AUS Tertiary Update
Council member to stand against
Chancellor
Massey University Council member, Dr Liz
Gordon, has confirmed that she will stand against current
Chancellor Nigel Gould as the fallout continues from the
Council’s decision not to increase student tuition fees for
2005. She says there is a clear need to inject a more
democratic approach into the University’s governing
structure and foster improved relationships within the
University community.
Dr Gordon’s decision comes after Mr
Gould’s stinging criticism, reported in last week’s Tertiary
Update, in which he described the Council as having let both
itself and the University down in the decision not to
increase fees. In a two-page letter to Council members, Mr
Gould asserted that the Council had materially failed in its
responsibilities, and that it had either shown scant regard
for the planning process or demonstrated a lack of
understanding of the University’s financial structures and
its dynamics. He then called on Council members to
demonstrate a higher level of commitment and consistency
than had been the case to date.
Dr Gordon, an Alumni
representative on the Council, said that there was strong
concern by Council members about the Chancellor’s lack of
judgement in making public statements which clearly
condemned the majority vote against increasing the fees by 5
per cent, the maximum allowed under the Government’s
fee-maxima policy.
The vote on the Chancellorship was
expected be held at the University’s next Council meeting on
Friday 3 December, but it is not now known whether this will
proceed. A spokesperson said the University had no comment
to make as it was still sorting out issues and was not in a
position to comment.
It is expected that three new
Government appointments made to the Council will be
announced early next week, before any vote is taken.
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Academic audit pass mark
for Auckland
2. Literacy standards too tough?
3. Maori
student debt hits $1 billion
4. The Sir Ed
scholarships
5. Top Harvard bosses earn
$US25m
6. Australian university agrees to long-term
settlement
7. UK poll reveals pressure to dumb
down
Academic audit pass mark for Auckland
Much is
happening that is positive and innovative, and students are
attracted to the University because of its high reputation,
but it should not take this reputation for granted according
to the latest Academic Audit Report of the University of
Auckland. The recently-released report focuses on teaching
quality, programme delivery and the achievement of learning
outcomes.
Acting Vice-Chancellor, Raewyn Dalziel, said
that the Audit results highlighted the value of the
University’s quality improvement efforts and pointed to
areas where the University could tighten its procedures.
“The Audit process required that the University undertake a
comprehensive self-review,” she said. “We identified
twenty-three initiatives that would enhance the University’s
processes and procedures, and to which we would give
priority over the next three years.”
The Director of the
Audit Panel, John Jennings, said that the University had
also undertaken specific initiatives to enhance the teaching
and learning experience of students that were independent of
the specific requirements of the Audit. “It was clear to the
Panel that the University has been proactive in undertaking
its own investigation of aspects of its operations when and
as issues arise,” he said.
Amongst the initiatives and
services which had impressed the Audit were the
establishment of a Curriculum Commission to consider the
institution’s academic programmes and teaching and learning
structures, a Student Life Commission which looked at
improving the student environment and experience and the
development of other student facilities at the City and
Grafton campuses.
Other initiatives which gained the
Panel’s approval included the appointment of high-calibre
faculty deans, the positive impact of the School Partnership
and Equal Opportunities offices, proactive efforts to
improve staff orientation and induction, the induction and
training of part-time and casual staff, the selection,
training and professional development of tutors and
demonstrators, the emerging distinctive profile of the
Tamaki campus and the commitment to improving its mentoring
programme.
The Panel also noted the commitment of the
University to ensuring that there was a strong link between
research and teaching, particularly in light of the
Performance-Based Research Fund assessments earlier in the
year which had ranked the University of Auckland as New
Zealand’s leading research-led university.
A full copy
of the Audit is available
at:
http://www.aau.ac.nz/nzuaau/publications/reports/Auckland_cyc3_2004.pdf
Literacy
standards too tough?
New National Certificate of
Educational Achievement (NCEA) literary standards required
by locally-based overseas students for entry into New
Zealand universities are threatening the lucrative
international student market, according to an English
language teachers’ organisation. In order to gain entry,
students must gain eight credits in the NCEA level 2
English, the same as domestic students but more than
required of other international students applying from
overseas or from a foundation studies programme.
Kathryn
Parker, secondary sector coordinator of the Teachers of
English to Speakers of Other Languages Aotearoa New Zealand
(Tesolanz), said that the new standard was putting New
Zealand’s market for overseas students at risk because many
may choose to go to universities in other countries as a
result of the change.
Ms Parker said it was unfair to
require international students in New Zealand secondary
schools to reach a higher standard than others. Students
coming to university through foundation studies programmes
are admitted on achieving a score of six in the
International English Language Testing System which is
designed for international students and is not as exacting
as the new NCEA standard.
Industry teachers spoken to by
Education Review said that the new NCEA standards for
literacy do not suit the abilities of international students
who neither have the cultural background to answer questions
on literature nor the language skills to meet strict
accuracy standards. Ms Parker said she doubted that
international students with less then seven years learning
in New Zealand would be able to meet the new NCEA
standards.
Maori student debt hits $1 billion
Maori
student debt has reached the $1 billion mark, and is
increasing by an estimated $140 million a year, according to
latest estimates from the Ministry of Education. It is a
rate at which the level of indebtedness will reach $2
billion within seven years.
Dr Helen Potter, Kaitûhono
for Te Mana Akonga, the National Mâori Tertiary Students’
Association said that the Maori student debt crisis was set
to get worse if the Government did not take urgent action to
reduce the ballooning levels of student debt. “The
Government should tackle student debt by immediately
introducing a living allowance for all students and ensuring
that student fees go down, not up,” she said.
Dr Potter
said that student loans are a barrier to Maori participation
in tertiary education, particularly for degree-level courses
and above, which are high-cost but which result in better
jobs. “Maori are effectively being fenced out of this
group,” she said.
Te Mana Akonga is holding a Maori
Student Debt Summit at Victoria University on Monday 6
December to discuss and debate solutions to the debt
crisis.
The Sir Ed scholarships
Sir Edmund Hillary has
agreed to lend his name to Waikato University’s new Parallel
Development Programme (PDP) Scholarships for high-performing
all-rounders. Dubbed Waikato’s equivalent to the prestigious
Rhodes Scholarships, the new Sir Edmund Hillary Scholarships
will be worth between $3,000 and $5,000, each and will be
available each year to around fifty academic high achievers
who also excel at either arts or sports.
Waikato
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould, said that he was
extremely pleased that the University would have someone of
Sir Edmund’s stature associated with the scholarships. “The
more we can do to assist these sorts of young people achieve
their best, the better for everyone concerned,” he
said.
Professor Gould said the University believes that
helping academically-able artists and sportspeople to
achieve all-round excellence will deliver considerable
benefits to the students themselves, the University in
Hamilton and Tauranga, the Waikato and Bay of Plenty regions
in particular and the country in general.
On 14 December,
the University is due to sign a memorandum of understanding
with a range of community organisations in the Waikato which
will be supporting the PDP by providing training to
students.
Benefits for those awarded the scholarships
would include having their tuition fees paid in full,
receiving personal support from a high-performance manager,
access to leading coaches or tutors in their area of sports
or arts excellence, participation in elite development
squads and competitions, free membership of the recreation
centre along with customised fitness programmes and life
skills and personal development
coaching.
Worldwatch
Top Harvard bosses earn
$US25m
The two top managers at the Harvard Management
Company, a subsidiary company which supervises Harvard’s
endowment programme, are earning $US25 million each in
salary and bonuses, according to figures released this week
by Harvard University. The Chronicle of Higher Education
reports, however, that the salary figures are significantly
less than last year, when each of them earned more than
$US35 million.
The University’s endowment programme
returned what was described as a healthy 21.1 percent return
on its endowment, currently valued at $US22.6 billion, in
2004. The median return on endowment investment across the
top twenty-five American universities was 17.1
percent.
In recent years, some alumni have criticised the
large payouts to the Harvard managers, saying that
remuneration of the level reported is “inappropriate,
indefensible, and corrosive to the values of the
University.”
Harvard Management officials said each
manager’s performance had exceeded the goals the company had
set. “No one receives a bonus at HMC whose performance has
not contributed substantial value-added to Harvard’s
endowment.”
Australian university agrees to long-term
settlement
Wollongong University is set to become the
first Australian university to sign up to the National
Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) strategy of ensuring that
all collective employment agreements in the current
bargaining round are binding until at least 2008. The
strategy is designed to minimise the impact of the
Australian Government’s new industrial relations strategy,
which is intended to reduce collective bargaining in the
university sector, and to outlaw strike action which could
affect students.
Staff at Wollongong voted unanimously
last week to accept the new deal, which gives a 28 percent
increase in salaries between now and March 2008, and
enhances parental leave provisions.
NTEU General
Secretary Grahame McCullouch said that the Union was keen to
extend the expiry date of all agreements for as long as
possible. “The objective is to ensure the strongest possible
legal protection of members’ employment conditions in the
face of what appears to be a renewed bout of government
interference in workplace arrangements in the sector,” he
said. “Similar negotiations are also underway at more than a
dozen universities, and the NTEU is confident of reaching
agreements with most universities in the sector by
mid-2005.”
UK poll reveals pressure to dumb
down
First-hand evidence of the widespread dumbing-down
of academic standards in the UK has emerged in an exclusive
Times Higher survey, with academics reporting that they have
been teaching students who were not capable of benefiting
from degree-level study, and that they have been forced to
pass students whom they say did not deserve to pass.
The
survey of almost 400 academic staff found that more than 80
percent agreed that the squeeze on resources in higher
education is having a general adverse effect on academic
standards. The survey also found that 71 percent agreed that
their institution had admitted students who were not capable
of benefiting from degree-level study, almost half reported
that they had felt obliged to pass a student whose
performance did not really merit a pass and 42 percent said
that decisions to fail students had been overruled at higher
levels in the institution. Almost one in five admitted
turning a blind eye to student plagiarism.
A spokesperson
for Universities UK said that the survey represented only a
small sample of academics, but added that the UUK had, for
years, pressed the Government to increase funding in order
to prevent a quality
crisis.
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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