The New Zealand Herald

TUMBLING DOWN

Staff cuts big factor as NZ universiti­es slide in world rankings

- Simon Collins

Staff cuts despite growing student numbers have dragged most New Zealand universiti­es down in the latest world rankings. The biggest six of the country’s eight universiti­es have all tumbled in the London-based QS rankings, which are regarded as the most important for attracting internatio­nal students.

Only our two smallest universiti­es, Waikato and Lincoln, have moved up the ranks.

Seven NZ universiti­es were marked down this year on their academic reputation, based on asking 83,000 academics around the world to list the top universiti­es in their fields.

Six lost ground in a survey asking 30,000 global employers which universiti­es provided their most competent, innovative and effective graduates.

But New Zealand’s worst result was on staff-to-student ratios.

“The increase in enrolments — and the decrease in faculty numbers — reported by the country’s universiti­es sees all eight receive a lower score for faculty/student ratio,” the QS report said.

Universiti­es NZ director Chris Whelan said this reflected a funding squeeze. “Over the last 10 years we saw a relatively steep real decline in per-student funding in the first half, reversed slightly in the second half. In the 2015, 2016 and 2017 Budgets there were increases that were slightly ahead of CPI [consumers price index],” he said.

“But university costs go up about 1.5 times the CPI because CPI doesn’t include salaries or constructi­on costs or IT, which make up 80 per cent of our actual costs.”

This year’s Budget gave the universiti­es no increase in per-student funding at all, the first nil increase in at least 17 years and a cut in real terms of $5 million to $10m for the University of Auckland alone.

Waikato University is the standout success this year, jumping 18 places overall and climbing into the top 100 (92nd) for citations per academic in

internatio­nal journals. Its acting vicechance­llor, Professor Alister Jones, said the university had pursued a strategy of boosting internatio­nal staff and students, encouragin­g research that “makes an impact” and building global links.

Last year it became the first NZ university offering full degrees in China.

“The strategy is making sure that we are publishing in the appropriat­e places. That is making a difference,” he said.

“Appointing the right people is also important in that process, and making sure that people are engaged in research that is making a difference.”

The QS data shows that 41 per cent of Waikato academics hold foreign citizenshi­p — a proportion that is even higher at Otago (60 per cent), Canterbury and AUT (both 47 per cent) and Victoria and Massey ( both 45 per cent).

The worsening staff/student ratio in New Zealand universiti­es was entirely due to cuts of 203 academics at Massey and 74 at Lincoln.

Massey communicat­ions director James Gardiner said staff were cut last year in science and health faculties, but the main reason for the big drop was that Massey excluded “non-research-active” staff this year.

Whelan said Lincoln also cut staff numbers and transferre­d the Telford farm training school to Mastertonb­ased Taratahi Institute of Agricultur­e last year.

Staff numbers increased, and staff/ student ratios improved slightly, at the other six universiti­es.

The QS rankings include points for high proportion­s of foreign students, on the basis that they are a sign that a university is a desirable destinatio­n.

Ministry of Education data shows that internatio­nal students at NZ universiti­es increased 38 per cent from 2008 to last year, while domestic students declined 2 per cent.

Internatio­nal students now make up 29 per cent of all students at Lincoln, 19 per cent at Waikato, 18 per cent at Auckland and AUT, 17 per cent at Massey, 16 per cent at Canterbury, and 15 per cent at Otago and Victoria.

 ??  ?? Worsening staff-student ratios hurt all of New Zealand’s top eight universiti­es in an internatio­nal survey.
Worsening staff-student ratios hurt all of New Zealand’s top eight universiti­es in an internatio­nal survey.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand