AUS Tertiary Update
Fresh threats to academic freedom
A former New Zealand
vice-chancellor has cautioned that universities must be more
than mere instruments of economic growth and development.
Bryan Gould, former vice-chancellor of the University of
Waikato and current chair of the board of the Foundation for
Research, Science and Technology, issued his warning in
opening the University of Auckland’s winter lecture
series, “Challenges for research in modern academia”,
earlier this week.
Calling on universities to be vigilant
not just in defending themselves against familiar threats,
Mr Gould said, “They must also be alert to new challenges,
which sometimes come in unfamiliar guises.” Expanding on
the theme, he added that the danger today is not so much
that universities are threatened by direct, hostile, and
deliberate assaults by governments or the private sector,
though it also must not be assumed that these were things of
the past.
“The threat arises from the growing
importance that universities are increasingly invited to
assume in promoting economic growth and development,” said
Mr Gould, adding that commentators from across the political
spectrum and from all parts of the economy have agreed that
universities are essential agents of economic
change.
“Our economic future is increasingly said to
depend on the research effort undertaken by our universities
and by their role in producing graduates with the skills
needed to promote economic growth,” he said. “This view
is naturally congenial to the universities, since it affirms
their value to society and appears to guarantee at least an
approximation of adequate funding. But the argument comes
with an unstated but potentially damaging downside, that
this role is what universities are essentially about and
that it is only to the extent that they fulfil that
expectation that they will be supported and funded,” he
said.
Pointing to the dangers of the approach, he
continued, “If it is asserted by political or business
leaders that the universities have failed to come up with
the required outcomes - that the economy is, for example,
short of particular kinds of graduates or is handicapped by
the failure to undertake particular kinds of research
projects - then continued support and funding for the
universities will be placed at risk.”
He said that the
problem, then, is that universities would be tempted, so as
to maintain continued public support and funding, to go
along with the inviting but dangerous assumption that their
only true value is as instruments of economic change. “In
doing so, they would accept a barely recognised but
increasingly damaging constraint on their freedom to pursue
knowledge - and we would have significantly misread our own
intellectual history,” he concluded.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Victoria’s film programme retained,
expanded, but jobs shaky
2. Support for women’s
scholarships
3. Auckland students angered by VC’s
allowance attack
4. Undercover police exposed at
Otago
5. Union push for academic freedom
6. Online
access reduces citation breadth?
7. First Mediterranean
university launched
8. LSE seeks teaching parity
9. A
nation of university ghettoes?
Victoria’s film programme
retained, expanded, but jobs shaky
The campaign conducted
by the Association of University Staff Victoria branch to
defend the university’s film programme against major
restructuring appears to have achieved considerable, if
mixed, success with the release of the draft report of the
film working party established to consider its future. The
establishment of the working party followed the rejection by
a decision panel of a deeply flawed change proposal that
would have cut two out of five academic jobs from the
programme and removed its film-production content.
The
working party report proposes the retention of the
programme, including its production capacity, and its full
complement of five academic jobs, as well as the
establishment of an interdisciplinary centre for new cinema
within the university focused on research, scholarship, and
creative work. The report suggests that the centre, which
would draw on other creative desciplines and fields within
the university, as well as the film programme, should aspire
to become recognised as a centre of excellence.
The
report recommends retention of five academic positions and
the elevation of that of the programme director to
professorial level. However, in response to what it
describes as the programme’s “long history of poor
interpersonal relationships”, it proposes disestablishment
of current academic positions, national advertising of the
new director’s position, and, initially, internal
advertising of the others.
Among the other
recommendations of the working party are the strengthening
of the compulsory core of the major and the focus on
research at honours level, the introduction of a master of
cinema arts degree, the provision of a dedicated,
state-of-the-art Mac Lab, and the establishment of an
academic forum for film with representation from all
relevant disciplines. The closing date for responses to the
draft report is Monday 4 August and the final report is to
be delivered on Friday 15 August.
Support for women’s
scholarships
Women-only tertiary-education scholarships
remain important, according to the New Zealand Union of
Students’ Associations (NZUSA), which is urging caution in
questioning their relevance and highlighting the ongoing
need for them. “Women-only scholarships pose no threat to
others’ participation, yet they do make a positive
difference to the recipients, just as with any other
scholarship,” said Analiese Jackson, NZUSA national
women’s rights officer.
While the participation of
women in higher education has experienced much growth and is
cause for celebration, she said there are no guarantees that
this recent phenomenon will continue, and there are many
areas in which women are still under-represented,
particularly in the sciences. “Women also don’t have
equality of outcome in the workforce, with a prevailing
gender pay-gap and many issues with horizontal and vertical
occupational segregation. To suggest there are no issues and
we can give up targeted encouragement seems very premature
at this stage,” said Ms Jackson.
“Many scholarships
for women are also based on other criteria, such as
second-chance education and supporting disadvantaged women,
or taking account of disciplines where there are lower
numbers of women. Without scholarships of this sort, many
women may have missed out on an education altogether,” Ms
Jackson added.
She characterised the use of completions
as a basis for analysis, as employed recently by Victoria
University senior researcher Dr Paul Callister and
publicised widely, as a very controversial, and potentially
inappropriate, measure of success. Rather than challenging
legitimate initiatives,” Ms Jackson said, “NZUSA
encourages criticism of the harsh user-pays tertiary
environment and promotes the introduction of a universal
student allowance as a sustainable solution supporting the
participation of all in higher education.”
Auckland
students angered by VC’s allowance attack
Students at
the University of Auckland are reported to have been angered
by recent comments by their vice-chancellor, Professor
Stuart McCutcheon, criticising possible moves towards a
universal student allowance. Professor McCutcheon said last
week that the idea of a universal student allowance being
contemplated by the government would amount to “an
unjustified election bribe”, adding that the money should
instead be spent on universities.
In response, Auckland
University Students’ Association (AUSA) president, David
Do, said, “While we agree universities need to be properly
funded to ensure high-quality education for all, what is the
use of world-class facilities and well-paid lecturers if the
students being taught are too hungry and tired to learn? It
is insulting to describe moves to ensure all students are
properly supported throughout their studies as merely an
‘unjustified election bribe’,” he added.
“Many
hard-working students are ineligible for a student
allowance, must borrow money to pay rent and food, and work
long hours on top of full-time study to make ends meet,
which all adversely affect their studies. Properly
supporting students through a universal student allowance
would enhance student retention and completion rates, and
allow them to achieve their full potential,” Mr Do
continued.
“It is perfectly justified to return to a
situation where all students are properly supported while
they are studying. Some $728 million over four years is
relatively modest compared to the $10 billion of student
debt we have today,” he said. Suggesting that the
vice-chancellor’s comments show “how out of touch he is
with the students he presides over”, Mr Do called on him
to “front up” and directly explain to students why he
believes better support for them is
unjustified.
Undercover police exposed at Otago
Posters
with pictures of plain-clothed officers working on campus
and labelled “Narks in our Class?” and “Narkiology
101. How to spot a nark” appeared around the University of
Otago earlier this week, according to a report in the Otago
Daily Times. One poster apparently shows plain-clothed
officers involved in the recent arrest of three people at a
National Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws
(Norml) stand at a Otago University Students’ Association
market day.
Another shows plain-clothed officers at a
regular protest “smoke-up” on campus. The posters name
the officers, give their badge numbers, and ask people who
think there might be an undercover police officer in their
class to contact Norml.
Norml leader Abe Gray is
reported as saying that he is unsure who had put the posters
together and posted them on the Norml website, from where
they could be downloaded, but that he believes the images
were taken from video footage recently posted by Norml
members on YouTube. He said the posters had probably been
put together because students felt uncomfortable being under
surveillance on campus. Mr Gray is also quoted as saying
that, from information police had divulged during various
interactions with them, it is believed they are also working
undercover in lectures.
The Dunedin area police
commander, Inspector Dave Campbell, said he was
disappointed, but not surprised, photographs of police
officers were posted on the Norml website. Police are
running an operation, he said, to stop offences against the
Misuse of Drugs Act on the university campus and, to date,
as a result, had issued nine trespass notices to
non-students and three to people enrolled at the university.
A university spokesperson said that no-one was able to
comment on plain-clothed officers working on campus at the
time the report went to press.
World Watch
Union push
for academic freedom
At RMIT University in Melbourne
today, Australian National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU)
president, Dr Carolyn Allport, is launching that union’s
biggest policy push in recent times under the banner “Our
Universities Matter: Investing in People and Society”. The
key claim in the campaign is for a new federal statute for
universities that will assert their distinctive role within
the integrated tertiary sector that is expected to emerge in
Australia as a result of new government
policies.
“Degree education, including postgraduate
degree education, research, and research training are at the
core of a university,” Dr Allport said in advance of the
launch. Advocating a stricter and clearer definition of a
university, she suggested that teaching-only universities,
universities with only one research area, and for-profit
universities should not qualify.
Dr Allport said that
the proposed statute would borrow an Irish legislative
definition that marries individual academic freedom to the
independence of universities as institutions. The NTEU
believes this is necessary because the Howard government was
hostile not only to researchers but to universities
generally.
“We thought the Irish definition was really
good and we think we’ve convinced education minister Julia
Gillard as well,” Dr Allport said. She explained that the
definition would confer protection, not through legal
sanctions, but through an institution’s reputation in the
international market. “It is symbolic, but its symbolism
is connected to the concept of the university’s reputation
and the reputation is connected to their market,” she
said.
Dr Allport said the Rudd government’s apparent
wish to create an integrated tertiary-education sector in
the interests of social justice and higher participation is
a “a very worthy aspiration”. For universities, however,
one issue would be standards, given any attempt to bring
together self-accrediting and non-self-accrediting
institutions and another would be competition and the public
good.
From Bernard Lane in The Australian
Online access
reduces citation breadth?
Scholars’ access to more and
more journal articles online may have had the perverse
effect of slowing the steady increase in the number of
citations of discrete articles, according to a recent study
published in the journal Science. And an unfortunate result
may be to tamp down debate among researchers, according to
the study.
When journals began posting their archived
issues online, the study suggests, that may have had an
effect opposite to what many publishers and librarians had
expected. James A Evans, an assistant professor of sociology
at the University of Chicago, looked at 34 million articles
published from 1945 to 2005. He found, if he controlled for
the prevailing trend of widening citations, that as more
articles appeared online, scholars’ citations tended
towards more-recent and less-diverse articles.
Dr Evans
attributed the shift to changes in researchers’ online
reading behavior: conducting searches that highlight
more-recent articles and following hyperlinks from those
articles to others. Scholars may see what others have cited
and assume that it is important, he suggested. “The
scientific community becomes more efficient at generating
consensus. But that means that papers and ideas not
immediately cited by others may get overlooked,” he
said.
Dr Evans’s results, however, have puzzled Carol
Tenopir, a professor of information sciences at the
University of Tennessee at Knoxville. Along with Donald W
King, a research professor at the school of information and
library science at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, she has been studying scholars’ reading
habits since 1977. The result of her own study, she said, is
that, after twenty years of holding steady, the number of
older articles that researchers read has increased in the
past ten years.
From Lila Guterman in the Chronicle of
Higher Education
First Mediterranean university
launched
A new Euro-Mediterranean University based in
Slovenia has been launched with higher-education courses
that will focus on issues of importance to European,
African, and Levantine countries bordering the sea. Creation
of the new institution is part of a joint declaration issued
by heads of state and government from 43 countries at a
Paris summit establishing a Mediterranean Union
organisation.
This is a parallel group to the European
Union, although it also incorporates North Africa and
Levantine countries that are not part of Europe. It has long
been a pet project of French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who
hosted the summit. The summit communiqué said a
Euro-Mediterranean University could “contribute to the
understanding among people and encourage cooperation in
higher education”.
At the launch, Slovenian prime
minister Janez Janša stressed the initiative’s historic
importance, saying, “Europe and the Mediterranean have,
since time immemorial, been connected in totality. European
culture, art, and science still draw inspiration from the
achievements of the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, Phoenicians,
Greeks, Romans, and others who, in their own time, helped
shape the region to which we belong.”
Supporting
universities from around the world are signing a foundation
charter in the period to September. Already, however,
universities from Britain, Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech
Republic, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary,
Israel, Italy, Lithuania, Malta, Morocco, the Palestinian
territories, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Tunisia, and Turkey
have signed.
The university’s stated aims are to
develop academic and professional human resources in the
region and contribute to the creation of a common
higher-education and research area in the Mediterranean; to
support and strengthen existing co-operation networks among
universities and institutes by promoting and organising
joint study and research programmes; and to encourage
intercultural dialogues.
From Keith Nuthall in University
World News
LSE seeks teaching parity
The London School
of Economics is to reduce class sizes and increase contact
time between staff and students as part of a drive to give
its teaching equal status to research. The school will
plough an extra $NZ5 million a year into teaching,
appointing twenty-five new lecturers and offering more
explicit recognition and reward for staff who can
demonstrate excellent teaching.
The move comes amid
mounting criticism from fee-paying students at research-led
universities that their teaching needs have been neglected
in the drive for research ratings, and it coincides with
similar moves at the University of Manchester. In February,
Professor Alan Gilbert, Manchester’s vice-chancellor,
criticised other members of the twenty-strong elite Russell
Group of research-led universities for neglecting
teaching.
At the LSE, a task force was set up last year
in response to concerns from students about teaching
quality, disappointing scores in teaching surveys, and a
perception among staff that only research was valued. Forty
of its proposals have been accepted by LSE’s academic
board.
Janet Hartley, pro-director for teaching and
learning, who led the task force, said, “It wasn't that
there was a crisis in teaching, but we weren’t happy with
some of the reports we’d had. I think it is as much about
reputation and brand as anything. If we are projecting
ourselves as a first-rate research institution, then parity
has to be there with teaching as well.”
A report by the
task force says that the LSE’s scores on teaching quality
in internal and national surveys had been “below the level
to which we would aspire” for a number of years.
From
Rebecca Attwood in Times Higher Education
A nation of
university ghettoes?
A widening gulf between local and
international university students in Australia is creating
segregated classes, cultural cliques, and religious ghettos
and raising fears of a backlash on campuses, according to a
recent report.
International education is a $NZ15.5
billion industry, and overseas students’ fees account for
an average 15 percent of universities’ overall funding,
but a higher-education expert warns of “informal but real
segregation”. Professor Simon Marginson, from the centre
for higher education at the University of Melbourne, said
local students tend to work off-campus and are not active in
student life, and international students spend most of their
time on campus, generally in the library.
While the
atmosphere on campuses generally supports international
students, Professor Marginson said, “You’ve got this odd
situation with the local students half-disengaged in a way
I’ve never really seen before. The international-student
industry runs off the back of a reasonably strong local
system which presumes a healthy relationship with the local
students; all of that has become the marketing pitch.
That’s the flashpoint that worries me more than any other
- that it could spring back into resentment,” he said.
Almost two-thirds of international students are from
Asia, and many have no contact with local students. Eric
Pang, president of the National Liaision Committee for
International Students in Australia, said overseas students
are not given a strong welfare system and have to rely on
peers for support, yet were accused of failing to integrate.
Many had told the committee, “There's not much
international students can learn from Australia in terms of
culture, or in terms of English. After all, the standard of
English of Australian students is not high
anyway.”
From Sushi Das and Erik Jensen in the Canberra
Times
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