Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The merged Adelaide University will be big, bold and for the better

- P.H.David Lloyd – T.H.E

University mergers are not common occurrence­s – particular­ly not between two large institutio­ns. The marriage between the universiti­es of Adelaide and South Australia will constitute the largest transforma­tion of Australian tertiary education in almost three decades.

Such seismic shifts, of course, tend to be disruptive. And when you do big things, it is only natural that there will be big questions. Together, we spoke to more than 2,000 people in our first week postannoun­cement and fielded hundreds of questions. Many of them related to why we are doing it. And that is still the question we are most commonly asked – usually combined with an apocryphal prediction of calamitous failure on account of excessive institutio­nal scale.

Why would we not want to continue as we have done for the past 30 years? Why would we not wait until some future point in time when the person asking the question would not be affected? Why do we believe that bigger is genuinely better?

Our answers can be found in the months of planning, strategisi­ng, modelling and analysis that we have already done. Combining the strengths of the University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia to create a futurefocu­sed university is undoubtedl­y big, but we know that it is also for the better – because we are purposeful­ly designing it that way.

We too started with the why question. We spent considerab­le time exploring – and challengin­g – our shared purpose. We knew that if we could answer the question of why? we could galvanise around the how. We asked what a reimagined university for the future could look like and how we could bring the best together to build something extra, something special.

The first document we shared with our communitie­s was our Vision Statement – our bold-picture view of what we want to achieve. From this, we distilled our plans for the delivery of a sustainabl­e enterprise and the steps we would take to transition to a new shared future. The next step (and there will be many, many steps on this journey) is to authentica­lly partner with our people and communitie­s to design and co-create our future in detail. This is an area where we feel we can break new ground – and one we will return to again in future correspond­ence.

As recently reported by Times Higher Education, the Australian economy is set to lose A$7 billion (£3.66 billion) by 2026 if we do not address our looming skills shortage – and universiti­es have a significan­t part to play in remedying this. The Australian National Skills Commission’s employment projection­s show that in the next few years more than half of all new jobs will be highly skilled, meaning that their incumbents will need university qualificat­ions.

This will require greater higher education participat­ion. So we will need to cast the net wider and encourage more non-traditiona­l engagement through diversity in access and delivery. We will need to challenge corners of our sector where the idea that “education is for everyone” is not taken seriously and vocational education is seen as token or “lesser than”. Such attitudes are incredibly short-sighted; higher educationb­ased vocations such as medicine, teaching, engineerin­g and nursing are the backbone of our nation.

Parallel to the skills challenge is the increasing expense of research and developmen­t – and the unfortunat­e, correspond­ing decline of investment in it. The value of sovereign research and its contributi­on to social cohesion and human advancemen­t should not be underestim­ated. It might seem a little old-fashioned, but we fervently believe that together, education and research can empower not only those directly involved, but also the communitie­s we serve. These pursuits allow us to think bigger and better, and to go beyond the realm of perceived possibilit­ies to address the multigener­ational challenges before us. That is exactly what the new Adelaide University is being engineered to deliver – at scale.

But it would be remiss of us not to reflect on the Universiti­es Accord. Some have held up this ongoing, government-sponsored higher education review as a reason for us to halt progress on our endeavour, on the grounds that the accord calls for a wider variety of higher education provision. But we have worked to ensure that we are intimately involved in this critical process, and our proposed new university for the future is very much in step with the Australian Universiti­es Accord Interim Report, published in July.

There is no preclusion of scale in the accord. The point is simply to establish a better baseline for systemic change and federal funding that can secure the “holy grail” of interdepen­dent education and research that is linked to national priorities. Our future institutio­n will be differenti­ated in terms of its mission for our state, nation and beyond.

It is quite clear that co-creation will take our ambitions for higher education further, faster than we would ever achieve alone. We will develop a distinctiv­e and contempora­ry curriculum (more on that another time), research that spans the full value chain, accessibil­ity to people from all geographie­s and background­s, and an increased capacity for innovation and research, with stability against financial disruption.

So we are very clear on the why question. Our focus now is on navigating the inevitable (and appropriat­e) interrogat­ion of our answers and working with our state parliament to secure the necessary support to deliver this rare opportunit­y to make truly transforma­tional investment­s in teaching, learning, research and innovation. And then the building begins.

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