An Australian policy analyst has proposed a two-pronged approach to inclusivity, with extra funding to help universities meet equity targets and 鈥渟ignificant financial penalties鈥 for those that fail.
Economist and former Department of Health secretary Stephen Duckett, who is deputy chancellor of RMIT University, said institutions that consistently flouted agreed equity targets should face 鈥渁聽significant impact on their budgets鈥.
For example, universities that broke a commitment to have 20 per cent of their students from disadvantaged backgrounds might only be funded for five times as many places as their equity enrolments. This would keep disadvantaged students鈥 share of places at the desired level.
鈥淸It] would certainly gain the attention of university administrations,鈥 Professor Duckett asserted in a聽 to the Universities Accord panel. 鈥淢ission-based compacts should signal tougher price consequences for failure to address equity targets.鈥
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Responses to the accord panel鈥檚 interim report fell due on 1 September. The panel asked interested parties to limit their advice to three issues and three pages.
Professor Duckett, who stressed that he was responding in a personal rather than a university capacity, said inclusivity could be boosted through a 鈥渟ystem of price incentives鈥 embedded in a new funding model. This could be achieved using loadings to cover the additional costs of teaching equity cohorts.
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He said higher education鈥檚 鈥渟morgasbord of small programmes鈥 exacerbated universities鈥 reporting burdens without resolving the problems they were supposed to address. 鈥淧ricing signals on universities could replace many, if not all, of the small programmes. This鈥ould give universities more freedom and reduce the reporting burden, as payments would be made based on existing student data collections.鈥
The Innovative Research Universities (IRU) said participation targets would not be achieved 鈥渋f all universities are expected to deliver on them in an identical way鈥. Its advocated 鈥渞ealistic institution-level targets鈥 premised on 鈥渆ach university鈥檚 strategy and the distinct community it serves鈥.
鈥淚nstitutions should have the flexibility to move resources to meet need,鈥 the IRU submission added. As an example, teaching subsidies could be used to fund enabling programmes.
The (ISAA) warned that a bigger higher education system would聽not necessarily be a 鈥渇airer鈥 one. Its聽 said that, without significant support, people from groups that 鈥渉ave long been outside the system鈥 would be perceived as having squandered the opportunity of higher education.
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鈥淭he system itself will contain the seeds of their exclusion,鈥 the submission said. 鈥淐ollecting more data to better understand the needs of students from these groups can itself lead to exclusion, because the collection can be biased to existing norms.鈥
But the Group of Eight (Go8) advocated a 鈥渘ational equity data institute鈥 among a suite of measures to make participation more equitable.
The new agency would bring together the , the and the in a 鈥渟ingle or federated structure鈥, the Go8鈥檚 said. 鈥淲e must know what works, what hasn鈥檛 worked and why, if we are to evolve our tertiary system and maximise access across the population.鈥
The University of Melbourne noted that equity students were generally less likely than other cohorts to complete their courses. 鈥淛ust working to increase the completion rates of existing students鈥ould make a difference to the education outcomes of under-represented cohorts,鈥 Melbourne鈥檚 听蝉补颈诲.
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