AUS Tertiary Update
Victoria denies underhand tactics over fees
Victoria
University Vice-Chancellor, Professor Pat Walsh, has
described as absolutely absurd claims of underhand behaviour
by the University in dealing with a proposal to apply to the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) for permission to
increase student-tuition fees in Humanities and Social
Sciences, Education, Architecture and Law by 10 percent on
2006 levels from the second trimester of this
year.
Earlier in the week, the Victoria University of
Wellington Students’ Association (VUWSA) expressed outrage
at the proposal, saying that the plans had been kept
confidential until exposed for public debate at the
University’s Council meeting on Monday this week. VUWSA
President, Geoff Hayward, said that the worst-case scenario
was coming to fruition for students, in that tuition fees
would increase at a rate faster than the 5 percent allowed
under the Government’s fee-maxima policy. “More
troubling, these decisions have almost been made behind
closed doors without student input,” he said. “Without
consultation, thousands of students would have to pay the
increase not even knowing it had happened. They wouldn’t
be able to express their opinions or take action on an issue
which has huge ramifications for their studies and their
lives.”
Professor Walsh said that, in September last
year the Council discussed, in public, a proposal to apply
to TEC for an exemption to raise the fees in question by a
further 5 percent in addition to the five percent increase
being applied to all courses in 2007. This was deferred for
future consideration and it was due to be discussed at
Monday’s Council meeting. “The report on this proposal
was mistakenly included in the confidential section of the
order paper when it should have been in the public
section,” he said. “As soon as this oversight was
spotted the Council moved to defer the matter so that it
could be considered in public at its March 26 meeting. I’m
surprised Geoff [Hayward] made [his statements] considering
he was present at Monday’s meeting and knows the matter
has not yet been voted on.”
Victoria University did not
respond to specific questions from Tertiary Update,
including whether the University should have revealed
proposals to prospective students earlier in order that they
could accurately inform decisions about study this year.
Instead, however, it issued a general media statement
rejecting the claim of underhand behaviour.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Glassed off, not
Glasnost
2. University disappointed cheating linked to
country of origin
3. Government considered closing
WITT
4. Barriers to student-loan repayment
eased
5. Student-loan interest rate set, interest-free
student loans extended for volunteers
6. Canterbury VC
reappointed, Wintec boss new ITP Chair
7. VCs’
pay-rise twice that of staff
8. Union to campaign against
casualisation
9. Mammoth faculty strike looms
10. US
university fires transgender professor
Glassed off, not
Glasnost
Palmerston-North-based tertiary-education
provider, UCOL, has reacted to claims that it never asked
the Government for help to save the financially troubled
Diploma in Glass Design and Production programme at its
Whanganui Campus. Last week, the Tertiary Education
Commission told Tertiary Update that it had not been
approached by UCOL with a request to save year one of the
glass programme and that, while Quality Reinvestment Fund
money had been approved for the institution, support for the
Diploma of Glass had not been a part of the institution’s
submission.
Last week, UCOL Chief Executive, Paul
McElroy, said that the institution had approached the TEC
under the Quality Reinvestment Fund specifically for
assistance for the glass programme, and he has since
reiterated that the Diploma in Glass was included in the
first business case presented to the Crown in June last
year. He says that senior UCOL councillors and officials,
together with representatives of Whanganui iwi and mayors
and officials from Ruapehu, Wanganui and Rangitikei
districts, presented the business case on behalf of
Whanganui UCOL to government education officials in
Wellington. The business case supported the redevelopment of
the UCOL’s Whanganui campus and annual ongoing support for
its continued operation.
Mr McElroy says that the
subsequent dialogue with the Crown resulted in the business
case being rejected and UCOL being advised of set fiscal
limits within which to resubmit a case. It was due to the
fiscal limitations imposed on UCOL by the Crown that glass
was not able to be supported in the re-submitted version.
“I stand by my comment that we did approach the Tertiary
Education Commission for funding to continue the Diploma in
Glass in Wanganui,” he said.
University disappointed
cheating linked to country of origin
Lincoln University
says that it is disappointed that media attention on issues
common to all educational institutions, such as plagiarism,
has been publicly linked with students’ country of origin.
The statement follows a major story in The Press alleging
that cheating and plagiarism is rife among Chinese students
at the University. The story cites serious incidents which
occurred last year, including a student breaking into an
office to steal an examination paper, another who paid
others to do her assignments and one who was awarded a PhD
scholarship despite breaking rules twice during honours
study. The Press also reported that, in July last year, a
Chinese student studying winemaking and viticulture was
caught copying a colleague’s work, and that students at
the time said widespread cheating by Chinese students was
going unchecked.
Assistant Vice-Chancellor (Academic),
Professor Sheelagh Matear, says that the University does not
collect data on the basis of race or country of origin in
relation to disciplinary matters as it would not have any
impact on the way in which a student is treated. “We aim
to treat all students fairly and according to their
needs,” she said. “We provide learning support for all
students and, in addition to that, the University also has a
dedicated International Student Advisor.”
A staff
member spoken to by Tertiary Update said, however, that,
while the University may not keep information on the country
of origin of cheats, it would be well aware that students
from mainland China were involved in most incidents of
cheating.
With students from more than sixty countries
making up approximately 45 percent of its student
population, Lincoln has the highest proportion of
international students at a New Zealand university. Last
year, the University had fifty-two cases of plagiarism and
forty-seven incidents of cheating in exams or
tests.
Professor Matear said that that information and
warnings relating to the University’s policies on
dishonest academic practice are accessible to all students
and staff, and that all international students have to meet
English language requirements before being admitted to the
University.
Government considered closing WITT
Cabinet
papers relating to the Government’s decision to appoint a
commissioner to Taranaki’s troubled Western Institute of
Technology (WITT) show that independent advisors,
PricewaterhouseCoopers, considered four options for the
Institute, including closing it down altogether.
A report
in Education Review says that documents show that Cabinet
concluded in June 2005 that WITT was technically insolvent.
It decided, however, not to start the process for appointing
a commissioner at that time because it was thought the
institution could break even by reaching 2000 EFTS and with
having a new Council chair and chief executive to provide a
fresh look at strategy.
Education Review reports that, in
early 2006, the Government was advised that WITT had a
business-recovery plan but, by June, the Minister for
Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, was describing the
situation as grave and an increasing risk, and concluding
that more financial support for the institution was
unavoidable. By September, Graeme McNally, the Crown
Observer, reported that there was serious risk to the
operation and long-term viability of WITT.
The four
options considered by PricewaterhouseCoopers included
closing or breaking up the institution at a cost of $19-23
million, paring it back to only its profitable courses at a
cost of $17-29 million in the next two years, redirecting it
to deliver mostly programmes sourced from other, larger
providers at a cost of $25-35 million or continuing “as
is”, which would cost $29-38 million over the next four
years with little likelihood the operation would ever break
even.
The advisors warned that the first two options
would involve “substantial reductions in public provision
in Taranaki”.
A spokesman for Dr Cullen, said the costs
associated with each option included Crown debt and assumed
that WITT’s debt, currently about $11 million plus
underwriting of a further $4 million, would be written
off.
Education Review says that this year’s enrolments
are 10 percent ahead of the same time last year, with extra
courses provided in some areas.
Barriers to student-loan
repayment eased
Legislation aimed at removing barriers
that deter student-loan borrowers from returning to New
Zealand was reported back to Parliament by the Education and
Science Select Committee this week. The Student Loan Scheme
Amendment Bill (No 2) introduces a three year “holiday”
from student-loan repayments to ensure that the loan
balances of borrowers going overseas short-term will not
increase at a punitive rate. The rationale for the changes
is that the current student-loan rules, and particularly the
complexity of repayment obligations for overseas-based
borrowers, may discourage them from meeting their repayment
obligations. The Select Committee’s report says that, as
the penalties for non-payment may be punitive, borrowers may
be deterred from returning to New Zealand.
Under the
proposed legislation, provision is made for data matching
between the New Zealand Customs Service and the Inland
Revenue Department to allow the Department to determine
correctly the entitlement of borrowers to interest-free
loans. Under current legislation, only student-loan
borrowers who remain in New Zealand are exempted from paying
interest on their student loans.
Also included in the
Bill is what is described as an opportunity for a new start
for overseas borrowers who have not been meeting their
repayment obligations by extending the current amnesty from
31 March this year to the same date in 2008.
Fifteen
submissions were received on the Bill by the Select
Committee, with the majority of submitters supporting its
intent.
Student loan interest rate set, interest-free
student loans extended for volunteers
The Revenue
Minister, Peter Dunne, announced this week that the interest
rate on student loans for the 2007-08 tax year has been set
at 6.8 percent, down from 6.9 percent. The change was
approved by Order in Council on Monday. Making the
announcement, Mr Dunne said that the interest rate for those
borrowers who still have to pay interest on student loans is
based on a five-year average of the ten-year bond rate, plus
a margin to cover administration costs.
In another
announcement, Mr Dunne named a further six organisations
whose volunteers may qualify for interest-free student loans
while working for those organisations overseas. In addition
to the forty-eight qualifying organisations named last year,
the six new charitable organisations approved are Interserv
(NZ), Mission Aviation Fellowship of New Zealand Inc,
National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of New Zealand,
NET Ministries (National Evangelization Teams), OMF New
Zealand (Overseas Missionary Fellowship) and Bright Hope
International Trust.
Student-loan borrowers are
generally required to be present in New Zealand for six
months in order to qualify for the interest-free provision.
However, the law allows Inland Revenue to grant an exemption
for certain borrowers who are overseas, including those who
are working without pay or for a token payment for a
charitable organisation.
Mr Dunne said that the
regulation recognises the special circumstances of these
charities, their employees and the contribution they make
through various activities that are not based on profit or
remuneration.
Borrowers working overseas for named
charitable organisations would still have to apply to Inland
Revenue to determine if they qualify for the interest
write-off.
Canterbury VC reappointed, Wintec boss new ITP
Chair
The University of Canterbury Council has voted to
re-appoint the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, for a
period of four years from February 2008. The vote was taken
at the Council’s monthly meeting held yesterday after
being recommended by the Council’s Vice-Chancellor
Employment Committee.
Professor Sharp has outlined to
Council his vision for a period of stability at the
University, with a focus on teaching and research
excellence. He intends to outline his vision for the
University to staff shortly.
Chancellor Robin Mann said
that he was delighted that Professor Sharp has renewed his
commitment to the University. “I am also delighted that
his significant achievements, during what has been a
challenging period in the University’s history, have been
recognised by Council,” he said.
Meanwhile, Wintec
Chief Executive Mark Flowers has been elected as Chair of
the Board of the Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics
of New Zealand (ITPNZ). ITPNZ, formerly the Association of
Polytechnics in New Zealand, is the collective voice that
represents the nineteen public institutes of technology and
polytechnics around the country.
A press statement from
Wintec says that Mr Flowers has made a significant
contribution to the local scene since late 2002. He is on
the Board of Katolyst, the Board of ITPNZ and the ITPNZ
Chief Executive Officers’ Committee and is a member of the
Chamber of Commerce.
Worldwatch
VCs’ pay-rise twice
that of staff
The salaries of university chiefs in the
United Kingdom rose by more than twice that of academic
staff in 2005-06, according to The Times Higher’s annual
vice-chancellors’ salary survey. Vice-chancellors earned
an average of 7.9 percent more in 2005-06 than in 2004-05,
according to an analysis of official figures for
vice-chancellor pay published by universities. In the same
period, academic salaries rose by just 3 per
cent.
Between 2004-05 and 2005-06, the average pay packet
for vice-chancellors, including benefits but excluding
employer pension contributions, grew by £12,044, from
£153,061 to £165,105. The highest earner was Laura Tyson,
former Director of the London Business School at £322,000,
while vice-chancellors of the Russell Group institutions
earned an average of £217,927 in 2005-06, an increase of
8.2 percent on the previous year.
The survey also
revealed huge pension contributions made to some
vice-chancellors, either as one-off or retirement payments.
The highest of these was to Michael Sterling at Birmingham
University, who received a pension of £126,000 in 2005-06
up from £88,000 in 2004-05
When asked whether it was
aware of or concerned about the level of pension payments in
2005-06, the Higher Education Funding Council for England
said it was powerless to control or rein in vice-chancellor
pay packets or pension payments.
The University and
College Union said that the results of the survey of
vice-chancellors’ pay sent out the wrong message to
staff.
From The Times Higher Education Supplement
Union
to campaign against casualisation
Mounting casual
academic employment in Australian universities and the risk
this poses to quality is the target of a major nationwide
campaign launched by the National Tertiary Education Union
(NTEU) yesterday.
NTEU has estimated that the number of
casual staff in Australian universities increased by 34
percent between 1996 and 2004, compared with a 6 percent
increase in academics with more secure employment. It
predicts the problem will worsen as universities make staff
redundant, in some cases as part of the jockeying to secure
Research Quality Framework funding. NTEU estimate that, in
the states of Queensland and Victoria alone, more than 450
academics were laid off last year as a result of
redundancies.
NTEU President, Dr Carolyn Allport, said
that the growing casualisation of the academic workforce and
the challenge this poses to universities in terms of
providing quality teaching and research is one of the most
serious issues facing the higher-education sector. “The
fact that casual academics are only paid on an hourly basis
is a major impediment to them performing their job to the
best of their ability,” she said. “Whereas full-time
academics are paid for their research and teaching, casuals
are expected to maintain their academic qualifications and
remain up to date in their field in their own time.”
More information on the campaign can be found at:
http://www.unicasual.com.au/
Mammoth faculty strike
looms
More than 24,000 California State University
instructors are voting this month to determine whether to
take strike action if their salary demands aren’t met by
the University’s administration. The California Faculty
Association says the faculty walkout, which would be the
first of its kind in the system’s history and potentially
the most massive in the history of US higher education,
would be likely to take place across the University’s
twenty-three campus system. As many as 400,000 students
would be affected.
Negotiations between the union and the
University, which began nearly two years ago, are at an
impasse, with the parties disagreeing over the true nature
of the employer’s offer. University officials say their
offer amounts to a 25 percent salary increase over the next
year, while the Faculty Association says the deal would
assure just a 15 percent across-the-board increase for all
instructors over the four years. A spokesperson said the
union is looking for what it calls a true 25 percent raise
for all its members over four years.
US university fires
trans-gender professor
A private Christian university in
the United States has fired a male faculty member, now
living as a woman, a few days after she legally changed her
name. Last Friday, a US judge approved John Nemecek’s
petition to change her name to Julie Nemecek.
When
Nemecek announced, late last year, that she would start
dressing and living as a woman, Spring Arbor University
officials cut her pay and reduced her job responsibilities,
saying that she had violated the terms of her employment
contract and warning that she would lose her job at the end
of May.
Nemecek said she was told on Monday this week,
three days after legally changing her name, that she had
been fired but would be paid through until May. The
University confirmed the dismissal in a written statement.
“A primary reason for this is John’s decision to not
honor the contract we had agreed on,” the statement said.
“We will honor our end of the contract financially and pay
John through the end of the academic year.”
Nemecek has
filed a gender-discrimination complaint against the
University and the two sides are scheduled to meet in
mediation on 6 March.
The Associated
Press
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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