AUS Tertiary Update
Big losses for polytechnics
with fee-maxima
The viability of a substantial number of
polytechnic courses has been threatened by the introduction
of fee-maxima in 2004. ASTE, the union representing
polytechnic staff, says that those advising government on
fee-maxima failed to properly take into account course costs
when considering the new maximum fee levels able to be set
for students in the tertiary sector. As a result some
polytechnic students face the prospect of having courses
cancelled or qualification programmes axed mid-stream. Other
students, in low cost areas, face significant fee increases
to cross-subsidise high cost courses.
The recent Budget
set maximum fee levels for tertiary courses, which include
both tuition fees and courses costs, and it is the latter
which have not been properly considered says ASTE National
President, Lloyd Woods. He said there are significant areas
where the Fees-Maxima Working Group, the group which advised
government on the matter, had insufficient information on
which to base its advice or had simply underestimated the
true level of course costs.
Mr. Woods said those
polytechnics which offered overseas (such as the
London-based City & Guilds cookery course) qualifications,
or where there were high compliance or materials costs,
stood to lose most. He cited the example of aviation courses
where actual course costs were in excess of $10,000 and the
potential losses for polytechnics could be as much as $5,000
per student. Similarly, maritime courses with sea-going and
firefighting elements cost more than $13,000 per student to
run, and could result in losses of around $2,000 per EFTS.
Outdoor education, broadcasting, performing arts,
professional cookery, photography and forestry courses are
also expected to be hit hard with losses of between $1,000
and $2,000 per student.
Some polytechnics estimate that
the financial loss could be as high as 17% across the
sector, with one polytechnic estimating its loss alone to be
more than $3 million. Mr. Woods said that unless there is
some recognition of the problem by government, polytechnics
will have to absorb the additional costs, cross subsidise,
or cancel courses.
Mr. Woods said that polytechnics were
further disadvantaged because they were not eligible for the
moratorium on fee-maxima whereby private providers whose
current fees and course costs are higher than the maxima
will have a year to comply.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Assessment criteria for charters cause
concern
2. University boosts regional
profile
3. Waikato merger plans with AUT
4. Tairawhiti
Polytech settles
5. Australian VCs oppose funding
links
Assessment criteria for charters cause
concern
Assessment criteria recently announced for
tertiary education organisation charters have drawn a sharp
reaction from the New Zealand Vice Chancellor’s Committee
(NZVCC). NZVCC describes the assessment criteria as “coming
out of left field” and say they cannot easily be aligned
with the content of charters.
The assessment criteria
expand the original charter requirements in a way that NZVCC
says blur the distinction between charters and profiles. It
had originally been understood that charters would be brief
documents, setting out the broad goals and strategy of an
organisation, while profiles would contain the expanded
detail of the strategy against which the organization would
be measured. The assessment criteria recently announced
require significantly greater detail and are much more
prescriptive than expected. Reports indicate that the
changes have been driven by Treasury and the Tertiary
Advisory Monitoring Unit (TAMU). AUS and other sector groups
say there has been little or no consultation. Some of the
changes are seen as unnecessary and expensive, and indicate
that charters, rather than profiles, will become the main
document against which institutions will be
measured.
NZVCC says that the Tertiary Education
Commission (TEC) requires charters to be completed by 30
September, a goal which would have been attainable under the
original charter content proposal.
AUS understands that
the tight timeframe has been in part driven by concerns at
government level at the time it is taking to implement
tertiary reforms.
University boosts regional
profile
The University of Otago is Dunedin’s biggest
employer and claims to have injected $771.1 million into the
Dunedin economy in 2002, according to the University’s
Economic Impact Report released this week. It is an increase
of more than $30 million (or 3.6%) on 2001. The report also
claims that the Christchurch and Wellington Schools of
Medicine pumped more that $19.7 million and $23.8 million
respectively into those cities, and the Auckland centre
contributed $1.3 million to the Auckland economy.
The
University has 2994 full-time equivalent staff, of which
just under half are academic staff, making it the largest
employer in the region ahead of the District Health Board
with 2306 staff and the third placed, meat company, PPCS
with 740 staff.
Vice-Chancellor, Dr Graeme Fogelberg
says that the result shows that “as well as enjoying the
status as a national leader in tertiary education and one of
the largest businesses in the South Island, the University
also continues to contribute significantly to the New
Zealand economy as a whole.”
AUS Branch President, Mark
Peters, noted that the University employed in excess of 6%
of the local workforce, and said government would need to
address underfunding of the university sector and resolve
important recruitment and retention issues if Otago was to
maintain its position as “an institution of major
significance”. Mr. Peters said that staff salaries
contributed around $118.8 million into the local economy, up
$10.6 million on 2001, and that the University had a
responsibility to ensure that pay rates and conditions of
employment set the benchmark for the region, and that
academic salaries maintained international
relativities.
Waikato merger plans with AUT
As
foreshadowed in Tertiary Update a fortnight ago, Waikato
University and the Auckland University of Technology (AUT)
have agreed to begin talks about closer integration of the
two institutions. Waikato’s acting Chancellor John Jackman
said in a statement that “the Councils of Waikato and AUT
believe there could be potentially significant benefits from
an arrangement to cooperate which needs to be investigated.
Our talks will investigate how best this can be
done.
“Any eventual developments will need to work for
both institutions and the communities they serve. We will
also want to proceed in a way that is consistent with the
thrust of government policy,” he said.
Waikato’s
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould, says he intends that
Waikato staff will be kept up to date with
developments”.
Meanwhile proposals to develop a campus in
Manukau are on hold while Manukau City Council conducts a
study to determine the tertiary education needs of the
city’s residents. It is expected that this will take two to
three months.
Tairawhiti Polytech settles
Staff at
Gisborne’s Tairawhiti Polytechnic have voted to accept a pay
deal which gives a salary increase of 3% per annum in each
of the next two years. The pay increase will be backdated to
2 March. Other changes agreed to by staff include
improvements to parental leave provisions and the inclusion
of policy on consultation. ASTE National President, Lloyd
Woods, says that the deal has resulted in Tairawhiti staff
pulling out of multi-employer negotiations with seven
polytechnic employers.
Meanwhile stalled negotiations
with the six remaining employers heads to mediation in
Auckland today in an effort to make progress in those
talks.
Worldwatch
Australian VCs oppose funding
links
The Australian National Tertiary Education Union
(NTEU) has welcomed a request by the Australian Vice
Chancellors’ Committee (AVCC) to the Federal Government to
drop plans to link university funding to radical changes in
university governance and workplace relations. The Budget
included significant financial inducements for
vice-chancellors and universities to replace collective
bargaining with individual employment contracts.
AVCC
President, Professor Deryck Schreuder, said one of the key
areas of concern in the Federal Government’s higher
education reform package is the linking of additional new
funds to governance and workplace relation reforms.
“The
AVCC has argued that funds to support the quality of
teaching and learning should best be tied to areas related
to performance in those areas, and not contingent upon
workplace and governance reform.”
NTEU General Secretary
Grahame McCullough welcomed the call by AVCC, saying that
“the NTEU’s position on any attempt to tie additional
university funding to governance and workplace relations is
clear: It is a recipe for confrontation between staff and
management and will create a bureaucratic and administrative
nightmare for
universities.”
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
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