AUS Tertiary Update
Tertiary Strategy to drive economic transformation
The
new Tertiary Education Strategy released this morning
underlines the Government’s determination to equip the
country with the kind of twenty-first-century skills needed
to drive economic transformation, according to the Minister
for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen.
The Strategy
broadly expects the tertiary-education sector to contribute
to transforming the New Zealand economy through lifelong
learning, by creating and applying knowledge to drive
innovation and by building strong connections between
tertiary-education organisations and the communities they
serve. It also sets out the Government’s expectations and
priorities for how the sector will contribute to the
Government’s goals, not just for the economy but also for
families and national identity.
As such, the Strategy
will be the key to developing and negotiating future plans
for the sector, and will incorporate the Statement of
Tertiary Education Priorities (STEP) so that there is now
one document setting out government expectations and
priorities.
From 2008, the new tertiary-education system
will be based on the Strategy and three-year plans which
will be agreed between individual tertiary-education
organisations and the Tertiary Education Commission. These
plans will establish what the Commission will fund and how
each organisation will meet the priorities identified in the
Strategy.
Dr Cullen said that the Strategy marks
significant progress towards a new tertiary system that
provides a better bridge between the world of learning and
the world of work. “If we are to achieve our aim of a
higher-income, knowledge-based economy that is innovative
and creative, it is vital that the tertiary-education sector
plays its part,” he said. “It is important that we have
a tertiary-education sector that allows families, young and
old, to meet their aspirations for education success and one
that supports and celebrates our unique national
identity.”
Dr Cullen said that feedback during
consultation on the Strategy reconfirmed the Government’s
support for a tertiary-education sector that makes a unique
and valuable contribution to our national development in all
dimensions, social, economic, cultural and
environmental.
The new Strategy can be viewed at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/goto/11727
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. New funding for Medicine and
Dentistry teaching welcomed
2. Massey gets exemption
from fee maxima
3. Commissioner for Western Institute of
Technology
4. Study shows those with qualifications earn
more
5. Education links strengthened with
India
6. Gold star for Otago
7. Student-loan-repayment
threshold too low, says NZUSA
8. Fewer US academics on
tenure track
9. Work-life balance award to UK
university
10. Iranian students disrupt President’s
speech
11. Odds on for union leadership
New funding for
Medicine and Dentistry teaching welcomed
Last week’s
announcement that funding for Medicine and Dentistry degree
programmes will be increased by $24.6 million has been
welcomed by the Association of University Staff (AUS). The
additional funding has been allocated following a review
which identified that there is a significant level of
under-funding for undergraduate Medicine and Dentistry
education, that New Zealand’s Schools of Medicine and
Dentistry need to be able to recruit and retain highly
skilled staff and that students must have access to the
highest-quality learning.
In a letter to AUS, the
Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, said
that the additional funding will address staff recruitment
and retention issues, support curriculum development and
ensure that the teaching infrastructure facilitates
excellent learning outcomes and meets Australasian
standards.
The AUS National President, Professor Nigel
Haworth, said that the additional funding comes on top of
the $26 million funding package which resulted from the
tripartite process among the Government, unions and
vice-chancellors earlier in the year. “The new funding
which has come into the sector has proven the real value of
constructive engagement with the Government on important
issues within the sector,” he said.
Professor Haworth
said that a major problem facing the universities was the
disparity between salaries paid to Medical and Dental
specialists within the public health system and those in the
universities. “Despite an internationally accepted view
that salary rates between these to groups should be
comparable, the current difference in base-salaries is
around $20,000 per year,” he said. “Had this new funding
not been made available, that differential would have
ballooned to $49,000 within eight years.”
Professor
Haworth said that he expected the new funding would allow
for immediate employment agreement negotiations between AUS
and the Universities of Otago and Auckland to ensure that
the additional funding supported the Government’s
objective of addressing staff-recruitment and retention
issues.
In 2007, the new funding rates will be between
$32,458 and $38,283 per equivalent full-time student for
Medicine and $46,427 for Dentistry. This represents an
increase over current funding rates of $13,566 for Medicine
and $14,353 for Dentistry.
Massey gets exemption from fee
maxima
Massey students say they will face a
“whopping” tuition-fee increase next year, following a
decision by the Tertiary Education Commission to approve an
application by the University for an exemption from the
Government’s Fee-Maxima policy. Under that policy, tuition
fees and course costs can increase by a maximum of 5 percent
without specific exemption.
The exemption will allow
Massey University to increase fees by up to 10 percent for
undergraduate courses and above the $500 limit for
postgraduate research for 2007.
Despite student
opposition, Vice-Chancellor Professor Judith Kinnear has
welcomed the exemption, saying that it formed part of a
range of measures to enable Massey to meet its financial
targets in the near future and continue to invest in staff,
infrastructure and services to deliver a quality education
experience for students. “Massey’s income per student is
amongst the lowest in the university sector because the
fee-stabilisation legislation introduced in 2003 (for 2004
fees) froze Massey fees at lower levels than other
universities. This was compounded by the Council decision in
2004 not to increase fees for 2005. We need to achieve a
level of fee income that will enable us to maintain the
quality of Massey’s research and research training and
teaching, and deliver on its Charter goals and Profile
objectives,” she said.
Massey University Student
President Paul Falloon said, however, that the decision
would mean that student fees would increase by $700 next
year. “This decision is an extreme disappointment,” he
said. “The Government has failed to properly fund the
University and has left students to bear the brunt of years
of underfunding.”
Liz Hawes, President of the Massey
Extramural Students’ Society, said that the Government’s
supposed concern over student-debt levels had been
completely negated by allowing astronomical fee increases
such as those seen in the 1990s. “This result completely
wipes out gains made through the Interest Free Student Loans
policy,” she said.
Commissioner for Western Institute of
Technology
In a move which had been earlier described as
“almost inevitable”, the Government has announced that a
Crown Commissioner is to be appointed to run the New
Plymouth-based Western Institute of Technology at Taranaki
(WITT). The Institute’s Council members have agreed to a
proposal by the Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael
Cullen, that they stand down and allow the Commissioner,
Murray Strong, to take over the authority and
responsibilities of the Council. It is the first time that a
commissioner has been appointed to run a New Zealand
tertiary-education organisation.
Dr Cullen said he was
grateful for the work of councillors in trying to manage
longstanding financial problems at the Institute, adding
that they had done their best and had made progress in some
areas during a difficult time of strong labour market
conditions and declining enrolments. “With continuing
pressure on enrolments and persisting deficits, however, it
is now apparent that a fresh approach is necessary,” he
said.
Lloyd Woods, National President of ASTE, the union
representing academic staff at the Institute, said that the
situation had become so difficult that the appointment of a
commissioner was almost inevitable. He said that WITT had
been struggling for some years following ill-conceived
ventures by previous management and councils. “Staff at
WITT feel [the appointment of a commissioner] is a positive
move and one that shows an ongoing concern for and
commitment to the Institute by the Government,” he said.
“We see this as a move in support of current management,
staff and, most importantly, students.”
Dr Cullen said
that the Government is committed to tertiary education in
Taranaki, and has made provision of $7 million to support
WITT into the future. “I will ensure the Commissioner is
supported by an advisory committee comprising people with an
understanding of the tertiary-education and training needs
of Taranaki. The committee will be appointed in early
2007,” he said.
Study shows those with qualifications
earn more
People with a qualification below degree level
earn about 20 percent less than those with a bachelor’s
degree, while those with a postgraduate qualification earn
about 60 percent more than those with only a bachelor’s
degree, according to a new report published by the Ministry
of Education.
The report, What factors impact on
graduates' earnings three years post-study?, looks at the
post-study earnings of those who borrowed through the
Student Loan Scheme and the earnings of people three years
after they left study and again five years after they left
study. The analysis provides new information on the extent
of change in the earnings of graduates who studied at
different qualification levels.
Included among the key
findings are that students who studied in the fields of
Health, Engineering, Management and Commerce and Education
were likely to earn more than students studying in other
fields, when adjusted for other relevant factors People
holding postgraduate qualifications in Management and
Commerce or Health were likely to have the highest earnings.
Among bachelor’s degree holders, studies in
Engineering and related technology studies, Health and
Education resulted in higher predicted earnings, while
individuals holding qualifications below degree level in the
fields of Engineering and related technology, Health and
Education also were likely to earn higher incomes relative
to other fields of study at the same level. Among
industries of employment, Engineering, Mining,
Telecommunication services, Finance and Insurance, Property
and Business Services and Health and Community services
provide higher returns to tertiary study.
The report can
be found at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/tertiary/factors-graduate-earnings.html
Education
links strengthened with India
New Zealand’s education
links with India have been strengthened with the appointment
of a South Asia Education counselor, Perya Short, to be
based in New Delhi. The announcement on Tuesday of Ms
Short’s appointment coincided with a bilateral meeting
between the Indian Minister of State for Human Resources
Development, Purandareswari Smt Daggubati, and New
Zealand’s Minister of Education, Steve Maharey, in South
Africa.
The Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael
Cullen, said that Ms Short would play a valuable role in
building relationships between New Zealand and Indian
education agencies, institutions and sector groups in what
has been a fast-growing and valuable market. “New Zealand
has an excellent reputation in India as a quality education
provider. Last year, 2,114 Indian students studied here, six
times more than in 2000. Total annual fee income was over
$23 million,” he said. ”We want to improve the quality
of our international education relationships. Strengthening
our ties with a growing and dynamic economy like India’s
will therefore assist improving the knowledge base of our
education organisations and so help the transformation of
the economy.”
Education counsellors have previously
been appointed to Beijing, Brussels, Washington and Kuala
Lumpur, and appointments are to be made to Santiago and
Seoul.
Gold star for Otago
The University of Otago has
been commended by an independent audit team for its
collegiality and strength of communication between the
University community and senior management, with specific
attention being brought to the job being performed by new
Vice-Chancellor, Professor David Skegg.
As part of a
three-year programme assessing each of New Zealand’s eight
Universities, the New Zealand Universities Academic Audit
team spent five days at Otago’s Dunedin and Christchurch
campuses in July, speaking to about 200 people, including
external stakeholders. Its findings have just been released
by the New Zealand Universities Academic Audit Unit in its
University of Otago Academic Audit Report, Cycle 3.
The
audit team reports that the University of Otago has a strong
reputation for high-quality education, a student-centred
culture and a lively and distinctive campus life, with
changes to the senior management team bringing new
approaches to strategic processes. Leading on from this, the
University was commended for the inclusive nature of
consultation around the development of the University’s
Strategic Direction to 2012 document, the strength and depth
of relationships between Dunedin City and the University and
progress made in responding to Treaty of Waitangi
commitments.
The report recommended, however, that the
University review its strategies to address continuing
gender imbalances among academic staff and senior managers,
and that casual and sessional teaching staff should be
required to participate in appropriate induction, training
and support programmes.
The report can be found
at:
http://www.aau.ac.nz/nzuaau_site/publications/reports/Otago_cycl3_2006.pdf
Student-loan-repayment
threshold too low, says NZUSA
The New Zealand Union of
University Students say that the income threshold at which
students must start to repay their student loans is too low.
On Tuesday, the Revenue Minster, Peter Dunne, announced that
the threshold would increase from $17,160 to $17,784 on 1
April next year
NZUSA Co-President, Conor Roberts, said
that, for people coming out of tertiary education and
earning just$17,784 per year, having to start repaying their
student loan remains a huge burden. “New Zealand has one
of the harshest repayment thresholds in the developed world,
our graduates are burdened with having to pay 10 percent of
their income at an incredibly low level of income,” he
said. “In Canada they don’t have to start repaying their
loans until their income reaches NZ$29,614, in Australia the
threshold is NZ$37,335 and in the United Kingdom it is
NZ$37,400.”
Mr Roberts said that the low threshold
means that students are likely to head off overseas rather
than develop their skills in New Zealand. “It also means
that people are going to put off starting families because
they are lumbered with repayments on high levels of debt at
low levels of income,” he said.
Worldwatch
Fewer US
academics on tenure track
More than 62 percent of all
faculty members in United States universities are not on
tenure track, including nearly 30 percent of those with
full-time positions, according to an analysis released this
week by the American Association of University Professors
(AAUP). The AAUP Contingent Faculty Index 2006 provides data
from 2,600 individual college and university campuses on the
number of full-time faculty with and without tenure, the
number of part-time faculty and the number of
graduate-student employees.
AAUP leaders say that,
because academic freedom for contingent faculty members is
not assured and because contingent instructors are generally
not provided with the level of institutional support
required to deliver a quality education, the emergence of
contingent faculty represents a fundamental change in the
nature of higher education. They say they hope that the
report will spur discussions on campuses throughout the US
about the use of part-timers and the need to create more
full-time, tenure-track positions.
Like the survey of
faculty salaries published by the AAUP every year, the
faculty index will, its authors hope, function as a report
card that calls institutions to account for their hiring
practices. “Most of the conversation about the use of
contingent faculty has been at the aggregate level,” said
John W. Curtis, Director of the AAUP’s Department of
Research and one of the authors of the report. “As a
result, he says, academics have grown accustomed to thinking
of the trend as ‘something that happens
elsewhere’.”
Now, the AAUP hopes, those same
academics can look at the index to find data for particular
institutions, like Boston University, where full-time
non-tenure-track professors almost outnumber tenure-track
professors, and the College of Dupage, a community college
in Illinois, where adjuncts outnumber full-timers more than
three to one.
The report can be found
at:
http://www.aaup.org/AAUP/newsroom/pressreleases/contindex.htm
From
the AAUP and Education Guardian
Work-life balance award to
UK university
Those promoting the development of
legislation promoting flexible working arrangements in New
Zealand have been encouraged by reports that Liverpool John
Moores University (LJMU) has become the first university in
the United Kingdom to earn an Investors in People award for
promoting work-life balance. The award is said to be giving
the University a unique advantage on the academic job
market.
All LJMU staff can take advantage of flexible
working, from job sharing, semester-only working and
occasional working from home to enhanced maternity,
paternity and adoption leave and above-average holiday
entitlement. Staff also have access to occupational health
and counselling services and reduced rates for the
University’s sports facilities.
David Blythe, an
Investors in People adviser who works with several
universities and colleges, said that, while institutions
were taking an increasing interest in work-life balance,
LJMU had taken the lead in embedding work-life balance
practices, and that this had boosted the University’s
attractiveness as an employer.
From the Times Higher
Education Supplement
Iranian students disrupt
President’s speech
Iranian students staged a rare
protest against President Mahmamoud Ahmadinejad on Monday
this week, calling him a “dictator” and burning his
photograph as he delivered a speech at their University. The
hard-line President is reported to have taken the protest in
his stride as he stood at the podium in a crowded hall at
Amir Kabir Technical University as a group in the audience
started chanting “Death to the dictator”.
“We have
resisted dictatorship for many years, from before the 1979
Islamic Revolution,” Ahmadinejad replied. “Nobody can
bring back a dictatorship even in the name of
freedom.”
The protest began when a group of students
started chanting during the speech, one holding up a poster
proclaiming “Fascist President, the Polytechnic is not a
place for you”.
Pro-reform students and staff at
Iran’s universities have been marginalised in recent
years, holding only low-level meetings and occasional
demonstrations, usually to demand better facilities or the
release of detained colleagues.
Last week, hundreds of
opposition students at the University of Tehran staged a
short demonstration demanding more freedoms.
From
Mainichi Daily News
Odds on for union leadership
It
appears as if there is nothing on which United Kingdom
betting agency, Ladbrokes, will not run a book, including
who will become the head of the recently established
University and College Union (UCU). In a pun-laden piece,
the Times Higher Education Supplement reports that three
hopefuls are on the mark in the race to become the General
Secretary of the 120,000-strong UCU, formed after the merger
of AUT, the Association of University Teachers and Natfhe,
the higher and further education colleges’ lecturers’
union.
The Times Higher reports the election as a
three-horse race, with the going expected to be heavy over a
testing course as the three candidates jostle to get a nose
ahead in the forthcoming hustings before a ballot of the
membership closes in March next year
After the close of
nominations last Friday, the three confirmed candidates for
the post were Sally Hunt, joint General Secretary of the UCU
and former AUT General Secretary, Roger Kline, UUCP’s Head
of Equality and Employment Rights and former Universities
Head of Natfhe and Peter Jones, a Natfhe/UCU activist and
hourly-paid lecturer at Deeside College in Wales.
Consistent with the age of true electronic
enlightenment, each candidate comes packaged with their own
almost-interactive website, but most importantly, Ladbrokes
currently has Sally Hunt at even odds to win the election,
Roger Kline at six to four and Peter Jones, the rank
outsider, at three to
one.
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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