AUS Tertiary Update
Decision-making under way on two fronts
Starting on
Monday, AUS members throughout the country will enter the
decision-making process on two of their major issues for
2008: MECA (multi-employer collective agreement) bargaining
and amalgamation. For a fortnight from 10 March, they will
join members from other university unions to hear and
discuss the case for continuing with national MECA
bargaining and the tripartite process again this
year.
Following that, AUS members will go on to discuss
their second amalgamation ballot. That ballot, for a merger
between AUS and the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education Te Hau Takitini o Aotearoa, is the result of the
TIASA decision not to proceed with the three-union proposal
for amalgamation.
Those meetings will be followed by a
ballot process covering both issues extending from 31 March
to 11 April. The combined ballot is intended to avoid the
possibility of “ballot fatigue” in this case where two
critical decisions must be made within a very short
period.
The ballot pack that goes out to members will
contain information on both national bargaining and
amalgamation, a voting paper for each ballot, and a single
addressed envelope which must be returned by internal mail
to the local branch office by noon on Friday 11 April. The
return envelopes are numbered solely to identify for
follow-up those who have not yet voted; numbering is not
used to identify how individuals have voted.
In the case
of the bargaining framework, the MECA decision will be
followed by combined union claims meetings and the
nomination of branch bargaining team members in the second
half of April, final decisions on claims and process in May,
and the commencement of bargaining.
If the second ballot
again endorses amalgamation, rules for the new union will be
drafted in close consultation with representatives of the
two existing unions and go to a combined rules conference in
mid year. The new union would then hold its first conference
in November 2008 and become fully operational by 1 January
2009.
Stressing the importance of maximum membership
participation in the ballots, AUS national president,
Associate Professor Maureen Montgomery, said, “The AUS
annual conference and council have strongly endorsed both
national bargaining and the proposed amalgamation and are,
therefore, recommending that members vote in support of
them.”
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Chance
for a fix to PBRF
2. Treble the Marsden Fund, say
researchers
3. NZUSA depressed by debt statistics
4.
Cheating on the rise again
5. Expanded performance-based
funding proposed in Australia
6. Some progress for women
professors
7. Dangers in naming rights
Chance for a fix
to PBRF
The Association of University Staff has welcomed
a review of the Performance-Based Research Fund currently
being undertaken by an international expert and involving
extensive consultation across the tertiary-education sector.
The union sees the review as an excellent opportunity to put
right major flaws in PBRF operation.
The review, being
carried out by Dr Jonathan Adams of the United Kingdom, is
intended to examine the PBRF process and, in particular, the
experience of staff involved in preparing evidence
portfolios on which research-performance assessments are
made. The PBRF provides $230 million annually in research
funding.
AUS national president, Associate Professor
Maureen Montgomery, said that the review will look at
problems that had arisen with the PBRF and how they might
best be resolved. She added that current assessment and
reporting models used for the PBRF are inappropriate and
that the improper use of individual PBRF ratings in
staff-performance appraisals not only creates anger and
disillusionment among academic staff but also compromises
the integrity of staff-development procedures already in
place.
“AUS has always rejected the individual unit of
assessment as the basis for the PBRF model and, equally, has
consistently opposed the reporting of results at that
individual level,” said Associate Professor Montgomery.
“Such is the depth of feeling about these flaws that the
possibility of a boycott of future rounds of the PBRF by
union members was raised at the recent AUS annual
conference.”
AUS will also be offering the reviewer
alternative models for determining the distribution of
research funding. They will not, however, include the
so-called metrics-based measurement system that employs
citation indices and impact analyses.
Associate Professor
Montgomery concluded that AUS would also bring to the
attention of the reviewer the international move away from
PBRF-style models.
Treble the Marsden Fund, say
researchers
In an open letter to the minister of science,
Steve Maharey, more than 430 of New Zealand’s most
distinguished researchers have called for a trebling of the
Marsden Fund over the next few years. The fund, which
disburses $40m per annum, is one of the few New Zealand
sources for the funding of undirected basic research and is
well-known internationally for its high productivity per
dollar and its role in value creation.
According to the
researchers, however, the fund has only a 7 to 10 percent
success rate for applicants and does not cover capital
equipment. They say that they have grown weary of
outstanding, internationally leading research proposals
being turned down year after year, of the deep cynicism
engendered among young and emerging researchers towards
their prospects, and of statements from successive ministers
that the fund should be substantially increased, while
increasing only incrementally, at best.
A trebling of the
fund, they argue, would reduce the failure rate from an
“absolutely unacceptable” 93 percent to around 75 to 80
percent while still maintaining the high quality-threshold
expected of the fund.
The open letter reaffirms the vital
significance of basic research and “its fundamental role
in revolutionary discovery” and notes that many of the
recent outstandingly successful New Zealand start-up
companies have emerged from it. “If New Zealand is serious
about cultural and economic transformation, it must have the
right balance between applied research and basic research
yielding, in the long term, a right balance between
incremental and revolutionary discovery.”
Seeking
collaboration rather than confrontation, the researchers say
they seek to create an innovative environment that will feed
wealth creation, enhance the nation’s welfare, and better
protect the environment.
NZUSA depressed by debt
statistics
The New Zealand Union of Students’
Associations is urging the government to take heed of the
depressing statistics revealed in Student Loans and
Allowances: 2006, the latest in a series of recent reports
highlighting growing student debt and the lack of access to
student allowances. The report shows that, in 2006, the
number of students receiving an allowance and not having to
rely on a student loan actually fell by 10 percent while the
number of borrowers and the increase in loan borrowing were
the largest since 2001.
“The fact that the biggest
proportion of borrowers dependent on debt was aged 20 to 25
years clearly shows that means-testing students on parental
income until the age of 25 to determine allowance
eligibility is deeply flawed and discriminatory,” said Liz
Hawes, NZUSA co-president.
“With this policy, Labour is
saying families can and will support their children until
the age of 25. Students and their parents know this simply
isn’t possible: low incomes, the high cost of living, and
extra expectations such as KiwiSaver leave many families
with nothing at the end of the week”, said Ms
Hawes.
This report is the latest in a number highlighting
students struggling financially. The Westpac Tertiary
Banking 2008 study revealed a staggering 42 percent whose
primary worry heading into study this year was money. And
NZUSA’s own 2007 Student Income and Expenditure Survey
showed students’ key concerns are financial, with 59
percent citing financial stress as damaging their study and
over three-quarters calling for a living allowance for
all.
The introduction of such a universal allowance is a
longstanding NZUSA policy to address what is seen as the
ever-growing problem of student debt.
Cheating on the rise
again
The latest issue of Education Review reports that
cheating rose in most New Zealand universities rose in 2007
after several years of decline in numbers of cases. It
identifies 499 cases of student academic misconduct at the
six largest New Zealand universities in 2007, almost half of
them, 228, in the Auckland University of Technology (AUT)
business school.
The weekly cites the business school
dean suggesting, by way of explanation, that it had recently
improved its performance in detecting misconduct.
Emphasising the seriousness with which cheating is taken, it
quotes him as saying, “What we have got better at over the
last five years is explaining to students what plagiarism
is, what are the things that they’re allowed to do and
what they are not.”
AUT’s total number of cheats was
269, followed by Victoria with 96, Auckland with 69, Otago
with forty-one, Massey with sixteen in exams, and Canterbury
with just eight. It is not entirely clear from the story,
however, if all universities record misconduct in the same
way.
Exam offences included illicitly introducing
unauthorised materials, calculators, and cell phones.
Penalties for misconduct included reference to a learning
development centre, reduction in marks (the most common
punishment for plagiarists), fines of up to $1,000, and
course failure.
Plagiarism, by far the biggest problem
according to Education Review, is increasingly being
combated by software such as Turnitin and other steps being
taken include specific training in the principles of
academic integrity and the introduction of academic
misconduct registers and, in the case of exam cheating,
random seating and the use of coloured paper for exam sheets
to confound note-smugglers.
World Watch
Expanded
performance-based funding proposed in Australia
Some
Australian universities are being threatened with funding
reductions if they do not succeed in such activities as
developing innovation and engaging with their communities.
The proposal comes with a number of other radical
initiatives in an unofficial discussion paper apparently
mainly written by Group of Eight (Go8) universities
executive director, Michael Gallagher.
The discussion
paper is described as “an attempt to build consensus and
seize the initiative on how Labor’s new funding compacts
would work”. The new Australian government’s compacts
appear to resemble New Zealand’s investment plans and are
apparently intended to assist each university to improve its
performance by the introduction of individually tailored
benchmarks around which universities can take an increasing
level of responsibility.
Hopes have been expressed that
compacts will serve the national interest better than has
the market model and protect nationally important areas of
study threatened by low student demand. There remain,
however, concerns about the “rules of engagement” for
the new model.
Among the initiatives proposed in the
discussion paper are the deregulation of what it describes
as “template university funding” and the extension of
performance-based funding to teaching, research, innovation,
and community engagement. Funding would be at risk if
universities fail to measure up in such areas. If, for
example, a university performed poorly in research, it would
be expected to transfer funding to an area such as community
engagement.
Go8 chair Alan Robson is cited as saying that
it is essential that performance be measured broadly and
that compacts would have to recognise university
differentiation. University of Tasmania vice-chancellor,
Daryl Le Grew, however, cast doubts on the model, calling
for respect for individual university autonomy and doubting
that performance could be measured fairly because of
differences in make-up.
From The Australian
Some
progress for women professors
Figures published late last
week have been described by the Education Guardian as
reaching record levels of numbers of women professors in
United Kingdom universities. While the increase has been
welcomed, it has also been observed that progress remains
somewhat glacial: the proportion of women professors
reported in the Higher Education Statistics Agency’s staff
record rising from 16.7 in 2006 to 17.5 percent in 2007.
That amounts to 2,885 women compared to 13,600 men.
The
proportion of women at all levels has also increased from
41.9 to 42.3 percent but with a much greater proportion of
women than men working part-time, 41.8 against 26.8 percent.
The total number of academic staff rose by 3.1 percent. The
numbers of non-academic staff also rose, by 1.9 percent,
with the great majority, 62.6 percent, being
women.
Responding to the figures, University and College
Union general secretary, Sally Hunt, said, as head of a
union with women in its two most senior positions, that she
was pleased to see higher-education institutions catching
up: “There is no reason why more women should not be in
the top jobs in our universities and being properly paid for
their work. Fair, open and transparent recruitment and
promotion procedures are in everyone’s interests, not just
women,” she added.
“What is equally important for the
future is that institutions act to ensure equality of
opportunity at every point so that women who are at the
start of their academic career will face fewer obstacles in
getting to the top.”
From the Education
Guardian
Dangers in naming rights
Naming rights have
become part of the university landscape and placing the
names of benefactors on campus buildings, programmes,
fellowships, even a piano bench in the music faculty, have
become a very normal part of fundraising, according to
Philip Fine in University World News. As a result, in almost
every university in the United States, researchers have the
name of a rich, local person or that person’s corporation,
before their title.
There may be unforeseen dangers in
the practice, however. In 1986, for example, Villanova
University in Philadelphia accepted money from John du Pont,
the heir of the wealthy du Pont family, and named a new
basketball arena the du Pont Pavilion. A decade later, du
Pont was convicted of murder. Villanova took the du Pont
name off the arena, and simply renamed it “The
Pavilion”.
Another case is that of Dennis Kozlowski,
the former CEO of Tyco, who had a building and rotunda named
after him at Seton Hall University in New Jersey. Now in
prison, he is one of the more famous US white-collar
criminals after being convicted of stealing $150 million
from his company. Fortunately for Seton Hall, he told them
they could take down his name.
The University of Houston
showed more fortitude in retaining its Enron Teaching Award.
Perhaps alarmed by such developments, however, at least one
university is bucking the trend. When the University of
Madison-Wisconsin was soliciting support for its business
school, it finally abandoned individual naming rights on the
grounds that other supporters may be alienated. In an era of
continuing corporate scandals, it may yet be grateful that
it has decided simply to call it “The School of
Business”, at least until 2028.
From Philip Fine in
University World News
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
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz. Direct inquiries should be
made to the editor, email:
editor@aus.ac.nz.