Thursday, August 27, 2015

CQ to host NBL pre-season match between NQ teams

I’m pretty excited after yesterday’s announcement that the Rocky community would be treated to a NBL pre-season game, thanks to the University, Rockhampton Regional Council, Rockhampton Basketball and JETGO, coming together to deliver this special event at the CQUniversity Community Sports Centre. The Cairns Taipans and Townsville Crocs will be battling it out in a grudge match in central Queensland on Friday, 18 September and I can’t wait!

For those who follow me on Twitter, know that I am a complete basketball tragic. Its great game and the teams in the NBL are very active in their communities, inspiring young kids to lead healthy lifestyles and do well at school. I’ve seen this community engagement firsthand thanks to our sponsorship of the Cairns Taipans. In fact, it was the work that the Taipans do in Far North Queensland communities that inspired the decision to become naming rights sponsor of the team.



I’m really proud that the University is able to host this match and think it’s great that several organisations came together, in a short period of time, to organise the logistics and bring a national sporting event, to the local community. This will no doubt be a highlight of the Rockhampton sporting calendar this year and more importantly will be an affordable event for families to attend and enjoy.

This just goes to show that as well as delivering classes universities can also deliver other value-add activities to boost to their local community and give something back to the regions that support them!


We are a national university based here in Rocky and it is fantastic that our support of a national sporting team allows us to bring an event like this to our home town. Go the Taipans!




Wednesday, August 26, 2015

'Methodological nonsense' peddled by Good Uni Guide

The Good Universities Guide results (GUG) have been released for another year, and university marketing departments across the country are scrambling to highlight their four and five-star achievements.

Not that we score many anyway, but I have put a stop to my own university spruiking its four and five-star results over the years.

The GUG is an utterly unreliable and flawed source of performance data which does the sector irreparable harm each year.

I will not acknowledge our high star scores just as I refuse to accept our one-star scores. In fact this year I went a step further and boycotted the release of survey data to the GUG, meaning CQUniversity recorded “not rated” entries for learning and teaching. A case of sour grapes? Maybe. But there are now a handful of highly reputable universities who, just like us, are no longer taking part in the statistical vandalism that is the GUG.

Let me provide just one example of the methodological nonsense peddled by the GUG. Several key measures of graduate experience (overall satisfaction, teaching quality and generic skills) in the GUG are derived from the Australian Graduate Survey (AGS), a national census of recent graduates from degree programs.

The AGS is governed by a Code of Practice, agreed by all Australian universities. The AGS provides raw data for the GUG but, importantly, it is then misused and misrepresented by the GUG.
The AGS data for overall satisfaction, for instance, is based on percentage satisfaction with CQUniversity scoring 81% or so in the last two surveys. In fact, all Australian universities sit within a band from around 77% to 88%. This shows that in general, four out of every five graduates from Australian universities are satisfied with the overall quality of their education – a fantastic vote of confidence in the integrity of our sector. However the GUG takes this data and slices it to exclude all postgraduate and sub-degree students (excluding just over half of our higher education graduates), and then it ranks (not rates) these from highest to lowest, assigning a five-star score to the top quintile (those over 85%) and a one-star score to the lowest quintile - those around 80%. They then confuse their readers by describing these scores as ‘ratings’, when clearly they are rankings.

In the 2015 GUG, CQUniversity was among many good universities scoring just one star for overall satisfaction - it would only take 4-5% more to be five-star, which is neither intuitive nor valid.
This approach flies in the face of common sense - we are all used to true star ratings, for example in hotel ratings on TripAdvisor and those allocated for energy and water efficiency of electrical goods. We know for instance that there is a world of difference between a one-star hotel and a five-star hotel. Yet the GUG doesn’t take this approach - instead it bases its ‘ratings’ on rankings, so there will always be the same number of five-star and one-star universities, irrespective of the widespread high quality of educational outcomes across the sector, and the marginal difference between a five-star and a one star result. Converting the percentage figures to a true five-star scale would actually give all universities satisfaction ratings of between 3.8 to 4.4 stars. 
I could go on and on about the GUG’s habitual misuse of data – like how my university sees over 90% of our students excluded from “Starting salary” and “Getting a full time job” categories, leaving us with just two and three star results in previous years (I’ve always scratched my head on that one, given AGS data routinely shows our graduates are above the national average on both fronts). Or how our own real-time in-house student surveying shows vastly different levels of student satisfaction from the five-year lagged data peddled by GUG. But essential it boils down to the GUG unashamedly violating the AGS Code of Practice, which states: ‘the data should be used with impartiality, objectivity and integrity … using methodological sound and transparent methods’, avoiding ‘false, deceptive or misleading ways’ and ‘not… knowingly undermine the reputation and standing of institutions in the Australian sector’. 
It may be difficult at times to wear the “not rated” results in this year’s GUG because of our boycott. No doubt it will raise many questions. But I am buoyed by other Universities joining with CQUniversity in our refusal to acknowledge the GUG as a valid and reliable industry assessment tool. In the next few years, the Quality Indicators for Learning and Teaching (QILT) initiative will further strengthen national data, and I predict this will eventually consign GUG’s misuse of stars rankings to the scrap heap.

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

CQUni Townsville campus confirmed as a winner

CQUniversity Townsville students have already praised their new campus and now the Master Builders Queensland organisation has added weight to the assessment of internal fit-out quality.

Thanks to a partnership between CQUniversity Facilities Management and Hurst Constructions Queensland, the Townsville campus has won a Master Builders Housing & Construction award for 'Education Facilities up to $1 million'.

The campus actually set a new standard for us when it opened earlier this year paved the way for the fit outs of both the new Melbourne campus and our second North Queensland campus in Cairns. Some of the features of the campus include:

  • State-of-the-art tutorial rooms featuring the latest presentation, audio-visual and video-conference equipment
  • Clinical skills lab which offers on-site practical training for paramedic science students.
  • Mac lab for professional communication students
  • Free wireless networking to enable students to connect their laptops to the Internet
  • Photocopying, scanning and printing facilities
  • CQUniversity bookshop online access and support
  • Townsville help kiosk - state-of-the-art touchscreen providing access to IT support and online library access, so that students can view an extensive array of online databases and source the latest information in their chosen fields
  • Student lounge area with lounge seating and monitors
  • Support staff on hand to assist with student enquiries
  • Plasma screen located in the reception to convey important information to students upon their arrival at the campus