AUS Tertiary Update
New ministers sworn in
Four new ministerial
position-holders with responsibility for education in the
new National-led government were sworn in yesterday. While
both of the National party members are in cabinet, the two
from support parties are associate ministers outside
cabinet.
East Coast MP Anne Tolley, cabinet number eight,
becomes minister of education, minister for tertiary
education, and minister responsible for the Education Review
Office. She has previously been a spokesperson on women’s
affairs and early childhood, a whip, and shadow child,
youth, and family minister, and earlier this year took over
the education portfolio.
North Shore’s Wayne Mapp, at
number thirteen, becomes associate minister for tertiary
education, minister of research, science, and technology,
and associate minister for economic development as well as
holding the defence portfolio. His previous shadow positions
include justice, immigration, foreign affairs, labour and
industrial relations, and Auckland issues as well as defence
and he was a short-lived spokesman for political correctness
eradication under Don Brash. Before entering parliament, Dr
Mapp was associate professor of commercial law at the
University of Auckland.
Pita Sharples from the Māori
party and Heather Roy from ACT are associate ministers of
education.
In response to AUS questions prior to the
general election, the National party committed itself to
supporting the Universities Tripartite Forum “as a means
to resolve salary issues in the tertiary sector” and
address issues for general staff. In response to the new
appointments, AUS acting general secretary, Nanette Cormack,
said, “We are looking forward to continuing the positive
tripartite relationships developed under the previous
government. The challenges facing the tertiary-education
sector are serious and will only be successfully met by
developing solutions that are holistic, have buy-in from all
stakeholders, and, most importantly, prioritise public
education institutions over those run by
profit-takers.”
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. New union another step closer
2. Senior
Canterbury staff quitting
3. Plumbers’ training subject
to full inquiry
4. Zero fees to stay at SIT
5. Crime
on the wane at Otago
6. Revolution required in
Australia
7. “White middle-class privilege”
perpetuated in the UK
8. Inclusive universities best
placed to deliver
9. All-women university under way in
Saudi Arabia
10. Presidents’ pay rocketing in the
US
New union another step closer
The formation of a new
union in the tertiary-education sector takes a further step
forward with the inaugural conference of the Tertiary
Education Union, Te Hautū Kahurangi o Aotearoa, on Monday
and Tuesday next week. The conference, to be held at the
Brentwood Hotel in Wellington, will endorse the set of rules
adopted at an earlier rules conference of AUS and the
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education.
The
conference will also see the opening of nominations for the
new union’s officers and the election of its first
national women’s committee, Te Kahurangi Māreikura.
Nominations for national offices will close on 3 February,
with the successsful candidates taking office on 1
April.
The conference will also consider a number of
professional and education issues, future industral
activity, and a budget for the new union as well as a number
of other financial arrangements.
Guest speakers at the
conference will include former AUS general secretary, now
CTU president, Helen Kelly, former University of Canterbury
vice-chancellor, now chief executive of the Tertiary
Education Commission, Professor Roy Sharp, leaders of the
New Zealand Union of Students’ Associations, and
international guests. National Distribution Union national
secretary and high-profile political commentator, Laila
Harre, will address a women’s breakfast on the second
morning of the conference.
Applications for the position
of national secretary of the new union close tomorrow and an
appointment is expected to be made in mid-December in
readiness for the commencement of operations on 1
January.
Senior Canterbury staff quitting
The
University of Canterbury is undergoing a comprehensive
change of its senior academic guard ahead of the arrival of
new vice-chancellor Rod Carr next year, according to a story
in yesterday’s Press. Three of the university’s six
pro-vice-chancellors, the academic leaders of its colleges,
are quitting their jobs, and two of them are leaving the
university. Dr Carr, who is managing director of Jade
Software Corporation, begins as vice-chancellor in
February.
In an email to staff on Monday, the Press
reports, acting vice-chancellor Ian Town announced that
pro-vice-chancellor of engineering, Peter Jackson, is
retiring from the university in May next year. Last week,
staff were also told by email that pro-vice-chancellor of
science, Ian Shaw, is relinquishing his position to return
to the academic life as a professor in the university’s
chemistry department. Pro-vice-chancellor of law, student
services, and international students, Scott Davidson, has
also resigned and leaves the university next month for
Lincoln University in Britain.
The three remaining
pro-vice-chancellors (PVCs) are Ken Strongman in arts, Nigel
Healey in business and economics, and Gail Gillon in
education.
Professor Town said in his email that
Professor Jackson had made a “huge” contribution to the
university. The intention is to make a new appointment and
allow for a handover period before his retirement. A search
is also on to replace Professor Shaw.
Professor Shaw told
the Press that the run of departures was “interesting”
but was unrelated to Dr Carr’s appointment or any desire
from the top for a new senior management team. “I don’t
think there’s anything sinister going on here. We’re all
quite impressed with the idea of Rod as the
vice-chancellor,” he said. “I’m absolutely certain in
all three cases it is unrelated to the [vice-chancellor]
appointment process.”
Plumbers’ training subject to
full inquiry
Years of controversy over the way plumbers
are trained in New Zealand have escalated to a full inquiry
into plumbing qualifications, auditor-general Kevin Brady
announced this week. Mr Brady said concerns had been raised
with his office about the way the regulatory body, the
Plumbers, Gasfitters and Drainlayers Board, carried out its
work.
“The auditor-general has been asked to review
specific aspects of the board’s activities several times
since 2000, resulting in advice at different times to the
board, ministers, and the regulations review committee of
parliament,” Mr Brady said. “The auditor-general has
made preliminary inquiries into these matters and has
decided that an inquiry is warranted to provide assurance to
parliament and to the public about the way the board is
operating and to assess progress with implementation of
changes.”
The inquiry comes after years of wrangling
about how plumbers are trained and then assessed in their
final exam. The issue reached boiling point in 2006, when
the government sacked the board, saying it had set its
standards too high. An independent report by lawyer Hazel
Armstrong said the relationship between the board and the
Industry Training Organisation was dysfunctional.
A March
2007 report by the board’s chief examiner, Roye Daniel,
lamented the poor quality of exam candidates. “While
candidates for craftsman examinations are not directed to
enrol for study courses, those at registration level who
have been trained in New Zealand, should have been through a
recognised theory-training package,” Mr Daniel
said.
“If this is the case, why is there such a lack of
understanding of fundamental underpinning trade knowledge?
... One would have to ask how these candidates meet a
satisfactory level for registration if their underpinning
knowledge is below the expected standard.”
Zero fees to
stay at SIT
The zero-fees regime at Southland Institute
of Technology looks likely to remain until at least 2011,
with local MP and member of the new National-led government,
Eric Roy, saying the scheme has a greater chance of
continuity now than it ever had. “I am very supportive of
SIT and the zero-fees scheme and I will work to ensure that
the new government understands and supports SIT to keep the
scheme in the future, “ Mr Roy said
SIT’s council
recently approved the scheme, which allows students to study
and gain qualifications without paying the tuition fees that
other organisations charge, remaining in place until at
least 2011. “Our zero-fees scheme is our point of
difference and has been very successful. It has attracted
students from all over New Zealand and has given many the
opportunity to gain qualifications, who otherwise may have
been deterred by tuition fees,” said SIT chief executive
officer Penny Simmonds.
The zero-fees scheme was first
put in place in 2001 and was a strategy to attract potential
students to Invercargill. Prior to the introduction of the
scheme, SIT had around 1400 students enrolled and since then
the roll has increased dramatically so that, by 2008, over
4000 students are enrolled.
“Invercargill is a friendly
rural town and a fantastic place for students to come and
study,” said Ms Simmonds. “We put a great deal of effort
into looking after students and the local community is
really supportive of them also. A key focus is ensuring that
the student environment is welcoming and conducive to
achieving academic goals,” Ms Simmonds added.
Crime on
the wane at Otago
A “culture change” among students
and a collaboration involving the University of Otago, the
Dunedin City Council and police is behind a significant
reduction in fires and offences committed in the university
precinct this year, university student services director
David Richardson is quoted as saying by the Otago Daily
Times. The Fire Service has noticed the most dramatic drop,
with 87 “nuisance” (rubbish or furniture) fires recorded
in the campus area this year, compared with 226 the previous
year and 269 in 2006.
Dunedin deputy chief fire officer,
Trevor Tilyard, said a major push to improve student
behaviour had paid off. “In years gone by, we would have
been run off our feet . . . but hopefully the culture of all
this nonsense is changing.”
Rubbish collection by the
council and the increased presence of Campus Watch staff and
police officers are behind the reduced frequency of fires.
Mr Richardson said, “What is happening is a cultural
change as people understand what the university takes
seriously. We take fires seriously as they damage property
and they pose a serious risk of injury or loss of
life.”
Campus Watch, which began in February last year,
is a 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week operation employing 50
staff who patrol the campus area and look after the security
of the university, plus performing some other custodial
roles. Members, it is reported, are finding younger students
more receptive to the idea of Campus Watch and more aware of
their boundaries than older students.
The total number
of thefts reported to proctor Simon Thompson by Campus Watch
members dropped from about 80 last year to 42 this year. Mr
Richardson attributed part of this drop to Campus Watch
working with police.
Correction
In last week’s
Tertiary Update, an acronymic mix-up in the report of Unitec
rejoining Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics New
Zealand resulted in NZQA, the New Zealand Qualifications
Authority, being identified as the university qualification
body. That is, of course, CUAP, the NZVCC’s Committee on
University Academic Programmes.
World Watch
Revolution
required in Australia
Australia needs a new education
revolution, a new approach encompassing the whole of the
education system because universities alone cannot solve the
nation’s educational problems, according to federal
education minister and deputy prime minister, Julia Gillard.
Speaking at the University of Melbourne, Ms Gillard said
Australia had to start again with a system-wide approach
that would invest in the early years when social inequality
was already entrenching itself.
“We know, for
instance, that by age three, the average child of a
professional couple has a vocabulary of 1,100 words and an
IQ of 117, while the average child of parents receiving
welfare has a vocabulary of 525 words and an IQ of 79,”
she said. “So the more we invest early, the greater the
educational improvements we can make.”
Ms Gillard
identified a need for significant reform in the nation’s
universities and added that the “one over-arching
problem” facing universities is stagnating levels of
public funding. While public investment in tertiary
education increased by 49.4 percent across the OECD in the
decade to 2005, in Australia it increased by zero
percent.
“In that time, Australia’s share of public
expenditure on tertiary institutions fell from nearly
two-thirds to less than a half,” Ms Gillard said. “But
while we’re pleased our universities have been able to
increase their own sources of funding, this should have
enabled them to significantly increase quality, not just
make up for the public shortfall.”
Discussing the way
that universities had been forced to find more money from
non-government sources under the Howard government, Ms
Gillard said this means that the last decade of strong
economic growth had been a massive wasted opportunity for
universities.
From Geoff Maslen in University World
News
“White middle-class privilege” perpetuated in the
UK
British universities are practising a form of social
engineering aimed at “perpetuating largely white
middle-class privilege”, it was argued at a Times Higher
Education debate last week. According to Harinder Bahra,
professor of management and diversity at Leeds Metropolitan
University, “The expansion [of higher education] has
increased participation but not widened participation.” He
added that, in his view, institutions replicate inequalities
through admissions policies and organisational
culture.
“How many black staff are found in senior
positions as role models or work in admissions, apart from
the customary black outreach worker, funded from the
widening participation budget?” he asked. Professor Bahra
cited the “transformational example” of India, which
sets quotas at universities for lower-caste applicants; but
he also noted that such a policy was unlikely to be
implemented in the UK. After the event, he said that he
thought a “limited” version of the Indian programme
should be introduced in the UK.
Aneez Esmail, professor
of general practice at the University of Manchester, noted
that “affirmative action” had helped produce America’s
first black president, although such initiatives had
received mixed reactions in the US. In some states, he said,
laws had been passed preventing affirmative
action.
“People are worried about a backlash, but if we
do nothing, nothing will change,” Professor Esmail said.
Institutions such as Manchester, which has put considerable
effort into widening participation, is “still not meeting
the very low targets set by the state.”
Professor
Esmail referred to the recent suggestion by Lord Chris
Patten, chancellor of the University of Oxford, that
universities are being used as “social security
offices”. “What he is saying is that he doesn’t want
anything to change,” Professor Esmail said. “That is not
acceptable.”
From Melanie Newman in Times Higher
Education
Inclusive universities best placed to deliver
Universities that accept a broad range of students and
offer lifelong-learning opportunities, specifically, those
of Australia, the UK, and Denmark, have the best
higher-education systems in terms of responding to economic
and social challenges, according to Brussels-based
think-tank, the Lisbon Council. “In an era of knowledge,
access to education is a key policy goal, which reaps
tremendous social and economic dividends,” said Lisbon
Council president Paul Hofheinz, commenting on a study of
tertiary-education systems among seventeen OECD countries,
published on 18 November.
The high ranking, first,
second, and third, of Australia, the UK, and Denmark,
results from their universities accepting the broadest range
of students, both domestic and foreign, without lowering
their educational standards. Inclusiveness attracts foreign
students, which, in turn, gives countries an advantage in
the global race for talent, the authors suggest.
In
addition, all three countries are “frontrunners in the
effort to offer continuing education to adults after they
have left the formal education system”, allowing large
numbers of people to benefit from access to lifelong
learning and, consequently, stay competitive in the labour
market.
By contrast, both Germany and Austria, which
ranked fifteenth and sixteenth respectively, suffer from the
restrictiveness of their educational systems. “They turn
away the most number of students from higher education, and
as a result offer higher education to a relatively low
number of people,” argues the report. As for Spain, ranked
last, the report suggests that it should address “the
apparent discrepancy between the subjects taught in
university and the skills sought on the labour market”.
“Our systems are too elitist and exclusive. They do
not offer enough educational opportunity to enough people
throughout their lifetimes,” said Dr. Peer Ederer, the
principal author of the study, adding that
tertiary-education systems are not delivering the social and
economic demands of modern, knowledge-based
economies.
All-women university under way in Saudi
Arabia
Work has begun on the construction of a new
$NZ6.88 billion campus for Riyadh Women’s University, the
first university in Saudi Arabia exclusively for female
students. The foundation stone of Princess Noura bint
Abdulrahman University in Riyadh was laid last month by King
Abdullah, whose involvement has created tension in the
kingdom.
The project is vast in every way. For a start,
the new campus will enable capacity to be doubled to around
40,000 students, twice the number at Oxford University. The
women will have fifteen academic faculties to choose from on
an extensive campus containing, among other things, a
700-bed hospital, housing for university staff, a school, a
kindergarten, and a high-tech transport system.
The
king’s decision to attend the foundation ceremony is seen
as a reflection of his personal commitment to expand
education in Saudi Arabia, for women as well as men. King
Abdullah’s pledge to expand education and career
opportunities for women has come in for private criticism
from elements in the Wahhabi religious establishment, and
even from conservative Muslims inside the vast royal family
itself.
The king, however, has insisted several times in
recent public speeches that it is vital for the Saudi
population as a whole to be offered the best possible
educational opportunities. He has also repeated his
commitment to the introduction of broad curriculum
reform.
Dissenting voices, however, say that projects
such as the expansion of Riyadh University for Women will
merely reinforce existing gender segregation. “It seems to
me that the university will be totally isolated from other
academic institutions,” said Dr Mohammed al-Zulfa, a
member of the kingdom’s advisory council. “Much of the
intellectual enrichment of university life comes from
contact with other establishments.”
From Tabitha Morgan
in University World News
Presidents’ pay rocketing in
the US
David J. Sargent, the 77-year-old president
(vice-chancellor-equivalent) of Suffolk University in
Boston, received a $US2.8 million pay package in 2006-07,
including a $436,000 longevity bonus and more than $1
million in deferred compensation, after the board of
trustees, eager to delay his retirement, decided he had long
been underpaid. Dr Sargent was the nation’s
highest-compensated university president in the annual
survey by the Chronicle of Higher Education, released this
week.
Others also received more than $2 million. David P
Roselle, who resigned as president of the University of
Delaware in June 2007, had a package of $2.4 million,
including deferred compensation. And E Gordon Gee, who
forfeited more than half of his $2 million compensation
package when he resigned from Vanderbilt University in 2007
to become president of Ohio State University, is the
highest-paid public-university president, the survey found.
Professor Gee’s Ohio State package was raised just this
month to more than $1.3 million.
While seven-figure pay
packages had been limited mostly to prominent private
research universities, some presidents of public
institutions like Ohio State and Delaware, or private
universities like Suffolk that offer few doctoral degrees,
are also topping $1 million in pay and benefits. In fact,
compensation for public research-university presidents is
growing faster than for those who head private institutions,
the survey found.
Median pay and benefits for presidents
of public institutions rose 7.6 percent in 2007-08, to
$427,400. Over a five-year period, the public
universities’ median compensation rose 36 percent,
compared with 19 percent at private institutions.
From
Tabitha Lewin in the New York Times
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