(1) The Academic Portfolio Executive Committee (APEC) is a management advisory committee of the University. (2) APEC's key objective is to support the achievement of UNE’s strategic plan and priorities by enabling cross institutional review and discussion of business plans, innovation, risks and issues relevant to the Academic Portfolio, advising and making recommendations for decision to the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (DVC) in regards to innovations and developments, high level resource allocation, policy guidance, relevant to the DVC's oversight responsibilities, including: (3) Input and advice on key reports by the DVC or members of APEC, to: (4) The Academic Portfolio Executive Committee (APEC) membership comprises the following ex-officio roles: (5) In attendance (in person or by nominee) as required for relevant discussions: (6) By invitation: (7) The functions of APEC are out in Table 1: (8) The DVC will chair the meetings. In the event the DVC is unavailable the committee will elect a Chair for the meeting from the voting members. (9) The Committee will meet monthly. Flying minutes (or circular resolutions) may be used for urgent matters. (10) A simple majority of the membership of the Committee will constitute a quorum. (11) Members will be required to consider and disclose potential conflicts of interest and may be required on resolution by the Committee to absent themselves from specific discussions and or business papers. (12) The Chair of APEC or nominated delegate will: (13) The provisions of these Terms of Reference take effect under the authority of VC&CEO consistent with Section 28(1)(a) of the University of New England Act 1993(NSW). APEC has delegated authority from the VC&CEO to perform on their behalf the advisory, monitoring and communication functions set out in the Terms Of Reference above, and all matters ancillary to those functions. (14) Academic matters - All management matters pertaining to learning, teaching and education services, programs and courses, including course and unit profile, academic quality and integrity, academic partnerships and collaborations, student retention and enrolment figures. (15) Academic Portfolio Matters refers to the planning, resourcing and prioritising of the University's academic programs and offerings, consideration of academic risk and compliance obligations and of academic integrity and quality. Note that academic quality matters are subject to review and/or approval via Academic Board and Committees. (16) Academic partner arrangements - In the Higher Education Standards Framework (Threshold Standards) 2015, a 'third-party arrangement' (TPA) is referred to as 'delivery with other parties'. A TPA means an arrangement made by a registered provider with another party (in Australia or overseas) to deliver some or all of a higher education course that leads to the award of an Australian regulated higher education qualification. (17) Academic Quality is defined by TEQSA as a demonstration or verification that a desired level of quality of an academic activity has or is likely to be obtained or sustained. Academic activities in this context include teaching, learning, scholarship, research and research training for higher degree research students. (18) Course Profile - Management of the overall composition and profile of the University’s course offerings to ensure overall TEQSA compliance, academic integrity, and control or treatment of risk. This includes management of course rules, learning objectives and outcomes, course organisation and design (including formative learning, assessments, WIL, learning support and staff expertise). (19) International Course Profile is management of the course offerings to international students.Terms of Reference (Vice-Chancellor approved) - Academic Portfolio Executive Committee (APEC)
Section 1 - Objective
Top of PageSection 2 - Membership
Top of PageSection 3 - Functions
Table 1
Domain
Advise the Deputy Vice Chancellor in relation to:
Monitor
1. Composition of the UNE Academic Course Portfolio (which includes all UNE award and non-award courses)
the competitive market positioning and resource management of UNE's overall Course Profile including:
2. Delivery of the UNE Academic Course Portfolio, including personalised student learning journeys, student success and retention
3. Load, fees, scholarships and allocation of places
As at 1 above
4. Hypothecated Commonwealth academic funding streams (including HEPPP, NPILF and SSAF)
5. Academic Staffing
Implementation of key strategies, plans and initiatives
6. Academic Partnerships
7. Academic Benchmarks
Overall Portfolio
Sector learnings and developments as well as academic integrity issues, trends and emerging risks
Section 4 - Committee Conduct
Chair and Deputy Chair
Meetings
Reporting
Top of PageSection 5 - Authority Delegation
Section 6 - Definitions
View Current
This is not a current document. It has been repealed and is no longer in force.
a. the strategic alignment, commercial viability and the University’s capacity to support and deliver the academic course portfolio;
b. the alignment of the academic course portfolio with the University’s place-based and digital-first strategies;
c. strategic, business and operational approval of proposals (consistent with delegations) regarding changes to the academic course portfolio (such as withdrawal, suspension or major alterations to existing courses and approval of new courses); and
d. initiation and implementation of portfolio reviews.
a. enrolment trends and forecasts for all courses each trimester;
b. revenue, cost of delivery and margin from academic programs; and
c. market intelligence
Strategic, business and operational approval of strategies, plans and initiatives to improve the quality and efficiency of delivery of the academic course portfolio, including:
a. student success and retention;
b. academic transitions;
c. student engagement;
d. quality of teaching; and
e. curriculum, pedagogy and assessment.
a. implementation of key strategies, plans and initiatives, including personalised student learning journeys;
b. holistic assessment of performance metrics relating to delivery against student feedback on teaching, satisfaction and QILT; and
c. implementation of contemporary, knowledge-informed, fit-for-purpose curriculum, pedagogy and assessment practices.
a. the load plan for the Course Portfolio;
b. domestic and international fees;
c. other pricing mechanisms, including scholarships, bursaries and package offers;
d. allocating CSPs to courses; and
e. setting enrolment caps or quotas for units and courses.
a. strategy for prioritising and allocating funding streams to projects and initiatives;
b. project proposals, including funding allocations and variations, for consideration and approval; and
c. reports to be provided to funders, including the Commonwealth.
a. allocation and expenditure of funding; and
b. performance and impact of funded projects.
strategies, plans and initiatives, as they pertain to different cohorts of academic staff, emeriti, adjuncts and volunteers, and relating to:
a. recruitment, induction, probation, promotion and performance;
b. planning and goal setting;
c. supervision, support, training and development;
d. workload; and
e. culture, wellbeing and engagement.
strategic, business and operational approval of proposals (consistent with delegations) regarding:
a. establishment of, changes to and withdrawal or disestablishment of third party arrangements; and
b. establishment of, changes to and withdrawal or disestablishment of academic partnerships (including MOUs), commercial activities or innovation pilot programs.
Performance of external academic partner arrangements, and commercial activities considering at outset and at least annually thereafter:
a. business case and value proposition/benefits realisation for UNE
b. priority and adequacy of resourcing;
c. structures and of ongoing relationship management, and
d. adherence to institutional compliance obligations including academic compliance and matters including modern slavery, foreign relations, autonomous sanctions and foreign interference as relevant.
a. recommend Institutional benchmarks for assessing Academic Performance and Quality across all academic portfolio functions and indicators; and
b. quality, compliance and key risks relating to operations of the Academic portfolio.
a. performance against institutional benchmarks; and
b. effectiveness of measures to address quality, compliance and key risks.
a. progress and implementation of plans and critical business-as-usual activities
b. risk profile and compliance management;
c. budget and resource management;
d. performance against academic and operational performance benchmarks;
e. business case and value proposition / benefits realisation;and
f. internal and external benchmarks.
In discharging all its functions, APEC considers:
a. strategic alignment, commercial viability and the University’s capacity to support and deliver the relevant strategy, plan or initiative;
b. alignment with the University’s place-based and digital-first strategies;
c. quality assurance, risk profile and compliance management;
d. budget and resource management;
e. performance against academic and operational performance benchmarks (internal and external);
f. business case and value proposition / benefits realisation; and
g. corrective action, including recommending changes to plans, policies, priorities and initiatives or other action, including further reporting, review or escalation