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International Equity Benchmarking
Project
Background
In the rapidly changing context of higher education today, universities
are faced with a number of complex challenges that impact on their core
business and have direct implications for equity and diversity
practitioners. Issues such as globalisation, internationalisation,
increasing competition in attracting and retaining high-quality staff
and students, and growing financial constraints all demand improved
institutional equity and diversity practice as one key element in
remaining internationally competitive. Benchmarking equity and
diversity, when utilised as a collaborative action-learning tool can
provide the capacity to not only measure past performance but
importantly to facilitate new insights leading to innovative strategies
to bring about improved institutional performance. In 2002, equity
practitioners in a small group of leading universities from Australia,
New Zealand, the UK and Canada agreed to explore the benefits of
developing an International Equity Benchmarking project modelled on the
philosophy and practice of Action-Learning.
Participants
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U21 members:
The University of
Queensland
The University of
Melbourne
The University of
Auckland
The University of British
Columbia
The University of
Nottingham
Additional partners:
The University of
Western Australia
(member of Australia’s Group of 8)
Queensland University
of Technology
(member of the Australian Technology Universities Network)
Goals
The International Equity Benchmarking Project addresses both staff and
student equity. Partners have deliberately chosen to focus upon selected
issues of common interest which have proved to be somewhat intransigent.
The Benchmarking Project is understood to be a long-term collaborative
‘Action Learning’ project. In this framework, the data we gather is not
the primary outcome, but rather a means to providing a basis for open
and honest dialogue about successes, failures and frustrations in our
various approaches in addressing these difficult matters. Its collection
and analysis assists us better understand our own university’s
performance and the discussions arising from the data and in sharing
information about strategies employed in our universities enables us to
reconsider our own work with greater insight.
Outcomes
Given the different countries, systems, and contexts of those
institutions involved, there have been a number of challenges that the
group has had to address, however, all have felt the benefits have
outweighed the difficulties. The International benchmarking Project has
provided a forum for partners to more rigorously examine their own
practice, and to learn from others within a collegial ‘learning
community’.
Key benefits to date have included improved and expanded data
collection systems within partner universities, for example developing
more fine-grained data collection on student attrition and longitudinal
data on staff career development and promotion. The opportunity to
reflect upon the ‘fit for purpose’ of activities has proved invaluable
i.e. unpacking the context within which successful strategies are
implemented. In addition, the International Equity Benchmarking Project
has value-added to knowledge and expertise of participants reflected in
the quality of input to committees, working parties, reports, research
and development of policies and strategies within their own
institutions.
Click here to download the
summary of the first phase of the project.
Click here to download the summary of the second phase of the project. Further information
Further information and reports of work undertaken through the project
are available from
www.uq.edu.au/equity |