糖心Vlog

Take collective view on reforms, says Australian lobby head

While accord recommendations that suit some universities might not suit others, overall benefit should be the litmus test, says new IRU chair

Published on
February 2, 2024
Last updated
February 12, 2024
Fans judge the participants in Melbourne to illustrate Take collective view on reforms, says Australian lobby head
Source: WILLIAM WEST/AFP/ Getty Images

Australian universities will need to adopt a collective view when they appraise proposals from their once-in-a-generation review, according to the new head of one of the country鈥檚 institutional networks.

James Cook University vice-chancellor Simon Biggs, who has been named chair of the Innovative Research Universities (IRU), said vice-chancellors and lobbyists should consider the impacts on the 鈥渟ector as a whole鈥 when the time arrived to evaluate proposals from the Universities Accord panel.

鈥淭he current funding model is what it is,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 would argue, from a small regional university, it doesn鈥檛 work very well for us. That doesn鈥檛 mean it doesn鈥檛 work OK for others. If you change it in some way, that might work better for me [but] make it a little bit worse for somebody else.

鈥淲hat we really need to be asking is, will the recommendations of the accord鈥atisfy the original ambition that the minister [for education, Jason Clare] provided to the panel? Is this the most effective way of spending the money? Where should we be supportive? Where should we point out the risks?鈥

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Professor Biggs said the IRU鈥檚 diverse nature 鈥 with members in both metropolitan and regional Australia, ranging in size from the University of Canberra鈥檚 17,000-odd students to Western Sydney University with almost triple that number 鈥 made it a good testing ground for proposals likely to gain widespread support.

鈥淚t鈥檚 rare that鈥nything that comes forward looks great to all of us,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have that ability to say, 鈥榃ell, it might look good for a big capital city university, but I can tell you it doesn鈥檛 look good for us in North Queensland.鈥欌

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Professor Biggs will head the IRU in 2024 and 2025. He takes over as chair from former Canberra vice-chancellor Paddy Nixon, who聽quit without notice聽last month.

It is a pivotal time for the sector, with the 47 recommendations in the accord鈥檚 final report expected to be released publicly at the end of the month, together with the government鈥檚 response. 聽

Professor Biggs said he expected a positive response. 鈥淲e should assume that the minister is looking to accept as many of the recommendations as he can. Otherwise, why go through the process? Our job is鈥o think about what does [each recommendation] mean? How will we implement it? Can we live with it?鈥

He said he expected some of the recommendations to be achievable without government intervention, while others might require little expense. The 鈥渢hornier鈥 ideas would be about money.

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鈥淵ou can never say never, I guess, but it鈥檚 unlikely we鈥檙e going to see some bumper package of additional funding,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think one of the traps that universities and other people fall into frequently is just saying we need more money.鈥

Professor Biggs said a聽tertiary education commission, which he expected to be recommended by the panel and supported by the government, would warrant particular scrutiny. 鈥淗ow will that operate? Is that another layer of compliance overhead or can it replace some layers of the overhead we鈥檝e already got? Does it facilitate a holistic system that鈥檚 going to work better?

鈥淢y [test] will be, does this make the public spend on universities more efficient and more effective?鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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