AUS Tertiary Update
Right diagnosis, wrong cure
The New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee (NZVCC), representing the
country’s eight universities, has released overnight a
“nine-point plan” for government policy in the sector.
Underpinning the nine points is an invitation to the new
government to work with the NZVCC “on a programme that
will ensure New Zealand fully benefits from its
universities”.
The first of the nine points is for
increased public investment in the sector by an amount that
has been reported elsewhere as $230 million a year in
addition to the present $1.149 billion. The NZVCC supports
this bid by repeating its previous counterposing of
university investment and student support and a claim that
42 percent of government money goes towards the latter, one
that is hotly disputed by the New Zealand Union of
Students’ Associations.
In addition to increased
funding, the document seeks annual indexation of that
funding on the basis of a university-related price index
rather than the general consumer price index and of limits
on student tuition-fee increases. Failing the requested
increase in public funding, the vice-chancellors’
fall-back position is for increased revenue from student
fees and “a reconsideration of the current fees maxima
policy to provide greater flexibility around fee
setting”.
Other claims are for reduced compliance
costs, “a differentiated investment system which
recognises and supports their distinctive contributions”,
and restoration of the universities’ access to contestable
research funding. These are followed by pleas for closer,
more complementary, relationships with other research
organisations, especially crown research institutes, an
unspecified “step change” for Māori and Pasifika, a
commitment to the universities’ distinctive contribution,
and acceptance by the government of “its obligation to
safeguard university autonomy and academic freedom and
recognise universities’ unique ownership
position”.
Association of University Staff national
president, Associate Professor Maureen Montgomery, while
welcoming the vice-chancellors entry into the debate and
supporting their concerns about underfunding of the sector,
has cast doubt on the efficacy of their proposed cure.
“The NZVCC has correctly identified the problem that
universities face, underfunding, but its solution to take
money from other areas that are also underfunded, such as
students and the rest of the tertiary-education sector, is
iniquitous,” she said. “The nine-point plan is blinkered
and would be doomed to fail.”
“It is not just
universities that are a key part of the nation’s
infrastructure, as the NZVCC claims, but public education as
a whole. University vice-chancellors will not be seen to
speak for the whole sector when they take a narrow and
segmented view of our education system,” Dr Montgomery
concluded.
Education minister Anne Tolley is reported in
the Dominion Post as rejecting the vice-chancellors’
attempt “to seize control of student fees” and has
reaffirmed the government’s election-campaign commitment
to the fee-maxima policy.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Union salary rights supported by ERA
2. New
union signed and sealed
3. More evidence of PBRF
“game-playing”
4. Survey finds students
hard-drinking
5. New ranking scheme for
Europe
6. Challenges remain for scholars in
Iraq
7. Give us the service we pay for, say
students
8. Will electric professors dream of virtual
tenure?
9. Neither pelf nor privilege ...
Union salary
rights supported by ERA
A challenge by Victoria
University professor of economics and finance, Roger Bowden,
against the university’s decision to award him a lower
salary increase than that negotiated by staff on the
collective agreement has been rejected by the Employment
Relations Authority. Professor Bowden, on an individual
employment contract, complained that his pro vice-chancellor
had limited his individual increase to 2.6 percent while
union members on the collective agreement gained 4.5
percent.
Professor Bowden had argued that his salary
should continue to reflect the requirements of his position
and that his increase was accordingly inadequate in relation
to that of his peers. The ERA, however, decided that the pro
vice-chancellor had properly assessed Professor Bowden’s
position, had used relevant criteria, and had genuinely
believed that the latter had a lesser workload than other
professors and had not performed to a sufficently high
level.
Association of University Staff acting general
secretary, Nanette Cormack, said that the decision clearly
illustrated the benefits of being a union member. “Had
Professor Bowden been an AUS member and covered by the
collective agreement, he would have been entitled to the
same 4.5 percent salary increase that others achieved,”
she added.
“It is somewhat extraordinary that Professor
Bowden would expect the same salary increase as those
covered by the collective agreement, particularly given the
efforts made by AUS members over the last five years in
particular to advance salary issues through such means as
the tripartite process,” Ms Cormack said. “The decision
also shows quite clearly that employers are not required to
give non-union staff the same salary increases as union
members.”
Ms Cormack also noted that the decision
showed that the pro vice-chancellor making the decision on
the size of Professor Bowden’s salary increase found that
there was no evidence of academic leadership and innovation
or the attracting of research funding on his part. He also
believed that Professor Bowden did not develop and maintain
research programmes or collaborate with his colleagues
because he was seldom on campus. He believed that Professor
Bowden was no longer developing new programmes and noted
that he supervised only one PhD student and had a relatively
light workload compared with other professors.
New union
signed and sealed
In the culmination of a protracted
series of individual steps, the formation of the new
Tertiary Education Union was finally and irrevocably
cemented at three conferences earlier this week. On Monday
morning, the Association of University Staff (AUS) and the
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) met
separately in annual conferences to adopt the procedures
necessary to permit amalgamation of the two existing unions.
During the balance of Monday and Tuesday, officers,
delegates, and observers from the two unions came together
in the inaugural conference of the new union to endorse its
constitution, structures, and budget.
The inaugural
conference itself was the scene of a very real amalgamation
of its own as participants from AUS and ASTE shed those
identities and worked in joint delegations based on common
workplaces. Workshops on organisation and recruitment of
women, the TEU’s position on PBRF, general-staff focus and
growth, recruitment strategies, and the creation of
influence at national and local level provided further
platforms for the development of common strategies.
The
first stage in the implementation of the new constitutional
structure was also put in place with the election of the
members of the national women’s committee, te kahurangi
māreikura. The successful candidates were, from general
staff, Lyndsay Ainsworth from Lincoln University, Helen
Brett from the University of Otago, Tracey Morgan from the
University of Waikato, and Gwen Walker from Otago
Polytechnic. Those from academic staff were Kari Bassett
from the University of Canterbury, Alex Sims from the
University of Auckland, Vicki-Lee Tyacke from UCOL,
Palmerston North, and Joneen Walker from the College of
Education, University of Otago. The women’s vice-president
and hui-ā-motu representative will be elected in the new
year.
More evidence of PBRF
“game-playing”
Reservations about aspects of the
operation of the Performance-Based Research Fund expressed
by Dr Jonathan Adams in his recent independent strategic
review of the fund have been extended with the release of a
new sector reference group consultation paper. Following up
on Dr Adams’s references to “wilful game-playing” in
the assessment process, the new report claims that that
results in some scores are not providing “an adequate
basis for stakeholders and the government to differentiate
between providers and their units on the basis of their
relative quality”.
Emphasising the importance of these
concerns being taken up if confidence in the PBRF is to be
maintained, the report continues, “The current eligibility
and reporting mechanisms have resulted in some scores that
could be considered misleading about the quality of research
in particular subject areas/nominated academic units/TEOs
[tertiary-education organisations], particularly when
comparisons are made with these subject areas in other
TEOs.”
Possible solutions to the problems suggested in
the paper include more rigorous audits of staff eligibility,
clearer eligibility guidelines, giving institutions more
room to move on inclusion or exclusion of particular
academics, and providing for the exclusion of more new and
low-level researchers.
In response to the sector
reference group’s concerns, AUS national president,
Associate Professor Maureen Montgomery, said, “The widely
acknowledged misbehaviour of universities in manipulating
the eligibility rules to gain advantage under the PBRF has
undermined the reputation of this assessment among academic
staff.”
“But worse, many academics are being
pressured by their employer to change their terms of
employment, for example to less advantageous tutor roles, in
order to rule them out of eligibility,” Dr Montgomery
added. “The Tertiary Education Commission’s inability to
control such manipulation means that the PBRF is rapidly
becoming a source of employment-relations problems, and the
new TEU will be forced to respond aggressively to
this.”.
Survey finds students hard-drinking
A recent
survey of the drinking habits of New Zealand university
students appears to provide some statistical support for the
popular image of a hard- and heavy-drinking lifestyle. The
study, conducted by a number of international researchers,
found that 81 percent of those surveyed had consumed alcohol
in the previous four weeks, 37 percent reported at least one
binge-drinking session in the previous week, and 33 percent
had a memory black-out in the preceding four weeks, compared
with 13 per cent of drinkers in a 2004 national survey from
the whole population who had more than one black-out in the
preceding year.
In addition, the research, based on a web
survey of more than 2500 undergraduates aged seventeen to 25
at six New Zealand campuses, found that 6 percent of
drinkers in the university survey had unprotected sex in the
preceding four weeks, compared with 3.3 percent in the
national survey who had unprotected sex more than once in
the preceding year; and that 5 percent of the student
drinkers reported being physically aggressive in the
four-week period, compared with 2.2 percent in the national
survey who had got into a physical fight more than once in
the preceding year.
Responding to the results of the
survey, New Zealand Union of Students’ Associations
co-president, Paul Falloon, said that student drinking needs
to be considered in a wider context. “It’s kind of hard
to say that all students are like this. We certainly accept
that there’s an element of heavy drinking within the
student body, but also within the wider society as well, and
I think it’s an issue that society at large needs to
acknowledge,” he said.
World Watch
New ranking scheme
for Europe
The European Union is planning to launch its
own international higher-education rankings, with emphasis
on helping students make informed choices about where to
study and encouraging their mobility. Odile Quintin, the
European Commission’s director-general of education and
culture, announced she would call for proposals before the
end of the year, with the first classification appearing in
2010.
A European classification would probably be
compiled along the same lines as the German Centre for
Higher Education (CHE) Development Excellence Ranking. Last
September, Ján Figel, a member of the European Commission
responsible for education, training, culture, and youth,
gave official support for the CHE project and its aims to
develop “tools to produce multi-dimensional rankings based
on robust, relevant, and widely accepted
methodologies”.
Mr Figel had said the main interest of
the commission was, “To help member states and their
institutions improve the quality of their education and
training systems and in particular to make it easier for
students to make an informed choice on where and what to
study, by offering accessible, transparent and comparable
information.”
“The commission is of the opinion that
many existing rankings do not really fulfil this purpose,
for example because they focus on research aspects rather
than teaching, and on entire institutions rather than
programmes and departments,” Mr Figel said.
“In order
to achieve a mapping of European higher education that
provides guidance and transparency, we need ranking tools
that take into account the existing diversity in terms of
languages, subject areas, profiles, student services,
research, and teaching quality. CHE is among the projects
which are giving an important contribution towards this
objective.”
From Jane Marshall in University World
News
Challenges remain for scholars in Iraq
Two of
three scholars invited from Iraq to share analysis of
academic conditions there could not get visas to attend this
week’s meeting of the Middle East Studies Association held
in Washington. Those gathered at the annual meeting for a
panel on “the role of academics in building civil society
in Iraq” had to settle for having the papers paraphrased
to them by a colleague.
This twist of fate, however,
prompted the remaining panelists to reflect on the
challenges that still exist for students and scholars in a
post-Saddam Iraq. Although Riyadh Aziz Hadi, a high-ranking
administrator at Baghdad University, and Amer Qader, a
professor at Kirkuk University, were unable to attend the
event, their scholarly work was presented before the
panel.
“This is kind of good for the event in a
sinister way,” said Abbas Kadhim, professor of Islamic
studies at the Naval Postgraduate School, in Monterey,
California, and a product of Iraqi higher education. “This
shows you some of the difficulties that remain for Iraqi
academics. If someone cannot attend an event like this,
because of a denied visa with one year’s notice, you’re
looking at a sequestered group of people.”
Though not
to the extent that it was during the Saddam regime, Kadhim
said, academic freedom is still constrained in Iraq. Inside
the classroom, he said, the free flow of ideas between
student and professor is limited by former customs. For
example, he noted that many Iraqis consider the questioning
or challenging of a professor publicly an “act of
hostility”. Even the wider academic curriculum cannot
offer a diversity of interests or values to students, he
said, noting that degrees are “cookie cutter” by design
and leave no room for electives.
From Inside Higher
Ed
Give us the service we pay for, say students
The
traditional undergraduate experience of huddling for warmth
around a one-bar heater and eating baked beans from the tin
is apparently being threatened by a new breed of student.
University vice-chancellors are having to adjust to
undergraduates who believe that their £3,000 annual fees
entitle them to a respectable standard of living.
Rather
than tolerating overcrowded houses where comfort is regarded
as having a bean bag in the sitting room, students are
demanding en suite bedrooms, direct access to the latest
technology, and even cleaning staff.
Brian Lang,
vice-chancellor of St Andrews University, told university
leaders at Princeton University in New Jersey that students
even expected their essays to be marked legibly and on time.
“We are becoming a service society, and students
increasingly think they are buying a service, for which they
want a return,” he said.
“We’re on a ratchet with
expectations and it’s very difficult to manage
expectations downwards. We have to manage student
expectations. The most old-fashioned way of doing that is to
say, ‘if you don’t like what we’re offering, go
elsewhere’.”
Dr Lang was one of the speakers at the
Future Campus conference at Princeton’s school of
architecture, which was addressed by senior staff from the
universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, and New York.
Afterwards he said, “Students are more demanding. Not only
do they expect a single room, it has to be en suite, have a
TV in it, and be cleaned for them.”
“This spreads
into the learning experience: they expect essays to be
marked clearly and back within a certain number of days, and
to see their tutor regularly. They want a fit-for-purpose
library with all the books they need, when they need them,
especially when they’re paying substantially for it.
It’s part of an increasing cultural awareness of
service,” Professor Lang concluded.
From Nicola
Woodcock and Jack Malvern in The Times
Will electric
professors dream of virtual tenure?
Last month at the
NASA-Ames Research Center, a group of top scientists and
business leaders gathered to plan a new university devoted
to the idea that computers will soon become smarter than
people. The details of Singularity University, as the new
institution will be called, are still being worked out and,
so far, the organisers are tight-lipped about their
plans.
To hold such a discussion at all, however, is a
sign of growing acceptance that a new wave of computing
technologies may be just ahead, with revolutionary
implications for research and teaching. The idea that gave
the new university its name is championed by Ray Kurzweil,
an inventor, entrepreneur, and futurist who argues that by
2030, a moment, the “singularity”, will be reached when
computers will out-think human brains.
His argument is
that several technologies that now seem grossly undeveloped,
including nanotechnology and artificial-intelligence
software, are growing at an exponential rate and thus will
mature much faster than most linear-minded people realise.
Once they do, computers will take leaps forward that most
people can hardly imagine today.
In The Singularity Is
Near: When Humans Transcend Biology, Dr Kurzweil presents a
utopian vision in which these supersmart machines quickly
help human researchers cure diseases and vastly extend the
human life span. Many academics think that’s far-fetched;
after all, early proponents of artificial intelligence made
similarly bold promises decades ago that went
unfulfilled.
Not, however, Ben Goertzel, director of
research at the Singularity Institute for Artificial
Intelligence, a private organisation promoting Dr
Kurzweil’s ideas. Computers will become better at teaching
than most human professors are once artificial intelligence
exceeds the abilities of people, he argues.
From Jeffrey
R Young in the Chronicle of Higher Education
Neither pelf
nor privilege ...
Academics may typically be motivated
more by love of learning than money, but few are known to
have negotiated their salary downwards. However, the actions
of an eminent historian prove that such selflessness,
intended in this case to stop cash-strapped universities
from spending funds they can ill afford, does
exist.
Quentin Skinner stepped down as Regius professor
of modern history at the University of Cambridge this year
at the age of 67. According to one of his peers, Alison
Richard, vice-chancellor of Cambridge, offered to keep
Professor Skinner on at the history faculty’s expense. But
Professor Skinner said that, although he would have liked to
stay after almost half a century at the university, he was
“too expensive” and the faculty would be better served
by employing two younger members of staff at the same cost.
The source added, “Great heavens, they said, you can’t
mean it - but he did.”
When Queen Mary, University of
London, then offered him the post of Barber Beaumont
professor of the humanities, Professor Skinner proceeded to
“beat them down” to a lower salary; he said he only
wanted to top up his pension.
In a third act of altruism,
he returned his lecturing fee to the University of
Bristol’s Institute for Research in the Humanities and
Arts when he discovered it represented a large chunk of its
annual grant. “Horrified by this, he returned the cheque
for use as a postgraduate bursary,” his admiring colleague
said.
And his restraint is not restricted to
remuneration. In 1997, when he was appointed Regius
professor of history by the Queen, he reportedly turned down
the knighthood that is typically conferred upon the holder
of the post. His colleague said, “He told them, ‘I
can’t do that, I'm a republican.’ And when his then
vice-chancellor asked him to reconsider for the sake of the
university, he said, ‘No, no, my friends wouldn’t speak
to me!’”
From John Gill 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