AUS Tertiary Update Vol 11 No 31
Universities of technology bill knocked back
The
education (establishment of universities of technology)
amendment bill has been reported back by the education and
science select committee with a recommendation that the bill
not proceed. The private member’s bill was put forward by
former NZ First MP, Brian Donnelly, and referred to the
select committee last year.
The bill would have provided
for the establishment of a new institutional category, the
university of technology, a concept that was opposed by the
Association of University Staff and the Association of Staff
in Tertiary Education (ASTE), as well as university
vice-chancellors, during select-committee hearings of
submissions earlier this year. AUS and ASTE argued that the
status quo should be maintained, but that more support
should be provided for the distinctive contribution of
institutes of technology and polytechnics (ITPs).
The
select committee report on the bill contains a NZ First
minority view to the effect that it believes that
legislation establishing universities of technology is long
overdue in New Zealand. “It is consistent with the
knowledge wave concepts which have been put forward in
recent times,” the minority view says.
Elsewhere,
however, the select committee states, “Some of us believe
that the primary impetus for the bill relates to the
perceived status of the word ‘university’. We are not
satisfied that the evidence presented justifies establishing
the category of university of technology. Moreover, the
associated costs, distraction, and confusion would be likely
to outweigh any potential benefits.”
As to the relative
status of universities and polytechnics, the report deals
with the claim that the introduction of universities of
technology would improve educational outcomes by addressing
the disparity of esteem between academic and vocational
qualifications. “They [supporters] argued that students at
ITPs are disadvantaged, both in New Zealand and
internationally, because vocational degrees lack the status
of university degrees,” the report says. “The majority
of us have not seen any evidence of widespread or systematic
bias against postgraduate ITP students. We believe that
parity of esteem is best addressed by institutions
developing their reputations for providing high-quality,
relevant educational programmes.”
The select committee
considered 30 submissions, with twelve submitters, including
AUS and ASTE, appearing before it, and received additional
advice from the Ministry of Education, the Tertiary
Education Commission, and the NZ Qualifications
Authority.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Online
university under investigation
2. Nelson Marlborough
allied staff stop work
3. More on university ratings and
a correction
4. Wānanga “challenge PBRF
model”
5. Keep peer review, warn top
researchers
6. Buzzwords build citations
7. “Two
cultures” in the social sciences?
8. Emergency handouts
for hungry students
9. Cambridge goes to Coronation
Street
Online university under
investigation
Tertiary-education minister Pete Hodgson
has ordered an urgent investigation into an online
university operating from a post box in Motueka, according
to a report in Education Review. It is believed that, if the
entity calling itself Prescott University is being run from
New Zealand, it would be in breach of the Education Act,
which protects the use of the term “university”.
The
minister is quoted as saying, “The government is concerned
that New Zealand’s international reputation as a
high-quality education destination is maintained and,
wherever possible, further advanced.” He continued, “I
have been advised that Prescott University is unaccredited
in New Zealand, and has not been approved as a university.
It is an offence under the Education Act (section 292) for a
person within New Zealand jurisdiction to use the term
university without relevant approval.”
“It is also an
offence for a person to purport to grant degrees, unless the
person is a valid university or has relevant approvals under
the act,” Mr Hodgson added. “As such, there is
sufficient information to warrant further investigation by
officials, and I have asked them to follow up as a matter of
urgency. It is unfortunate that New Zealand has been
associated with this organisation through the existence of a
PO Box number which is listed as the administrative
headquarters of the Prescott University,” he
concluded.
Education Review reports that the local
company apparently associated with Prescott University,
Vacation Getaways, has applied to be removed from the
companies register and has changed its registered office
from the Motueka post box to a residential address in
Auckland. The university’s website, however, said, at
least until recently, that transcripts must be sent to
students from its New Zealand “administrative office”
via India.
Nelson Marlborough allied staff stop
work
Allied staff stopped work at Nelson Marlborough
Institute of Technology (NMIT) this week to protest at a
meeting of the institute’s council over the current
impasse in their collective-agreement negotiations. The
staff, who are members of the Tertiary Institutes Allied
Staff Association (TIASA), are said to have taken action out
of sheer frustration and anger at NMIT’s approach to the
collective-agreement negotiations.
“Our members do not
accept NMIT’s assertion that a 4 percent salary increase
is not affordable,” said TIASA chief executive, Peter
Joseph. “During the last negotiations, our members and
their academic colleagues accepted NMIT management’s
statements that anything above 3 percent was not affordable
and could jeopardise the institute’s financial future,
only to find that NMIT then went ahead and provided those
allied staff on individual agreements with a 3.8 percent
increase,” he said.
TIASA members also view as “over
the top” the fact that NMIT has approached these
negotiations with a list of more than 80 claims, according
to Mr Joseph. “The 4 percent increase that our members are
seeking is both reasonable and affordable, and is in line
with recent TIASA settlements in the institutes of
technology and polytechnics sector of 4 to 4.5 percent,”
he said. “NMIT’s 3.6 percent offer, with strings
attached, is not acceptable.”
Mr Joseph added that
TIASA members had crowded into this week’s council meeting
carrying placards and banners, demanding to be treated
fairly and to have their contribution acknowledged and
valued by NMIT. Allied staff will be meeting over the next
few days to consider what further action may be required to
advance a settlement.
More on university ratings and a
correction
Professor Sarah Todd, pro-vice-chancellor
(international) of the University of Otago, has pointed to a
misunderstanding in last week’s Tertiary Update story on
the latest Shanghai Jiao Tong university ratings. The story
reported that the University of Auckland appeared in 44th
place in the 201-302 band and Otago at 80th.
While that
is literally true, Professor Todd pointed out that, in fact,
the Jiao Tong ratings’ methodological approach results in
all universities within a band being placed in alphabetical
order. It is not possible, therefore, to arrive at any
conclusion as to the respective positions of the two
universities from these ratings.
Professor Todd added,
“It is worth noting that, where the Shanghai methodology
enables differentiation between individual universities at
the country level, they do so. Indeed, New Zealand is one of
just a handful of countries represented in the listings for
which they have felt unable to identify a clear number one
university, and instead have placed the country’s top
universities in a group.”
Also on the recently released
ratings, it has been calculated by the Press that “New
Zealand produces the best universities with less money and
fewer people” on the basis of gross domestic product
(GDP). With its proportion of global GDP at 0.2 percent, New
Zealand produces the equivalent of 25 top institutions per 1
percent of GDP while the UK produces 8.57 and the US 5.5. In
addition, New Zealand comes second only to Sweden when
comparing top-500 countries on the basis of population
figures.
Wānanga “challenge PBRF model”
In his
review of the PBRF assessment process, covered in last
week’s Tertiary Update, Professor Jonathan Adams says that
he feels that “it is of rather little value to make the
work of the wānanga fit the PBRF model, and it is a
challenge to the PBRF model for it properly to evaluate what
the wānanga are doing”.
Professor Adams describes the
activities of the wānanga as “a complex and interlinked
portfolio, where research is arguably more evidently linked
to teaching and learning than it is in many universities”.
Suggesting that some of the research work of wānanga in
science, social science, and arts would be immediately
acknowledged as easily reaching national and often passing
international standards, he expresses doubt that all of the
research activity is so easily assessed.
“The wānanga
have the potential to make an essential contribution to to
the knowledge business, and to enable New Zealand to make
the most effective use of all its talent,” Professor Adams
says. “But the existing knowledge concepts in MKD [Māori
knowledge and development], and therefore in the wānanga,
are in transition.”
Expressing disappointment for
“the excellent staff who are joining the wānanga from
universities and ITPs not to be seen as directly comparable
in research status to their peers”, Professor Adams’s
overall recommendation is that New Zealand should, in the
meantime, find a different route from that of the PBRF to
support the “knowledge mission” in the wānanga.
World
Watch
Keep peer review, warn top
researchers
Peer-to-peer judgment must be maintained as a
core feature of the system being designed to allocate more
than a billion pounds a year in research funding, some of
the United Kingdom’s most senior research figures have
warned. Frank personal perspectives on the future of
research funding have been given by eleven chairs of the
subpanels that are assessing the quality of UK research for
the 2008 research assessment exercise (RAE).
After this
year’s RAE, a new system to allocate funding will be set
up, judging research quality using a combination of peer
review and “statistical indicators”, such as counting
the number of times an academic’s published work is cited
in journal papers (bibliometrics), and the number of
research students a department attracts. The chairs,
representing a wide range of disciplines, have expressed
concern about the reduced influence of peer review under the
forthcoming research excellence framework (REF). They also
raise worries about the rigid application of metrics, such
as citation counts, to assess quality and on which to
determine funding.
Panel chairs have not commented
collectively on the REF on this scale before. Keith
Richards, chair of the geography and environmental studies
subpanel, has even argued that, as bibliometrics are
unsuitable for use in some subjects, they should be rejected
in them all.
The Higher Education Funding Council for
England (HEFCE) is still developing the detailed model for
the REF. It has said that the system would combine
statistical indicators, including bibliometric indicators
such as citations “wherever these are appropriate”, with
“light-touch expert review” and non-numerical
information. The balance between these different measures
will vary “as appropriate” for each subject. HEFCE has
already launched a pilot bibliometrics exercise and says it
will be informally consulting the sector with the aim of
bringing forward firm proposals in early 2009.
From Zoë
Corbyn in Times Higher Education
Buzzwords build
citations
Academics who use fashionable “buzzwords”
in their research papers could enhance their reputations as
their work is cited more often by their peers, a new study
suggests. Research from Durham University has found that
keywords used by academics to search online for research
papers are often copied in the same way that buzzwords are
copied in day-to-day language.
In his research paper,
“Random drift versus selection in academic vocabulary”,
anthropologist Alex Bentley suggests that buzzwords can lead
to whole new bodies of theory, even when the words
themselves lack clear meaning. “I have come to feel that
in the social sciences you get bodies of theory that I
suspect actually started from a buzzword. A lot of those
words don’t have concrete meaning,” Dr Bentley
said.
One example he cites is the word “agency”.
“The word drifted up and at some point it reached a level
where people are using this adjective so much they created a
theory ... It does have an impact on academic progress and
success.”
Dr Bentley speculated that the phenomenon can
impact on rates of citation, the number of times an
academic’s published work is cited by peers. Citations
counts will be used to help judge research quality and
determine the distribution of billions of pounds in funding
under the research excellence framework that will replace
the research assessment exercise.
“These buzzwords will
help you to get cited,” said Dr Bentley. But he argued
that the relationship between buzzwords and citations needs
further study. “It’s a bit of a chicken and an egg
problem [in deciding] whether using something that’s on
its way up is causing you to get more citations.”
From
Hannah Fearn in Times Higher Education
“Two cultures”
in the social sciences?
Key philanthropic and government
programmes offering grants for PhD students in the United
States appear to be excluding proposals for graduate
students in sociology and political science, while favoring
proposals from those in history, anthropology, and a range
of relatively small disciplines such as art history and
ethnomusicology, according to data released last week.
The analysis was presented at the annual meeting of the
American Political Science Association (APSA) and focused on
programmes to support field research or international
research. The issue is regarded as particularly important
because the analysis comes at a time when many political
scientists are urging the discipline to push those who focus
on American government and politics to take a broader view
and study other parts of the world as well.
According to
those who discussed the issue at the APSA meeting, a variety
of factors, including biases and habits within disciplines,
are hurting the “explanatory social sciences” in ways
that are damaging to those fields and their graduate
students.
Ronald Herring, a professor of government at
Cornell University who focuses on South Asia, said that he
first became concerned about the issue when he was on a
board looking at fellowships for the American Institute of
Indian Studies, which is the largest funder of support for
graduate work in India. The year he looked at the situation,
the success rates for political scientists and sociologists
seeking grants were both zero.
Nearly three-quarters of
proposals in art history were accepted, two-thirds for
history, and nearly half for anthropology. While the
situation has since improved, Herring said he wondered why
“some social sciences were being weeded out of area
studies”.
From Inside Higher Ed
Emergency handouts
for hungry students
The rising cost of living is hitting
some Australian university students so hard that the
universities have now resorted to handing out emergency food
aid. Requests for food handouts usually come to welfare
organisations but, in this case, universities are having to
respond to student needs.
Student organisations say many
students across the country are going hungry, and the
Australian Catholic University in north Sydney has set up a
system where students can take food handouts anonymously. It
says an increasing number of students are turning up to
classes hungry, forced to skip meals because of the growing
costs of living. So the university has had to set up a
cupboard stocked with essential food items.
Cath Leary,
who runs the programme, says dozens of students access it on
a daily basis. “Some people are doing it really tough,
some people are eating one meal a day,” she said. “We
hear, particularly from our counsellors, who are saying that
students are coming to them and saying, 'I'm not eating as
much as I probably should be'. The counsellors will often
take the students up to the food cupboard and show them ...
so they actually know that it’s there.”
She thinks,
however, that there are many more students going hungry.
“There are actually a lot of students who are not
accessing the resources,” she said. “We hear that
they’re too embarrassed to do that, because it would be to
admit failure.”
From Michael Edwards on ABC
News
Cambridge goes to Coronation Street
It’s a long
way from Cambridge to Coronation Street, but the
world-famous university is attempting to narrow that gap by
planting stories with scriptwriters at several major
television soaps in a plan designed to make the university
less off-putting to potential applicants. The Cambridge
University communications office has written to story
editors at EastEnders, Coronation Street, and Emmerdale,
among others, to suggest storylines that could present the
university in a more student-friendly light.
The move is
part of the university’s efforts to tackle its elitist
image and encourage students from a more diverse range of
backgrounds to apply. Press officers also approached Top
Gear to suggest it recreate an infamous stunt carried out by
engineering students at the university who, in 1958, winched
an Austin Seven on to the top of the university’s
70-feet-high Senate House. They also suggested to the
writers of Doctor Who the possibility of setting some
historical scenes in the Cambridge colleges.
A
spokesperson for the university said it was part of a push
to challenge “myths” about the university before its
800th anniversary next year. “It’s about challenging
myths about studying at Cambridge. People think it’s an
expensive place to study when, in fact, because of short
terms and the availability of college accommodation, the
bills can be lower. We have some of the most generous
student-support packages around and it’s an unlimited pot:
we don’t run out of cash,” he said.
The advances have
so far proved fruitless and were too late with one soap:
EastEnders is already featuring the story of two students,
Libby Fox and Tamwar Masood, whose mothers are competing
over who might make it to Cambridge or Oxford when they
apply for university next year.
From Polly Curtis in the
Guardian
More international news
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News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
AUS Tertiary
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