The University of Queensland has become the second Australian higher education institution to agree terms with the controversial Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation, which is expected to result in a聽new extended major being offered next year.
The memorandum of understanding with the philanthropic centre, reportedly worth A$50聽million (拢28聽million), was signed in Sydney on 7聽August.
Vice-chancellor Peter H酶j said the deal would give Queensland 鈥渁聽level of philanthropic support rarely seen in the humanities in Australia鈥, bankrolling 鈥渁 rigorous sequence of study focused on small-group discussion, a study-abroad programme and student-centred learning鈥.
鈥淭his level of investment in the humanities at UQ comes at a time when opportunities to maintain these foundational disciplines are diminishing,鈥 Professor H酶j said. 鈥淭alented future students will be able to pursue a liberal arts education that will be both challenging and rewarding, and will equip [them] with the collaborative and persuasive skills to bring about meaningful change.鈥
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The programme would offer an extended major in Western civilisation via two pathways: a bachelor of advanced humanities (honours) and a dual degree combining an honours in law with a bachelor of humanities (Western civilisation).
Queensland said the Ramsay funding would cover 10 full-time equivalent academic staff, including a director, two new professional staff and 150 scholarships for high-achieving students.
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Ramsay will fund sabbaticals for academics after they have taught for at least six semesters.
The agreement is the second for Ramsay, which reached terms with the University of Wollongong last year.
Unlike Wollongong, which avoided controversy by negotiating in secret, Queensland has undergone bruising consultations with its staff and students. The university鈥檚 board of studies for the humanities and social sciences faculty twice rejected the draft curricula.
Staff and student opposition to the Ramsay partnership partly centres around institutional autonomy. Professor H酶j insisted that the agreement gave Queensland control over 鈥渁ll key governance arrangements, including course content, teaching standards, student admissions, selection of scholarship applicants, staff appointments and academic and intellectual freedom鈥.
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The agreement entitles Ramsay to representation on staff selection panels but does not give it veto rights over recruitment or deployment. Appointments, teaching, quality assurance and dealings with students 鈥渨ill be undertaken in accordance with UQ鈥檚 usual procedures and policies and will be solely under UQ鈥檚 ambit and control鈥, the agreement says.
But staff representatives say the partnership threatens academic freedom, institutional autonomy and transparency and 鈥渞aises serious concerns about educational diversity and equity and the quality of UQ curriculum鈥.
A petition from the Queensland branch of the National Tertiary Education Union says the proposed curriculum is 鈥渞egressive and outdated鈥 and 鈥渉as the potential to privilege students who are already privileged鈥.
The Ramsay agreement follows claims that the Queensland-based Confucius Institute wields too much influence in the university.
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Australian vice-chancellors were briefed about security issues, including the influence of Confucius Institutes, during a 7 August meeting with education minister Dan Tehan at Wollongong.
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