AUS Tertiary Update
TEU national secretary appointed
Sharn Riggs, currently
national secretary of the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education (ASTE), has been appointed national secretary of
the Tertiary Education Union. She will take up the position
when the new union comes into formal existence in the new
year.
Ms Riggs took a BA at Victoria University in 1975
and worked as an English teacher at Howick College. After
wide-ranging overseas experience she returned to New Zealand
to become education organiser with the then Wellington
Clerical Union. She moved to ASTE in 1989, becoming national
secretary in 1997.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Government yet to respond to TEC
briefing
2. OECD warns against over-commercialising
research
3. Bleak funding forecast for ITPs
4. UCOL
professor loses redundancy claim
5. Recession a time to
build skills, says ITPNZ
6. UK academics reject
“spying”
7. Push for a national bush
university
8. South African academics seek ruling on
academic freedom
9. Challenging times for Solomon Islands
education
10. “Find the excellence”, lecturer
told
11. Farewells and greetings
Government yet to
respond to TEC briefing
The Tertiary Education Commission
has released its briefing to incoming minister of tertiary
education, Anne Tolley, but the sector remains uncertain of
the minister’s response to that advice. Equally uncertain
are her plans for the TEC itself.
As could be expected,
the commission placed some weight on the value of
collaboration and planning within the sector, noting for
instance, “A more strategic system requires an approach
where the government, the sector and stakeholders are
partners.” This stands in contrast to the philosophical
direction that the National party took into the election,
and its stated preference for more competition and student
choice in the tertiary-education sector.
TEC argued in
particular in its briefing that institutes of technology and
polytechnics need support in shifting to a more co-operative
approach. “Previous business models at institutes of
technology and polytechnics were largely based on growth. In
some cases, this led to significant increases in low-quality
courses,” the briefing observed.
“Investment Plans
focus institutes of technology and polytechnics on providing
high-quality education and achieving relevant outcomes for
their regions, within managed funding. The challenge is to
work with the sector to transition to sustainable business
models that support this focus on quality and
outcomes.”
Since receiving this briefing, the minister
has remained non-committal on the future role of the
commission. And, earlier this week, she declined to comment
on previous statements she had made about plans to “trim
bureaucracy” at the commission.
Tertiary-education
unions have challenged this lack of direction from the
minister, with Association of University Staff acting
general secretary, Nanette Cormack, warning,
“Tertiary-education institutions shouldn’t be competing
against each other over the same students. The message of
co-operation for the overall good of the communities and the
economy was finally getting through. But as institutions
watch the TEC wriggle and writhe under the government’s
suspended scalpel they are tempted to revert to their old
ways,” Ms Cormack added.
Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education national secretary, Sharn Riggs, said,
“Institutions need to be well-resourced and properly
funded if they are to meet the goals of the Tertiary
Education Commission and the government. Paring back the
TEC simply because of a knee-jerk objection to
‘bureaucracy’ will not help the tertiary-education
sector meet those goals.”
OECD warns against
over-commercialising research
The OECD’s recently
released report, Tertiary Education for the Knowledge
Society, Volume 2: Equity, Innovation, Labour Market,
Internationalisation, suggests that member countries such as
New Zealand need to be wary of increasing commercialisation
of their research-funding structures. The report argues that
tertiary-education institutions (TEIs) need to improve
knowledge diffusion rather than strengthening
commercialisation.
“The shift to competitive and
project-based funding in TEIs needs to be examined in
relation to the long-term development of the research and
innovation system. Investment in equipment and instruments
and the share of basic research conducted in TEIs is
declining in many countries,” says the report. “The type
of research undertaken seems to be shifting towards shorter
and safer projects, and this is also linked to performance
measures. It is unclear if project-based funding is having
an impact on the training of researchers.”
The OECD
goes on to note that, while commercialisation activities may
provide revenue for TEIs, it is important to remember that
the results are highly skewed. It suggests that funding of
research and innovation needs to take a long-term
perspective because there are often very long time-lags
between discovery and application for which commercial or
competitive funding mechanisms can sometimes fail to
account.
The report’s chapter on equity praises many of
the efforts individual New Zealand tertiary institutions
have made to improve equity and access for students, noting
in particular the role that wānanga and polytechnics play.
It argues, however, that the main cause of inequitable
access to tertiary education is that young people from
disadvantaged backgrounds do not attain the qualifications
needed for entry.
“This means that, to lessen
inequality of access to tertiary education, policy needs to
intervene at much earlier educational levels. Interventions
on these levels may be more effective than at the time of
the transition to tertiary education.”
The report
opposes excessive testing and tracking of students at school
level and argues for an increased focus on “offering
second chances to gain from education; providing systematic
help to those who fall behind at school; strengthening the
links between school and families; and targeting resources
at the students with the greatest needs”.
Bleak funding
forecast for ITPs
The Tertiary Education Commission’s
briefing to the incoming minister paints a bleak financial
picture for tertiary-education institutions, particularly
institutes of technology and polytechnics over the next
three years.
It lists the baseline funding of
universities as rising over two years from $1,277 million in
2009 to $1,363 in 2011 or an increase of 6.7 percent. While
the consumer price index is currently running at 5.1 percent
for the year, Treasury is forecasting inflation to average
around 2.4 percent between 2009 and 2011.
This means
university baseline funding could increase in real terms
over the next two years. However, wānanga baseline funding
only increases from $161 million to $167 million, or 3.7
percent, between 2009 and 2011 and ITP funding falls from
$596 million to $575 million, a drop of 3.5
percent.
These financial figures from the commission
align with comments made by its chief executive, Professor
Roy Sharp, at last month’s inaugural TEU conference, where
he warned tertiary-education staff that the commission would
not be sheltering the sector from whatever the
government’s response to the unwinding economic crisis
might be.
“You and your members need to understand
fully the current environment for tertiary education….
Unfortunately the reality of the current economic
environment means there is no real extra money to go around.
That means institutions are going to have to get the most
that they can out of current budgets,” Professor Sharp
advised.
UCOL professor loses redundancy claim
A
professor made redundant because of funding problems in the
tertiary-education sector has lost his claim to the
Employment Relations Authority that the layoff was a sham,
according to a report by NZPA. John Dowds was recruited by
UCOL human resources manager, Bill Kimberley, and chief
executive, Paul McElroy, and employed at the Palmerston
North-based Universal College of Learning in 2004 as
professor and dean of international programmes.
Mr
Kimberley and Dr Dowds reportedly negotiated an employment
agreement and, in December 2004, the pair signed off on a
five-year fixed-term agreement that included a redundancy
clause. Dr Dowds was to enact strategy and develop
international collaborations and alliances. The role was a
new one and depended on funding.
Dr Dowds and Mr McElroy
met regularly and, eventually, Mr McElroy broached the
subject of the difficulty of having to make savings because
of funding arrangements in the tertiary-education sector. At
that point the matter of redundancy arose. A consultation
process followed, and Dr Dowd’s employment was terminated
before the end of the five-year contract. He was paid his
entitlements, including holiday pay, leave, notice, and a
redundancy payment.
Dr Dowds, however, complained that he
had relied on what he said were oral terms he had agreed
upon with Mr Kimberley. He said Mr Kimberley had told him
the redundancy clause was “not a matter of moment”, was
a standard clause, and should not be of concern. Mr
Kimberley denied providing such an assurance.
Dr Dowds
said his redundancy was pre-determined and a sham. UCOL, on
the other hand, denied the claim. Authority member Paul
Stapp said he was satisfied the fixed-term agreement met the
requirement of stating the way in which it would end and the
reasons for ending it in that way. “Dr Dowds’ position
is entirely undermined by the existence of the signed
employment agreement,” he said.
Recession a time to
build skills, says ITPNZ
Institutes of technology and
polytechnics will support the government’s Restart package
by providing training for the recently unemployed and others
affected by the recession, says Institutes of Technology and
Polytechnics New Zealand executive director, Dave Guerin.
“The Restart programme appropriately focuses on the most
urgent need for people who have lost their job, financial
support, while our proposal will support people in the
longer term, Mr Guerin said.
According to BERL research
commissioned by ITP New Zealand, there will be 46,500 to
76,400 more people unemployed or out of the labour force by
March 2011. Unemployment will peak in March 2010 and people
with lower skills are likely to make up 75 percent of the
increase.
“The growing group of people affected by the
recession could be enrolled in high-quality courses to boost
their industry skills, preparing them for a higher-level
role than they left, or retraining them for growing sectors.
This would address both unemployment increases and help
develop a more productive workforce and a faster-growing
economy in 2010 and 2011, Mr Guerin added.
“ITPs are
best-placed to respond with their regional focus, strong
networks with their communities, and strength in providing
applied professional and vocational education which is
developed alongside industry. ITPs have both the capability
and flexibility to respond immediately to increased
enrolments in skill-development courses.”
ITPNZ has
identified four groups most affected by the recession, and
expects an increase in ITP enrolments from those groups.
They are people who have lost their jobs; people who are
under-employed, such as workers in firms working fewer
shifts or shorter weeks; school-leavers who delay entry into
the labour force; and tertiary-education students choosing
to study longer.
Correction
The 13 November edition of
Tertiary Update quoted the Otago Daily Times to the effect
that the University of Otago is “expecting another budget
deficit of up to $26 million next year”. It has now become
clear that the story was erroneous and confused the
operating surplus/deficit with investment in capital
facilities.
In fact, as Otago vice-chancellor, Professor
David Skegg, has pointed out, the 2008 surpluses are
forecast to be $25.7 million for the university and $22.7
million for the group, including companies and trusts. In
addition, the 2009 budget projects an operating surplus of
$19.6 million for the university.
Tertiary Update regrets
reproducing the error.
World Watch
UK academics reject
“spying”
Academics and students have presented a
4,500-signature petition to Downing Street, urging the
government to withdraw new immigration rules for overseas
students in the United Kingdom. From next March,
universities will be expected to monitor whether overseas
students are attending tutorials.
In response, many
academics have complained they are being asked to “spy”
on students in a quasi-immigration-officer role. The
government, however, replied that it must clamp down on
foreign nationals exploiting the system by using student
visas as a bogus route into the UK.
The petition has
been organised by Ian Grigg-Spall, academic chair of the
National Critical Lawyers’ Group and honorary fellow at
Kent Law School. Mr Grigg-Spall said that there has to be
trust between teacher and student. “Now if they think that
we’re wearing two hats, teacher, but also a hat labelled
‘immigration officer’, I think that’s a complete
contradiction.” “That’s why I say it’s a breach of
our university autonomy and why in fact it’s a breach of
academic freedom,” Mr Grigg-Spall added. “This is a
slippery slope, this is a dangerous slope, and as a human
rights lawyer, I am very worried.”
From next year,
universities will have to have a licence to offer places to
students from outside the European Union. They will also
have to act as sponsors for overseas students and lecturers
will be expected to monitor these students’ attendance at
tutorials and report if they fail to attend.
A
spokesperson for the Home Office said, “Universities have
a duty of care to all their students; checking that they are
attending and making progress is part of that
responsibility. Institutions benefit from bringing foreign
students to the UK, so they must share some responsibility
for them whilst they are here. These requirements were
discussed at length and agreed with Universities UK and
other representatives of the higher-education sector as part
of our consultation,” the spokesperson concluded.
From
the BBC
Push for a national bush
university
Australia’s biggest university could be
created if a merger of regional universities recommended by
the recent Bradley review of higher education is adopted.
Two regional universities, Lismore-based University of
Southern Cross (USC) and Bathurst-based Charles Sturt
University (CSU), have already announced they will merge,
and USC vice-chancellor Paul Clark has said that more than
70,000 students could attend the new institution if a third
university were to join them.
The move anticipates what
is understood to be a recommendation for a new mechanism for
higher-education provision in regional Australia, based on a
serious fall in participation. It is widely perceived that
there is over-provision in some places, no provision at all
in others, and a lack of will on the part of governments to
address the issue.
In a push aimed at getting greater
numbers of poorer rural and regional students into tertiary
education, however, the two regionally based New South Wales
universities said they had the support of deputy prime
minister Julia Gillard for the merger. Professor Clark said,
“Both the Bradley review and the deputy prime minister are
looking for a really innovative approach to regional
delivery. We think a commonwealth university [of regional
Australia] will have open to it all of the ways to create a
national university.”
Professor Clark’s partner in
the merger, CSU vice-chancellor Ian Goulter, said a
condition of Ms Gillard’s backing is a requirement that
the merger include a third university, but one from outside
NSW. “Charles Sturt is about providing professionals for
regional Australia and there’s an absolute alignment
between CSU’s position as the national university of
inland Australia and the establishment of a commonwealth
cross-state-jurisdiction university,” Professor Goulter
said.
From Guy Healey in the Australian
South African
academics seek ruling on academic freedom
About 150 of
the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s staff have put their
names to a petition calling on education minister Naledi
Pandor to intervene in an long-running dispute at the
university over academic freedom. The argument, reported on
in earlier editions of Tertiary Update, has pitted the
university’s vice-chancellor, Malegapuru Makgoba, against
some of the 4000 staff members, of whom 1960 are academics,
and international scholars.
Ms Pandor said at the weekend
she could informally meet Professor Makgoba to discuss the
issue and the negative publicity it has been garnering for a
university she described as one of South Africa’s
better-performing higher-education institutions.
The
petition was also signed by about 60 academics from other
universities in South Africa and other countries, as well as
alumni. They joined 34 international academics from
universities including Stanford, Oxford, Chicago, New York,
London, and Denmark’s Roskilde University, who last month
signed a letter of protest addressed to Professor Makgoba
and the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s council chair, Mac
Mia. They warned that the incident could hinder
research-collaboration and staff-development programmes
between that institution and international
universities.
Although there have been rumblings about
the status of academic freedom at the university for quite a
long time, the issue reached a head a few months ago when
the university’s management instituted disciplinary action
against two of its top academics who criticised Professor
Makgoba in the media. He has put out a communique to staff
warning that “academic debates and arguments, unlike
political ones, are not won through the mass mobilisation of
troops but by the presentation of simple facts and the
simple truths”.
From Sue Blaine in Business
Day
Challenging times for Solomon Islands education
The
Solomon Islands’ only higher-education institution, the
Solomon Islands College of Higher Education (SICHE), is
facing even greater challenges than those already faced in
recent years, according to its director, Dickson Ha’amori,
speaking at the college’s graduation last week. Based on a
theme of “Relevancy for Education”, the Honiara ceremony
saw the graduation of 736 students.
In his address, Mr
Ha’amori said, “The physical size of our college is a
serious barrier to accessing tertiary-education
opportunities and services available here. While the demand
for places in SICHE continues to increase, the college needs
to be expanded.”
Mr Ha’amori said that the current
management is aware of most of the things that need to be
addressed, “but needs financial assistance to get them
done”. He acknowledged the national government for its
continuous support to the college over the years but added
that, among the many challenges faced, one is limited houses
on campus to accommodate all staff members.
Mr Ha’amori
said that the college has been forced to house some of its
workers in motels, which is very expensive. “SICHE is
stretching its budget when it comes to housing but, despite
all these challenges, SICHE will continue to support
upgrading its staff,” he confirmed.
From Gina Maka’a
in Solomon Times
“Find the excellence”, lecturer
told
A senior lecturer at a leading university has spoken
out about the pressure across the sector to mark students’
work leniently, detailing examples of his own marking
decisions being overturned. Stuart Derbyshire, a
psychologist at the University of Birmingham, described how
an examiner increased the marks he had given his students
and told him he had to “work harder to find the
excellence” in his students’ work. Dr Derbyshire also
said that, after he failed one essay for being “fatally
flawed”, the student got a D grade regardless.
Dr
Derbyshire argues that grade inflation is occurring
nationally but that “there is considerable reluctance to
face the problem”. He has submitted a paper on his
concerns to the Commons Select Committee for Innovation,
Universities, Science and Skills, which is carrying out an
inquiry into university standards. He has been backed by
some of his students.
In 2006-07, 13 percent of UK
graduates received a first-class degree, compared with 8
percent in 1996-97. A recent Times Higher Education poll of
more than 500 readers found that seven out of ten believed
that rising numbers of firsts do not reflect improving
standards.
Reflecting on his experiences, Dr Derbyshire
recalled one instance in which an examiner added three marks
to the results for every student on a course. When he
complained, the examiner said, “We can’t work according
to what it was like 20 years ago. We have to find excellence
wherever we can.” That was when he was told, “You need
to work harder to find the excellence.”
In another
case, Dr Derbyshire said that the way one of his courses was
moderated “meant that an essay I failed for being fatally
flawed ended up getting a D. The student concerned was then
profiled from a 2:2 to a 2:1.”
From Melanie Newman in
Times Higher Education
Farewells and greetings
With the
imminent formation of the Tertiary Education Union, TEU
Tertiary Update will make This edition of AUS Tertiary
Update is the last to be edited by Graeme Whimp and the last
to appear under that title. It also marks the final
departure of Marty Braithwaite, who edited Update for five
years and continued to subedit it for most of this
year.
its appearance in early February next year under
the editorship of Stephen Day, the TEU communications and
campaign organiser. Stephen can be contacted in the new year
at Stephen.Day@teu.ac.nz.
We want to thank all our
readers for their support, participation, and occasional
correction over the years, and extend our best wishes for
the new year.
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