine Pountney; head of the Wintec
council and Waikato District Health Board member Gordon
Chesterman; and former Māori Language Commission head Haami
Piripi.
The series opens with Ms Mahuta and Emeritus
Professor Ritchie discussing the significance of
Kīngitanga. This will be followed on the second night by a
panel of non-Māori commentators and national figures
reflecting on Te Kīngitanga as a historical yet modern
social movement. The final session will comprise iwi
representatives from outside the Waikato/Tainui iwi boundary
giving their perspective on Te Kīngitanga, their role in
relation to it, and their allegiance to the
movement.
International doctoral scholars
selected
Tertiary-education minister Pete Hodgson this
week announced a new batch of 38 international doctoral
scholars who will study at New Zealand universities next
year. The scholars have been selected from almost 400
applications received from students in 79 different
countries. Each year New Zealand supports up to 38
international doctoral students to study for a PhD at a New
Zealand university under the New Zealand International
Doctoral Research Scholarship programme.
In announcing
the awards, the minister said, “These scholarships are a
winner for New Zealand and for the scholarship students. The
students benefit from the wealth of knowledge and expertise
held within our tertiary institutions. In turn, New Zealand
institutions gain from students sharing the findings of
their own research and their experiences gained
overseas.”
This year the largest numbers of students
selected come from Canada, Germany, India, and the United
States, but a wide range of other countries are also
represented. Research topics include a study of the
generation of earthquakes on New Zealand’s alpine
fault-line, research into intercultural adaptation, and the
application of the small-world phenomenon to the routing of
messages within large computer networks. The students will
take up their three-year scholarships from January.
Pete
Hodgson described the scolarships, administered by the
Education New Zealand Trust, as one way New Zealand works to
further enhance the reputation of its tertiary-education
system overseas. Other programmes include the policy that
allows international PhD students to pay the same fees as
New Zealand domestic students.
The scholarships have
resulted in a rapid increase in international-student PhD
enrolments. “Enrolments rose from 693 in 2006 to 1,807 by
August 2008, an increase of 161 percent. In 2007
international PhD students enrolled in New Zealand came from
91 countries,” Pete Hodgson said.
World
Watch
“Future proofing” by cutting staff
Up to 270
staff will lose their jobs after Australia’s Victoria
University (VU) announced it would slash costs by $27
million next year. Victoria is the second university to
announce job cuts this month, with 230 academic and general
staff to go from La Trobe University by the end of the year.
Melbourne University’s troubled arts faculty will also
sack up to 20 academic staff by Christmas, its second
voluntary redundancy scheme in a year.
The bulk of the
redundancies will target Victoria University’s 664
higher-education staff, with up to 150 expected to leave.
About 100 of the 1287 general staff and 20 of the 559
vocational staff will also go in a six-month programme the
university describes as “future proofing”.
Vice-chancellor Elizabeth Harman said it was a pre-emptive
move designed to ensure the university remains in surplus as
it repositions itself in an increasingly competitive
sector.
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU)
Victorian state secretary, Matthew McGowan, called on the
vice-chancellor to resign, saying there had been no
consultation on the cuts and no information provided on how
many jobs would be lost or from where. He said a survey from
late 2007 found that staff confidence in Victoria University
management was at very low levels.
It is understood that
the NTEU will be recommending industrial action at a meeting
to be held today. “Staff at VU have been left with no
other choice but to take industrial action. The
vice-chancellor and senior management have consistently
failed to negotiate seriously, and have refused to treat the
bargaining process with respect,” Mr McGowan said.
“VU’s vice-chancellor can turn this around by coming to
the negotiating table in good faith, and giving up her
reckless and derisory attitude towards collective bargaining
and staff.”
From NTEU and Bridie Smith and Ben
Schneiders in the Age
Icelandic freeze on Oxbridge
funds
Britain’s Oxford University could face losses of
up to £30m ($NZ76.6m) in cash deposits tied up in Icelandic
bank accounts. Overall, twelve English universities have a
total of £77m ($NZ196.7m) in Icelandic banks. The sum
Oxford has in Icelandic banks is larger than that held by
Cambridge, which stands to lose £11m ($NZ28m), but
represents only 5 percent of the university’s cash
deposits, so both universities are in a similar position of
financial risk.
According to a spokesperson for Oxford,
the university has £600m ($NZ1536m) in cash deposits, an
annual turnover of more than that, and £3.4bn ($NZ8.7bn) in
endowments. “In operational terms, it’s an amount of
money we will want to get back, but people here aren’t
going to feel the impact,” the spokesperson said. While
some universities had been able to withdraw their cash
deposits, Oxford had not invested in Icelandic banks over
the last eighteen months and the money originally invested
was locked in.
Oxford’s director of finance, Giles
Kerr, wrote to the English funding council, HEFCE, yesterday
to call for co-ordinated action between it, the Department
of Innovation, Universities and Skills, and the Treasury.
“[They] are well aware of the challenges faced by the
sector,” he said. “We expect them to do all they can to
protect the position of higher-education institutions, which
are vital to the country’s future prosperity.”
From
Anthea Lipsett in the Guardian
Medical school bans
gifts
The University of Minnesota medical school is
considering a new conflict-of-interest policy so strict that
doctors wouldn’t even be able to accept Post-it Notes
bearing a drug company’s logo. The far-reaching policy
which, if enacted, would be among the toughest in the
nation, comes as congressional investigators and the US
Justice Department are probing ties between doctors and drug
companies and medical-device manufacturers; probes that have
raised some difficult questions for the university.
The
medical school’s proposed policy digs deep and reaches far
into the entrenched relationship between the drug and
medical-device industries and the university’s doctors,
researchers, and students, as well as the institution
itself. If adopted, the policy would profoundly alter the
relationship between industry and the state’s largest
medical school.
All personal gifts from industry would be
banned. Free drug samples would be limited. Industry support
for doctors’ continuing medical education would be phased
out. Doctors’ consulting relationships would be disclosed
to both patients and the public. Those financial ties would
be monitored far more closely.
“It’s really putting
policies in place that would, as best as possible, ensure
the patient’s best interest,'” said Dr Leo Furcht,
co-chair of the task force recommending the rules and
chairman of the university’s department of laboratory
medicine and pathology. Acknowledging that reactions had so
far been mixed, Dr Furch said, “Many people have said,
‘This is something we have to do’, there are some who
feel [the policy] has gone a little too far, and some who
feel it isn’t enough.”
From Janet Moore in the Star
Tribune
Blacklist under fire
Academics named as
militant left-wing ideologues in a blacklist tabled in the
Australian federal parliament claim they are victims of a
Young Liberals’ “witch-hunt”. While many of the
blacklisted academics admit that humanities and social
science faculties are dominated by progressives, they say
bias is not a serious problem in Australian universities.
The list of more than 30 academics who are described as
“unashamed activists for political and ideological causes
such as radical feminism, animal rights, and gay rights”
has been published on the Young Liberals’ website. It was
submitted to a Senate inquiry on academic freedom in schools
and universities.
Among those on the Young Liberals’
list are controversial philosopher Peter Singer, feminist
and activist Eva Cox, former ABC Four Corners producer and
now journalism lecturer Peter Manning, and University of
New South Wales (UNSW) senior associate dean in the faculty
of arts and social sciences, Sarah Maddison. “The way
they’ve gone about this has the smell of a witch-hunt,”
said Dr Maddison. “They don’t want to create public
discussion about the quality of education, they want to
score political points.”
Dr Maddison, an expert in
women’s rights and indigenous politics, said there is
probably “a grain of truth” in the notion that
humanities academics are more left-wing than the general
population. However, regular student feedback surveys and
existing grievance policies already protect against bias,
she said.
UNSW deputy vice-chancellor (academic),
Richard Henry, said he had full confidence in the
independence and integrity of his staff. “It’s ironic
that in the name of academic freedom people have created a
blacklist that decreases academic freedom.”
From
Matthew Knott in the Australian
British academic calls for
Christian universities
Britain needs Christian
universities to counter the focus on “wealth creation and
utilitarianism” in the secular higher-education sector and
to teach students biblical values across all subjects,
according to Nigel Paterson, a lecturer at the University of
Winchester. In a paper for the Jubilee Centre, a Christian
social-reform organisation, Do We Need a Christian
University?, he proposes a model Christian university that
would use the Bible within all its courses.
Dr Paterson,
who trained in natural sciences at the University of
Cambridge and now lectures in English at Winchester, said
two or three Christian universities would enrich the country
and contrast with the “spiritual vacuum” elsewhere in
higher education. Secular universities’ energies “can
all too easily be directed by political influences towards
wealth creation and utilitarianism”, he said, while a
Christian institution could nurture subjects “that might
easily be blocked from starting or closed down in the
secular academy”.
A model Christian university would
prioritise the study of theology, once “the queen of
sciences”, Dr Paterson said, with all disciplines
accepting that “there is a religious dimension to life
that merits respect and academic scrutiny”.
Britain
already has fourteen church universities and colleges
founded by religious denominations that maintain links to
the Church. Asked whether more courses in theology would be
viable, Dr Paterson said that a Christian university could
expect to attract UK and international students from
evangelical, pentecostal, and charismatic churches.
He
said that, while a fully Christian university could
specialise in the arts and humanities, avoiding the
challenge of finding funding for scientific research, it
would be “detrimental to both science and the world” to
avoid the study of science.
From Melanie Newman in Times
Higher Education
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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