TEU Tertiary Update Vol 13 No 38
Teachers Council says only registered teachers to supervise students
The New Zealand Teachers Council today released new approval, review and monitoring processes and requirements for initial teacher education programmes. These will apply to all teacher education providers in New Zealand - universities, wānanga, polytechnics, institutes of technology and private training establishments.
Among the council's recommendations is a requirement that
anyone supervising a student teacher in a formal school
setting must themselves be a registered teacher.
TEU national president, Dr Tom Ryan welcomed the new
processes, saying it is good to see that the council
listened to the views of actual teacher educators during the
review process.
Dr Ryan says that in recent years
TEU has had concerns that some academic staff in schools of
education who do not have formal teaching qualifications
have been pressured into supervising student teachers on
their placements.
"Teaching is an applied
professional qualification where practice is just as
important as research. We would not expect academics who
lack nursing qualification to be supervising student nurses
in hospitals. Likewise, it is only reasonable that student
teachers doing practicums with children should be supervised
by registered teachers"
In the recent past some
institutions have defended their practice of requiring
teacher educators without a practising certificate to
supervise students with the claim that it falls within the
ambit of their [the institutions'] exercise of academic
freedom.
However, Dr Ryan rejects this claim,
saying that according to international understanding,
academics should claim academic freedom only in areas where
they have professional expertise. That is, it is those
teacher educators with a practicing certificate who have the
rights and responsibilities of academic freedom, rather than
their employing institutions.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
- Waiariki prepares to shrink under govt cap
- Joyce says we need more students, but he won't be paying
- Awanuiārangi settles with crown for $14m
- Funding cuts for ITOs?
- Other news
Waiariki prepares to shrink under govt cap
According to the Rotorua Daily Post, hundreds of potential tertiary students will be left in limbo and jobs may be lost at Waiariki Institute of Technology, following a review of courses and entry criteria.
The paper reports
that the review is the result of government funding
cuts.
The government cap on student numbers means
entry requirements at Waiariki will be tightened next year.
Waiariki's Mokoia campus currently is home to about 3000
domestic full-time students, but chief executive Pim Borren
says that is expected to shrink to 2700 next
year.
The number of new places available at the
institute will drop from 2000 to 1400 and those wishing to
study are being advised to enrol before Christmas so they
don't miss out.
Students will be required to pay
their fees in full before their course starts and those who
pay early will be given priority. Course entry requirements
will become stricter, as Waiariki looks at ways to restrict
the number of students.
After previously having
few or no entry requirements for most courses, students with
the best academic results now will take
precedence.
Dr Borren told the Daily Post that he
believes such harsh capping during a recession is
short-sighted of the Government.
"[They] should
have been more lenient with the cap."
Dr Borren
said the Government should have been focusing on upskilling.
When the economy picked up the unemployment rates would drop
and the country would be faced with a skills shortage, he
said.
Some courses would be cut which in turn
would lead to staff losses, although that wasn't something
yet being discussed, Dr Borren said.
Ministry of
Education senior manager Ben O'Meara said that under a
capped funding system there was a possibility some people
would not be able to enrol in their first choice of
study.
However, he said expenditure and the
number of Government-funded student places had actually
increased during the recession.
Joyce says we need more students, but he won't be paying
Minister of tertiary education, Steven Joyce, told the UCOL Tertiary Teaching and Learning Conference last week that one of the issues the tertiary education system faces is that there are "very heavy controls on the sector, in price and volume."
Mr
Joyce said that the country needs "more people with degrees
and the better paying jobs that come with them, more
learners encouraged to get a good vocation and make things
of their lives,[and] fewer young people falling through the
gap between secondary and tertiary."
"And I want
to see second chance learners given the opportunity to
improve their skills."
However, despite continued
media stories that many potential students are missing out
on the opportunity to study because of government imposed
funding cuts, Mr Joyce reiterated that there would be no new
funding to address the problems he has identified. He noted
that government currently invests more than $4 billion a
year into the tertiary sector, including student
support:
"That's a massive amount of money, and
compared to other countries we certainly aren't tight in the
tertiary area. It's highly unlikely there will be any
significant cash injections in the foreseeable future. The
challenge is to get better results from what we are already
spending."
TEU national president, Dr Tom Ryan,
said in response that, while the tertiary sector cannot and
doesn't expect a blank cheque from government, the minister
urgently needs to stop viewing more students as a cost and
start recognising them as an investment.
"The
very students that this government wants to get new skills,
new knowledge and new jobs, are the same ones that are
missing out on places because of the government imposed
funding restrictions on polytechnics, wānanga and
universities."
Awanuiārangi settles with crown for $14m
Tertiary education minister Steven Joyce and Māori affairs minister Dr Pita Sharples signed a deed of settlement this week with Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi recognising the unique contribution it makes to tertiary education, and providing it with funding to develop its Whakatāne campus. In the settlement the Crown will pay Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi $14.5 million.
Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi claims
that when setting up the tertiary institution in 1992 it was
given only $64,000 by the Government. It says that the
amount of money was not equivalent to what other tertiary
providers where given.
Mr Joyce says this is the
last of the three Wānanga to be compensated. He says the
money will build a library, a lecture theatre, and an
exhibition centre.
Mr Joyce says the agreement
completes negotiations between the Crown and all three
wānanga over the 1999 Waitangi Tribunal Wānanga Capital
Establishment Report (Wai 718).
The Tribunal
supported the claim that wānanga did not get capital
funding from the government equivalent to other public
tertiary providers and, as a result, the three wānanga and
their students were disadvantaged.
Te Wānanga o
Aotearoa and Te Wānanga o Raukawa settled their respective
claims under Wai 718 in 2001 and 2008.
Funding cuts for ITOs?
The Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) this week announced changes to funding policy for industry training organisations (ITOs), after revealing average completion rates were only 31 percent.
NZPA
reports that the commission has been reviewing ITOs and has
begun a programme of work aimed at improving their
educational and financial performance.
"This
process has identified areas that require improvement and we
are modifying funding rules governing ITOs' use of funding,
improving the systems that track trainees, and strengthening
the TEC's own monitoring processes," said TEC chief
executive Roy Sharp.
New policies to take effect
from January 1 next year include placing annual caps on
funding for each trainee, clarifying the need for clear
evidence of trainee achievement, and ensuring that ITOs are
funded at rates that reflected the actual progress of
trainees.
From March 2011 the TEC will introduce
the Industry Training Register, giving near real time
reporting of trainee progression.
Mr Joyce said
modelling of the new rules and current conditions showed
they could result in annual funding to ITOs decreasing by as
much as $20 million in 2011.
"This reduction in
funding is in addition to a short-term decline in demand for
industry training as a result of current economic
conditions," Mr Joyce said.
"The TEC is currently
estimating that ITOs will under-spend their allowable budget
by around $16 million in 2010."
He said the TEC
had identified poor practices under the existing rules,
including some examples where funding was claimed for
trainees who were not actively engaged in
training.
Mr Joyce said the changes would bring
ITOs into closer alignment with other taxpayer-funded
tertiary institutions, and would have no impact on the
funding for modern apprenticeship schemes.
Other news
Corporate heavyweights lashed out at the poor funding of Australian universities, warning that student-to-staff ratios were at "ridiculous" levels. There are currently more than 20 university students to one member of staff, compared with less than 13:1 in 1990. "The student to academic staff ratio is ridiculous," ANZ chairman John Morschel told The Australian and Deutsche Bank Business Leaders Forum in Sydney – The Australian
Students may have to pay five
times the current degree course cost at England's top
universities if the cap is removed on tuition fees, research
suggests - The
BBC
The Network for Education and Academic
Rights (NEAR) and the Scholars at Risk Network (SAR),
together with partners worldwide, have undertaken a series
of workshops to raise awareness of academic freedom and
related values - including access,
accountability/transparency, academic freedom/quality,
autonomy/good governance, and social responsibility - SAR/NEAR
The Council of Trade Unions is warning that the proposed
90-day fire-at-will law change could be used to discriminate
against GLBT employees. The CTU has told Parliament's
Industrial Relations Select Committee that even though
discrimination on the basis of sexuality is illegal,
employers will not have to give a reason for dismissing
someone during the trial period - GayNZ
Both Sally and Polly do the same work. But Polly is a
Professional Teaching Fellow, which means she must get her
work signed off by someone else. Read TEU
University of Auckland Branch's comic telling of Polly's
story here - TEU University of Auckland
Branch.
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TEU Tertiary Update is published weekly on Thursdays and distributed freely to members of the Tertiary Education Union and others. You can subscribe to Tertiary Update by email or feed reader. Back issues are available on the TEU website. Direct inquiries should be made to Stephen Day, email: stephen.day@teu.ac.nz