AUS Tertiary Update
Funding slide threatens
quality of university education
University funding has
declined by 23 per cent in real terms over the past decade
according to research released last evening by the
Association of University Staff (AUS) and the New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee (NZVCC).
The research report,
University income and student numbers between 1980 and 2002,
by economists Guy and Helen Scott investigated trends in New
Zealand and compared the data with that from relevant OECD
countries.
Report findings show that Ministry of
Education funding per domestic equivalent full-time student
(EFTS) in universities fell, in inflation adjusted terms,
from $9609 in 1992 to $7367 in 2002, and that staff to
student ratios had increased from 1:12.5 in 1980 to 1:18.3
in 2002.
Speaking at the launch of the report, AUS
National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said that public
investment in our universities is highly productive but was
being allowed to steadily deteriorate. “That cannot be
allowed to continue,” he said.
Government assertions that
the erosion of university funding which occurred under the
previous administration had now stopped were incorrect, said
Dr Rosenberg. “Between 1999 and 2002, Government grants to
universities fell from 46 per cent to 42 per cent of total
operating revenue. Over the same time, income from student
tuition fees increased from 23 per cent to 29 per cent, all
of that increase being from international student
fees.”
Dr Rosenberg pointed to the current cap on tuition
fees, through the fees maxima policy, which meant that
approximately two thirds of university income was now
determined by the Government even though it provided only 42
percent of operating revenue. “Universities have increased
their incomes by reliance on at-risk sources such as
international student fees and contestable research
contracts,” he said. “The report’s authors had commented
that this situation reduced job security for staff.”
Dr
Rosenberg said that the compound effect of diminished
funding and high student to staff ratios would have an
effect on the quality of university teaching and research.
Most universities were finding it harder to attract good
international academic staff and there were predictions of a
major international staff crisis within universities by
2010.
The full report and accompanying documents can be
found on the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Injunction stops PBRF
release
2. University negotiations heading for mediation
3. New Vice-Chancellor for Lincoln
4. Living
allowance campaign launched.
5. Lincoln enrolments off
to “flying start”
6. Progress in UK pay
talks
7. Private colleges to compete for state
funds
Injunction stops PBRF release
The University of
Auckland and Victoria University of Wellington yesterday
afternoon successfully obtained an interim injunction from
the High Court to stop the release of the Tertiary Education
Commission’s (TEC) Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF)
report.
The injunction, which was granted only hours
before the release of individual grades to universities,
concerned an appendix in the report that attempts to compare
the average quality categories or grades of New Zealand
universities in the PBRF exercise with British universities
in the Research Assessment Exercise (RAE).
Victoria
University of Wellington Vice-Chancellor Professor Stuart
McCutcheon said that vice-chancellors had strongly objected
to the inclusion of the information in the report since they
found out about it two weeks ago, and had repeatedly sought
its removal.
“It is totally invalid and inappropriate to
compare the performance of universities in two different
countries with significantly different tertiary funding
systems and assessed according to quite different criteria.
It is like comparing apples with oranges and will damage the
reputation and standing of New Zealand’s universities both
domestically and internationally,” he said.
University of
Auckland Vice-Chancellor Dr John Hood said that the
universities had no problem with the publication of the
report as long as the international comparisons were
withdrawn. “We are only taking this action to challenge the
appendix and four related paragraphs which we believe
contain flawed international comparisons,” he said. “We are
happy to be compared with British universities as long as
that comparison is valid.”
Supporting the concerns
expressed by the vice-chancellors, AUS National President Dr
Bill Rosenberg said that the UK system used departmental
assessments based on a limited number of selected staff to
determine RAE scores, whereas New Zealand had graded all
staff. He said that comparable UK universities have more
favourable research conditions, including better staff to
student ratios and higher levels of funding.
The General
Manager of the TEC, Ann Clark, said TEC would not be
releasing the report until it had time to study the
implications of the injunction.
University negotiations
heading for mediation
An industrial mediator has been
brought in to try and make progress between university
employers and unions after attempts to negotiate new
national collective employment agreements across the sector
reached an impasse.
At stop-work meetings held over the
last two weeks, university staff comprehensively rejected
salary offers of between 2% and 2.8% made by the employers
to renew current enterprise-based collective employment
agreements. University employers have refused to agree to
national collective agreements.
Staff are currently
engaged in low level protest activity which is aimed at
telling Government and university employers that significant
salary increases and national collective employment
agreements are urgently needed in the university sector, and
must be funded by Government. The protest action, which
began on Monday, will continue until the end of next week.
AUS Industrial Officer Jeff Rowe said that unless
significant progress is made, a recommendation will be made
to union members to take up to ten days strike action.
Support for such action was foreshadowed at recent
meetings.
Mediation is scheduled to take place in
Wellington on Tuesday 23 and Wednesday 24 March.
New
Vice-Chancellor for Lincoln
Professor Roger Field has
been appointed Vice-Chancellor of Lincoln University,
effective from 1 April. Professor Field has been the
University’s Acting Vice-Chancellor since the retirement of
Dr Frank Wood in October last year, and he has also served
in that capacity on two other occasions. Announcing the
appointment, Chancellor Margaret Austin says that Professor
Field comes to the position with an outstanding combination
of academic and administrative experience at a senior level
and as a notable contributor to tertiary education in New
Zealand, Australia and Europe.
The appointment was
unanimously supported by the University Council and Mrs
Austin said the selection process was robust and
comprehensive, and included consultation with groups drawn
from all sectors within the University. “Professor Field is
a respected as an educator, researcher, manager and leader
and he has a reputation for decisiveness, clarity and
excellence,” said Mrs Austin. “He is a strategic thinker
whose management strengths are recognised by his peers and
by the University Council. “He has played a major role in
the development and implementation of recent organisational
and structural reviews at Lincoln University from which
significant successes have already flowed.”
AUS National
President Dr Bill Rosenberg welcomed Professor Field’s
appointment, saying that his standing as a researcher and
academic would be invaluable in his new role.
Living
allowance campaign launched.
The Victoria University of
Wellington Students’ Association (VUWSA) has challenged
University management, Wellington City Councillors, Members
of Parliament and Government Ministers to sign a national
petition demanding a living allowance for all tertiary
students. The petition is part of a national campaign
launched by the New Zealand Students’ Association (NZUSA)
seeking to gain a living allowance at the level of the
unemployment benefit for all tertiary students.
VUWSA
President Amanda Hill said that most of the people being
asking to sign the petition had received their tertiary
education for free but many of them now supported a system
that restricts the current living allowance to only a third
of tertiary students. “By signing the petition in the year
before a general election, members of the Government and
University management are publicly supporting a return to
the free education that they received” she said.
Last
week the Vice-Chancellor of Auckland University of
Technology (AUT), Dr John Hinchcliffe, signed the petition
saying that he believed students should be supported while
they gain qualifications at AUT. “We know that too many
students are forced into working long hours to finance their
degrees. A living allowance would permit them to concentrate
on their studies,” he said.
Lincoln enrolments off to
“flying start”
A 15 percent increase in equivalent
full-time student (EFTS) registrations at Lincoln University
has been one of the best first-term enrolment results in
recent years and lays a firm platform for a buoyant 2004,
according to incoming Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roger
Field. “With mid-year entry and our end of year summer
schools still to come, Lincoln is off to a flying start,” he
said.
Bolstering the traditionally strong international
enrolment at Lincoln has been a solid 3 percent lift in the
domestic EFTS total. “This domestic boost is particularly
encouraging given the highly competitive domestic
recruitment market,” said Professor
Field.
Worldwatch
Progress in UK pay
talks
Intervention by the British Trade Union Congress
(TUC) has resulted in signs of a resolution to the current
dispute between university employers and the Association of
University Teachers (AUT) over a proposed new pay framework
for academic and related staff at UK universities.
In a
statement TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber has said that
he will be writing to the AUT and employers “setting out
jointly agreed positive proposals, which it is hoped will
form the basis for a rapid resolution of the current
dispute.”
The intervention of the TUC follows months of
negotiations between the unions and employers which
culminated in strike action in February followed by a
boycott on student assessment, including a refusal to mark
essays and exams.
Under the employers’ proposals many
academic and related staff would have lost up to £2000 per
year.
Private colleges to compete for state
funds
Private colleges in the US state of Washington will
be allowed to receive state aid for students enrolling in
high-demand programs, under a controversial budget provision
passed late last week. The proposal is now being considered
by the Washington Governor’s office.
Some public-college
officials have voiced concerns about allowing private
institutions to benefit from public dollars when there is
not enough state aid to meet the needs of state colleges and
universities. “We're expanding the pool of institutions
competing for a limited amount of money that already is not
enough,” said Larry Ganders, assistant to the president at
Washington State University. He argued that public
institutions in Washington have the space to enrol more
students but are simply limited in how many they can take by
state
regulation.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
issues are archived on the AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz