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Australian Universities Quality Agency and Quality Audit

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Title: Australian Universities Quality Agency and Quality Audit


1
Australian Universities Quality Agencyand
Quality Audit
Professor Deryck Schreuder Chair, AUQA October
2004
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Briefing Outline
  • Overview of AUQA
  • Quality Audit
  • Other Aspects of AUQAs work
  • Auditing Transnational Education.

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1. Overview of AUQA
  • The Australian Universities Quality Agency (AUQA)
    is an independent national agency that will
    promote, audit, and report on quality assurance
    in Australian higher education.
  • It is a not for-profit company limited by
    guarantee.
  • The shareholders are the Commonwealth, State and
    Territory Ministers for Education.

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AUQA Board of Directors
  • Three directors nominated by the Commonwealth
    Minister responsible for higher education
  • Three directors nominated by the State
    Territory Ministers responsible for higher
    education
  • Four directors elected by the self-accrediting
    institutions
  • One director elected by the non-self accrediting
    institutions and
  • AUQAs Executive Director

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AUQA Staff
  • AUQA has a full-time staff of nine
  • Executive Director
  • Audit Directors (4)
  • Information Manager
  • Personal Assistant to Executive Director
  • Audit Support Administrator
  • Project Officer

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Australian Universities Quality Agency
In Australia, universities are created by
legislation after surmounting significant hurdle
requirements. Therefore, they are not
subsequently required to go through an
accreditation process. They do however undergo
lustral audit by the national Agency, AUQA.
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AUQAs Objectives
  • Arrange and manage a system of periodic audits
    of QA arrangements relating to the activities of
    Australian universities, other self-accrediting
    institutions (SAIs) and state and territory HE
    accreditation bodies.

1
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AUQAs Objectives
  • Monitor, review, analyse and provide public
    reports on QA arrangements in SAIs, and on
    processes and procedures of state and territory
    accreditation authorities, and on the impact of
    those processes on quality of programs.

2
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AUQAs Objectives
  • Report on the criteria for the
    accreditation of new universities and
    non-university HE courses as a result of
    information obtained during the audit of
    institutions and state and territory
    accreditation processes.

3
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AUQAs Objectives
  • Reporting on the relative standards of the
    Australian HE system and its QA processes,
    including their international standing, as a
    result of information obtained during the audit
    process.

4
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2. Quality Audit
  • A systematic, independent determination whether
  • An organisations planned arrangements are
    suitable to achieve its goals (i.e. check the
    overall approach).
  • Actual practice conforms to the planned
    arrangements (i.e. the deployment).
  • The arrangements achieve the desired results.
  • The organisation is learning and improving from
    its self-evaluation of its approach, deployment
    and results.

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AUQA Audit Scope
Indicative scope includes
  • Organisational Leadership, Planning etc.
  • Teaching Learning (all modes), Courses etc.
  • Research, Consultancies, Community Service etc.
  • Internationalisation
  • Understanding Students and Stakeholders
  • Staff and Staff Support
  • Student Support
  • Academic Support
  • Admin Support, Facilities, Resources etc.

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Main Audit Stages
  • 1. Auditee conducts self-evaluation
  • Consultation on panel membership
  • 3. Performance Portfolio submitted
  • 4. Portfolio Meeting
  • 5. Preparatory Visit preparing for the Audit
    Visit
  • 6. Provision of supporting documentation

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Main Audit Stages (cont.)
  • Off-shore Audit Visit (if any)
  • 8. On-shore Audit Visit(s)
  • 9. Draft Audit Report to auditee
  • 10. Audit Report published
  • 11. Follow-up Action Plan ( 3-4 months)
  • 12. Follow-up Progress Report ( 2½ yrs)

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AUQA Auditors
  • AUQA has a Register of 100 honorary auditors from
    Australia and overseas
  • The AUQA Board approves all appointments to the
    Register, following checks of resumes and
    referees reports
  • All auditors undertake some form of training
  • AUQA holds annual Auditor Meetings

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Typical Panel Composition
  • two members from within Australian universities
    or other SAIs
  • an Australian member from outside the university
    sector
  • an overseas member (usually from within a
    university) and
  • an AUQA professional staff member.

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Questions andComments?
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Other Aspects of AUQAs Work
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1. National Activities
AUQA has a significant national presence in
Australia in addition to its audit work
  • Australian Universities Quality Forum
  • Good Practice Database
  • workshops
  • publications
  • policy advice

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2. International Activities
AUQA has a significant international presence in
addition to its audits of the overseas activities
of Australian institutions.
  • International Network for Quality Assurance
    Agencies
  • in Higher Education (INQAAHE)

- Development of Principles of Good Practice
for Quality Assurance Agencies
  • Asia-Pacific Quality Network (APQN)
  • - AUQA Secretariat

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  • Mutual Recognition

- quality assurance agencies to minimise load
on institutions and facilitate credit transfer
and recognition of qualifications eg. MoU
with South Africa
  • South East Asian Ministers of Education
  • Organisation (SEAMEO)

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  • ASEAN Universities Network (AUN)
  • AUQAs staff are frequently invited to
  • speak at a number of international
  • conferences and to assist other quality
  • agencies with their work.

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  • Over recent years, staff have conducted
  • reviews of institutions in Hong Kong, Mexico,
  • South Africa and the United Arab Emirates,
  • and provided advice to agencies in Japan
  • and elsewhere.
  • Staff have trained reviewers for other
  • quality agencies.

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  • AUQA frequently receives government
  • and agency delegations, from all parts
  • of the world.
  • Staff from overseas quality assurance
  • agencies have also observed AUQA audits.

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Auditing Transnational Education
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Offshore Audit Visit Stages
  • Request further information
  • Decide an Offshore AV is required
  • Notify Auditee request further information
  • Construct visit program in consultation with, and
    via, Auditee
  • Delegation undertake visit, accompanied by
    Auditee
  • Delegation reports back to full Panel
  • Follow-up issues identified

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Tests for Transnational Audit Visits
  • Materiality
  • Significance
  • Risks (to the provider)
  • Risks (to the students)
  • Host Country Accreditation
  • Necessity
  • Practicality

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1. Materiality
  • What are the numbers of staff and students per
    transnational venue (perhaps as a ratio to total
    student numbers)?
  • If numbers are modest and stable, then Audit
    Panel may choose to put its efforts elsewhere.
  • If numbers are big/variable enough to have a
    discernible impact on the SAIs financial
    position, then Audit Panel may consider
    thissufficiently material to warrant attention.

29
2. Significance
  • What is the relationship of the transnational
    activities to the SAIs organisational
    strategies?
  • If ad hoc, or not scheduled for growth in
    comparison with other organisational goals, then
    Audit Panel may conclude it not sufficiently
    significant to apply limited resources in
    auditing it.
  • If transnational activities are subject of
    aggressive growth strategy then Audit Panel may
    deem them sufficiently significant to warrant
    particular attention, even if currently quite
    small.

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3. Risks (to the provider)
  • What is the likelihood and consequences of things
    going wrong with the transnational activities?
    Factors to consider include
  • How long the activity has been established.
  • How stable has been the operation.
  • What risk management systems are in place.
  • Whether there are any particular external
    sensitivities (e.g. media, political).

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4. Risks (to the students)
  • The institution may have thorough systems, tested
    refined through experience, for large bodies of
    transnational students, but not for the smaller
    operations.
  • Use of transnational staff may increase risks for
    students, particularly regarding HDR supervision.
  • Students may be denied access to University
    faculty.
  • Support via a language other than Englishmay
    pose risks.

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5. Host Country Accreditation
  • Many transnational locations in which Australian
    SAIs operate have their own external quality
    mechanisms.
  • The scope and rigour of host country
    accreditation processes varies considerably.
  • What is the effect of these arrangements on the
    QA for Australian transnational activities?
  • Can the Audit Panel rely on mutualrecognition?

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6. Necessity
  • Are there other, more cost-effective means
    available by which the Audit Panel can acquire
    the necessary knowledge?
  • Examples include
  • Teleconferencing
  • Videoconferencing
  • Documented materials
  • Bringing people to the Panel

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7. Practicality
  • Can a visit be properly planned and achieved in
    the time available?
  • What is the number and location of transnational
    venues? If the transnational activities are
    widely dispersed around the world, then there may
    be practical limitations of time and cost.
  • Sampling is a technique used for auditing
    domestic activities and is no less applicable
    totransnational activities.

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Implications for Quality Assurance
  • Admission
  • Teaching
  • Assessment
  • Support Services
  • Evaluation and Review
  • Philosophy
  • Contract
  • Approvals
  • Curriculum
  • Promotion

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1. Philosophy
  • What is the purpose of the transnational
    activity?
  • What values underpin it?
  • Who are the stakeholders/beneficiaries, what are
    their interests, and how are their interests
    being represented?

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2. Contract
  • Contract authorisation
  • Was a thorough due diligence undertaken first?
  • Signed by who? Was there appropriate
    consultation?
  • Contract scope
  • Academic QA issues covered in a clear manner?
  • Are the risk management provisions adequate?
  • Contract management
  • Good communication processes?
  • Is the contract subject to review?

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3. Approvals
  • Internal Approval
  • Was it a planned or emergent event?
  • Was it the contract explicitly approved within
    the SAI? How? Were the right people involved?
  • What info contributed to the approval process?
  • What values underpinned the approval process?
  • External Approval
  • Have the necessary host countryapprovals been
    obtained?

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4. Curriculum
  • Is the curriculum identical, equivalent,
    significantly tailored or unique?
  • Is it appropriately contextualised (e.g. case
    studies, cultural sensitivity)
  • In what language are curriculum materials?
  • Have appropriate approvals been sought re
  • credit recognition/exchange agreements?
  • amendments to the program?
  • changes to the delivery mode?

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5. Promotion
  • In what language is the program promoted?
  • Who is doing the promotion, and to what
    guidelines? Is it consistent with domestic
    promotion regarding curriculum and policies?
  • How accurate and fair is the promotion, e.g. re
    availability of electives?

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6. Admission
  • Entry Standards
  • Identical, equivalent or different?
  • Are credit transfers properly quality assured?
  • Decision Makers
  • Who is managing the student admission approvals?
  • Where are approval decisions being made?
  • Who is checking the validity of the evidentiary
    requirements (incl. prior credit)?

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7. Teaching
  • The Teachers
  • Are there appropriate selection, induction,
    briefing and support of teachers?
  • What accountability systems are in place?
  • The Teaching
  • Does the schedule provide adequate time for
    student reflection and assignments?
  • Is the pedagogy appropriate?
  • In what language is teaching provided?

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8. Assessment
  • Is the assessment schedule identical, equivalent
    or different to the base program?
  • What is the language of all assessment?
  • Who does the assessing? Is assessment moderated?
    Precisely how?
  • Are results compared against the base program
    results?
  • What academic security provisionsare in place
    (e.g. invigilation)?

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9. Academic and Pastoral Support
  • What (and how are) Library, IT and pastoral
    resources and services made available?
  • How do these support services compare with the
    Australian version? What form of evaluation is
    in place?
  • Are the decisions made in respect of support
    services deliberate and based on an assessment of
    student learning support requirements?

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10. Evaluation and Review
  • Are the learning outcomes demonstrably equivalent
    to those of the home program?
  • Are teaching evaluations, course evaluations and
    course reviews being conducted? Using whose
    models? How are results used?
  • How and how often is the contract reviewed?
  • What information contributes to the review, and
    who is involved?

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  • Professor Deryck Schreuder
  • Chair, AUQA

A u s t r a l i a n U n i v e r s i t i e s Q u
a l i t y A g e n c y
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