AUS Tertiary Update
Student debt driving students overseas
Two
new reports from the Ministry of Education show reduced
repayment times for student loans and a decrease in the
growth rate of student debt, but they also show that many of
the highest-qualified graduates were the most likely to
leave the country. The reports give new, more-detailed data
about loans, with information derived from an integrated
dataset that links information from all of the agencies
involved with the loan scheme. They also compare the loan
balances of different groups, examine repayment times and
look at how much people earn when they leave study. It is
the most comprehensive analysis of student loans and debt
since comparable data-collection began in 2002.
The key
findings from the first report, Living with a student loan,
show that the higher the level of qualification studied, the
higher the leaving debt, and the higher the post-study
income, the faster the progress towards repayment. Students
studying Health leave with more debt, and graduates in
Medicine are more likely to be overseas than graduates with
other bachelor-degrees. The report also shows that the
median level of debt of those studying in health-related
fields was 1.5 times higher than the overall
figure.
Among the main findings in the second report,
Income of student loan borrowers, was that the level of
qualification studied, and whether it was successfully
completed, makes a large difference to the person’s income
once study is complete. It also showed that, while most
people’s income increased in the first few years after
study, there is a large proportion which receives a benefit
in the first few years following study. Women earn more than
men while studying, but less than men after study, and
completing a tertiary qualification tends to reduce the gap
between men and women.
Education Minister Trevor Mallard
said that the reports give much better information than
before and expose some of the myths surrounding loans and
debt. “Student loan balances are lower than many people
believe and repayment times are reducing,” he said. “In mid
2004 most borrowers owed less than $10,000. The June
estimate of the average repayment time was 9.3 years,
compared with 9.6 years a year earlier and 10.3 years in
June 2002.”
New Zealand Students’ Association
Co-President Camilla Belich said, however, that the report
proved that graduates with higher student debt are more
likely to go overseas. “The Government’s own research
confirms student debt is forcing our best and brightest
overseas,” she said. “By burdening students with
unbelievable levels of debt, the Government is dislocating a
generation and leaving New Zealand with chronic skills
shortages in certain areas.”
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Individual PBRF scores must be
protected
2. PBRF moderators appointed
3. Otago
University, College to merge
4. 2005 enrolment figures
begin to emerge
5. Wira Gardiner appointed to Wananga
Council
6. Kiwi VC stamps mark on Oxford
7. UPNG
staff to strike over salary dispute
8. UK universities to
go for maximum £3000 fees
Individual PBRF scores must be
protected
Individual scores from the next round of the
Performance-Based Research Fund must not be returned to
institutions, according to Association of University Staff
(AUS) National President, Professor Nigel Haworth. His
comment comes in response to the release of a consultation
paper by the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) on the use
of data by tertiary education organisations in the 2006 PBRF
Quality Evaluation.
Professor Haworth said that,
following the last round, individual scores had been used
inappropriately by some universities, such as in performance
reviews or in the annual promotion exercise. “These scores
were not intended, nor were they fit, for such purposes and,
while universities were advised of this, a number persisted
anyway,” he said. “As the results were not supposed to be
used without the prior permission of the individual
researcher, universities have shown they cannot be relied
upon to act with integrity on this issue. Individual Quality
Evaluation results must, therefore, remain
confidential.”
The TEC’s consultation paper includes
questions about what information should be given to tertiary
institutions, discusses the misuse of PBRF data and gives
options around guidelines for the use of PBRF data for
institutions.
The TEC has also released for consultation
its Draft Strategic Plan for the period between 2005/6 and
2010/11. The draft plan sets out what the TEC proposes to do
to achieve the goals of the Tertiary Education Strategy and
the Statement of Education Priorities.
Submissions on
both papers are due on 23 March, and the consultation
documents can be found on the TEC website:
www.tec.govt.nz
PBRF moderators appointed
TEC has
appointed three top academics to act as moderators of the
2006 PBRF Quality Evaluation. They are John Hattie,
Professor of Education at the University of Auckland, who
will be the Principal Moderator, and Professors Carolyn
Burns from the University of Otago and Mason Durie from
Massey University.
Acting Chair Kaye Turner said that
TEC was delighted to announce the appointment of such
distinguished academics to these key positions. “All three
of the new moderators were Peer Review Panel chairs in 2003,
and I see their acceptance of these appointments as a
further vote of confidence in the PBRF,” she said.
TEC
says the moderators will work with the twelve Peer Review
Panels to ensure a “transparent, credible and consistent”
moderation process throughout the 2006 Quality
Evaluation.
Otago University, College to merge
The
University of Otago and Dunedin College of Education have
agreed to discuss a possible merger, and will set up a small
working party to look its feasibility. This follows the
announcement last week that the University of Canterbury and
Christchurch College of Education will work towards a merger
at the end of this year.
Otago University Chancellor
Lindsay Brown said that while the College and University
each currently provides its own teacher education, they also
cooperate in a number of areas under an existing Memorandum
of Agreement. For the last twenty-five years the two
institutions have delivered a joint four-year Bachelor of
Education degree. “Competition [between the two
institutions] has been the exception rather than the rule,”
he said.
“Even during the recent period of strong
competition [in the tertiary education sector] professional
collegiality among University and College staff has been
maintained, and we have had some shared teaching and
provision of some joint services,” said Kathy Grant, College
Council Chair.
A joint press release advised that “the
two institutions recognise that the benefits of a merger are
many, including enhanced teacher education practice, and
further developing educational research, scholarship, and
postgraduate programmes; increasing professional development
opportunities for teachers and other educators; extending
the work in international education projects; and
contributing to educational policy and philosophy.”
A
preliminary report on a merger will be presented to the two
Councils “as soon as possible”.
2005 enrolment figures
begin to emerge
Victoria University of Wellington has
reported that its student enrolments are holding steady this
year, while the University of Otago says its numbers have
increased at a higher level than forecast. Preliminary
figures provided to the University of Otago Council on
Tuesday suggested an overall increase of 2.9 percent, higher
than the 2.4 percent for which the University budgeted.
Otago Vice-Chancellor, Professor David Skegg, said that
while there had been overall growth, there was a slight
decline in first-year numbers, due mainly to the fall-off in
international first-year enrolments. “Strong growth in
first-year numbers over the last two years has contributed
to overall gains in both domestic and international
enrolments. The 2.9 percent growth represents an increase of
470 equivalent full-time students,” he said.
By the end
of the first week of lectures, just under 16,000 students
had enrolled at Victoria, a similar number to last year. By
the end of the year, the number is forecast to increase to
around 20,0000.
Victoria’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Pat
Walsh, says the levelling-off has come after four years of
very rapid growth, and that the national trend of static or
declining domestic university enrolments was starting to
influence the Wellington market.
“We are also now
experiencing the planned effect of Victoria’s self-imposed
limit on international students which last year led to the
imposition of higher entry standards for international
students,” said Professor Walsh.
The University has a
cap of 16 percent international students.
Wira Gardiner
appointed to Wananga Council
Education Minister Trevor
Mallard announced yesterday that he is appointing Wira
Gardiner as the fourth ministerial appointment to the
Council of Te Wananga o Aotearoa. This follows the
appointment last week of a Crown Manager, Brian Roche, to
the beleaguered institution.
Trevor Mallard said he was
pleased that Wira Gardiner had joined the Council. “He will
bring to it his extensive experience and expertise in
governance and management, both in the private and public
sectors. He has considerable mana in Maoridom,” he
said.
“While Mr Gardiner will have the same role … as
other council members, I have no doubt that he will bring
immense governance experience and guidance to the council as
it moves into a new era,” Trevor Mallard
said.
Worldwatch
Kiwi VC stamps mark on
Oxford
Oxford’s new Kiwi Vice-Chancellor wants to drag
the ancient University into the modern age, but he’ll have a
fight on his hands with the traditionalists, according to
British newspaper The Independent. Dr John Hood has
published a green paper on governance, arguing that if
Oxford wants to remain a leading global university it needs
to streamline its 800-year-old decision-making structures.
His message is that the University must reform or become
mediocre.
Dr Hood is proposing a new 150 member academic
council drawn from Oxford’s faculties and colleges to
replace the current two-tier decision-making process. He
also proposes a new thirteen-member Board of Trustees to
oversee the finances and investment policy of the
University, a job currently undertaken by the governing
Council.
Critics say that the proposals will destroy the
character of Oxford, eating into the freedom of its colleges
in a dramatic way. They say it seems to be the beginning of
a process through which the central university
administration will try and take control of all aspects of
college self-management, particularly to eliminate their
financial freedom.
Dr Hood has “put up backs by moving
at such breakneck speed,” says The Independent. “Stories
have spread about his lack of schmoozing skill compared to
his predecessor .... They also suspect he finds Oxford’s
traditions ridiculous, particularly the proctors who are in
charge of discipline and wear white bow ties and special
gowns.”
Meanwhile, former University of Canterbury head,
Professor Daryl Le Grew, recently backed away from an
industrial scrap with cleaners at the University of Tasmania
where he is now Vice-Chancellor. Professor Le Grew has
promised continuing employment to about fifty cleaners after
a month-long community campaign opposing his plans to
contract-out the cleaning.
UPNG staff to strike over
salary dispute
More then 300 staff at the University of
Papua New Guinea have threatened to go on strike unless its
Australian Vice-Chancellor and three other senior
administrators resign immediately. They blame the four for
not implementing an approved wage increase, despite advice
to do so from the country’s Industrial Registrar.
The
National Academic and Non-Academic Staff Associations both
said they had lost confidence in the four after they failed
to implement a 4 percent salary increase and an additional
one-off payment awarded by the Government to public servants
last year.
More than 290 staff have signed a letter to
the University’s Chancellor saying that the University’s
management is incompetent and that, even if they were paid
tomorrow, they will still stop work until the four resign.
The National
UK Universities to go for maximum £3,000
fees
Universities across the United Kingdom are set to
charge students the maximum £3,000 a year in tuition fees.
Details will be announced next week of the first wave of
charges under the controversial new system, which comes into
force in autumn 2006. Universities, including Oxford and
Bristol, have gained permission from the education watchdog,
the Office for Fair Access, to raise their fees to the
maximum amount. This means that universities will charge
£3,000 a year, and £9,000 for a three-year course, for
popular degree courses such as English, Medicine, Law,
Mathematics and Economics.
The Evening
Standard
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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