AUS Tertiary Update
AUS and ASTE call for continuation of tertiary-education
strategy
Unions representing staff in the
tertiary-education sector say that they will work with the
new National-Act government to ensure that reforms resulting
from the tertiary-education strategy of the outgoing
government will continue to meet the economic and social
goals and needs of the country. Both the Association of
University Staff and Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education have prepared a briefing paper for the incoming
education ministers, and will seek to meet them as soon as
they take charge of their portfolios.
Central to any
discussions will be the future of the tripartite arrangement
among the unions, government, and vice-chancellors which has
seen more than $65 million of new funding invested in
university staff over the past three years.
AUS national
president, Associate Professor Maureen Montgomery, says that
the incoming government needs to consolidate the reforms
implemented over the last three years and ensure that New
Zealand has a collaborative rather than competitive
tertiary-education sector, one where public funding is used
to support a planned provision through public
tertiary-education institutions rather than through
profit-based private providers.
ASTE national president,
Tangi Tipene, says that, while some headway was made by the
previous government towards addressing the systemic
under-funding of the sector, the unions’ briefing to
incoming ministers will centre on the fact that New Zealand
still lags behind other OECD countries in terms of
per-capita expenditure on tertiary education. The effect of
underfunding on staff is evidenced by low comparative
salaries, the intensification of workloads (particularly
impacting on staff in the ITP sector) and increasing demands
for research outputs.
Concerns will be raised also about
the PBRF as a funding and evaluation model for research,
noting misuses and abuses of individual evidence-portfolio
scores and the inadequacy of the model in addressing the
research-development needs of the ITP sector. However, the
unions will be clear that they see the continuing support
and development of research in this country as critical to
our progress both nationally and internationally.
In
summary, the AUS and ASTE position is that the momentum of
the last three years in terms of the implementation of the
tertiary-education strategy, additional funding,
improvements to salaries, and a commitment towards more
student support (including plans for a universal student
allowance) will need to continue if the sector is to meet
the desired economic and social goals and needs of the
country.
A summary of the tertiary-education policies of
National, Act, and United Future, the three parties forming
the incoming government, can be found
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/Current/GeneralElection/3Party.pdf
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. VCs focus on
personnel
2. New Zealand “fairly
middle-of-the-road”
3. ASTE welcomes Unitec back into
the fold
4. Otago expects $26 million deficit
5. Final
wānanga claim settled
6. Academic freedom under attack
in South Africa
7. Australian student services to be
restored
8. UCU rejects spying proposals
9. Steps
towards South African amalgamation
10. Melbourne’s
California dreaming
11. For a free market in university
education
VCs focus on personnel
In their reaction
to the outcome of the general election, university
vice-chancellors are focusing on likely personnel changes in
the relevant portfolios. With the election of a National
government, says the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee (NZVCC), all eyes in the tertiary-education sector
are trained on the list of possibilities for the
tertiary-education portfolio. “Of further interest to
universities is who will be the minister for research,
science and technology while the widely-tipped post of
minister of infrastructure also has a bearing on
institutions that constitute the foundation of New
Zealand’s research capability,” says the NZVCC.
Noting that Dr Paul Hutchison is National’s
tertiary-education and RS&T spokesperson but that Anne
Tolley is education spokesperson and appears to have the
inside running for a senior cabinet post in that portfolio,
the NZVCC raises the possibility of a number of associate
ministers of education for the tertiary, schools, and
early-childhood sectors. At least one of those posts could
in theory be offered to one of the minor parties as part of
the negotiations around the support arrangements for the new
government, even though National has now decided to form a
minority government with support from ACT and United Future
on confidence and supply issues. Any portfolios offered to
potential support parties, including the Māori Party, will
therefore be on an outside-of-cabinet basis, the NZVCC
suggests.
Reflecting that outgoing tertiary-education
minister Pete Hodgson also held the RS&T and
economic-development portfolios, linking roles around the
development of an innovative economy, the NZVCC expresses
interest in seeing if National employs a similar approach.
New Zealand “fairly middle-of-the-road”
A global
study of academic salaries just published by the Boston
College Center for International Higher Education describes
New Zealand, along with Japan, as hovering in the middle of
the pack across many of the areas analysed. The pioneering
International Comparison of Academic Salaries: An
exploratory study reports, “In several ways, New Zealand
represents a fairly middle-of-the road country in our
comparative study. Its salary averages (particularly at the
entry level) tend to hit the middle of the spectrum, as do
its salary progression and salary-to-GDP ratios.”
The
fifteen-country study focused on five major components:
salary data, contextual information relevant to each
country, purchasing-power parity, national-development
considerations bearing in mind standard-of-living
indicators, and key salary-income benchmarks for each
country. Data was collected from government sources,
reputable studies, and experts, but the study’s authors do
warn, “Unfortunately, measuring academic salaries is far
from science. Plagued by a lack of consistent data (or for
many countries, any data at all), difficulties in comparing
living costs, and other problems, this study must be seen as
a first attempt rather than a definitive report.”
That
said, the study finds that academics in Saudi Arabia are the
best paid in the world while those in China are worst off.
The figures by country, with average per-month salaries in
$US, are: Argentina $3,054, Australia $4,795, Canada $6,548,
China $1,182, Colombia $2,826, France $3,905, Germany
$4,333, India $1,547, Japan $4,112, Malaysia $3,107, New
Zealand $4,490, Saudi Arabia $6,611, South Africa $4,076,
the United Kingdom $4,343 and United States $5,816. The
average entry-level salary across the countries was $2,888 a
month while top-level salaries average $5,318 a
month.
The study is available
at:
http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/soe/cihe/salary_report.pdf
ASTE welcomes Unitec back into the fold
The
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education has warmly
welcomed the decision this week of Auckland institute of
technology Unitec to rejoin the institutes of technology and
polytechnics (ITP) sector umbrella body, ITPNZ. A Unitec
council meeting on Monday responded to a presentation on
ITPNZ’s new business plan by board chairperson, James
Buwalda, and executive director, Dave Guerin, by resolving
to rejoin for 2009 and, consequently, place programme
approval with the ITP qualification body, ITPQ, rather than
the university one, NZQA. Unitec’s membership is expected
to be ratified promptly by the existing ITPNZ
membership.
ASTE national secretary, Sharn Riggs,
responded to the decision by congratulating Unitec on
reuniting the ITP sector and thereby ensuring that the
sector could again speak with a single voice. “This move
marks the end of the previous management’s costly campaign
to convert Unitec into a university and affirms the fact
that ITPs cannot be seen as second-class citizens in the
tertiary-education sector aspiring to become something
else,” Ms Riggs said.
Unitec chief executive, Rick Ede,
in making the announcement of the decision, said, “I know
from the conversations that I’ve had around campus, many
of you’ll agree that this will greatly improve Unitec’s
engagement with the sector and our representation in
critical, national tertiary-education issues.”
“For
academic staff, the transition from NZQA to ITPQ should be
almost seamless, while, for all of us, membership of ITPNZ
should open up new opportunities to learn from, and
collaborate with, colleagues from other ITPs,” he added.
“ITPNZ has also acknowledged that it, too, will be greatly
strengthened by having Unitec back in the
organisation.”
Otago expects $26 million deficit
The
University of Otago is expecting another budget deficit of
up to $26 million next year as costs spiral and it hurries
to upgrade and expand its facilities, according to a report
in the Otago Daily Times. While the 2009 interim budget
tabled at a university council meeting earlier this week
showed an operating surplus of $19.6 million, that amount
and more would be soaked up by proposed capital works, chief
operating officer John Patrick said.
The university is
about one-third of the way through a plan to address
critical space shortages across most teaching divisions, Mr
Patrick is quoted as saying. He added that the interim
budget allows $37 million for capital works, but that figure
is significantly under-estimated.
After the meeting, Mr
Patrick said he expected at least $57 million to $60 million
to be spent on capital works and two strategic land
purchases next year, about the same amount being spent on
capital works this year, and added that he would not be
surprised if the deficit reached $26.5 million, which is the
deficit expected for this year.
Otago vice-chancellor
Professor David Skegg told the ODT that the university
expects about $240 million next year from various public
funding sources, but that departmental budget cuts and
tuition fee increases next year had been necessary to avoid
“painful” staff redundancies.
At the same meeting,
council members fulfilled the prediction of Otago University
Students’ Association president Simon Wilson that they
would “follow the steps of a familiar dance” in voting
to increase student tuition fees by the maximum allowable.
Mr Wilson’s suggested alternative of a slow-down in the
university’s capital-works programme was rejected by all
but student representatives, as was a fee-freeze petition
with 1162 signatures.
Final wānanga claim
settled
University World News reports that the New
Zealand government has settled the last of the claims made
against it by Māori tertiary-education institutions for
capital funding that will put them on an equal footing with
other public institutions. The $50.6 million agreed with Te
Wānanga o Raukawa last month adds to nearly $10 million
already paid to the institution and brings the total value
of settlements for the three public wānanga to $169
million. The settlements stem from a successful Tiriti o
Waitangi legal claim made in 1999-2000.
The establishment
of wānanga began 25 years ago and the initially private
bodies later became public institutions, resulting in their
claim that they should receive capital establishment grants
similar to those provided for the creation of other public
tertiary-education institutions such as universities and
polytechnics.
They won their case in 2000 but had
separate negotiations over how much each institution should
receive from the Crown. Te Wānanga o Aotearoa, one of New
Zealand’s largest tertiary-education institutions,
received $71.8 million, while Te Whare Wānanga o
Awanuiārangi agreed to $37.1 million, though $8.5 million
of that is dependent on a successful business case being
concluded.
Announcing the latest settlement, minister of
Māori affairs Parekura Horomia said the settlement
recognised that Raukawa had capital needs and
characteristics comparable in the context of the settlement
to those of a university-led institution. Mr Horomia said
the settlement is sufficient to cover Raukawa for the cost
of bringing its buildings, plant, and equipment up to a
standard comparable to other tertiary-education
institutions.
World Watch
Academic freedom under attack
in South Africa
Malegapuru Makgoba, vice-chancellor of
the University of KwaZulu-Natal, one of South Africa’s
pre-eminent universities, has laid formal charges against
two professors despite imminent resolution of their dispute
through an internal peer-reviewed facilitation process using
a panel appointed by himself.
When Professors Nithaya
Chetty and John van den Berg refused to sign documents
admitting their guilt, Professor Makgoba proceeded with the
charges because “he believed it is in the best interests
of the university to proceed to a disciplinary hearing”.
The university then appointed top advocates to prosecute and
preside in the disciplinary process at a cost estimated at
between R250,000 and R500,000 ($NZ 40,000 and
$NZ80,000).
The academics, who had collated a submission
to a forthcoming senate-sponsored discussion document on
academic freedom on behalf their faculty, now face dismissal
on charges of failing to take due care in communicating with
the media; breaching the confidentiality of senate; and
dishonesty and/or gross negligence in alleging that the
vice-chancellor had no right to omit a document on academic
freedom prepared by the faculty of science and agriculture
from the senate agenda. Union representatives are baffled as
to what part of the university’s disciplinary code is
being applied.
National Tertiary Education Staff Union
(NTESU) activists at the university, objecting to the use of
lawyers in internal disciplinary proceedings, have described
this as “a dispute which touches on the rights of academic
staff to freedom of expression”. In South Africa the right
to academic freedom is constitutional.
NTESU has raised
the matter nationally with the Department of Education
(Higher Education Division) indicating the use of taxpayer
subsidies for these purposes is misdirection of funds in
trust, and has asked the department to consider
interceding.
NTESU is asking unions internationally to
write to the university expressing their opposition to such
an abuse of academic freedom, the use of “might against
minions”, and throwing into the process money which could
be better spent on more pressing needs.
Australian student
services to be restored
Australian federal minister for
youth, Kate Ellis, announced this week that the government
will give universities the capacity to address the declining
level and quality of student services which have been under
enormous pressure since the introduction of the Howard
government’s voluntary student union (VSU) legislation in
2006. From 1 July 2009, universities will have the option
of charging domestic students a fee for the provision of
much-needed services including child care, counselling, and
sporting activities.
“Today’s announcement by
minister Ellis means that the government is meetings its
election promise to restore university student services and
representation which have been devastated since the
introduction of VSU,” said Dr Carolyn Allport, national
president of the National Tertiary Education Union, in
response to the announcement.
“The introduction of VSU
made it illegal for universities to levy a compulsory
services fee on students and resulted in the loss of $170m
per year in university revenue. Since the introduction of
VSU there have been in excess of 1,000 jobs lost in the
provision of student services at our universities, which has
resulted in the loss of or severe cut backs in many basic
student services such as counselling and independent
advocacy,” Dr Allport added. “Given that attending
university is a financial struggle for many students, we
also strongly support the decisions to cap the fee at $A250,
and to allow students to repay the fee through an
income-contingent loan.
“From July next year, all
universities will be required to meet a new set of national
benchmarks and protocols for the provision of student
services and representation. Of critical importance is that
the new protocols and standards will cover not only basic
services but also require student representation and
advocacy,” Dr Allport concluded.
UCU rejects spying
proposals
Britain’s University and College Union
declared this week that new proposals for staff to monitor
foreign students risked jeopardising the crucial
relationship between students and staff. The union’s
general secretary, Sally Hunt, is one of 200 signatories to
a letter that argues that “police-like surveillance is not
the function of universities” and calls on MPs to oppose
the new rules and put pressure on the government to withdraw
them.
“We have grave concerns that new rules on
monitoring foreign students have been pulled together
without any consultation with the people who would be tasked
with their implementation,” Ms Hunt said. “We do not
believe it is appropriate or effective to task colleges and
universities with the policing of
immigration.”
“Despite writing to the departments
involved, at no point have we been consulted by either the
Home Office or the Department for Innovation, Universities
and Skills. At a time when we need to appear more, not less,
attractive to students and academics from overseas, these
proposals will fundamentally taint the UK university
brand,” Ms Hunt added.
“We have been down the road
of asking staff to monitor their students before and UCU
robustly opposed such measures. As we said then, if people
wanted to go into the monitoring or spying game they would
have become spooks. We believe that, if implemented, the
proposals could only harm the important relationship between
staff and students, as well as having a knock-on effect in
terms of work load for our members and therefore has
contractual implications,” Ms Hunt concluded.
The
letter opposing the proposals is available
at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/nov/10/immigration-policy-immigration-and-public-services
Steps
towards South African amalgamation
Two of the major South
African tertiary-education unions, the National Tertiary
Education Staff Union (NTESU) and the National Union of
Tertiary Employees of South Africa (NUTESA), recently moved
closer to creating a single union when their national
presidents agreed to take a memorandum of agreement to
investigate amalgamating the unions to their respective
congresses.
NTESU and NUTESA have taken these steps in
response to common interests and synergy-seeking in the
restructured higher-education landscape. Re-engineering of
the sector has highlighted the need for a single voice for
the representation of workers in the sector. It is
estimated there is a potential membership of 25,000 in
academic and general staff categories within the sector and
the two unions would bring together approximately 8000
current members.
After striking the memorandum of
understanding, the two presidents combined with advisors to
draft a proposal on a working framework agreement for the
negotiation of a detailed statement on a future synchronised
union structure and the possibility of creating an
inter-union task team.
The two unions have similar
histories. NTESU is the successor to UDUSA, an organisation
which many international unions will remember from the
Apartheid era of South Africa. NUTESA grew within the old
technology sector, which has now been incorporated into a
single higher-education system of universities and
universities of technology.
Some discussion was
undertaken during 1999 to 2003 when this issue was first
mooted, but it did not reach conclusion. NTESU gained a
mandate from its congress in January and NUTESA will debate
the proposal in its forthcoming congress.
While the
fragmentation of union representation in the country has
been commented upon at ministerial level, and by other
education sector stakeholders that have already responded to
the restructured higher-education landscape, the unions have
so far found achieving an appropriate response more
difficult.
Melbourne’s California dreaming
University
of Melbourne vice-chancellor, Professor Glyn Davis, has
called for the creation of a community-college network
modelled on the California university system in a radical
move that would restore the binary divide between teaching
and research institutions. Professor Davis said community
colleges would combine associate and full degrees with
vocational training opportunities, and could be created from
the amalgamation of universities and vocational-education
providers, particularly in rural and regional areas.
They would not, however, offer research degrees, nor
would they compete for competitive research grants. “I see
the Californian community-colleges model as an important way
to address the important and legitimate needs for
higher-education provision outside metropolitan
Australia,” Professor Davis said. “They would also
address the need for equity.”
“A single entity,
jointly owned by a TAFE (a further-education institution)
and university, would create the critical mass of
opportunities for study in smaller communities, which
otherwise struggle to sustain with a small student
base.”
California’s 110 community college campuses
serve 2.7 million students and enrolments are reported to be
spiking as the economy slides into recession. The popularity
of community colleges is attributed to open enrolment
policies, low tuition fees, and courses with an employment
focus. They also offer pathways into other institutions. A
two-year associate degree in a local community college can
become the foundation for completing a full degree in the
same, or another, university.
Meanwhile, in Britain, a
vocational university is being proposed as a way to meet the
government’s expansion targets “at a lower cost than
presently envisaged”. Further-education colleges are
proposing to deliver new “bachelor of vocational
studies” degrees, awarded through a “National Skills
University” on the basis of two years’ study at the
equivalent of A level followed by a further two years in
higher education.
From Luke Slattery in the Australian
and Melanie Newman in Times Higher Education
For a free
market in university education
Larry Johnson is a
self-described “entrepreneur from hell”, so it’s of
little surprise that the University of Cincinnati academic
likes the plan for a new budgeting system on campus.
Professor Johnson, dean of the the university’s college of
education, criminal justice and human services, is helping
to craft a “performance-based” budgeting model at
Cincinnati.
The plan, which is being accelerated to
address expected budget shortfalls, rewards colleges for
enrolling more students to generate revenue. On the other
hand, colleges that fail to meet agreed-upon revenue goals
may have to take budget cuts. “In a sense, we’re
creating a higher ed free market,” Professor Johnson said.
“We’re really embracing each program and unleashing its
creativity.”
Creating incentives for revenue growth is
not new to higher education, and Cincinnati is drawing upon
models used at Ohio State University and Indiana University.
But Cincinnati’s decision to implement a new budgeting
process for the entire university by 2009 reflects an
important philosophical shift that speaks to the times,
according to Nancy Zimpher, the university’s president.
Faced with the likelihood of declining state support in a
faltering economy, the new plan encourages growth, she
said.
“We have to be able to make those cuts, and at
the same time we have to be able to grow,” Dr Zimpher
said. “So how are we going to do that? I think the way
universities have responded to [budget shortfalls] is
they’ve just cut. They haven’t thought about the growth
side.”
From Jack Stripling in Inside Higher Ed
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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