AUS Tertiary Update
Former Auckland VC highest paid public
servant
Former University of Auckland Vice-Chancellor, Dr
John Hood, was one of the two highest-paid public sector
employees in the country last year, with a remuneration
package valued at between $410,000 and $419,999. It was
worth $40,000 more than he received in 2002 and, alongside
the Commissioner of Police, put him a clear $20,000 ahead of
the Chief Executives of the Department of Courts, Ministry
of Health, Inland Revenue Department and Ministry of
Justice.
The figures were released last week in the
State Services Commission’s 2004 Annual Report, which
provides details of remuneration paid to senior personnel in
the public service and state sector for the year to 31
December 2003. Remuneration, the value of which is reported
in $10,000 bands, is defined as comprising salaries, the
value of motor vehicles, the employers’ contributions to
superannuation and any performance-related payments.
The
biggest mover in the university sector was Lincoln’s former
Vice-Chancellor, Frank Wood, who, between 1 January and 6
October, received a package worth between $340,000 and
$349,999. It was up by almost $100,000 from his $250,000
package for the whole of 2002.
Following recent reports
that last year’s figure included a “golden handshake”,
Lincoln University issued a denial, saying that Dr Wood
received only his salary and “contractual entitlements”. It
did not elaborate on what those contractual entitlements
were.
Next on the universities’ remuneration pecking
order were Otago, where the Vice-Chancellor’s remuneration
increased from $320,000 to $330,000, Victoria and Auckland
University of Technology where it went from $260,000 to
$280,000 and Waikato, which moved from $260,000 to
$270,000.
The Vice-Chancellor of Massey University
received $240,000 for the period between 3 March and 31
December, an annualised figure of $320,000. Similarly, the
new Vice-Chancellor at the University of Canterbury received
$240,000 for the period between 1 March and 31 December, an
annualised amount of $293,000.
Other remuneration
packages in the tertiary education sector ranged from
$260,000 for the Chief Executive of the Christchurch
Polytechnic Institute of Technology to less than $100,000,
for a ten-month period, for the Chief Executive of the Open
Polytechnic of New Zealand.
Aside from chief executives,
just over 1,000 staff in the tertiary education sector
received remuneration of $100,000 or more. One received a
package worth between $300,000 and $309,999, while 357
received between $100,000 and $109,999.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Auckland students stunned at fee
increase
2. Mixed reaction to student loan
report
3. Partial PBRF round on cards for
2006
4. Polytechs want better national representation
5. Middlesex drops first-year exams
6. Sacked
professor invited back
Auckland students stunned at fee
increase
Students say they are stunned by the University
of Auckland Council’s decision, on Monday this week, to
increase domestic undergraduate student tuition fees by an
average of 4.28 percent for 2005. The biggest increases will
apply to arts and science degrees, where they will rise by 5
percent. Business and economics will increase by 3.4 percent
and law by 2.3 percent. Fine arts and optometry fees will
remain at current levels. Postgraduate fees will increase by
7.6 percent.
The New Zealand Herald reports Students’
Association President, Kate Sutton, saying that the
University Council had ignored the welfare of students and
raised fees as high as the Government’s fee maxima policy
would allow. “They took advantage of that and did it,” she
said.
The University is also seeking a 10 percent
increase in fees for medicine and health sciences, but will
have to apply to the Government for an exemption from the
fee maxima policy, which restricts increases to 5 percent or
less. Ms Sutton said the Students’ Association would ask the
Government to reject the University’s application.
Acting
Vice-Chancellor, Raewyn Dalziel, said the increases were
based on cost increases of between 4.5 and 4.7 percent, or
$19.1 million, that the University faces in 20005. “After
taking into account the additional 3.2 percent in government
funding for 2005, and the fee increases already agreed for
international students, the University faces a $9.7 million
shortfall,” she wrote in a memo to staff and students.
Ms
Dalziel said the University would continue to seek funding
increases from government that are based on real university
costs. “Staff and students are urged to join this campaign,”
she wrote. “Unless we can achieve more rational government
funding policies, increases in student fees will continue to
be inevitable.”
Although the Massey University Council
recently rejected a management recommendation to increase
its fees by 5 percent for 2005, fees have been increased by
an average of 4.5 percent at Victoria University and 3.4
percent at the University of Waikato A number of
polytechnics have now also set their 2005 fees, with average
increases so far of between 2.8 percent and 5 percent.
Mixed reaction to student loan report
Reaction has
been predictably mixed to the release of the annual report
on the student loan scheme, tabled in Parliament this week.
While the Government is claiming success, with loan
repayments up and repayment times down, students are saying
the report shows that student debt is increasing.
In one
corner, the Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary),
Steve Maharey, says the results show that the Government’s
moves to cut students’ costs are working. He says that one
third of all debt incurred since the scheme began has been
repaid or written off, and that figure is forecast to rise
over the next ten years. “The total debt is now expected to
rise more slowly as repayments increase. By the middle of
the next decade it is estimated that the amount repaid each
year will be greater than the amount borrowed,” he
said.
Mr Maharey’s statement is cold comfort, however, to
students and their families who faced fee hikes in 2004 and
will be paying even higher fees in 2005, according to New
Zealand University Students’ Association Co-President, Fleur
Fitzsimons. “Labour should stop defending the loan scheme
and get real about the problems. Student debt is wreaking
havoc with our society and economy and no amount of
government spin will make the problem go away,” she said.
“The report shows that more students now have debts above
$20,000 compared with the same time last year.”
Other key
findings in the report reveal that the total level of
student loan debt, at 30 June 2004, was almost $6 billion,
up by more than $600 million at the same time in 2003; the
projected level of debt is expected to reach $13 billion by
2014-15, up by $500 million on the forecast a year ago;
there were 156,250 borrowers in the 2003 academic year, up
3.8 percent from 150,575 in 2002; and the total amount
borrowed in 2003 was $987 million compared with $934 million
in 2002.
The report shows the average student loan
balance had increased to $14,242 by 30 June 2004, an
increase of 4.1 percent on the 2002-03 average of $13,680,
and the median student loan balance was just under $10,000.
Of the 419,000 people with a current loan balance, 345 have
a debt of $100,000 or more.
Partial PBRF round on cards
for 2006
A range of options for the next
Performance-Based Research Fund assessment round were
released this week by the PBRF Sector Reference Group (SRG).
One option suggests that the next quality-evaluation
assessments could be partial or semi-voluntary. It comes
after criticism about the negative effects of PBRF on
individual staff, and calls from AUS to move from an
individual to a group-based assessment.
The SRG Chair,
Professor Paul Callaghan, said he believes there is a way
forward that will make the conduct of a second
quality-evaluation in 2006 more efficient and acceptable to
everyone. “A partial round would result in substantially
lower costs for all the participants, while giving new and
emerging researchers a chance to seek a higher quality
category earlier than would be possible if a later date,
such as 2007 or 2009, was chosen for the second quality
evaluation,” he said.
Under the proposed partial round,
it would be optional for PBRF-eligible staff who were
assessed in 2003 to complete an evidence portfolio. Only
eligible staff who were not assessed in 2003, and possibly
some researchers in special circumstances, would be required
to participate in 2006.
The other PBRF papers propose
options for the subject areas and peer review panels and, on
the eligibility of tertiary education organisations and
staff to participate in quality-evaluations. A technical
paper, discussing IT issues, is also available.
Polytechs
want better national representation
Polytechnic heads
are understood to be calling for the reform of their
national body, the Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics
of New Zealand (ITPNZ), following recent public criticism of
the way in which a number of polytechnics had obtained
community education funding. One, the Christchurch
Polytechnic Institute of Technology (CPIT), has been the
subject of intense negative publicity over its obtaining
more than $15 million public funding from its Cool It
enrolments, while others have been targeted for what have
been described by National MP Bill English as “funding
scams”.
Education Review reports that the call for change
comes particularly from those institutions where managers
have felt that ITPNZ did not defend them adequately from the
public criticism over the use of community education
funding. They say that the body needs restructuring in order
to better deal with issues confronting the sector.
According to Education Review, CPIT Chief Executive John
Scott asked his Council to tell ITPNZ to restructure or it
would reconsider its membership. Mr Scott said there had
been growing disquiet about the effectiveness of the
leadership provided by ITPNZ, and that the organisation has
not addressed critical issues in a proactive
manner.
ITPNZ Executive Director Jim Doyle is reported
saying changing the structure would be difficult and that he
doubted whether the current structure of the organisation
was relevant to the current debate on community education
funding.
Worldwatch
Middlesex drops first-year
exams
England’s Middlesex University has scrapped exams
for first-year students and is implementing a policy of “100
percent coursework” for first-year modules. The University
has confirmed that traditional exams have been dropped for
all first-year courses, except where an exceptional case has
been made to its Academic Board.
The Times Higher reports
that critics are claiming it is an unprecedented move to
make it easier for students to pass courses. An unnamed
source at Middlesex said that if student numbers were down,
the University could ensure good retention rates by ensuring
that students pass in any course. “It’s good for business
and good for ratings.”
The Times Higher says Middlesex
was embroiled in a controversy earlier this year when it was
reported the University had set a “de facto” maximum failure
rate, when it demanded a report from staff on any module
where 15 percent or more students failed.
Defending its
position, Middlesex’s Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Ken Goulding,
said that is was strongly held in the University that
learning is what matters most at level one and that
demanding coursework was the best way to facilitate
learning.”
Sacked professor invited back
A disabled
seventy-year-old emeritus professor is back on the job at
the Manchester Metropolitan University, after earlier having
been sacked and escorted from his office by police. After
being told he would no longer be given any part-time
teaching the Professor, who had been at the University for
forty years, demanded an explanation for the decision and
refused to leave his office. Unable to move him, the Dean
called the police for assistance.
After the Professor had
enlisted the support of colleagues, contacted his solicitor
and called the Times Higher, the University advised he would
be kept on in an, as yet, unspecified,
role.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz