ACUADS Newsletter
April – October 2005
The ACUADS
Newsletter is an ad hoc publication from the Australian Council
of University Art and Design Schools. It aims to communicate information
about activities of the Council Executive, research interests and
events and activities related to the visual art and design sector.
Contents
1. ACUADS Chair's
Report
ACUADS Distinguished Awards – Nominations Invited | Nelson Reforms to Higher Education | Research Quality Framework | ACUADS Australian Supplement | CHASS | HASS on the Hill | Possible Coalition of Peak Bodies | ACUADS Annual Conference, Perth 2005 | ACUADS Executive Meetings & Annual General Meeting |
2. ACUADS Executive Meeting 30 Sept 2005
New Executive | Election of Office Bearers |
3. ACUADS Annual
General Meeting 29 Sept 2005
Election of the Executive | Membership Fees 2005–2006 | Future Conferences | Research Quality Framework Preferred Model |
4. ACUADS Executive
Meeting 28 Sept 2005
Distinguished Teaching & Research Awards | Research
Quality Framework Preferred Model & Measures
of Quality & Impact in Publicly funded Research
in the Humanities Arts & Social
Sciences (CHASS Research paper) | Research
in the Creative Arts Report by Dennis Strand, May
1998 | Newsletter | Location of Future
Conference | Web Site Update | Peak Art
Groups | DASSH Group (Deans of Art, Social Sciences & Humanities) | Australia
Council Conference Backing our Creativity | Communication & Promotion | Report
from the Treasurer | AGM 29 September
2005 |
5. ACUADS Executive
Meeting 5 August 2005
CHASS | HASS on the Hill | NAVA | ACUADS Communication Strategy | The Australian Supplement | New Executive Officer | Graduates Research | Membership Fees | Peak Art Bodies | Fellowship, Teaching & Research Awards 2005 | Perth Conference 2005 Update | Quality Assurance Project | Visual Arts Funding | Visiting Artists | Drawing Conference | Report from the Treasurer |
6. ACUADS Executive
Meeting 26 April 2005
Rhapsody 21C | VCA Graduate Destination Survey | Research
Quality Framework | ACUADS Web Site | Newsletter | The
Australian Newspaper Supplement | Annual Conferences | Teaching,
Research and Fellowship Awards |
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1. ACUADS Chair's Report
Chair's Report
Su Baker, Head, School of Art, Victorian College of the Arts
Welcome to the last ACUADS Newsletter of 2005. There has been a delay
in its publication due to an overhaul of the web site and the advent
of the very successful annual conference in Perth . Please check the
web site - www.acuads.com.au - for
the conference abstracts with full papers to be posted shortly.
We have considered it useful to consolidate the business of the year
into this one distribution and intend to resume regular reporting next
year. We have also hoped more attention to the web site will keep members
up to date throughout the year. If you have items of interest and notices
for distribution throughout the year please forward to admin@acuads.com.au.
ACUADS Distinguished Awards – Nominations Invited
The ACUADS Council
offers three awards to honour outstanding contributions to the art and
design disciplines. The Fellowship Award, the highest honour, recognises
a distinguished career in fostering the development and management of
a School of Art and Design. The ACUADS Distinguished Teaching and Research
Awards recognise a distinguished career in teaching and research respectively.
Nominations are now invited with applications closing 30 June
2006. The application process is outlined in detail on our
web site under Awards.
Nelson Reforms to Higher Education
The year of 2005 was the first year of
the implementation of the new HESA Act, known more commonly known as the Nelson
Reforms. These new
legislative conditions have presented a magnitude of change for the
Higher Education sector, the impact of which we are only just beginning to feel,
and includes the inherent contradiction of the apparent deregulation
to a user-pays system and an unprecedented framework of government intervention
in reporting and ministerial discretion.
These factors are going to
affect all of us in possibly different ways, but this is undoubtedly a new era
of Higher Education policy and a new economy for universities and by extension
the schools of art and design as represented by ACUADS. So what is new, I hear
you say! Yes, the last 15 years have been a roller coaster ride indeed.
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Research Quality Framework
The two significant issues that will impact
on us will no doubt be the focus on the review of research funding being
undertaken through the Research Quality Framework and a renewed focus on
quality of teaching and that funding implications may be linked to high
quality outcomes. It can be assumed that both these exercises will impact
on the operations of art and design schools around the country and so there
is an opportunity, and perhaps an imperative, at this moment to collectively
reinforce the strengths of our discipline and identify points for improvement
and reinforcement.
The Annual Conference in Perth Artists, Designers and Creative Communities built
on this common purpose and led to stronger bonds that will assist in
managing this changing environment. The theme for this moment may well
be co-operation and
that we will need to balance the economic demands which may require competition
with the strategic sectoral needs that will undoubtedly require co-operation.
ACUADS Australian Supplement
In the recent ACUADS Australian Supplement
published on 17 August we said:
"Art and design schools have a role in
generating cultural, intellectual, and creative capital in the broadest
sense of the term. In a pluralist culture such as this global world there
is increasing circulation of artistic forms and ideas and much of the
dynamism in contemporary art and design can be seen through this exchange
between and within art or design works, like one big cultural think tank.
A good art and design school creates a milieu, an incubator atmosphere,
a critical context, and should be an occasion of opportunity for students
through their studio-based study to produce new work. Similarly, for
the academics who teach them through both teaching, professional practice
and research. In many cases this collective activity can produce a new
conceptual marketplace, with new desires to be fulfilled. An art and
design school campus is a place to go and to mix it with other creative
people, to learn, produce, reflect and as a launching pad for cultural
experiments."
This ACUADS Australian Supplement to which many members contributed
is another successful instrument to promote the strength of the art
and design sector and this year it came out on the week of the HASS
on the Hill (see below), much to the admiration of our colleagues in
the other peak bodies, in particular NACTMUS. The Executive want to
thank all of those institutions that participated and hope that it
was also of assistance to others who weren’t able to do so this
year.
With the creativity and innovation agenda hotting up in this country
it seems we are well placed to contribute in a major way. Many of us
might feel that we have been fighting a rearguard action, or from
a defensive position. We might now need to adopt the hutzpah,
the flare, that is expected of us as artists and designers and cultural
producers of all kinds and to start to help define what a creative
economy looks like and how you make one!
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CHASS
Of particular significance over the past 12-18 months has been
the establishment of the Council of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences,
CHASS. See www.chass.org.au.
CHASS has a brief to represent the interests of the sector to government
and to key stakeholders. The web site is very clear and informative
and now has a number of important documents available that will provide
a focus for further collective actions. For example, as a member of
CHASS, ACUADS contributed to a number of the submissions including
one on the RQF, and the 'PMSEIC
Working Group on "The Role of Creativity in the Innovation Economy"
A submission from the Council for the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
(CHASS)'.
Note: See our web site for ACUADS contributions and the CHASS site
for the final reports.
HASS on the Hill
HASS on the Hill (Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences at Parliament
House – see www.chass.org.au)
was an occasion to have a conversation with our colleagues in NACTMUS
and CHAUTSI and to propose that we establish a focal point for future
discussion between the peak bodies of the visual and performing arts.
Increasingly the language of the system, in particular through the
DEST funding bands, and possibly the future RQF, the "visual and performing
arts", or "creative
arts" are identified as having common teaching and research concerns.
It was thought important that we form ways of working together when
these matters demand the weight of numbers.
Possible Coalition of Peak Bodies
On 10 and 11 October meetings were held at the VCA in Melbourne
with a combined group of Peak Bodies coordinated through CHASS. It
was of great interest to see the diversity and depth of representation
of interest in the sector and it was agreed to work together,
possibly through the common vehicle of CHASS. It was agreed that there
will be a meeting in Adelaide on 3rd March to further the discussion
about a series of common goals, and for a strategy to advance common
interests.
It is proposed that next year at the annual conference in Melbourne
we hold a special pre-conference event that brings the tertiary education
groups together. While these connections are very usefully provided
by CHASS, it was thought that to strengthen the "A" of CHASS
could only be a good thing.
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Annual Conference, Perth 2005
In addition to the advocacy work for the
benefit of the sector the ACUADS 2005 annual conference was an opportunity
to celebrate the diversity of the work being undertaken, as seen through
the papers presented which aim to interrogate our own structures and
systems, and to share best practice and horror stories. We mustn't underestimate
the value of 'venting'! Themes emerged and by the end of the
three days there emerged a sense of where the strengths are, what we
need to do to build our capability in areas of deficiency and to take
that back to our home institutions with a renewed sense of unity and
purpose.
There were opportunities to talk and meet and at the conference dinner
we announced this year's Distinguished Teaching and Research awards,
paying tribute to those who have made significant contributions to
our profession. (See ACUADS web site under 'Awards' for details.)
We began with the pressing topic of current and urgent matters to
do with research and the government's plan to introduce a Research
Quality Assessment process. We need, as a sector, to make a particular
effort to build on the work of ten years ago where we identified our
approach to measuring, evaluating research in the creative arts. The
1996 Strand report as it was known set out the framework for finding
measures of excellence in the work of academics in the creative arts
disciplines which we are now required to revisit, and advance as an
appropriate method of assessing the quality of our work. The time has
come to look at what we do and to value it in its own right
and not to try to match the apparent logic of what is perceived to
be a more objective model.
By the end of the conference we had written and had membership endorsement
to submit an ACUADS response to the RQF enquiry and this can now be
found on the web site under 'Research'.
The 2005 AGM was conducted during the Conference. The Executive election
was held and there were a number of retirements, thanks were given
to those departing and the new Executive was elected. It was confirmed
that the annual conference for 2006 will be held in Melbourne and the
following year in Sydney. There was also important discussion about
the potential of affiliation relationship with our colleagues in New
Zealand. This is being pursued. The next meeting of the Executive will
be held in December in Melbourne.
The 2005 conference proceedings will be published on-line before
the end of the year and be available as a printed PDF booklet as well.
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ACUADS Executive Meetings & Annual General Meeting
ACUADS holds
four Executive meetings and an Annual General Meeting each year. Following
is a summary of the topics discussed at those Executive meetings and
the Annual General Meeting since the previous newsletter: 30 September,
28 September, 5 August, 26 April 2005, together with the Annual General
Meeting of 29 September 2005. The meetings are listed in reverse chronological
order.
2. ACUADS Executive Meeting 30 September 2005
The ACUADS Executive meeting held at Curtin University
of Technology, Perth on 30 September considered the following agenda
items:
Welcome & New Executive
Outgoing Chair, Su Baker, declared the meeting
open and welcomed all present. She congratulated the newly elected members
following the AGM held the previous day, and noted the make-up of the
new Executive as follows:
Su Baker, VCA; David Williams, ANU; and Domenico DeClario, ECU (to retire
September 2006)
Noel Frankham, Utas; Kay Lawrence, UniSA; Robyn Stewart, USQ; Bernard
Hoffert, Monash (to retire September 2007)
The Committee noted that this configuration comprising seven elected
members embraces different states and may therefore allow for the
co-option of another colleague from New South Wales and/or covering the
area of design.
Election of Office Bearers
All positions were declared vacant and the
following were elected:
Su Baker, Chair
Noel Frankham, Deputy Chair
Kay Lawrence, Secretary
David Williams, Treasurer and Public Officer.
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3. ACUADS Annual General Meeting 29 September 2005
The Annual General Meeting held at School of Contemporary Art, Edith
Cowan University, Perth on 29 September 2005 considered the following
agenda items:
Election of the Executive
The Chair noted that six nominations had
been received for the four vacancies on the ACUADS Executive Committee.
This being the case, an election was held and the following were duly
elected:
Noel Frankham, University of Tasmania, Hobart
Bernard Hoffert, Monash
University, Victoria
Kay Lawrence, University of South Australia
Robyn Stewart, University
of Southern Queensland
The newly elected members will join the continuing members due to retire
at the next AGM:
Su Baker, Victorian College of the Arts
Domenico de Clario, ECU School of Contemporary
Art, WA
David Williams, School of Art, ANU
Membership Fees 2005–2006
The Treasurer asked the meeting to endorse
a 5% increase in membership fees in line with the policy adopted at the 2004
Conference that subscriptions should be indexed annually. The meeting adopted
the following fee schedule for 2005/2006 (GST included) as follows:
Under 250 EFTSU – $654.50 ($630 – 2005)
Under 1000 EFTSU – $927.30 ($892.50 – 2005)
Over 1000 EFTSU – $1091.20
($1050 – 2005)
Future Conferences
The Chair invited discussion on the location of
the 2007 Conference. The meeting endorsed the Executive recommendation
that the 2007 Conference be held in Sydney.
The meeting also agreed to address the issue of the type of relationship
Australia may wish to establish with New Zealand and to report to the
next Executive scheduled for 12 December 2005.
Research Quality Framework Preferred Model
The Chair tabled a draft paper prepared by a Conference Working Party
for discussion. The meeting endorsed the tabled paper, including the
various proposed amendments and noted that the amended paper would now be forwarded
to CHASS as ACUADS' formal response.
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4. ACUADS Executive Meeting 28 September 2005
The ACUADS Executive meeting held at Central TAFE, Perth on 28 September
considered the following agenda items:
Distinguished Teaching & Research Awards
The meeting noted the
certificate, on ACUADS letterhead, confirms the type of award, place
and date with the citation signed by the Chair and Deputy Chair.
The awards are to be presented at the Conference Official Dinner and
the five recipients to receive a commemorative silver pin.
The meeting discussed the policy and process issues of the Awards and
agreed as ACUADS is identified through the awards, the process should
be further articulated and the net cast widely to obtain recommendations.
It was agreed that the closing date should be 30 June rather than
the current policy of 31 July and that the Executive reserves the
right to make decisions re late submissions. It was also agreed to instigate
a system of reminders and prompts to ensure all Heads of School had time
to consider their nominations.
Research Quality Framework Preferred Model & Measures of Quality & Impact
in Publicly funded Research in the Humanities Arts & Social Sciences (CHASS
Research paper)
Professor Baker spoke to the Conference topic of
the Research Quality
Framework Preferred Model and how best to program discussion
to allow the opportunity for wide-ranging input from conferees which
would lead to a draft response which could be considered and possibly
ratified at the AGM given that the deadline for response was Tuesday
4 October 2005.
Professor Williams noted that there were four important points identified
by CHASS Director, Toss Gascoigne, in his earlier discussions with
Nigel Lendon and that this may be a useful framework noting that the
core business of the visual arts and design sector is studio practice:
- Encourage as many individuals, schools and institutions as possible
to submit comments as a high response rate is regarded as important.
- Outputs relevant to visual arts and design are important to the
discipline and ACUADS should articulate these as a contrast to the
convention of papers and citations. Both should be included.
- ACUADS should support and encourage collaborative research efforts
noting this is a strategy widely recognised and in art and design
it really needs greater focus.
- Future impact is a key measure for art and design. ACUADS should
give examples of such things as community involvement, audience attendance
(at exhibitions, performances, etc.), an engagement in issues concerning
peoples' lives and the value of this strategy, e.g. the visualisation
of environmental issues and if an economic argument is needed, the
benefits of cultural tourism and art events, etc. could be considered.
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Research in the Creative Arts Report by Dennis Strand,
May 1998
Professor Williams noted that this study was published nearly
ten years ago and it was suggested that a submission be made to fund
a revised version. The meeting agreed.
Newsletter
The Chair, Professor Baker, advised the meeting that the newsletter
needs to meet two criteria: be seen to be proactive and, at the same
time, convey a sense of returning value for the membership. She proposed
an e-mail copy to Members every three months as well as publishing it
on the web site. The form to include a Chair's Report, summary of Executive
discussions plus information on recent events, and CHASS reports with
links provided.
Location of Future Conference
Professor Baker asked the meeting to consider
the location of the 2007 Conference which it was agreed should be held
in Sydney and that this proposal be recommended to the AGM, 29 September.
Web Site Update
The Chair reported that the IT Consultant, Kirsten Muir,
had now fully upgraded the site with a graphic design to include newsletters,
membership lists and conference papers from 2003 and 2004. The meeting
welcomed the added feature of a suggestion mechanism for user feedback.
Peak Art Groups
The Chair reported that building on earlier discussions
at previous Executive meetings, she and David Williams, representing
ACUADS, would be attending a meeting of Peak Art Bodies, organised by
CHASS at the Victorian College Arts on 10-11 October 2005.
DASSH Group (Deans of Art, Social Sciences & Humanities)
Professor
Williams raised for discussion a proposal that DASSH and ACUADS work
together to apply for funding to conduct a research project. The Executive
agreed to further investigate the matter.
Australia Council Conference Backing our Creativity
The Chair reported that she had attended this conference at which Sir Ken
Robinson (UK) was the Keynote Speaker, noting that he is a major leader
in the UK promoting creativity in education. The Australia Council drafted
a paper on art education comprising four key statements. The Executive
agreed that the Chair should write to the Australia Council endorsing
these four principles and acknowledging the valuable work done and its
impact on the tertiary education sector.
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Communication & Promotion
The Chair tabled for information the full
page ad for ACUADS in the Art & Design
Education Resource Guide 2006, which fulfills the agreed policy of
promoting ACUADS through key publications to assist in raising the
profile and this in turn assists Heads of School in promoting their
own disciplines.
Report from the Treasurer
The Treasurer, Professor Williams, referred
the Executive to the various financial reports presented to the meeting
which required their formal approval so that the official end of year
audited papers may be presented the following day to the AGM for ratification.
A formal motion was duly moved and carried.
AGM 29 September 2005
The meeting moved a vote of thanks to those
members retiring at this AGM while noting that three of the four would
be re-nominating:
- Jan Davis (retiring)
- Noel Frankham (re-nominating)
- Bernard Hoffert (re-nomninating)
- Kay Lawrence (re-nominating)
5. ACUADS Executive Meeting 5 August 2005
The ACUADS Executive meeting held at the Victorian College of the Arts
(VCA), Melbourne on 5 August considered the following agenda items:
CHASS
Professor Baker advised that the CHASS (Council for the Humanities,
the Arts and Social Sciences) web site provides regular updates on activities
and that she and Professor Williams will be attending the CHASS AGM
and Conference in Canberra on 16 August 2005.
The Chair reported that she has prepared a submission in response to
a request from CHASS which is consolidating a submission for PMSEIC (Prime
Minister’s Science, Engineering and Innovation Council).
HASS on the Hill (Humanities, Arts and Social
Sciences at Parliament House)
The Chair advised that she and Professor Williams will be attending this
conference (see Chair’s Report above).
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NAVA
Professor Baker reported that she is now on the board of NAVA and
this relationship provides synergies for ACUADS.
ACUADS Communication Strategy
Professor Baker reported that the
following name http://www.acuads.com.au/ has
been registered. It was agreed that, given the national nature of ACUADS
with the office moving with change of the Chair position, it is more
appropriate that the web site be an independent site. It was also agreed
that the site should have appropriate links to member institutions. The
meeting approved expenditure to establish the web site and ongoing support
and maintenance of the web site.
The Australian Supplement
Professor Baker reported that the Supplement
due out on 10 August will be bigger than last year’s including a
leading article, and that ACUADS had purchased the front cover banner.
The meeting agreed it is important to promote ACUADS and that ACUADS
should be involved in other key publications also to assist in raising
the profile which in turn assists Heads of School in promoting their
own disciplines.
New Executive Officer
Kay Morrissey will take up the EO role from
5 September 2005.
Graduates Research
VCA is developing a questionnaire, with assistance
from a researcher, that will assist in better measuring outcomes and
aspirations for Visual and Performing Arts graduates. The research will
be piloted later in the year by contacting all 2004 VCA graduates. The
resultant report will be used to develop a funding proposal for a larger
national study.
Membership Fees
Last year’s Minutes recommended a future policy
of an annual indexed increase in fees. The meeting therefore agreed to
recommend to the September AGM that the fees for 2006 be increased by
5%.
Peak Art Bodies
A coalition of peak art groups has existed in the past
and the meeting agreed it may be timely to reactivate a "Coalition of
the Creative Arts" prior to the ACUADS 2006 conference. Such a group would
need to have a very focussed and strategic agenda to explore political
synergies and common issues (e.g. research, graduate outcomes, etc.).
This group would be complementary to ACUADS and have the specific purpose
of creating a larger critical mass through the formation of strategic
alliances.
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Fellowship, Teaching & Research Awards 2005
The Executive, noting that
there were no nominations for the Fellowship Award this year, were pleased
to support two Teaching and three Research nominations:
- Robert Baines (Distinguished Research Award 2005) Royal
Melbourne Institute of Technology
- Clive Barstow (Distinguished Teaching Award) Edith Cown University,
Perth
- Jonathan Holmes (Distinguished Research Award) University of Tasmania
- Fred Littlejohn (Distinguished Teaching Award) University of South
Australia
- Diana Wood-Conroy (Distinguished Research Award) University of
Wollongong
Perth Conference 2005 Update
Professor De Clario reported on the
Perth Conference noting that regular meetings are taking place between
his university, Edith Cowan and the other co-hosting institutions: Curtain
University of Technology, Central TAFE and the University of Western
Australia. He noted that a $5,000 grant has been received from his Faculty
to assist with costs and that administrative support is being received
from the Office of the Dean.
The meeting affirmed a previously agreed policy that the hosting institution
is responsible for any liabilities associated with a conference and
they receive the credit in acting as a co-host with ACUADS. It was
agreed to develop templates for organising future conferences with a
possible refereeing policy being adopted of "blind" or double "blind"
and that these generic documents be available on the web site.
Quality Assurance Project
Professor Hoffert reported on a proposal that
the PRATO Centre at Monash be involved in a project comparing Quality
Assurance issues (measuring processes) of European and Australian Art
education. It was agreed that ACUADS be involved in the project which
commences in April 2006 and will be conducted over approximately two
years.
It was agreed that ACUADS continue to develop its relationships with
relevant international organizations. It was noted that links with Asian
institutions in particular need to be developed.
Visual Arts Funding
Professor Williams raised for discussion current consolidated information
on funding levels per student. Professor Frankham noted that the issues
of nomenclature of programs and workload definitions across the various state
tertiary institutuions also needed clarification.
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Visiting Artists
Professor Lawrence advised that Janice Jeffries will be visiting Australia
in March/April 2006. It was agreed that information regarding significant
visiting artists should be publicised among members.
Drawing Conference
Professor Hoffert requested ACUADS funding support for a drawing conference
to be held in Melbourne, September 2005. The usual sum of $500 was agreed
in line with ACUADS promotion policy and the meeting noted that acknowledgement
of ACUADS contribution will appear on the printed material.
Report from the Treasurer
Professor Williams tabled a financial report as at 2 August 2005 and
the meeting noted the healthy situation of the group's reserve. Subscriptions
are the highest they have been (around 35 members). It was noted that
there are also more members from the TAFE sector.
6. ACUADS Executive Meeting 26 April 2005
The ACUADS executive meeting held at the University of South Australia
on 26 April considered the following agenda items:
Rhapsody 21C
The seminar is to be held at the University of Tasmania, Launceston
Campus on 26 May 2005. ACUADS provided financial support in line with
their promotion policy.
VCA Graduate Destination Survey
The Executive considered the proposal
that the graduate outcomes pilot survey should utilise ACUADS resources
and alumni contacts. A sample survey was distributed for comment pending
a decision.
Research Quality Framework
A draft document which responds to DEST’s
proposed RQF was distributed for comment noting that CHASS (Council for
the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences) was also preparing a response.
The Committee unanimously supported the RQF document which will be submitted
2 May 2005 including any additional comments from the Executive.
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ACUADS Web Site
The Chair reported that management of the web site was in the process
of being moved to the Victorian College of the Arts and that the URL
had been purchased. The Executive moved a vote of thanks to Dr. Andrew
Speirs of Sydney College of the Arts for his contribution in maintaining
the web site over the past few years.
Newsletter
The Executive agreed that a simple bulletin page would be
established on the web site with appropriate links including to The Australian
newspaper supplement which is to publish an article on ACUADS.
The Australian Newspaper Supplement
The Executive agreed to proceed with
this year’s supplement
as it is seen as a positive tool to promote research activities and
the forthcoming Perth Conference, September 2005. It was agreed that
the Chair in her article should focus on research degrees in the creative
arts and the Research Quality Framework.
Annual Conferences
Professor David Williams reported that the 2004 Canberra
Conference budget position was neutral.
Professor De Clario, Edith Cowan University, advised that preparations
were well in hand for the September 2005 conference in Perth.
Teaching, Research and Fellowship Awards
It was agreed that full completion
of applications needs to be part of the criteria and an application form
on the web site should be considered.
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