AUS Tertiary Update
TEC withholds individual
PBRF score
The AUS has welcomed a decision by the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) to withhold from the
University of Auckland the Performance-Based Research Fund
(PBRF) evidence portfolio assessment result of one of its
academic staff. It comes after the Auckland AUS Branch
President, Associate Professor Peter Wills, placed a
restriction on the release of his individual assessment
prior to submitting his evidence portfolio and, as a result,
the TEC has agreed that only the aggregated grade for
Associate Professor Wills’ department will be released to
the University. His individual quality score will remain
confidential.
When compiling his portfolio, Associate
Professor Wills stipulated that the information was supplied
for the sole purpose of assisting the TEC to generate a
personal quality score that could then be aggregated with
others “in the matter of deciding how certain research funds
could be disbursed by government”. He advised the University
that permission must be obtained from him before any use,
other than for that purpose, was made of his
information.
Associate Professor Wills then told the TEC
that permission to return his personal score to the
University of Auckland was “categorically denied”. In turn,
the TEC have advised Associate Professor Wills that his
individual grade will not now be released.
In welcoming
the decision not to release Associate Professor Wills’
score, AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg has called
for all individual scores to remain confidential. “The
decision not to provide Professor Wills’ individual grade to
the University is a significant precedent that will be
widely publicised,” he said. “Other academics will see it as
inequitable and unacceptable that some staff will have their
personal information released to their institutions, while
others do not. This is particularly so if some institutions
attempt to use individual PBRF assessments for promotion
purposes or, as has already been the case at Victoria
University, to set remuneration rates. The likely
consequence is that other staff will now want the same
opportunity as Associate Professor Wills not to have their
personal information released to their institution. Any
differentiation would lead to confusion and administrative
difficulty”.
Dr Rosenberg said that AUS has consistently
opposed the release of individual scores and encouraged
other university staff to apply to TEC not to have
individual scores released. He said that individuals would
still have the right to request their individual scores from
the TEC.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. NZ
universities ranked in top 500
2. Tertiary teaching and
learning quality project announced
3. Bonus paid to
Massey staff
4. TEC calls for more vocational
education
5. Blair survives fees
vote
6. Schwarzenegger set to slash education
spending
NZ universities ranked in top 500
Three New
Zealand universities have made it into a prestigious top 500
ranking of world universities. The University of Auckland
came out on top of other New Zealand institutions at 201
equal, along with 50 others.
Massey University and the
University of Otago were ranked at 351 equal out of the top
500. None of the other New Zealand universities were in the
500 universities ranked.
The Academic Ranking of World
Universities 2003 report, conducted by the Shanghai Jiao
Tong University's Institute of Higher Education, ranks the
world's top 500 universities on academic and research
performance. The universities were evaluated by several
indicators of research performance.
The top three
universities were Harvard, Princeton, and the California
Institute of Technology.
The Australian National
University was the only Australian institution to make it
into the top 50, coming in at No. 49.
The University of
Auckland was placed at No. 23 of the top 100 universities in
the Asia-Pacific region. Massey and Otago were 50th-equal.
No other New Zealand universities were ranked.
Tertiary
teaching and learning quality project announced
The
government is to look at how to enhance the quality of
tertiary education teaching and learning this year with the
implementation of The Enhancing Quality Project. The project
will investigate how existing quality assurance arrangements
can be enhanced to support better teaching and learning.
It is part of moves to develop a stronger ‘culture of
quality’ within the tertiary education sector, which
includes the need to maintain and enhance the quality of
student’s learning outcomes; an understanding, commitment to
use and sense of responsibility for the systems which are in
place for maintaining and enhancing quality (that is,
continual improvement); and ensuring that effective
infrastructure and processes are in place so that continual
quality improvement can be guaranteed at each tertiary
education organisation.
The Project will be guided by an
expert working group drawn from the tertiary education
sector. An initial scoping exercise is now underway to seek
the opinions of stakeholders on the key issues to be
included for investigation.
Announcing the project,
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary) Steve Maharey
said the Project is a key step in realising the objective
included in the five year Tertiary Education Strategy that
‘learners and the wider public have confidence in high
levels of quality throughout the system’.
“The government
wants to ensure better educational outcomes for all
learners. This project will look at what further
infrastructure, systems and processes are needed to ensure
teaching and learning excellence is consistently
achieved.
“The oversight of quality assurance in the
tertiary education sector is the responsibility of the New
Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA), and other quality
assurance bodies, and will remain so. The government
believes that it is important to separate NZQA’s
responsibilities for quality assurance from the Tertiary
Education Commission’s responsibilities for allocating
funding,” he said.
Bonus paid to Massey staff
Massey
University staff received a one-off pay bonus of $750
immediately before Christmas last year, in what
Vice-Chancellor Professor Judith Kinnear described as
recognition of outstanding efforts and achievements in
2003.
“This special payment is a way of thanking those
who have contributed towards the excellent results the
University has achieved during 2003, not only financially,
but also in teaching, curriculum development, research,
research training, external grants, consultancies,
commercialisation and in the administrative, technical and
other support areas of the University that are essential to
our academic endeavours,” said Professor Kinnear.
AUS
Massey Branch President Harvey Jones said that although the
one-off bonus was a positive gesture, the unions should have
been consulted and would have preferred the additional pay
be added to base pay rates. Mr Jones said the bonus came
during national salary negotiations and would do nothing to
address significant pay deficiencies in the
sector.
National employment agreement negotiations resume
in Wellington on 11 February.
TEC calls for more
vocational education
AUS National President, Dr Bill
Rosenberg, has raised concerns regarding a media release
from the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) this week. In
the release, the TEC Chair, Dr Andrew West encouraged
secondary school students and their parents to view a study
path which leads into vocational, instead of academic
education. Dr West said that the country is facing areas of
growing skill shortages and it is vital high school students
understand the changing nature of the workforce and the
skills needed. He also believed that New Zealand didn’t have
the “best mix” to power our businesses and industries.
Dr
Rosenberg said that he agreed that it is essential that our
tertiary education system provides for a wide range of
educational and training needs and that vocational education
should be more respected as an option than is currently the
case. He was concerned, however, at the apparent bias
towards vocational skills based training at the expense of
academic education. “Relative to other countries, New
Zealand still has a low percentage of university qualified
people in its workforce,” he said. “Only 14 per cent of our
workforce has a university qualification, compared to 19 per
cent of the Australian workforce”. [OECD data 2001]
Dr
Rosenberg said that in light of Dr West’s comments, the
Government should confirm its commitment to academic
learning, and advise whether it intends to deal with major
funding woes in the sector.
Worldwatch
Blair survives
fees vote
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has narrowly
escaped defeat with the narrow passing of a controversial
bill which will allow universities in England and Wales to
increase student tuition fees of up to £3,000 per year from
2006. Labour’s 161-vote majority was reduced to just 5, as
Parliament voted for the change by 316 votes to 311 on
Tuesday this week. Seventy three Labour MPs voted against
the Government, with commentators describing it as a pyrrhic
victory for a “wounded” and “humiliated” Blair. The
legislation will be reviewed further in the House of Commons
before proceeding to the House of Lords.
Reaction to the
legislation has been sharply divided. While many university
administrators have welcomed the bill, student and staff
leaders have described the proposals as “deeply regressive”
and have vowed to fight them at every stage through the
Commons and Lords. Association of University Teachers (AUT)
General Secretary Sally Hunt said that AUT members
vehemently opposed this tax on students and rejected any
idea that the variable fees would improve pay for staff. She
promised that AUT would stand shoulder to shoulder with the
National Union of Students to tackle the twin problems of
top-up fees for students and poor pay for
staff.
Schwarzenegger budget to slash education
spending
California’s Republican governor, Arnold
Schwarzenegger, has outlined a budget proposal this month
which includes massive cuts to health, education and other
social service spending in the state. $729 million will be
cut from higher education spending as part of a package
aimed at eliminating a $14.3 billion gap between expected
tax revenues and expenditures. Enrolment for the state
universities will be capped and those that enter will face
increasing costs and fewer and smaller grants. Tuition and
fees for California university students will increase ten
percent for undergraduates and about 40 percent for graduate
students. Community college fees will increase by 44
percent, on top of last year’s 64 percent increase. Many
low-income students who currently qualify for Cal-grants
scholarships will find that they are no longer eligible.
There have been published estimates that the higher tuition
will cut incoming University of California and California
State first year classes by 10 percent, or 7,200
students.
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays
by the
Association of University Staff
PO Box 11 767
Wellington, New Zealand.
Phone (+64 4) 915 6690 Fax
(+64 4) 915 6699 Website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz.
Direct enquiries to Marty
Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz