A New Zealand university has drawn staff ire by pushing ahead with plans for an offshore campus amid major staff cuts.
Massey University said its joint venture in Singapore, which it hopes will accommodate up to 5,000 students, was a âlogical baseâ for international expansion. âIn the current economic environment, itâs important to diversify revenue streams and identify growth opportunities,â vice-chancellor Jan Thomas told staff.
âThis compelling opportunity has been given a great deal of thought and consideration regarding the potential risks and rewards, including significant revenue benefits for the university.â
Massey said it was in the âfinal stagesâ of consummating a âmajor face-to-face campusâ on the island, with operations to begin next year. While the university has released few details, the deal apparently involves a local partner or partners along with Massey Global Singapore Private Limited, a wholly owned business consultancy established in 2016.
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Massey said it has been active in the island since 2008. It offers an honours degree in food technology, taught by Massey staff at the Singapore Institute of Technology, and a masterâs degree in analytics through PSB Academy. The joint venture will allow it to âexpand in different disciplinary areas and further enhance our reputation as a global universityâ, a spokeswoman said.
The Tertiary Education Union (TEU) condemned the move, with organiser Ben Schmidt saying local students were the universityâs âforemostâ responsibility. âIt is disturbing to witness Massey setting up shop in another country while cutting hundreds of jobs in Aotearoa [New Zealand],â he said.
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âInstead of building empires abroad the university should be keeping staff it already employs, and serving the students and the communities it is funded by our government to serve.â
The comments follow Masseyâs offer of âvoluntary enhanced cessationâ in the library and academic colleges. The TEU says up to 245 jobs could go, mostly in the sciences and humanities.
Mr Schmidt said the cuts were âincredibly disappointingâ, particularly after the government had promised universities a NZ$128 million (ÂŁ61 million)Â bailout. âThey are being pushed through via policy changes and voluntary redundancy with no real engagement with the staff who will be expected to pick up the pieces.â
Masseyâs spokeswoman said the âentirely voluntaryâ redundancies did not target particular positions and were âjust one mechanism to help reduce costsâ. She said the proposals had been rolled out in a âhighly consultative change processâ.
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She said Massey had âseveral projects currently under way to address the challenging financial climate the tertiary sector is facing. Many of these projectsâŠhave been ongoing for years as the university remains committed to working in a financially sustainable way.â Â
In a recent staff webinar, Professor Thomas identified the âexpansion of transnational educationâ as one of âfour big shiftsâ to achieve sustainability, amid annual deficits that are forecasted to reach NZ$70 million by 2027 unless the university can find savings and extra revenue.
She said the university wanted to reduce its reliance on government funding. While Singapore was its current offshore focus, Massey would âexplore other opportunities to ensure transnational education provides the resources Massey needs to maintain itself as a world-class universityâ.
By 2042, she said, Masseyâs aspiration was to have more New Zealanders studying online than on-campus, with most face-to-face students based overseas.
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