An End to Open Entry at Universities?

February 19th 2010 at 10:30am, By David Choat

David Choat is the third blogger to join ED Blog. He is profiled here.

University of Canterbury Vice-Chancellor Rod Carr has a challenging article in yesterday’s Press (not online, but UC sent us a copy, where he questions the continuation of New Zealand’s distinctive policy of open entry to universities for adult students.

I thought it might be worth taking a step back and having a look at the issue with a bit of an historical perspective.

A couple of years ago, I had the privilege of working with Norman Kingsbury on a strategic view of student “pathways and staircasing” for the Tertiary Education Commission. The report we produced (which represented our views and not necessarily the government’s or TEC’s) can still be found on their website.

Anyway, we covered the issue of open entry and included a bit of background on the issue, which I’ll excerpt here:

The tradition of open entry for adult students has a long history in New Zealand. It can be traced back to the end of the First World War, when ex-serviceman were allowed entrance to university without examination. This was later extended to all adults over 30, and the age was subsequently lowered to 21 and then 20.

This policy has not been without controversy, although it has proved to be “a difficult concept for either government or universities to cast away” [Butterworth & Tarling]. The Hughes Parry Committee of 1959 (which led to the break-up of the University of New Zealand) cautioned against over-generous use of provisional admission (as the practice was known) but concluded that, rather than recommend restrictions, “we prefer to seek ways of improving the performance of those who fail in order to convert their failure into success.”

Though moderated by increased use of selection for particular programmes, particularly in the professions, open entry has continued as a feature of New Zealand’s tertiary education system through the Learning for Life reforms (which gave it its present legislative expression) and into the present day.

The most recent [as at 2006] debate on open entry, at least insofar as it relates to degrees, was initiated by the Tertiary Education Advisory Commission (TEAC) of 2000-01 (which led to the establishment of the Tertiary Education Commission). The Tertiary Education Advisory Commission advocated the introduction of relatively extensive rationing by merit of all under-graduate degree places… This proposal was not accepted by the government, however. The Cabinet paper setting out its response to TEAC’s recommendations on funding noted parenthetically, “The TEAC recommendation of a merit-entry test to under-graduate degrees was extremely unpopular amongst those who submitted comments on the fourth TEAC report, and is not suggested as part of the integrated funding framework.”

The report also went on to argue that open entry for adult students “is likely to be an important part of the explanation why New Zealand’s approach to other aspects of admission and selection is less regulated than in other countries.” (For those interested in reading further, it’s on pages 32-34 of the report.)

It will come as no surprise to anyone who knows Norman and his passionate belief in equity and access that the review came down strongly in favour of retaining open entry. Maybe the issues and circumstances have changed decisively in the last four years, but I’m not convinced of that.

More than that, though, I hope that any decisions about changing or ending New Zealand’s open entry tradition are not done in an “amnesiac” manner, without seeking to understand the role the provision has played and how it fits into our wider system. There have been a few too many haphazard changes made that way recently.

4 Responses to An End to Open Entry at Universities?

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Dave Guerin

February 19th, 2010 at 12:50 pm

I think Rod made some very good points in his column, but he also seemed to abdicate responsibility for addressing the issue. The global research is pretty clear that people from all backgrounds can succeed at university as long as they come in with adequate academic preparation. Rod seemed to be saying that that was the responsibility of secondary schools (or anyone other than the university). While the university is not the only place that can help students prepare, it needs to be involved in the solution. Remedial education programmes may be ‘expensive and distracting’ as he says, but Rod isn’t heading an ivy league university He’s heading a diversified institution that can’t simply rely on others to feed in qualified students.

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Dean Carroll

February 19th, 2010 at 1:09 pm

Might it be interesting to distinguish between open entry to ‘universities’ and open entry into the tertiary education system. I have long advocated that academic merit is the most effective and efficient mechanism and framework to ration ‘higher’ education. The problem we have in New Zealand is that there is not a system by which students/trainees can enter tertiary education and progress seemlessly and in which their formal and non-formal educational achievement is given appropriate and fair recognition. Those who have “Job-like” qualities will have already been bored with my decade-long advocacy of the University of California model in which in New Zealand polytechnics and others would place the role of community colleges. The key difference from the current system would be that polytechnics could award associate degrees, there would be automatic RPL and cross-crediting and a certain percentage of university places would be guaranteed for polytechnic/wananga/PTE graduates. This system is well established overseas.

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David Choat

February 19th, 2010 at 2:22 pm

Dave – I think your comment about “a diversified institution that can’t simply rely on others to feed in qualified students” gets to the heart of the idea that there is a distinctive New Zealand model of university, which strongly informed the thinking around the establishment and continuation of the open adult entry policy. This comes through very clearly in Beeby’s Biography of an Idea. Is that sort of model one we now wish to discard? I’d argue not without careful thought about what we’re giving up and why.

Dean – that issue about seamless progression is of course very much the focus of the Pathways & Staircasing report overall – tho structural shifts like a UCal model were well outside of our scope!

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Paul Williams

February 21st, 2010 at 3:10 pm

Dean, I don’t know the specifics of UCal’s arrangements but I was recently briefed on a presentation given by two senior US Community College CEs who bemoaned their lack of funding and status. I agree however, there’s a need to encourage low SES and otherwise disadvantaged learners into higher education. It’s a key objective of the current federal government and they’re looking to the VET sector to help them – for instance, we generally have around 45,000 diploma and advanced diploma students per year, approximately 40 per cent of whom are comparatively low SES. One of the major impediments is the programs; VET quals don’t typically have the knowledge component of the earlier years of a uni qualification and this generally means very limited credit is awarded. We’re working on alternative arrangements, dual offers, joint programs etc, but absent funding, it’s not going to happen quickly.

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