AUS Tertiary Update
“Coincidental” similarities in university
advertising
The similarities between two university
advertising campaigns have been dismissed as coincidental,
according to a story by Hamish McNeilly in the Otago Daily
Times. The University of Otago launched its “Take Your
Place in the World” advertising campaign in July,
replacing the previous “Get Over It” campaign, which ran
for eight years. Now, however, hot on the heels of the Otago
television launch, the ODT reports, the University of
Auckland has released its “Make Your Mark on the World”
television campaign.
University of Otago marketing and
communications director Virginia Nicholls is quoted as
saying that her university was aware of the Auckland
catchphrase but that the similarity was merely a
coincidence. It was a matter of personal taste who had the
better campaign “and, in the end, it is up to the viewers
to decide”. She said that the television campaign is just
one element of a communication programme, which includes
publications, website, information nights, expos, and
alumni.
University of Auckland senior communications
adviser Bill Williams apparently declined to comment on the
similarities with the University of Otago slogan. “We do
not comment on the merits of other universities’
advertising campaigns,” he said. Both universities
declined to comment on their respective advertising budgets.
Auckland’s “Make Your Mark on the World”
television campaign featured interviews with former
students, while Otago’s “Take Your Place in the World”
campaign featured students at the campus and a pop song.
Zephyr WPD partner Robert Coulter, of Auckland, said the
advertising agency is proud of its Otago campaign and the
similarity with the Auckland campaign was “a
coincidence”. “We worked on the campaign for over a year
and I am sure they did as well,” he said. “Despite the
similarities of the slogans, they have different
meanings,” he said. “Auckland’s is about promoting
success, and Otago’s is about achieving enrolment
results.”
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Universities’ deferred-maintenance costs
unknown
2. NZ universities succeed commercially, says
NZVCC
3. Digital boost for te reo Māori
4. Top
scholars off to Cambridge
5. University funding linked to
“employability”
6. STEMing the tide
7. Urgent need
for African tertiary education
8. Security or
politics?
9. The Britneys of academia
Universities’
deferred-maintenance costs unknown
Education Review
reports that, just one week after a vice-chancellor said
that the backlog of deferred maintenance is evidence of
university underfunding, only one of the eight universities
has been able to put a figure on its extent. Referring to
the problem of deferred maintenance, Victoria University
vice-chancellor Pat Walsh recently said that universities
could be at a tipping point in their struggle to maintain
quality in the face of government underfunding.
Victoria,
however, could not put a figure on its maintenance backlog,
with facilities management director Jenny Bentley saying
that the value of deferred maintenance commitments is often
hard to quantify. Education Review quotes Ms Bentley as
saying, “That is because that while there is a preferred
timeline to replace or renew facilities, they can sometimes
function satisfactorily for a longer period of time than
expected.”
Similarly, according to the report, the
University of Auckland could not quantify its deferred
maintenance, saying only that it is a problem.
The
University of Canterbury also advised that it could not put
a dollar value on the problem as it phases in refurbishment
and new works to match its revenue. And the University of
Waikato is reported as saying that it is still in the throes
of refining its asset-management planning and has yet to
establish a firm figure.
Only Massey University, with its
three campuses, was able to provide an estimate of the value
of its deferred maintenance. Referring to it as a
“ball-park” figure, the university said that it is
looking at “in excess of $50 million”.
NZ universities
succeed commercially, says NZVCC
The New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee claims that commercialisation
of university research is currently generating a billion
dollars for the New Zealand economy through the market
capitalisation of spin-out companies. A publication
outlining that success has been produced by the NZVCC in
conjunction with University Commercialisation Offices of New
Zealand, a consortium of individual university
commercialisation units. University research
commercialisation: Paying dividends for New Zealand contains
six case studies in which the commercial potential of
university research outputs have been realised.
NZVCC
chair, Professor Roger Field, says that linkages among
universities, other research providers, and private business
are especially important in a small country like New
Zealand. “Many of our firms are too small to engage in
research and development themselves. Universities help by
providing the expertise and knowledge to carry out this
research. Strong linkages are required at each stage of the
transfer process to ensure that the full benefits of such
research are captured,” he said.
The publication says
that the market capitalisation of university start-up
companies has risen rapidly, from $76 million in 2003 to
$1.1 billion in 2006. A research and development survey
carried out by Statistics NZ reveals that research in New
Zealand universities is worth almost $600 million a year to
the universities, accounting for a third of all R&D carried
out in this country. The NZVCC argues that the
commercialisation of that research provides a far greater
return to the economy.
Professor Field says the activity
underlines universities’ key role in shifting the New
Zealand economy from a reliance on commodities to
knowledge-based products with a higher value. “The success
story of the university commercialisation companies is not
necessarily well understood and the NZVCC thought it time to
share that success more widely,” he said.
Digital boost
for te reo Māori
Taranaki iwi and hapū will be the
first to participate in a new initiative developing digital
technology for the learning and teaching of te reo Māori.
The initiative, hosted by the Western Institute of
Technology at Taranaki (WITT), was launched yesterday at
Puke Ariki Museum in New Plymouth.
The project is the
first of those planned by Te Ipukarea, the Māori Language
Institute, a collaborative initiative hosted by AUT
University and partnered by Victoria University, Te Wānanga
o Aotearoa, Christchurch Polytechnic, and Canterbury and
Lincoln Universities.
Stage one of the project is He
Rangi Mātāhauariki mō te Reo, a digital-technology
initiative for the learning and teaching of te reo Māori.
The project is also focused on enhancing the digital
literacy of Māori language learners and educators.
Head
of the faculty for humanities, health and Māori at WITT,
Lisa Ferguson, said it is an honour to be the first region
in the country to take part in the project. “This is a
wonderful opportunity to not only capture the unique
Taranaki lexicon, but also a wonderful initiative to ensure
all Taranaki people have access to advancing their te reo
skills using their unique dialect.”
Ms Ferguson said
that the project will add further diversity to the
mechanisms available to share and teach te reo Māori, an
essential process to ensure learning of the language remains
dynamic and accessible. AUT’s Professor Tania Ka’ai said
Taranaki was chosen to launch the digital initiative in
recognition of the huge contribution respected Māori
academic and Association of Staff in Tertiary Education
tauheke, Dr Huirangi Waikerepuru, has made to the survival
of the Māori language. “Dr Waikerepuru has committed a
lifetime and legacy that we have all benefited from,”
Professor Ka’ai said.
Top scholars off to
Cambridge
Distinguished performances in physics, civil
engineering, and classical studies have paved the way for
three of New Zealand’s top scholars to study at Cambridge
University as recipients of the Woolf Fisher Scholarships
for 2009. The scholarships, among the most valuable awarded
in New Zealand, are each worth up to $100,000 annually for
three years of study and cover full payment of university
and college fees, return airfares, and an allowance of
$35,000 a year.
Jennifer Haskell from the University of
Canterbury will be working towards a PhD under Dr Gopal
Madabhushi, a world-leading lecturer in geotechnical
science. Her research will focus on seismic design of
foundations and will use Cambridge’s geotechnical
centrifuge, a sophisticated model that can simulate the
impact of earthquakes on soil.
Andrew Haines from the
University of Otago hopes to study with Professor Jeremy
Baumberg in Cambridge’s nanophotonics group that studies
the behaviour of light on the nanometre scale. He will be
working towards a PhD investigating the assembly of
metamaterials. This research has immediate relevance in
fields such as telecommunications, but also may be applied
to a wide variety of technologies.
James McNamara from
Victoria University of Wellington will be working towards a
PhD in classics, researching the writings of the Roman
historian Tacitus. He is looking to expand on an earlier
project on the exploitation of fear as a command tool in the
Roman Empire. He has already completed an MA in classics
with distinction at Victoria, having majored in Latin,
Ancient Greek and German at undergraduate level.
World
Watch
University funding linked to
“employability”
British universities could be funded
according to their ability to produce employable graduates
as the government seeks to measure their success in
“up-skilling the workforce”. The prospect of gearing
funding to take graduate-employment data into account has
been raised in a report by the Higher Education Funding
Council for England (HEFCE).
While making it clear that
there is no immediate plan to implement such a regime, HEFCE
says that a graduate-employment indicator “has the
long-term potential to be one of a basket of measures that
could collectively be used as a basis for incentive funding
mechanisms”.
Funding of this kind would be “extremely
dangerous”, according to Roger Brown, professor of higher
education at Liverpool Hope University. “All it would do
is reinforce what we already see of students only wanting to
study subjects that will get them an immediate job, often at
the expense of subjects that might be better for their
long-term development,” Professor Brown said.
“Similarly, institutions will do whatever they need to do
to get the money. It is a particularly daft idea.”
The
HEFCE paper was produced for universities secretary John
Denham as part of a series of reviews to map out the
development of the sector to 2020. Mr Denham had asked the
funding council to investigate new ways to measure the
success of different universities. In his letter to David
Eastwood, HEFCE’s chief executive, Mr Denham asked for an
examination of measures in five areas: research, innovation,
teaching, widening participation, and the “up-skilling of
workforces”.
HEFCE warned, “By limiting our thinking
to the five policy areas identified by the secretary of
state, we potentially limit institutions’ contributions to
their students and wider community.” Professor Brown
added, “There’s no reference among those headings to the
development of scholarship, no reference to what higher
education is ultimately about.”
From John Gill in Times
Higher Education
STEMing the tide
Countries around the
world are trying to prevent a continuing decline in interest
among students in science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics or STEM: the so-called key vulnerable subjects.
Professor John Holman, director of STEM subjects at the UK
National Science Learning Centre, said Britain is not alone
among advanced economies that had experienced shortages of
graduates in these areas.
Australia, along with the UK,
is looking at ways of attracting more students into the STEM
subjects. Representatives from the CSIRO, the Australian
Academy of Science, and the Federation of Australian
Scientific and Technological Societies last week appeared
before a House of Representatives standing committee on
education and training in Canberra.
In Britain, STEM
subjects are in a healthier state than they were in 2004, as
the Higher Education Funding Council for England announced
last week. In an upbeat statement, Professor David Eastwood,
the council’s chief executive, said HEFCE’s £350m
($NZ925m) six-year programme that started in 2005 is helping
to “turn the corner”.
In 2004, there were
pessimistic reports of closures of university chemistry
departments and a declining interest in these subjects among
students in schools and universities. Latest figures show a
significant growth in the number of students taking STEM
subjects.
The universities admissions service data showed
that maths acceptances had risen by 8 percent from 2007 to
2008, chemistry is up by 4.4 percent, and physics by 3.3
percent. These increases build on those since 2005 to 2006,
when maths rose by 12 percent, chemistry by 12 percent, and
physics by 10 percent. Engineering fell by 0.8 percent but,
since 2007, numbers had increased by 6.4 percent.
From
Diane Spencer in University World News
Urgent need for
African tertiary education
Tertiary-education enrolments
in Sub-Saharan Africa more than tripled between 1991 and
2005, expanding at an annual rate of 8.7 percent, one of the
highest regional growth rates in the world, says a new
report by the World Bank. But public funding did not keep
up, and spending per student plummeted over 25 years from an
average of $NZ11,236 a year to just $NZ1621 in 2005 for 33
countries. “Educational quality and relevance both
suffered as a result,” according to Accelerating Catch-up:
Tertiary education for growth in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The
report describes Sub-Saharan Africa’s “remarkable
economic turnaround” after two decades of stagnation.
Gross domestic product growth in the region accelerated to
over 6 percent on average from 2002 to 2007 as a result of
increasing macro-economic stability, market reforms, and
growing global demand for Africa’s natural resource-based
commodities, the World Bank study claims. “If this surge
is to evolve into a virtuous spiral that stimulates even
higher, and sustained, growth rates in a substantial number
of African countries, significant investment in physical and
human capital is needed over an extended period,” says the
report.
Africa’s stock of secondary and tertiary-level
skills is small and its quality highly variable and
undermined by mortality from infectious diseases and by
emigration, says the report. “African nations will need to
produce a larger pool of good-quality tertiary-education
graduates and postgraduates, and to produce them
particularly in the disciplinary (and interdisciplinary)
fields relevant to a country’s chosen strategy for
economic development.”
From Alphonce Shiundup in Daily
Nation
Security or politics?
In March this year, when a
faculty panel at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln
selected William Ayers to be the keynote speaker at a
November conference at the college of education, nobody
really noticed. Since then, Professor Ayers, now a
distinguished professor at the University of Illinois and
former leader of the ultra-radical Weather Underground, has
come to prominence through attacks on Barack Obama’s
acquaintanceship with him. On 17 October the university
called off the Ayers appearance, citing security
concerns.
But the timing of the announcement, shortly
after Nebraska’s governor and other politicians and donors
demanded that Professor Ayers be kept away, left many
dubious. Some faculty leaders say that the incident
represents a serious violation of the principles of academic
freedom.
Given that “there are people at the University
of Nebraska with a deep knowledge of academic freedom and an
equally deep commitment to it,” it is “particularly
painful to see this institution intimidated by politicians
and donors into cancelling,” said Cary Nelson, national
president of the American Association of University
Professors.
With Professor Ayers in the news, the
university issued a statement noting that no state funds
were being used for his visit and that he would be speaking
on his scholarly research, not politics. But Governor Dave
Heineman, a Republican, called for the invitation to
Professor Ayers to be rescinded.
The state’s attorney
general, Jon Bruning, followed with his own call for the
invitation to be withdrawn. Alumni and donors started to
send e-mails and call the university, with some threatening
to halt donations.
From Inside Higher Ed and University
World News
The Britneys of academia
Online publishing
has sparked an explosion in the number of places where
academics can showcase their work. Today, no field of study
is too obscure to have its own dedicated title. But have
platforms such as the Journal of Happiness Studies or
Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy News made academic
publishing more democratic?
Far from it, says Alex
Bentley, an anthropologist at Durham University. “We’re
just producing so much wordage that nobody has time to read
anything. It makes academic publishing, and even science
itself, a bit like trying to get hits on blogs or trying to
make yourself the Britney of science.”
Although the
internet puts information at our fingertips, we have no time
to trawl it. As a result, we trust sites like Digg.com to
guide us through the information jungle. This phenomenon is
called “herding” by economists, who use it to explain,
say, fashion trends and stockmarket bubbles.
For
researchers, it means that exposure is everything. “As a
result of this lack of time, people are just hyper-focused
on Science, Nature, and PNAS [a journal of the US National
Academies of Science],” says Professor Bentley. “There
are many high-quality printed journals that a lot of people
aren’t interested in any more because their article will
be treated critically and then it won’t have any impact.
What they want is an article that can be treated
uncritically and have a big impact.”
Adding to the
problem is the fact that methods to measure research impact
are becoming more numerical. For example, the number of
times an article is cited by others has become a proxy for
quality.
There is even a formula that will reduce a
researchers’ whole career to one digit, called the
H-index, which has been used for recruiting researchers for
tenure in the US. “A lot of people feel that their H-index
is the most important thing on their CV,” says Professor
Bentley.
Information on the H-index is available at
http://bit.ly/H-index
From Linda Nordling in the
Guardian
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
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