AUS Tertiary Update
McCutcheon top paid VC
The University of Auckland’s
Professor Stuart McCutcheon was New Zealand’s highest-paid
vice-chancellor last year with a remuneration package worth
between $410,000 and $419,999, around five times more than
the salary of career-grade senior lecturers. Last year’s
top earner, Professor Judith Kinnear of Massey University,
dropped into fourth place with a remuneration package of
between $320,000 and $329,999. Professor Kinnnear’s
reported remuneration for 2005 was well short of her 2004
package of between $360,000 and $369,999.
The figures,
released in the State Services Commission Annual Report,
also reveal that the Vice-Chancellor of the University of
Canterbury, Professor Roy Sharp retained his spot in second
place with remuneration worth between $360,000 and $369,999,
significantly up from between $310,000 and $319,999 in 2004.
In other universities, Otago’s Professor David Skegg
received between $330,000 and 339,999; AUT’s Derek
McCormack between $310,000 and $319,999; Victoria’s and
Waikato’s Professors Pat Walsh and Roy Crawford each
picked up between $300,000 and $309,999; and Lincoln’s
Professor Roger Field received between $260,000 and
$269,999.
Vice-chancellors fared well by comparison with
others in the wider public sector, with the chiefs of large
organisations such as Treasury, Inland Revenue and Foreign
Affairs receiving $450,000. Six more heads of large
ministries each received more than $400,000.
The highest
payment in the tertiary-education sector was $430,000 made
to the controversial former head of Te Wānanga o Aotearoa.
That figure includes all contractual entitlements such as
performance bonuses, severance and the payment of unused
leave. Remuneration paid elsewhere in the public
tertiary-education sector ranged from $270,000 for the head
of the Christchurch Polytechnic to $120,000 for the Chief
Executive of Te Wānanga o Raukawa.
Association of
University Staff General Secretary Helen Kelly said that
university staff would be concerned to learn that some
vice-chancellors’ salaries had increased at a rate higher
than those of their staff, particularly at a time that
institutions were cutting staff and axing courses on the
basis of a shortage of funding. “Union members will find
it both ironic and hypocritical that salaries of this level
are being paid to vice-chancellors at the same time as
restructuring and consequent job losses are occurring in
some universities,” she said. “Much of that
restructuring is a direct result of poor planning and
performance at senior management levels, for which
vice-chancellors appear not to take
responsibility.”
Remuneration packages listed in the
State Services Commission Annual Report include base salary,
the value of a motor vehicle, superannuation and any
performance-related payments.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. Big increase in tertiary qualifications,
student debt
2. Call for Māori strategy in TES
3. NZ
education system among best in OECD
4. New international
doctoral scholarships
5. VCs press for more money, fewer
rules
6. Tuition fees on front line of election
campaign
7. Iran bans politically active students from
university
8. “Loopy left” blamed for
resignation
Big increase in tertiary qualifications,
student debt
The number of New Zealanders with a
bachelor’s degree or higher qualification has grown by
more than 140 percent in the last nine years, from 195,000
in 1994 to 471,000 in 2005, and the number of students
engaged in tertiary education has almost doubled, from
254,100 to 504,400, according to figures included in the
Student Loan Scheme Annual Report tabled in Parliament last
Thursday.
The report shows, however, that student-loan
borrowing was $971 million in 2005, bringing the total loan
balance to $8.37 billion. It projects that the student-loan
balance will blow out to almost $13 billion within the next
ten years. Since it began, 665,900 people, or 20.4 percent
of the population aged fifteen and over, have used the
student-loan scheme, and 154,411 students, or 40 percent of
those eligible, took out a loan from the scheme in 2005.
There were 154,411 new borrowers last year.
Other key
findings in the report include that, in the nine year period
reported, the percentage of New Zealanders aged fifteen and
over who have participated in tertiary education has
increased from 8.9 to 14.2, enrolments by women in public
tertiary education have increased by 84 percent and
enrolments by Māori and Pasifika peoples have increased by
177 percent.
According to the Minister for Tertiary
Education, Dr Michael Cullen, the report showed that
students’ loan borrowing has tended to reduce over the
past four years, with the average time taken to repay a loan
dropping from ten years to nine. “This shows that the
student-loan scheme is making higher education available to
far more people,” he said. “The Labour-led Government
has made tertiary education more accessible and more
affordable. The interest-free policy introduced in April
builds on that. It has been designed both to further cut the
cost to students of tertiary study and to encourage students
to invest their skills in the New Zealand
economy.”
Meanwhile, the New Zealand Union of
Students’ Associations (NZUSA) says that the report
highlights the ongoing impact of high and continually
increasing tertiary-education fees in New Zealand. “The
annual report shows the median student-loan balance climbing
from $10,404 in 2004/05 to $10,652 in 2005/06,” said Conor
Roberts, NZUSA Co-President. “Low public funding of
tertiary institutions and high fees are only going to see
this amount increase. The Government is projecting that in
2014/15 students will owe an astonishing $12.7 billion. We
need urgent action on fees and funding if we are going to
avert this debt tragedy.”
The Student Loan Scheme
Annual Report can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/tertiary/sls-report-2006.html
Call
for Māori strategy in TES
An on-line “email
postcard” calling on the Government to include a specific
Māori component in the Tertiary Education Strategy has
proved to be a hit, with hundreds of messages being sent
this week to the Tertiary Education Commission and the
Minister for Tertiary Education. The Government is currently
consulting on the draft Tertiary Education Strategy and
Statement of Tertiary Education Priorities, documents which
will set the direction for tertiary education in the next
five years. Māori staff and students, however, say that
they have been shocked that the Māori component in this
process, the Māori Education Strategy, was not initially
intended to be included in the next TES.
Association of
University Staff Māori Officer, Naomi Manu, said that the
TES needs to include, from the outset, a strategy to address
the tertiary-educational needs and priorities for Māori
that shows a commitment to Te Tiriti o Waitangi. “Māori
staff and students are concerned about the omission of Te
Tiriti o Waitangi from the discussion documents around the
development of the second TES, and are campaigning to ensure
that concerns around the inclusion of both this and a Māori
tertiary component in the TES would be acted on,” she
said.
Mrs Manu says that Māori members of AUS had met
with the Associate Minister of Education, Parekura Horomia,
late last week and were confident that their concerns would
be acted on. She said, however, that it was still important
to ensure that the agencies, such as the Tertiary Education
Commission and Ministry of Education, did not overlook
ensuring that Māori-specific priorities are included in the
TES. “Our campaign to make sure this happens includes an
email hikoi with a brief submission outlining the concerns
around Te Tiriti and the Māori content in the TES,” she
said.
The email postcard can be found at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/postcard.asp
NZ education
system among best in OECD
The Ministry of Education
Annual Report 2006, which has also just been released, shows
New Zealand’s education system performing well over all in
relation to other Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development countries, according to the Secretary for
Education, Howard Fancy. He said that New Zealand’s
participation rates in tertiary education had risen after
already being high in relation to other countries, and that
there is a growing proportion of our population with
tertiary qualifications.
This was Mr Fancy’s last
annual report. He will be standing down as Secretary for
Education at the end of this month after more than ten years
in the job.
Noted elements in the report relating to
tertiary education include that participation in tertiary
education is at one of the highest rates in the OECD;
enrolment in doctoral degrees has increased by 33 percent
since 1988 and completion rates have increased by 37 percent
over the same period; tertiary education is becoming more
affordable; and strong working relationships are being
developed among the Ministry of Education, Tertiary
Education Commission and New Zealand Qualifications
Authority.
The report says that the development and
launch of the next stage of the tertiary-education reforms
will look to align the system more closely to government
economic and social goals and increase the focus on quality,
relevance and value for money.
The Ministry of Education
Annual Report 2006 can be found
at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=11630&data=l
New
international doctoral scholarships
Students from
countries as diverse as Estonia, Belgium, Jordan and
Cameroon are to come to New Zealand as a result of forty new
International Doctoral Research Scholarships. The students
will be involved in a vast range of disciplines, ranging
from bio-control of insect pests through to
three-dimensional medical imaging.
According to the
Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, the
scholarships attract some of the finest academics in the
world and that intellectual injection is a huge benefit to
our own scholars. “They are also an important way of
showcasing the abilities of New Zealand’s tertiary
institutions to the world and that will attract interest and
enrolments well beyond the scholarships themselves,” he
said. “The Government wants New Zealand tertiary
institutions to actively participate in the international
academic community as it helps businesses and communities
gain access to international research and
technology.”
Dr Cullen said that, if New Zealand is to
be transformed into a higher-wage, knowledge-based economy,
this kind of engagement is vital.
The scholarships
provide full funding for course and living costs while
undertaking PhD work in New Zealand for up to three years,
with the latest recipients receiving funding of about $3
million.
The international doctoral-scholarship
programme began three years ago with the intention of
enrolling 100 students. This year 537 applications were
received for the scholarships, over 200 more than in 2005.
The scholarships are open to students from all around
the world. Students from twenty different countries were
selected and will be joining the sixty current scholarship
students spread across the eight universities.
Further
information relating to scholarships can be found
at:
http://www.newzealandeducated.com/scholarships/page1.html
Worldwatch
VCs press for more money, fewer
rules
Australian vice-chancellors are reported to have
turned up the heat on the Government, signaling they will
not only continue to lobby for less government intervention
but will press for more public money in next year’s
budget.
The report comes as new figures show that direct
government funding accounts for only 41 percent of
university revenue, twenty percent less than ten years ago.
Revenue from student-tuition fees has escalated to plug the
funding gap.
Sydney University Vice-Chancellor Gavin
Brown described the present situation, in which the
Government urged universities to chase other funding sources
yet regulated them more, as a paradox. “What happens is
that, as the Government forces us to go out and be more
entrepreneurial, they get more and more nervous about what
we might do, so they increase the regulation,” he said.
University of New South Wales Vice-Chancellor Fred
Hilmer wants the Government to lift the 25 percent cap on
student-fee increases so that universities are able to
compete on price in a true market system.
Macquarie
University Vice-Chancellor Steven Schwartz said the
Government’s agenda for universities could not be achieved
as long as it controlled price and supply. “I can see the
huge amounts of benefit if we said to universities: ‘Have
as many students as you like, charge them whatever you like
so long as they’re willing to pay it and you can collect
it through the [tuition-fee] system, and we'll subsidise the
students’,” he said. “From a competitive point of view
that would really change the system.”
The
Australian
Tuition fees on front line of election campaign
The cost of higher education has become a major issue in
next month’s congressional elections in the United States,
with the Democrats blaming the Republicans for cutting
Federal financial aid and allowing interest rates on tuition
loans to rise.
The Democrats have promised to restore
government grants for tuition fees, cut interest on student
loans and allow more tax deductions for families of
university students. Democrat leaders have promised to raise
the maximum individual government tuition grant by 25
percent, to $US5,100, while halving interest rates on
student loans.
Nancy Pelosi, the House Minority Leader,
told students at Georgetown University in Washington that
their dreams should not be weighed down by debt. “Your
education is not only important to your self-fulfillment, it
is important and essential to the competitiveness of our
country,” she said. Ms Pelosi criticised Republicans for
cutting student-aid programmes by $12 billion and raising
interest rates on student loans. She added that the
Democrats would work to increase the number of university
graduates in science, mathematics and engineering by 100,000
over the next four years and to increase government spending
on stem-cell research.
Meanwhile, the Republicans have
said that Federal financial aid to students was at nearly
unprecedented levels, and that the real problem was the high
tuition fees charged by universities. Howard P. ”Buck”
McKeon, the Republican Chairman of the House Education
Committee, said that Republicans were working on requiring
universities to disclose their costs and theoretically
embarrassing universities into moderating tuition-fee rises.
Times Higher Education Supplement
Iran bans
politically active students from university
The Iranian
Government has barred at least seventeen students from
pursuing graduate studies this year because of their
political activism and beliefs, and fifty-four more students
have been required to sign statements that they will observe
political and ideological regulations, according to a paper
released by Human Rights Watch.
The paper, Denying the
Right to Education, calls Iran’s restrictions on the
students a “blatant violation” of the Government’s
“international human-rights obligations”.
The paper
names six students who were informed that they would not be
allowed to continue their studies, and eleven more who were
not allowed to register this year. The human-rights
organisation has determined that all but one of those
students were barred because of their political activism.
Another student was barred because her father, a
“persecuted writer”, was considered a security threat.
All of the banned students had already been accepted
into graduate programmes through competitive entrance
examinations.
Human-rights officials said the tightening
grip on activism would significantly impede political
activity in Iran and that universities in that country have
been a key locus for critical thinking and for political
activities critical of the government or protesting
government actions.
Iran’s president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, recently called on conservative students to
oppose liberal and secular faculty members and forced the
retirement of faculty members at the University of Tehran
for their opposition to the country’s conservative Islamic
authorities.
From the Chronicle of Higher
Education
“Loopy left” blamed for resignation
A
conservative legal academic in Australia, Dr James
McConvill, has quit his job at Melbourne’s La Trobe
University in the face of what he claims is a campaign of
persecution designed to appease the “loopy
Left”.
McConvill says he was hired as part of a
campaign to “shake things up” and “clean out the
postmodernists and feminists”, but now claims the head of
La Trobe's Law School (and former University of Canterbury
academic), Gordon Walker, has “been turned”.
McConvill has complained to the Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission, providing it with emails that he
says suggest a censorship campaign. “There is evidence ...
that senior management of La Trobe University have been
concerned about my writings … which either criticise
left-leaning government officers ... or adopt a right-wing
conservative or libertarian position,” he told the
Commission. He said that Professor Walker also complained
about articles he had written on his web log.
The
University is understood, however, to have raised concerns
about Dr McConvill’s teaching and about “unusual
activity” at a conference in Rio de Janeiro. It is also
believed to be awaiting details from Dr McConvill about a
claim for reimbursement of conference expenses, including a
gold bracelet.
From The
Australian
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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