AUS Tertiary Update
$54 million for New Zealand researchers
The Marsden Fund
has announced its largest annual investment yet of $54
million in a wide range of leading-edge research projects.
The contestable fund is intended to support excellence in
advanced research in New Zealand. Projects are selected
annually in what the fund describes as a rigorous process by
nine panels of experts who are guided by the opinions of
world-leading referees. Funding is spread over three
years.
A total of 91 new projects have been given the
go-ahead, advancing New Zealand research in the sciences,
engineering, maths and information sciences, humanities, and
social sciences. Twenty-five of the awards, over a quarter
of the total, are Marsden Fast-Starts, designed to support
outstanding researchers early in their careers.
Among
this year’s awards is a project that will give answers to
the questions, “What did moa and other large extinct birds
eat? And what effect did their snacking have on our
ecology?”. This research will be accomplished by
examining the contents of moa coprolites (fossilised faeces)
to learn more about dietary habits.
Another study is
examining the substance behind organisations’ claims of
being carbon neutral. This study is a timely investigation
in the light of urgent policy and scientific demands for
action on climate change. Yet another will take a
comparative approach to the study of policing of indigenous
peoples by colonial administrations in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.
Dr Garth Carnaby, chair of the
Marsden Fund Council, said, “All of the projects funded
have been thoroughly reviewed internationally and are of
excellent quality. The fund sits at the discovery end of New
Zealand’s research spectrum, allowing our best researchers
freedom to explore their own ideas. It represents a
government investment in the creation of cutting edge
knowledge through scholarly research.”
A recent $2.25
million budget boost from the government and a decision to
spend accumulated funds has enabled the Marsden Fund Council
to increase its investment in New Zealand’s early career
researchers, and seed fund a number of projects it would
have been impossible to support otherwise. “The increase
in investment this year has meant that we were able to fund
a good number of the new Fast-Start projects, which have
been substantially increased to $100,000 per year for three
years of research,” added Dr Carnaby.
A full list of
2008 recipients is available at:
www.marsden.rsnz.org
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Sacked Auckland
lecturer reinstated
2. Options for measuring research
performance
3. Debt ambulance at bottom of
cliff
4. Unitec restructuring decision
delayed
5. Secondary-tertiary interface to be
strengthened
6. OECD calls for more
internationalisation
7. Australians trim courses for
global outlook
8. EU research findings open
online
9. And a lecture to go, please
10. A PhD at
91
Sacked Auckland lecturer reinstated
The
political science lecturer sacked by the University of
Auckland for an angry e-mail he sent to a student has been
quietly reinstated. Paul Buchanan, a widely quoted expert on
international security, was sacked last year after emailing
a 25-year-old Middle Eastern student telling her that she
was “under-performing and under-qualified”.
He
accused her of “preying on some sort of Western liberal
guilt” by citing her father’s death as a reason for
requesting an assignment deadline extension. The university
considered the email a case of serious misconduct and fired
Dr Buchanan.
In March, the Employment Relations Authority
ordered the university to pay Dr Buchanan $66,000 in lost
wages and damages for his wrongful dismissal. However, it
stopped short of ordering his reinstatement, saying it would
not be practical for Dr Buchanan to be reinstated and that
he lacked awareness of the impact his conduct had on
others.
Association of University Staff (AUS) deputy
secretary, Marty Braithwaite, said at that time that Dr
Buchanan could “undoubtedly” work again for the
university. “A university should be a robust enough place
that people can have disagreements, but move on and put them
behind them.”
Both Dr Buchanan and the university
appealed to the Employment Court, which was to hear the case
in November.
However, after a recent meeting, it was
agreed between the parties that Dr Buchanan be reinstated by
the university. University spokesperson Bill Williams is
reported as saying that Dr Buchanan was on “research and
study leave” but declined to comment further.
The AUS
has declined to comment on the latest development in the
case. Dr Buchanan could not be reached for comment and his
lawyer, Ray Parmenter, also declined to comment.
From
NZPA
Options for measuring research performance
Last
week’s forum, “Measuring Research Performance: What are
the Options?” heard that it is essential, whatever
research-performance-measurement system is adopted in New
Zealand, to keep it under continuous review to mitigate
possible flaws and keep abreast of international
developments and discoveries. Dr Jonathan Boston of Victoria
University’s school of government told the forum that, if
alternatives to peer review were to be considered, “they
would need to meet a set of evaluative criteria that cover
cost effectiveness, stronger incentives for excellence,
equitable treatment of disciplines, better performance
information, enhanced funding predictability, and the
ability reliably to compare performance.
Dr Jonathan
Adams, author of the recent Tertiary Education Commission
review of the PBRF and critic of the individual unit of
assessment, canvassed the advantages and disadvantages of a
bibliometric approach. In particular, based on his
considerable experience of bibliometric systems in the UK,
he emphasised the importance of the ability to gather
in-depth data in order to produce useful information as well
as having an adequate population size.
The Australian
Research Council outlined its intention to employ an
evaluation system that uses a combination of indicators and
expert review informed by measures of research activity and
intensity, indicators of research quality, and indicators of
excellent applied research and translation of research
outcomes. The New Zealand Ministry of Education presented a
comparison of funding outcomes under PBRF and bibliometrics
models which indicated that the latter approach would have
brought some redistribution of funding in the last round of
assessment.
In conclusion, AUS academic vice-president Dr
Grant Duncan argued for caution in adopting a bibliometrics
approach as well as highlighting a number of serious
problems with the present model. Expressing reservations
about any of the existing methods of assessment on the
grounds of academic freedom, he nonetheless set out a number
of principles that any re-design of the PBRF should consider
as benchmarks for future planning.
Dr Duncan’s paper is
available
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/Policy/PBRF/RedesignPrinciples.pdf
Debt ambulance at bottom of cliff
The National
party’s recent policy announcement to write-off student
debt in an effort to address medical-workforce shortages in
hard-to-staff-areas may provide welcome relief for those
lucky few who benefit, according to the New Zealand Union of
Students’ Associations (NZUSA). Thousands of other skilled
graduates, however, will be forced to continue battling with
significant debt.
“Throughout the country, we have
workforce shortages covering numerous industries, which
impact negatively on the economy, but National’s new
policy ignores all of these,” said NZUSA co-president Liz
Hawes. “Various national sector groups have voiced concern
at workforce shortages and highlighted that student debt is
a key factor, yet National appears to have either not heard
or simply doesn’t care,” she continued.
“Such
short-sighted policy is surprising given National’s
apparent concerns at the loss of skilled workers. This
policy is so narrow it will do nothing to bring most of them
back and neither will it prevent the majority leaving in the
first place,” said Ms Hawes. “The lack of depth and
consistency shows National’s support for indebtedness and
high-cost education, and a distinct lack of acknowledgement
of the negative effects this is having on New
Zealanders.”
“Debt relief needs to go hand in hand
with prevention. Any medical professional can tell you that;
treating the symptoms isn’t going to fix the problem, you
also need to address the cause,” Ms Hawes said. “High
debt is caused by lack of student living allowances and high
fees. Disappointingly, National’s new policy ignores these
root causes of the debt affliction facing New Zealanders and
has gone for the ‘ambulance at the bottom of the cliff’
approach with limited debt relief for just a select
few.”
“Students and graduates are left looking
elsewhere for real tertiary-education initiatives and policy
that will finally put an end to borrowing in the first place
and genuinely assist the hundreds of thousands who are
already struggling with existing student debt,” Ms Hawes
concluded.
Unitec restructuring decision delayed
The
governing council of Auckland institute of technology Unitec
met on Monday to determine its final approach to a
restructucturing plan aimed at reducing spending by $15
million over three years. Staff have been advised that the
finalised plan will be communicated late this week, once
plans were completed and affected staff told.
Association
of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) northern region field
officer, Chan Dixon, said that consultation leading up to
the final decision had been more “open and robust” than
previously at Unitec and that there is a feeling that some
of ASTE’s suggestions had been taken into account. “In
particular, we hope there will be fewer redundancies than in
the original proposal, at least in the academic area,” she
said.
The original consultation documents had signalled
that more than 100 jobs would go, a figure somewhat
ameliorated by the creation of 45 new ones. The council’s
impending decision is to determine exactly how many will be
cut by the end of this year, and there is some expectation
that that figure will be reduced.
“Our members are well
aware, nonetheless, that next year’s restructuring round
will focus on academic staff and programme delivery,
including staff-student ratios, which currently stand at
about one to fourteen overall. That figure, however,
reflects complexities such as postgraduate programmes with
understandably few students per staff member and facility
limitations in some areas. We look forward to again being
able to openly scrutinise the next set of proposals,” she
concluded.
Secondary-tertiary interface to be
strengthened
High school students not suited to school
will be going to class at an Auckland polytechnic instead,
under a new $1 million pilot project, reports the NZ Herald.
The scheme, part of a $39.7 million suite of education
initiatives linked to the government’s major Schools Plus
plan, is due to start at the Manukau Institute of Technology
next year.
Unlike traditional fast-tracking of students
to universities or polytechnics, the 80 to 100 students in
the “tertiary high school” will not be top academics and
will stay on their old high-school roll. The Year 11 to Year
13 pupils will have “potential” but not be suited to
conventional high school.
The report quotes Manukau
Institute of Technology student-affairs executive director
Stuart Middleton as saying that the project aims to engage
those who might have otherwise dropped out. “We’re
keeping students in school but not at school. This is
students finishing their schooling but not remaining in the
environment where they are not making sufficient
progress,” said Dr Middleton. He added that attendance
would be monitored to ensure pupils were coming to class as
part of a wide range of supports to be offered.
The New
Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee (NZVCC) has welcomed
the potential of the Schools Plus policy to improve the
secondary-tertiary interface. “Universities already
provide opportunities for able secondary-school students to
include some tertiary study in their programmes and share
their specialist resources, such as geography field stations
and science laboratories, with secondary schools,” said
NZVCC chair, Professor Roger Field.
“Schools Plus
should focus on raising the aspirations of those secondary
students who have potential to succeed in university
education – especially Māori and Pacific students,
students with disabilities, and students from lower
socio-economic backgrounds,” added Professor
Field.
World Watch
OECD calls for more
internationalisation
Governments should position their
higher-education systems in the global arena, develop a
strategy and framework for internationalisation, and
encourage institutions to be more proactive internationally,
says a report published by the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development last week. Tertiary Education
for the Knowledge Society offers this and other policy
advice to countries striving to build tertiary education in
ways that stimulate innovation, competitiveness, and
economic growth.
The new report draws on a study of
tertiary policy in 24 countries, the OECD Thematic Review of
Tertiary Education, and has two volumes: the first focusing
on governance, funding, and quality and the second on
equity, innovation, the labour market, and
internationalisation.
On internationalisation strategy,
the report points out that countries vary greatly in terms
of their power, size, geographic location, dominant culture,
tertiary-education systems, the roles of their languages
globally, and their previous internationalisation
strategies. “Obviously, this strategy needs to adapt to
country-specific circumstances, building upon natural
advantages and acknowledging constraints, and there is no
ideal internationalisation strategy other than maximising
the benefits of internationalisation in the national
context,” says the report.
It adds that, while the
international dimension of tertiary education is influenced
at the national-sector level by policy-steering and
co-ordination, funding, and regulations,
internationalisation activities are conducted by
institutions and, within them, by disciplines.
The
potential for national policy is therefore primarily
creating framework conditions for institutions to become
“proactive actors of internationalisation” by removing
blockages, granting institutions the autonomy to be more
responsive to the external environment, or by including
internationalisation in annual negotiations between
governments and institutions.
“Greater sustainability
of internationalisation strategies can be achieved by
promoting the diversification of international
activities,” says the report.
From Karen MacGregor in
University World News
Australians trim courses for global
outlook
The University of Western Australia (UWA) has
joined a group including Melbourne, Macquarie, Monash, South
Australia, and Victoria universities undergoing radical
course reform unprompted by government policy. Melbourne,
UWA and Macquarie have jettisoned the smorgasbord of
credentials characterising Australian higher education in
favour of a much smaller number of broad undergraduate
courses integrating the humanities and science.
UWA last
week announced plans to cut its undergraduate courses from
70 to six, while Macquarie University plans to cut the
number of undergraduate courses by 75 per cent in time for
the 2009 academic year as part of an attempt to
“reinvent” and “reposition” the university.
University of Melbourne vice-chancellor Glyn Davis, who in
2005 instigated a process of curriculum reform leading to
the Melbourne graduate-school model, said that this is the
first time in living memory that universities had decided to
take charge of their own futures rather than allow
government to determine policy. “The move for change has
come from within the sector and has been attempted without
additional federal investment,” Professor Davis said.
“This means those universities pursuing change are taking
all the risk.”
The reform process has strong
international parallels, as individual universities such as
Harvard, and entire systems such as the European
universities covered by the Bologna Accord, have embraced
the cause of curriculum renewal. Professor Davis said the
curriculum revolution was prompted in part by the sector’s
internationalisation, and questions about the attractiveness
of Australian degrees in the light of Asian, US, and
European reforms.
“If we remain passive, existing
markets will drift away,” he said. “For universities
without viable local income, which is to say all public
universities, losing our international markets is slow
death.”
From Luke Slattery in the Australian
EU
research findings open online
The European Commission has
responded to growing demand in the science community for
unfettered access to research by launching a pilot project
to make European Union-funded research in seven key subject
areas available free of charge on the internet. According to
the commission, the move should help the EU step up its use
of the latest scientific developments by ensuring that
businesses, particularly small and medium-sized enterprises,
have access to the latest research results. It should also
help the EU’s researchers themselves by making their work
more widely known.
The pilot project will cover health,
energy, environment, information technologies, research
infrastructures, socio-economic sciences and humanities, and
science in society. All are part of the generously funded EU
Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) for research and have been
picked out, said a commission statement “because of their
high societal impact and their importance in helping Europe
address major challenges such as climate change”.
Among
them, the targeted areas account for some 20 percent of the
total FP7 budget. If the pilot, which will run until the end
of FP7 in 2013, is successful, it will be extended for the
next research funding scheme: the Eighth Framework
Programme.
Under the rules of the new access policy,
researchers getting FP7 grants will be required to deposit
peer-reviewed research articles arising from the projects in
the open access repository of their choice. The EU says
articles must be freely available either six or twelve
months after publication, depending on the subject area; in
fast-moving fields such as energy, environment, health, and
information and communications technology, the deadline is
six months.
From Alan Osborn in University World
News
And a lecture to go, please
When provided with the
option to view lectures online, rather than just in person,
82 percent of US undergraduates declared that they would be
happy to entertain an alternative to showing up to class and
paying attention in real time. A new study released this
week suggests not only a willingness but a “clear
preference” among undergraduates for
“lecture-capture,” the technology that records, streams,
and stores what happens in the classroom for concurrent or
later viewing.
The study, sponsored by the University of
Wisconsin-Madison’s e-business institute, tackles the
much-discussed question of students’ preferences for
traditional versus online learning with unusual rigour.
Based on a survey of more than 29,000 undergraduate and
graduate students at the university, the study had a
response rate of over 25 percent. Almost half of the
undergraduates, 47 percent, had taken a class with lectures
available for online viewing.
The responses potentially
address two of the biggest obstacles some observers see to
more widespread adoption of lecture-capture technology and
other elements of distance education: a willingness to learn
remotely, and the cost barrier. Students who responded to
the survey clearly understood the benefits of lectures that
are available as webcasts, such as making up for missed
classes, which, at 93 percent, ranked as the top advantage,
and “watching lectures on demand for convenience”, 79
percent, or other reasons, such as reviewing lectures before
class.
At the same time, the survey addresses potential
cost concerns, which have given pause to administrators who
worry about the financial strains of scaling up their
educational efforts as well as to students who would bristle
at added technology fees for all of their classes. Over 60
percent of respondents said they would pay for
lecture-capture capabilities, and of those, 69 percent said
they would be willing to pay on a “course-by-course”
basis rather than bundled fees.
From Andy Guess in Inside
Higher Ed
A PhD at 91
At the age of 91, when many
people would be relaxing, Joseph Ciampa worries about
becoming obsolete. It is the same fear that once drove this
Italian theological scholar and Baptist pastor into
switching careers to become an enrolled nurse at the age of
50. And now it has driven him to become one of the world’s
oldest recipients of a PhD.
“I have this drive not to
be useless,” Mr Ciampa said at his home in Melbourne’s
Flemington.
It has taken eight years’ study, and the
hard work of typists transcribing Mr Ciampa’s handwritten
drafts, but, next month, Melbourne’s La Trobe University
will award him his doctorate. Mr Ciampa’s thesis explores
the timelessness of storytelling through the writings of the
late Carmen Martin Gaite, who is for Spain what Virginia
Woolf and Simone de Beauvoir are for the English and
French-speaking worlds.
The world’s oldest PhD
recipient is believed to be Edgar Douse, who, at 93, was
awarded a PhD in theology in Britain in 2004. The Australian
record is believed to be held by Ron Fitch, who, at 92, was
awarded a PhD on railways in 2002.
A man with the formal
civilities of a bygone time, Mr Ciampa has always insisted
on referring to his supervisor, Lilit Thwaites, as Doctura,
never by her first name, as all her other students do. His
writing in Spanish has also tended towards archaic words
that sometimes left Dr Thwaites stumped. “I always had a
vision of him sitting in his outside garage ... with huge
Spanish dictionaries by his side, finding just the right
word,” she said.
Dr Thwaites said Mr Ciampa’s work
was a significant contribution to the study of Spanish
literature. He is now planning a master’s degree on the
philosophers Ludwig Wittgenstein and Noam Chomsky.
From
Andrew Trounson in the Australian
More international
news
More international news can be found on University
World News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
AUS
Tertiary Update is published 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