AUS Tertiary Update
Unspent PTE funding to be
redistributed
More than $19 million in unspent funding
intended for private tertiary education providers this year
is expected to be redistributed to new or growing private
training establishments (PTEs) in 2004. Associate Education
(Tertiary) Minister Steve Maharey has announced that the
unused funding will be reallocated through a strategic
priorities fund to PTEs offering qualifications in ‘priority
areas of private tertiary education and training’.
The
overall government funding available to PTEs in 2003 was set
at $146 million, with funding to individual providers capped
at the same number of equivalent full-time students they
enrolled in 2001. A contestable fund also allowed some
providers additional funding over 2001 levels.
Mr Maharey
said that some PTEs had not used all of their allocations
and others “exited” the system in 2003, creating the pool of
unspent money. He said the government wanted to ensure that
the unallocated funding was reallocated to the more
successful PTEs “who have the ability to offer extra
education for students”.
The Association of University
Staff says, however, that the unspent funding should be
reinvested in the public sector. AUS National President, Dr
Bill Rosenberg, says the government should take the
opportunity created by the failure of PTEs such as Carich
and Modern Age to to review whether private institutions
should receive public funding at all, and to immediately
reduce the overall funding handed over to private
institutions. “To say these institutions ‘exited’ the system
is an insult to all those students who lost money and to
staff who lost their jobs. It shows the Minister is not a
fast learner in regard to this sector,” said Dr. Rosenberg.
“Funding to private institutions rose rapidly in the
dying days of the National government in the late 199’s and
the present government has done nothing but cap this
funding,” said Dr. Rosenberg. “The recent crashes have
raised, once again, questions about why private providers
should profit from public funding, particularly where
facilities provided by public institutions are duplicated in
the private sector. Students, staff, public education and
the public are suffering as a result of this badly conceived
and deteriorating policy”.
Education Review reports that
nine private providers used less than 60% of their funding
allocation over the past two years, while a further three
are expected to utilise less than 50% of their allocation
this year. The worst performers were in 13 courses that used
less than 20 per cent of the funding allocated to them. 42
courses run by private providers used less than 60% of the
funding allocated to them through the strategic priorities
fund this year
Mr Maharey said that in addition to
renewed funding for PTEs in 2004, a contestable funding
round will be held in March 2004 to distribute the remainder
of the Strategic Priorities Fund. The Tertiary Education
Commission will invite applications for this funding later
this month.
Total government funding for PTEs in 2004
will be capped at $150 million.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. More funding needed for universities says
Maharey
2. Bids for new funds exceed expectation
3. Auckland leads the way in supporting international
student industry
4. Rebel MPs force top-up fees retreat
until New Year
5. British student arrested in
Iraq
6. Lecturer “too old” for college job
More funding
needed for universities says Maharey
The Association of
University Staff (AUS today welcomed the statement from the
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary) Steve Maharey
that more investment is needed in the university system.
Delegates to the AUS annual conference, being held in
Wellington this week, were told by Mr. Maharey today that
additional funding, over and above that already proposed for
targeted initiatives, was needed within in the sector but
said it would more likely come initially from a
redistribution of resources from within the
sector.
Conference delegates said that while the Minister
needed to ensure that additional funding was allocated for
universities in next year’s Budget, the $19 million that had
not been spent in the private tertiary sector this year
could be immediately reallocated to universities. “This
would show some genuine desire to resolve funding
difficulties,” said AUS National President Dr. Bill
Rosenberg.
Mr. Maharey told the AUS conference that a
number of new initiatives would focus on building capacity
and assisting the sector “to transition to the new tertiary
environment”. He outlined details of a planned Review of the
Tertiary Education Workforce which will be conducted over
2004 and the first half of 2005; a Review of Quality
designed to enhance the quality of teaching and learning;
and the proposed teaching performance element of the funding
framework.
Mr. Maharey said he intended to work with
stakeholders, including staff and students, to identify
needs that the tertiary education system, aligned with the
Tertiary Education Strategy, will be required to meet in the
future. He gave several examples, such as the Canterbury
Tertiary Alliance, where efficiencies within the system
could “flourish and contribute to an improved sector
performance”.
In response to questions, Mr. Maharey said
that the establishment and compliance costs would also
reduce with the on-going implementation of the
Performance-based Research Fund.
Bids for new funds
exceed expectation
The Tertiary Education Commission
(TEC) has received more than 264 applications for two new
funding programmes. The applications oversubscribe the
available funding by almost $200 million.
105
applications, amounting to $93 million, were received for
the $14 million available in the e-Learning Collaborative
Development Fund (eCDF) and 159 applications, totalling $134
million, were received for the $20 million available in the
Innovation and Development Fund (IDF).
“Applications for
the 2003/04-2004/05 round of funding closed on 10 October
and we are pleased with the outstanding response and that
tertiary education organisations have shown so much interest
in bidding. We are now prioritising these applications
against our assessment criteria,” said TEC Chair Dr Andrew
West.
The Government has set aside $68 million over the
four funding years 2003/04 to 2007/08 for the two new
capital and operational funds as part of its programme of
developing the capability of tertiary education
organisations.
The purpose of the eCDF is to build
e-learning capability in tertiary education in the form of
information and communication (ICT) tools and knowledge. The
IDF is intended to foster new and innovative ideas that will
improve the operation of the tertiary education system.
All bids have been screened to ensure they meet set
criteria and eligible applications have been put forward to
an Assessment Panel for each of the two funds, comprising
senior representatives from the TEC, Ministry of Education
and New Zealand Trade and Enterprise, and relevant external
experts.
“All applications need to clearly show their
contribution to the Government’s Tertiary Education
Strategy, how they increase the provision of capability for
this strategy, how they avoid fiscal risk to the Government
and the applicant’s ability to undertake the project,” said
Dr West.
The Assessment Panels’ recommendations will be
put forward to the Tertiary Education Commissioners who will
make the final decisions on which applications will receive
funding. Applicants will be notified of the decisions in the
week of 22 December 2003.
Round two of the funding will
open for applications in the second half of 2004.
Auckland
leads the way in supporting international student
industry
A report on the state of international education
in Auckland city has prompted the Auckland City Council to
consider bringing together key industry stakeholders to
discuss ways to address a number of issues which have been
identified.
The Infometrics Consulting report,
‘International students – their impact on Auckland City’,
was commissioned by Auckland City and provides information
on how the international education industry has developed,
and gives some insight into what is needed to achieve
sustainable growth and better manage its impact on the
city.
The report confirms that the international student
industry brings $930 million a year into Auckland city, but
raises a number of questions for discussion. They include
industry regulation, quality standards for homestay
students, the consistency of the Immigration Service
decisions, and strategies to reduce risks through
diversifying markets, providing new services and addressing
quality issues.
Key industry players, including
representatives from central and local government, agencies,
education and pastoral care providers and those who can
assist with infrastructure requirements, will meet to
discuss the report with the aim of driving the industry
forward in the Auckland.
Worldwatch
Rebel MPs force
top-up fees retreat until New Year
The British government
has decided to delay publishing plans to introduce
university top-up fees in the face of opposition from rebel
MPs. The higher education bill had been pencilled in for
this week but has been put off for several weeks to allow Mr
Blair to avoid a Commons showdown before Christmas.
A
strong appeal by education secretary Charles Clarke to the
prime minister to hold the vote before Christmas was finally
rebuffed after a meeting between the two. Downing Street
apparently ordered the delay because whips could count on
winning back only about 40 of the 133 rebel Labour MPs for a
vote before Christmas. The government needs to win back at
least 50 to be certain of victory.
Delaying the higher
education bill could prevent universities implementing the
top-up fees during 2006, the scheme's planned first year of
operation, because universities will have too little time to
agree fee levels, according to Universities UK. The sector’s
umbrella body warned this week that delay was ‘worrying’ as
applicants sitting A-levels in 2005 but taking a year out
before starting university in 2006 would have to be informed
of the charges attached to courses in prospectuses before
they were equipped to make a choice.
It is anticipated
that the government will increase the salary level at which
graduates would have to start repaying the fees from the
current proposed £15,000 a year to £18,000 or even
£20,000.
British student arrested in Iraq
A British
university student has been seized in northern Iraq,
suspected of trying to join a terrorist group linked to
al-Qaeda, which is attacking coalition forces. The student,
from Yarm, near Middlesbrough, was found last month
travelling on a British passport through the mountains of
Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq. The Manchester University
student was intercepted near Erbil by a Kurdish security
police patrol while travelling in a taxi with a second man
whose identity are unknown.
Lecturer “too old” for college
job
A lecturer, who was headhunted by an art college but
rejected when it discovered that she was 67 years old, may
sue for breach of contract. The lecturer was asked to
prepare a lecture and a series of tutorials for Winchester
School of Art, part of Southampton University in the UK,
after the college saw her impressive CV. No one asked her
age, although she stated her date of birth on her
application. She was interviewed by the school's head of
fashion and sent a contract. She returned it, with a form
exempting her from national insurance because she is of
retirement age. The lecturer then received a call telling
her that the offer was being withdrawn because the
university was "cracking down" on people working beyond
normal retirement
age.