AUS Tertiary Update
PM not well informed, says Canterbury VC
University of
Canterbury vice-chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, has
dismissed the prime minister’s suggestion that the
university rethink its proposal to cut existing programmes
and staff numbers in its college of arts. As reported
earlier in Tertiary Update, Helen Clark, after hearing the
concerns of affected students over the proposed cuts, called
on the university to find another way to make
savings.
Professor Sharp’s response, however, when he
met those students, was to tell them, “Well, to be honest,
I think the prime minister is not very well informed about
running a university.” He went on to say, “It’s very
easy when you’re that kind of person to say ‘save the
money somewhere else’ but, if we try to save the money
somewhere else, wherever it is, then the same situation
arises: people say you can’t save it there, save it
somewhere else.”
Interestingly, this very point is
taken up in the Association of University Staff submission
on the change proposal. The submission rejects the
institutional isolation of individual colleges and
accompanying accounting model that produces such a response.
Instead, taking account of the university’s overall
healthy surplus, it advocates the adoption of a
whole-university approach that is essential to the pursuit
of interconnectedness and collegiality.
Specifically, the
submission identifies four main drivers of change that are,
in turn, employed by the university in its justification.
They are the setting of arbitrary contribution margins on
individual colleges; the imposition of arbitrary
staff-to-student ratios on college of arts programmes; an
equally arbitrary proposed ratio of
administrative-to-academic-staff numbers; and the
introduction of the rhetoric of “core”
disciplines.
These drivers are seen by the submission as
empowering university management to initiate and implement
academic-policy changes by circumventing the governance role
of the council and avoiding the requirement for proper
academic consultation.
In their place, the submission
recommends that the current consultation process be halted
pending a properly minuted council discussion and directive,
consultation with both academic board and community, and
acknowledgement of the tertiary education strategy and the
national interest.
Among its consequent recommendations
are the opening of the contribution-margin model to
independent analysis; full discussion of staff-to-student
ratios and the proposed general-to-academic-staff ratio;
meaningful consultation and discussion about an
epistemologically appropriate model for arts programmes; the
provision and analysis of alternatives to staff cuts; and
urgent meetings with the government to discuss special
funding for strategically important programmes.
The
complete submission is available at:
http://auscanterbury.blogspot.com/2008/03/aus-submission-on-college-of-arts.html
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. No flexibility from
Victoria
2. AUS appointment to PBRF reference
group
3. Whole-of-organisation approaches to improving
teaching and learning
4. Life memberships for Lincoln
pair
5. VCs’ pay sends wrong message
6. Corrupt
academics, bureaucrats, and politicians
7. Tenure - now
see the movie
8. More women graduates but no more
jobs
9. Putting in the hours
No flexibility from
Victoria
A set of guidelines on “teaching restraints”
recently issued to heads of school and deans of faculties by
Victoria University’s human resources department is
attempting to impose draconian limitations on the ability of
academic staff to obtain dispensation from being required to
teach at any time between 8.00 am and 6.30 pm Monday to
Friday. In the face of legislation coming into force later
this year providing for flexible working hours, the
university’s timetable policy adopted last December
requires full-time academic staff to be available to teach
throughout that period, except in the case of “exceptional
circumstances”.
While paying lip service to the equity
implications of the policy, the guidelines define an
exceptional circumstance as “one that is beyond the
control of the staff member and which would result in undue
hardship if a teaching constraint was not
imposed”.
Pointing out that the threshold for such a
constraint is high, they set out examples of circumstances
that would not meet the criteria. They cover the opening or
closing hours of a pre-school, crèche, or school; the
availability of a preferred nanny or child carer; a staff
member’s residential proximity to the university; public
transport or recreational activity timetables; and the
timetable for scheduled meetings such as academic or faculty
board, except for staff with continuing and significant
responsibilities at those meetings.
Lest there be any
confusion about the stringency of the policy, the guidelines
go on to emphasise that hardship means placing “a severe
burden on the employee and which they could not reasonably
be expected to endure”.
Reacting to the guidelines,
Victoria AUS branch status of women committee convenor, Dr
Sandra Grey, said, “It is important for all staff to have
a decent work-life balance and certainly crucial that as
staff, unionists, and employers we take seriously the
difficulties facing parents trying to juggle teaching,
research, and care duties.”
“This is a very important
equity issue. As we know from national statistics women
still take on more of the unpaid work in homes, so they’re
likely to be more affected by this attempt to tighten up
rules around ‘teaching hours’. However, men with
caregiving duties are, of course, still being massively
disadvantaged if their dual roles as employee and caregiver
aren’t taken seriously,” Dr Grey added.
AUS
appointment to PBRF reference group
The appointment of Dr
Grant Duncan, AUS academic vice-president, was announced on
Friday to the fifteen-strong sector reference group created
to provide advice to the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC)
on the design, implementation, timing, nature, and conduct
of the Performance-Based Research Fund 2012
quality-evaluation process.
Dr Duncan, a nominee of the
Association of University Staff, is a senior lecturer in
social and public policy programmes at Massey University,
Albany. His appointment will ensure that the concerns of
university staff about the operation of the PBRF are
considered by the TEC.
The primary goal of the PBRF is to
distribute the research component of the government grant to
the tertiary-education sector according to the research
profile of participating institutions. That profile is
assessed on the basis of the research performance of
individual staff members through a quality-evaluation
process.
Dr Duncan has taken a particularly active role
in the development of AUS policy in this area since 2002 and
has an active research interest in the PBRF, which falls
within his field of specialist expertise.
“My job on
the reference group is to advance the concerns of university
staff about the PBRF, as reflected in AUS policy,” Dr
Duncan said. “AUS members have also put forward a number
of alternative approaches to the assessment of research
quality and productivity, and to the current
funding-allocation model. AUS hopes that the sector
reference group will be a forum that is open to critical
examination of the problems that the PBRF has created, and
to alternative approaches.”
Dr Duncan said that
university staff have expressed particular concerns about
the accountability within the current PBRF model falling
upon the shoulders of the individual as the unit of
assessment and about the misuse of the individual quality
scores and evidence portfolios for internal management
purposes.
Whole-of-organisation approaches to improving
teaching and learning
Ako Aotearoa, in partnership with
the Association of University Staff, Institutes of
Technology and Polytechnics of New Zealand, the Tertiary
Accord of New Zealand, and the Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education Te Hau Takitini, is hosting a series of
regional seminars intended to discuss the development of
strategies to enhance the quality of teaching and learning
in New Zealand’s tertiary sector. Ako Aotearoa is a
national centre established to promote high-quality tertiary
teaching and learning.
The seminars will be held in
Christchurch on Monday 7 April, Auckland on Monday 14 April,
and Wellington on Friday 18 April.
The objective of the
programme is to engage senior executives of institutions,
academic managers, and practitioners in joining up some of
their thinking on how institutions can best support teaching
and learning.
“With the recent past being dominated by
developments in research, especially the PBRF, it is great
to see some new activity around what supports quality
teaching. Student evaluations of teaching are now
commonplace, and they have their place, but they are prone
to biases, and they do not necessarily give any indication
of actual learning outcomes,” said AUS academic
vice-president, Dr Grant Duncan.
“There is always scope
for innovation in organisational systems and practices to
promote improvements in the experiences and opportunities
that students gain from their university studies. AUS will
be interested to hear of any ideas for improvements in
policy or in teaching practice that may be of relevance to
our members,” he added.
Rather than simply providing an
opportunity for broad-ranging discussion of good teaching,
it is proposed that the key question for the seminars be how
institutions can ensure that they support good teaching and
learning practices within their organisations, particularly
as the sector looks to engage with a new quality-assurance
system more focused on provider
self-assessment.
Envisaged outcomes include stimulation
of thinking about strategic approaches to supporting quality
teaching and learning and the identification of possible
projects for strategic improvement which might be funded by
Ako Aotearoa.
Life memberships for Lincoln pair
Two
long-serving Lincoln University AUS members were presented
with life membership certificates at a celebration held at
the university last week. Associate Professor George Hill
and Dr Rupert Tipples had been awarded the honours at the
AUS annual conference held last November, along with
Waikato’s Varvara Richards and Canterbury’s Bill
Rosenberg.
Both men have had a remarkably long
involvement as union members and leaders, being involved in
supporting workers in tertiary education since long before
the AUS was established. In each case their service to the
union in a range of activities spans over thirty
years.
Since the formation of the AUS, Associate
Professor Hill has served extensively on the local AUS
committee, and also on the national committee and council,
including a period as national president.
He was
instrumental in setting up Lincoln University’s voluntary
lecturer-evaluation system and has served many times on the
promotions committee. His current significant contribution
involves heading industrial bargaining for the AUS at
Lincoln University and being part of the national AUS
industrial committee.
Dr Tipples joined the AUS from a
background in union activity in the United Kingdom. He has
frequently served in significant roles as Lincoln’s AUS
president, and is currently co-president with Lyndsay
Ainsworth.
He is noted for his tenacity and persistence
in helping individuals with issues that have affected their
employment. Especially important has been his influence in
promoting the AUS benevolent fund to members in need of
financial support.
Lincoln AUS members are delighted that
both men are continuing in roles within the union and that
their vast institutional knowledge is still available to the
union and the university.
Their life membership
certificates were presented by Maureen Montgomery, the
current AUS national president, and Nanette Cormack, the
acting general secretary of AUS, at a staff celebration of
the achievements of both men at Lincoln University.
World
Watch
VCs’ pay sends wrong message
The United
Kingdom’s University and College Union (UCU) has reacted
to the release of a recent survey of vice-chancellors’
salaries by saying that its results send out the wrong
message to staff. The Times Higher Education-Grant Thornton
survey reveals that vice-chancellors enjoyed an average pay
rise of 8 percent from 2005-6 to 2006-7 and that 56 of them
have a higher annual salary than the prime minister.
The
union is concerned that vice-chancellors’ pay goes largely
unchecked and there appear to be no clear principles that
determine how big the rises are or why they are awarded.
Academic staff are subjected to much greater scrutiny in
terms of their pay and UCU believes that vice-chancellors
should not be immune to such analysis. It is calling for
much greater transparency and clearer guidelines setting out
the reasons for vice-chancellors receiving the increases
they do.
UCU general secretary, Sally Hunt, said: “At a
time when some universities are pleading poverty and
suggesting they may have problems fulfilling commitments on
staff pay, it does seem a little distasteful that
vice-chancellors have once again enjoyed above-average pay
increases. Vice-chancellors’ pay continues to fall outside
of the type of scrutiny their staff are subjected to and how
they merit big increases is never properly explained.”
“They should be subjected to performance-related pay,
like their staff are,” Ms Hunt added.
“If they do
perform well enough to merit reward, then they should
receive a bonus, rather than a massive pay boost that tops
up their final-salary pension scheme. It is vital that
universities ensure there is proper scrutiny of
vice-chancellors’ pay and pension provision if we are to
avoid suspicions of one law for those at the top and another
for the rest.”
Corrupt academics, bureaucrats, and
politicians
A Siberian university student bit back when a
bribe he was asked to pay a teacher to pass an examination
failed to deliver the success expected. The final-year
student at Tyumen State Agricultural Institute more than
2,000 km east of Moscow complained to state prosecutors when
his 39-year-old senior lecturer in the faculty of soil
science and agrochemistry demanded a 2,000 rouble ($NZ106)
bribe. The student told investigators that, although the
bribe was paid, the expected exam pass was not forthcoming.
An investigation into this case, and other suspected
incidents of financial extortion at the institute, is under
way.
Corruption in Russian higher education has long been
an endemic problem. The most recent in-depth study into the
problem was carried out by Moscow’s Indem Foundation, a
democracy-oriented thinktank run by Georgy Satatov.
The
four-year study, which tracked corruption across Russian
society between 2001 and 2005, put the annual cost of the
black market in bribery at $3.7 billion, with
higher-education institutions accounting for $US720 million
of that in 2005.
Overall, corruption across the
higher-education sector accounted for about 21 percent of
the total market, with two in every three students and their
families willing to resort to paying education officials,
administrators, and tutors to secure places, exam results,
or other benefits.
The Indem study, based on
representative interviews with 2,000 Russians in 2001 and
3,000 in 2005, found both an increase in the number, range,
and cost of bribes and the willingness of ordinary people to
pay them.
From University World News
Tenure - now see
the movie
Higher education has often provided plots for
film, most often student-oriented movies such as Animal
House or Orange County. Stories of faculty members also
appear, with a number of academic novels having been
dramatised.
Now, however, it’s tenure that’s about to
have its fifteen minutes of Hollywood fame. Blowtorch
Entertainment begins shooting next month on Tenure, which is
about a college professor coming up for tenure in
competition with a female rival who has recently arrived at
the fictional Grey College.
Brendan McDonald, the
producer, said that he viewed academe as “one of the
interesting worlds to explore” and added that he viewed
the project as “lampooning the tenure process”.
Some
experts on tenure and/or the artistic portrayal of
professors are dubious that the movie can be either true to
the realities of academic life, popular with moviegoers, or
both. And their analysis reflects thinking about why tenure,
a source of much drama for people in academe, doesn’t tend
to be a top storyline for the rest of the world.
At least
one film scholar, however, thinks that the forthcoming film
might do well. Chuck Tryon, who is on the tenure track as an
assistant professor of film and media studies at
Fayetteville State University, could see the film succeeding
with the indie film crowd and “creative class
audiences”, whose members include many academics or people
who know academics.
The biggest difficulty Tryon
envisions is the reality that, for many professors, the
intellectual action is in their minds and not necessarily
something that can be filmed in a way that would be
“visually interesting.” He added that “since my
ongoing pursuit of tenure typically involves me sitting in
front of my laptop until 1.00 am, I don’t know how
interesting that would be to watch.”
From Inside Higher
Ed
More women graduates but no more jobs
It is reported
that the government of Saudi Arabia has urged the
kingdom’s private sector to play a bigger role in creating
jobs for the rising number of women graduates. UNESCO and
Saudi government figures show that women make up 58 percent
of the total student population at universities.
The
Saudi higher-education minister, Dr Khaled Al-Anqari, has
said that this is a record for women’s education in the
region. But such an impressive achievement in
tertiary-education participation is not matched in the
workplace: only 16 percent of Saudi women work, mostly in
education, where the system of classroom segregation
provides opportunities generally lacking in the private
sector.
During a recent visit to the kingdom, the UN’s
rapporteur on violence against women urged the government to
establish the necessary infrastructure for women’s
participation in all government institutions and private
businesses, and in decision-making processes.
For his
part, Saudi labour minister Ghazi Al-Gosaibi argued against
rapid change, saying the issue of segregation would not
change overnight. “In fact if, we try to change things
forcefully, then that may complicate matters,” Al-Gosaibi
said.
One sign that the issue of female graduate
employment may be being addressed seriously is the drafting
of sexual-discrimination legislation by the kingdom's
advisory Shoura Council.
Maha Al-Hujailan, a medical
researcher at King Khaled University Hospital in Riyadh, is
one of only a few women to have discussed the issue
publicly. Her research revealed that women graduates were
confronted by sexual harassment within the workplace and
when applying for jobs. Al-Hujailan said the absence of
legislation opened the door for violators and made Saudi
women “easy prey”.
From University World
News
Putting in the hours
The chair of the philosophy
department at the University of Akron was removed from his
position earlier this month after he balked when a dean told
him that department chairs had to be present on the campus
from 8.00 am until 5.00 pm each weekday unless they had
received written permission from the dean to be
absent.
Howard M. Ducharme Jr. had been the chair of the
philosophy department at Akron for the last eleven years. He
said he had never heard of an attendance policy for
department chairs until Ronald F. Levant, dean of the
college of arts and sciences at the university, called him
at home one day last month at 4.30 pm and asked him why he
wasn’t at his desk.
Dr Ducharme, who said that
particular day had begun with a 6.30 am breakfast meeting,
told the dean he was working from home. He met the dean a
day later and was told, he said, that “being on leave is a
military concept, and when one is away from their duty
station without permission, they are AWOL”.
Dr Ducharme
then complained about the policy to the university’s
provost. He also sent an email message to other department
heads in the college detailing his interactions with Dr
Levant. He received a registered letter on 10 March saying
that the dean was removing him as chair of the philosophy
department. Dr Ducharme, who has been at the university for
twenty-two years, continues to work as a professor at
Akron.
According to his employment contract as chair, Dr
Ducharme said, he was to spend about 20 percent of his work
time on his administrative duties. Like all department
chairs at Akron, he was considered a manager and as such was
not represented by the university’s faculty union.
From
the Chronicle of Higher Education
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 inquiries should be
made to the editor, email:
editor@aus.ac.nz.