Institutional Profile: Open Polytechnic

Institution Name  Open Polytechnic
Contact details  Private Bag 31914
Lower Hutt 5040
New Zealand
Website/URL  http://www.openpolytechnic.ac.nz/
Brief Overview

The Open Polytechnic is the specialist national provider of open and distance learning (ODL) and a major educator of people in the workplace. Our primary functions are to support Government economic and social transformation goals and make a key contribution to business and industry by providing flexible access to vocational learning.

Our mission statement reflects this: ‘we strive to support vocational lifelong learning and national development goals through innovation and excellence in open flexible education’.

Distance Education History

The Open Polytechnic began life as the Technical Correspondence School in 1946, providing resettlement training for returned servicemen and women following World War II. In 1963, it became the Technical Correspondence Institute (TCI) and began offering national training in trades subjects.

As part of wider education reforms, the institution was renamed The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand in 1990, becoming the specialist national provider of open and distance learning at tertiary level.

The following years were a period of profound transformation, with many new programmes and courses introduced in response to market demand. The Open Polytechnic also adopted internationally proven models for distance learning course design, student support and quality control. In a new phase, Open Polytechnic is now developing an expanding range of online courses and services.

Teaching and Learning Profile

Degree level focus  Bachelor focus
 Bachelor: 100%
Expenditure on teaching  major
Orientation of degrees  non-regulated/ licensed career-oriented focus
 88%
Range of subjects  comprehensive
 7 disciplines

Student Profile

Distance learning students  predominant
Mature students  predominant
 82%
Part-time students  predominant
 96%
Size of student body  large

Research Involvement

Doctorate production  none
Expenditure on research  not reported
Peer reviewed publications  some
 0.64

Involvement in Knowledge Exchange

Cultural activities  some
 14
Income  not reported
Patent applications  not reported
Start-up firms  not reported

Regional Engagement

1st year bachelor from region  major
 99%
Graduates working in region  major
 75%
Importance of local/regional income sources  major
 98%

International Orientation

Foreign degree seeking students  not reported
Importance of int'l income  none
Incoming students  not reported
International academic staff  substantial
 11%
Outgoing on exchange  none

DE-related Institutional Information

Number of Students 6,787 (Equivalent fulltime students)
Number of Students by DE mode 6,787 (Equivalent fulltime students)
Number of Academic Staff 119.6
Summary of External Quality Assurance Processes

There are two external quality assurance regimes - programme approval and accreditation and external evaluation and review. Both are administered by New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA).

Programme approval and accreditation.
This process approves the qualification, programme and courses which are proposed and accredits the institution to deliver the programme. It uses an external panel of primarily subject experts to recommend the approval and accreditation to NZQA. The process is the same for all other polytechnics and institutes of technology, other than being a solely distance institution our accreditation applies to students where ever they live, whereas for class-contact institutions, accreditation is site specific.

External evaluation and review.
This process, involves a team of trained external evaluators appointed by NZQA, visiting the Polytechnic, every four years, to evaluate the Polytechnic’s capability in self assessment activities (leading to continuous improvement) and its educational performance to ensure that the Polytechnic continues to meet the QA requirements set up by NZQA. The process is the same for all other polytechnics and institutes of technology.

Summary of Quality Procedures

A specific business unit within the Open Polytechnic has responsibility for quality assurance preparing the organisation for external evaluation and review.

In terms of distance education, this unit monitors the effectiveness of key academic quality assistance processes specifically moderation.

To ensure we are a sector leader in Open Distance Learning (ODL) pedagogy and innovation technology enabled learning:

  • we actively contribute to policy/consultation papers on academic and educational issues from external educational agencies.
  • implement and monitor a student engagement survey

All programmes are required to be undertaking a continuous process of self evaluation, which culminates in an Annual Programme Evaluation Report presented to the Polytechnic’s Academic Board. The self evaluation is based upon the outcomes for students and key stakeholders and the key process leading to those outcomes. The process is based upon identify actions for improvement in performance and evidence that the improvements are happening.  All programmes are required by the Academic Board to undertake a formal programme evaluative review at least once every four years. The evaluative review involves external subject experts and key stakeholders. It is and designed to review and update the outcomes of the programme, the programme structure and the programme activities and delivery and also any changes to the courses within the programme.

Courses are formally reviewed every three years and more frequently if there are significant changes to their content brought about by changes to content.

Percentage of resources that are OER 0%
Intellectual Property Rights Position

Owned by the institution but with no licensing back to staff

(Comment: Academic staff sign an IP agreement when employed, in accordance with institutional policy)

Expected changes for DE from the current strategy

The Government’s stated vision for tertiary education in general is ‘Relevant and efficient tertiary education provision that meets the needs of students, the labour market and the economy.’

The expectations of government on Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics (ITPS) to deliver ‘smarter, better public service for less’ poses the sector wide challenge of lifting educational success and rationalising programmes while maintaining participation and lowering costs. Specifically, in 2010, a new performance-based funding system was introduced which will mean in future the government will be more and more focussed on the academic performance of all learners and how well institutions support their success.

Our challenge as a specialist national provider of open distance learning (ODL) is to demonstrate that investing in the Open Polytechnic is a better investment than funding the replication of ODL models in other parts of the sector.

Any future considerations for DE

To meet the Government's expectation as set out in 14.1 the Open Polytechnic has a range of initiatives either at the planning stage or in delivery, related to our seven key shifts. Specifically these are:

Service leadership - distinguishing our provision through demonstrated capability in service focused distance education

Stakeholder engagement – active positioning through listening and communicating our contribution to vocational education

Academic portfolio – enhancing the vocational relevance of our portfolio so that qualifications lead to good jobs and meet stakeholder needs

Student demographics – generating viable demand across a diverse student base Value for money and financial performance – maintaining financial viability and providing value propositions for students and funders

Educational performance – ensuring our learners succeed in their study and advance to vocational application or high learning

Staff engagement – inspiring our staff so that they contribute to the development of the Open Polytechnic

Summary of the impact of technology on distance education

About 30%, mainly degree-level courses (Ls5-7 of the New Zealand Qualifications Framework) take courses wholly or largely delivered by e-learning.

About 20% take courses where the amount of institutionally supplied/guided e-learning is "significant".

About 50%, mainly lower level qualifications, take courses where the where the amount of institutionally supplied/guided e-learning is insignificant.

Technologies

  Technologies currently in use Tools likely to be used more in 5 years time
ASYNCHRONOUS COMMUNICATION    
Blogs
E-mail
Microblogging (e.g. Twitter)    
Online Forums / Threaded discussions
Personal Portals (e.g. iGoogle)    
Podcasts  
RSS feeds
Shared Calendars / Meeting Scheduling (e.g. Doodle)  
SMS / MMS
Social Networking Utilities (e.g. Facebook, MySpace)      
Vidcasts  
Voicemail
Webinars  
Website
Wikis
SYNCHRONOUS COMMUNICATION    
Chatrooms
Instant messaging (e.g. ICQ, MSN)  
Online forums (eg Eluminate)  
Shared Whiteboards    
Teleconferencing
Telephone
Video Conferencing
Virtual workspaces    
Voice-over IP (e.g. Skype)
RESEARCH TOOLS    
Citations/References (e.g. Endnote, Zotero)  
News Sharing (e.g. DIGG)  
Notification Services (e.g. Google Reader)  
Online databases or directories  
Search Engines (e.g. Google)
Social Bookmarking (e.g. del.icio.us)
Web Annotations (e.g. Diigo)    
DOCUMENT SHARING & MANAGEMENT    
Document Repositories / Management Systems  
Document Sharing (e.g. Google Docs, Google Apps)    
Grid/Cloud Computing    
Learning Management System
Sharing Geographic Content (e.g. GoogleMaps)    
Sharing Image Content (e.g. Flickr)    
Sharing Presentation Content (e.g. Slideshare)  
Sharing Textual Documents (e.g. GoogleDocs)    
Video Sharing (e.g. YouTube, TeacherTube)
OTHER    
Password Management (e.g. OpenID)  
idium webpublisering