AUS Tertiary Update
Three NZ universities in top 200
Three New Zealand
universities, Auckland, Otago and Canterbury, have been
listed among the world’s top 200 universities in the
latest series of international university rankings, but it
is not all good news. Although the University of Auckland
has maintained its place as New Zealand’s top university
in the Times Higher Education Supplement-Quacquarelli
Symonds Ltd (THES-QS) Rankings, it has fallen to fiftieth
spot, down from forty-sixth last year. Similarly, Otago is
now ranked at number 114, down from seventy-ninth position
last year. Canterbury, by contrast, has increased its
position, up from 333 last year to 188 this year.
Three
other New Zealand universities are in the World’s top 400,
but their identities are yet to be published.
The THES-QS
World University Rankings are based on a series of measures
including peer review, recruiter review,
international-faculty ratio, international-students ratio,
student-faculty ratio and citations per faculty.
The
world’s top ten universities are from the United Kingdom
or the United States, with Harvard maintaining its ranking
as the top university overall for the fourth year in
succession. Cambridge, Oxford and Yale universities all tied
for second place, with Imperial College London, Princeton
University, the California Institute of Technology, the
University of Chicago, University College London and the
Massachusetts Institute of technology rounding out the top
ten. The leading Australian institution was the Australian
National University in sixteenth place.
Responding to the
release of the rankings, University of Auckland
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Stuart McCutcheon, said that,
assessed against the world’s best, he is very pleased to
have maintained the position in the top fifty. “This
ranking is a tribute to the quality and commitment of all
our staff,” he said. “The University of Auckland was
also first among New Zealand universities in the Shanghai
Jiao Tong University rankings released earlier this
year.”
The University of Canterbury Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Roy Sharp, is reported as saying that, while he
did not personally agree with the idea of rankings, he was
pleased Canterbury had made it into the top 200. “Other
people take them seriously which is important when
recruiting staff and students,” he said.
The THES-QS
rankings can be found
at:
http://www.topuniversities.com/
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. New university-type
proposed
2. Fine Arts students turn backs on
vice-chancellor
3. Debt no barrier to more study, says
report
4. Labour punishes high performers, says
National
5. Otago fees up by an average 4
percent
6. Survey reveals concerns about direction of
universities
7. Labor expected to kill off RQF
8. More
university bosses make millionaires’ club
9. Fooling
no-one
New university type proposed
Legislation aimed
at establishing a new type of tertiary-education
institution, a university of technology, has been referred
to Parliament’s Education and Science Select Committee for
further consideration. The Education (Establishment of
Universities of Technology) Amendment Bill, which was passed
into its second stage of the legislative process last week,
arose out of New Zealand First Party’s confidence and
supply agreement with the Government following the last
General Election. The Bill’s promoters say that the
addition of a new category of institution will bridge a
significant legal gap within the current structure of the
tertiary-education system while enhancing flexibility and
encouraging differentiation.
New Zealand First Education
spokesperson Brian Donnelly said that the Bill recognises
the importance of building and fostering relationships among
business, industry and scientific research at a tertiary
level. “The establishment of a non-university class of
institution for technology will provide scope to develop
workplace skills and knowledge to a level comparable to
overseas education providers,” he said. “In addition,
the Bill allows for students to move across various levels
of tertiary education, with delivery of appropriate
sub-degree programmes and pathways which allow them to
progress to higher levels of education and training while
pursuing their career goals.”
The move to establish
universities of technology intensified after a recent but
unsuccessful bid by the Auckland tertiary-education
provider, Unitec, to be re-classified as a university.
Unitec Chief Executive, Dr John Webster, says that the
current system is unfair, particularly for students from
lower socio-economic backgrounds and those who are unable to
realise their potential at secondary-school level. “This
limits our capacity to build the advanced skills and
know-how we need to transform New Zealand’s economy,” he
said.
Association of University Staff National President,
Professor Nigel Haworth, said, however, that there is no
evidence to support the contention that the establishment of
a new type of institution would enhance the current
tertiary-education reforms or provide a better-quality
tertiary education. “Moreover, the institution described
by Mr. Donnelly is what most people recognise to be a
traditional polytechnic, and a vital component in the New
Zealand tertiary system,” he said.
It is expected that
public submissions on the Bill will be considered later next
year.
Fine Arts students turn backs on vice-chancellor
Fine Arts students dressed in black and turned their
backs on the University of Canterbury Vice-Chancellor last
Thursday evening as he spoke at the opening of the Ilam
School of Fine Arts 125th anniversary exhibition at the
Christchurch Art Gallery. In what was labelled a silent
vigil to mourn the slow death of one of New Zealand’s
prestige art schools, more than one hundred students
protested the axing of staff positions at the School and a
cut of around one half of its operational budget.
One
full-time permanent position each in the disciplines of
painting and sculpture have been “eliminated” as the
University’s College of Arts prepares to face what has
been described as a manufactured budget crisis. Both
disciplines have had a traditional establishment of two
staff, complemented by visiting artists, but, as positions
have become vacant, they have been cut to part-time or
filled by staff on fixed-term arrangements. The School also
faces a cut of $85,000 from its general operating budget for
2008 unless it accepts a significant increase in the number
of students.
Student representative Hannah Wilson said
that students feared that the University’s moves
threatened the quality of the education being offered at
Ilam. “As the longest-established school of Fine Arts in
New Zealand and one of the oldest in the English-speaking
world, Ilam has a huge and well-deserved reputation that
should be built upon, not threatened by short-sighted budget
cuts,” she said. “We believe the increase in students as
suggested by the University would seriously impact on the
ability of staff to provide a quality education. It would
also put pressure on the limited space and practical and
human resources, which are extensively used by Fine Arts
students.”
Ms Wilson added that Christchurch is well
known for the quality and diversity of its arts and she
believes that the city needs a vibrant and high-quality
School of Fine Arts in order to maintain this
reputation.
Debt no barrier to more study, says
report
Student loan debt does not discourage students
from future studies, according to a new report published
this week by the Ministry of Education. The unimaginatively
titled Does the student loan scheme discourage students from
returning to study? suggests that the burden of a loan does
not have a negative effect on students, possibly due to
their confidence in being able to repay the loan on
completion of their studies.
Based on the results of a
series of analyses, a profile of students returning to study
has been created. The profile says that students who have
the highest likelihood of returning to study are those who
have an outstanding student loan, did not complete the
qualifications studied previously, undertook degree-level
study at universities and studied towards qualifications in
health, education, society and culture rather than
management and commerce fields.
This study also suggests
that policy decisions are likely to trigger short-term
increases in returning behaviour and that the most affected
populations are likely to be those that left tertiary
education in the year when the policy decisions were
announced. Furthermore, when both borrowing and educational
factors are controlled, the effects of demographic factors
such as ethnicity, age and gender on the returning pathways
of students are found to be negligible.
The report was
initiated in order to gain an insight into educational
pathways and the aspirations of former tertiary students who
return to study and it aims to identify the factors
affecting student return. The populations of returning
students over the period from 1997 to 2005 are compared with
the populations of non-returning former tertiary students
who had the same opportunity to return. Such comparisons are
conducted for students who have returned after having a
break of one to seven years (seven comparison
groups).
The study suggests follow-up studies to monitor
the returning behaviour in the tertiary-education sector in
New Zealand and the effect of educational policies on
individuals’ behaviour.
The report can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/tertiary_education/15496
Labour
punishes high performers, says National
The National
Party says that the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC)
should be rewarding high-performing polytechnics like the
Southern Institute of Technology (SIT) rather than cutting
its funding. The comments come in the wake of news last week
that nearly half of New Zealand’s polytechnics and
institutes of technology face cuts to student numbers and
public funding as the TEC moves to curtail out-of-region
competition and stop budget blowouts.
SIT is expected
to be the hardest hit of the polytechnics, standing to lose
as much as $8 million, or 26 percent, of its funding,
equating to around 1300 students. Much of the expected cuts
relates to SIT’s provision of trades training in
Christchurch where it is competing head-to-head with the
Christchurch Polytechnic and Institute of Technology (CPIT).
National spokesperson for Tertiary Education, Dr Paul
Hutchison, said that SIT had demonstrated innovation,
quality and value for money and should be rewarded, not
punished. He added that SIT was invited into Christchurch by
the building-construction and motor-industry training
organisations because of quality and price issues.
Dr
Hutchison said that the TEC was requiring that polytechnics
ask other polytechnics delivering courses in their region to
stop those courses and surrender the associated EFTS in a
process known as repatriation. He said that there had been
talk of “threats” that TEC would cut funding if a
polytechnic did not “repatriate” EFTS when requested by
another polytechnic.
The new Minister for Tertiary
Education, Pete Hodgson, said that the tertiary-education
reforms will deliver a tertiary-education system that better
meets the needs of a wider range of stakeholders, including
students, business, iwi and communities. “Institutes of
technology and polytechnics have a strong contribution to
make to this system by focusing on and meeting the needs of
their regions. This is a key shift for the polytechnic
sector that is widely understood, and I am pleased to see
polytechnics adapting their focus to deliver to regional
needs,” he said. “Any proposed funding changes for the
Southern Institute of Technology are designed so the
Institute can meet the needs of Southlanders, and this is
something both the Tertiary Education Commission and I
support.”
Otago fees up by an average 4 percent
Otago
has become the latest university to set student-tuition fees
for 2008, in this case by an average increase of 4 percent.
The Otago Daily Times (ODT) reports that the University’s
Council meeting on Tuesday approved the fee rise after a
sometimes sharp-edged debate in which student
representatives warned about “dangerous” divisions,
including those over Physiotherapy fees.
Undergraduate
tuition fees in Arts, Languages, Teaching, Business and
Theology will each increase by 5 percent, while Law course
fees, including honours, will rise 4.3 percent. Health
Science courses, including Medicine and Dentistry, will
increase by 2.4 percent. Fees for many taught postgraduate
courses have also been increased by 5 percent, including
Arts, Languages, Theology and Business.
The ODT reports
that the Council also approved a recommendation that, in
addition to an interim Physiotherapy fee increase, the
University should also seek approval from the Tertiary
Education Commission to increase the fee by a further 5
percent, to $5213 per year.
Otago Vice-Chancellor,
Professor David Skegg, is reported as saying that Otago and
the country’s other universities have long had to deal
with the “inadequate” indexing of actual university
costs through Government education funding and, even with
the latest fee rises, the University would not fully catch
up with rising costs. “Government increases in
student-related funding for universities were often linked
to the consumer price index, but recent studies had shown
the actual cost rises experienced by universities, including
staff salary rises, were almost double the CPI figures” he
said.
The proposed undergraduate-student fee rises for
next year were widely supported by the Council, but strongly
opposed by the two student representatives, Otago University
Students Association President Renee Heal and Finance and
Services Officer, Honor Lanham.
The Council unanimously
passed a resolution suggesting that the Students’
Association and the University jointly make an approach to
the Government over “serious underfunding” of the
university sector.
Worldwatch
Survey reveals concerns
about direction of universities
A survey of nearly 5,000
university staff in the state of Victoria reveals
significant concerns about the direction and quality of
universities under the current Australian Government. The
survey, conducted by the National Tertiary Education Union
(NTEU), also concluded that government funding for
universities is considered by many to be too low, government
interference too high and that Universities seem more
focused on gaining income than on student outcomes
NTEU
Victorian Division Secretary, Matthew McGowan, said that the
Government’s micromanagement of and interference in the
operations of universities has increased dramatically over
the period of the Howard Government. “Universities are now
forced to spend inordinate amounts of time and money meeting
onerous reporting requirements, and implementing new
requirements in areas such as industrial relations, just to
be able to maintain existing inadequate levels of
funding,” he said.
Mr McGowan said that the results of
the survey did not come as a surprise. “While staff feel
that their universities provide high-quality research and
teaching, they are concerned that a number of developments
are putting this at risk,” he said. “In particular,
staff are concerned that reduced funding, growing political
interference and increased levels of corporatism and
managerialism are occurring at the expense of focusing on
the needs of students, an agenda that has been driven by the
Federal Government.”
A summary of the survey results
can be found
at
http://www.nteu.org.au/bd/vic/higheredsurvey
Labor
expected to kill off RQF
Still in Australia, that
country’s peak university body, Universities Australia
(UA), the equivalent of the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee, says that the higher-education sector will be
relieved if the Howard Government loses this month’s
General Election because the contentious and flawed Research
Quality Framework will be cancelled by a Labor
government.
In what has been described as one of the
strongest attacks yet on the funding reallocation measure,
UA RQF spokesman and Australian Catholic University
Vice-Chancellor Peter Sheehan said that, if the Government
goes out, the sector will feel relieved that the RQF won’t
go ahead in its present form. He added that, if the
Coalition is returned, it must delay the RQF assessment
phase by one year to early 2009 for submissions and 2010 for
funding changes. “To introduce the RQF next year would be
far too premature for the sector, which would be very
nervous of that, and in the final run the proper assessment
of quality could be jeopardised,” he said. “The enormous
workload, the costs, the lack of principles guiding the
funding allocation all seem to me to say it’s eminently
sensible to delay this exercise.”
Education Minister
Julie Bishop has so far brushed off university concerns
about the timetable, insisting that the RQF will go ahead as
scheduled.
From The Australian
More university bosses
make millionaires’ club
The remuneration of university
presidents in the United States is reported to be soaring,
with the number of million-dollar pay packages at private
institutions nearly doubling from last year and compensation
at many public universities not far behind.
Presidents at
twelve private universities received more than $US1 million
($NZ1.32 million) in the 2005-6 year, the most recent period
for which data on private institutions is available. The
number is up from seven a year earlier, according to an
annual survey of presidential pay carried out by
theChronicle of Higher Education.
The number of
private-college presidents earning more than $US500,000
reached eighty-one, up from seventy a year earlier and just
three a decade ago.
The survey also found that the
number of public-university presidents making $US700,000 or
more rose to eight in 2006-07, up from just two the previous
year. The survey did not include the new President of Ohio
State University, whose $US1 million pay package, before
bonuses, is probably the highest of any public
institution.
Officials at high-paying institutions defend
the salaries, saying they result from intense competition to
hold on to talented executives necessary to help build
institutional wealth and prestige. They say that running a
large university is increasingly similar to running a
corporation.
Meanwhile, the Chronicle has found that, in
a survey of 165 public universities, one-third of
public-university chiefs do not have formal, written
employment agreements. Several rely solely on letters of
appointment, while others want to keep compensation details
away from public scrutiny. Another common reason cited for
the lack of written agreements is that governing boards may
prefer that presidents be “at will” employees who serve
at the pleasure of boards and can be easily fired.
Fooling
no-one
Academic phonies or, at least, people who think
they are, are reported to have started identifying
themselves as a sort of precaution against being exposed as
cheats. The Chronicle of Higher Education reports that a
recent workshop at Columbia University in the United States
for young academics who feel like frauds was attended by
highly successful scholars who live in what was described as
a creeping fear of being found out.
The impostor
syndrome, first identified in 1978, is apparently a
cognitive distortion experienced by many academics
preventing them from internalising any sense of
accomplishment.
It is reported that the idea quickly
struck a chord with scholars from the working class who
bristled at the old guard’s sense of entitlement but found
themselves crippled by a stubborn inability to feel the
same. Meanwhile, scholars who came from academic legacies,
described as children of the old guard, had feelings of
unearned privilege to contend with.
It appears that a
person with impostor syndrome typically experiences a cycle
of distress when faced with a new task. Initial self-doubt
is followed by perfectionism, procrastination, overwork and
anxiety. Then comes success. But with success comes the
discounting of success and the on-set of
self-doubt.
Success, the story says, only serves to
reinforce the whole cycle.
More international news
More
international news can be found on University World
News
http://www.universityworldnews.com/
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
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the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz