AUS Tertiary Update Vol3 No2
DEAR STEVE... FILL THAT
CHAIR!
The government should move quickly to appoint the
chair of the Tertiary Education Advisory Commission, says
AUS.
AUS president Neville Blampied has written to
Associate Tertiary Education Minister Steve Maharey saying a
lot hinges on the abilities of the chair, given the tight
timeframe in which TEAC will work.
The appointee should
oversee the advertising and short-listing of secretariat
members. A suggested one-day a week for TEAC work is too
little time, believes AUS, and the new chair should be given
a minimum 2.5 days a week for this year at least.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. Intellectual property
claims anger staff
2. Universities do it better!
3.
Liz Gordon in the hot seat.
4. Science input at top
level.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY CLAIMS ANGER STAFF
Staff
at both Lincoln and Otago Universities have reacted strongly
to recent university attempts to claim ownership of
intellectual property.
After a huge outcry, Otago
University has backed off a proposal that it should own the
copyright and most of the royalties on all publications
produced by staff.
This would have introduced a whole new
bureaucracy for assigning copyright to journals and
publishers, say staff, and it had disturbing implications
for academic freedom.
Despite the backdown, Otago still
proposes to take the copyright on textbooks and on all
teaching materials or class handouts. That means staff who
shift to another university would technically be unable to
take their courses with them.
It also means staff will be
extremely reluctant to invest time in developing web-based
courses of the kind the university says it is very keen
on.
Anyone who thinks they might have a successful
textbook in them is likely to avoid Otago completely in the
future, given the university will now take a much higher
proportion of royalties. Staff already dip deeply into their
own pockets for research expenses such as unpaid
conferences.
The proposals may have originated in Otago's
Research and International division, which seems to be run
by people long on industry experience but short on academic
nous. Discussions are (we hope) ongoing.
UNIVERSITIES DO
IT BETTER!
Student loans administration may return to
tertiary institutions because of continuing WINZ snarl-ups.
Social Services Minister Steve Maharey made the
announcement as WINZ said it would hire 100 more staff to
cope with the deluge of calls from panicking students. WINZ
took over student loans administration on January 1 but
widespread problems emerged this month as students began
enrolling for the academic year.
Students complained of
delays in loan approvals, incorrect information on loan
contracts, and hassles in reaching WINZ staff. Mr Maharey
said an inquiry into WINZ would look at whether the loan
scheme should return to tertiary institutions.
“We will,
in an open-minded fashion, have a look at both the question
of staying with WINZ or restoring it into a campus when we
do that evaluation.”
WINZ hired 20 extra staff last
month to cope with unexpectedly high levels of queries over
student loans. The student services centre logged 42,000
calls in one day last week.
“We are having difficulty
dealing with the huge volume of calls we couldn’t possibly
have anticipated,” said WINZ spokeswoman Patricia Reade. She
said the calls had been spurred by media publicity, mailing
out 22,000 letters with the wrong enrolment information, and
recently announced interest rate changes.
For its system
to work, WINZ needed institutions to enrol students on the
basis of loan applications, said Ms Reade. It did not want
institutions to wait for WINZ to approve loans before
accepting students.
LIZ GORDON IN HOT SEAT
Former
Canterbury (and Massey) branch AUS member Liz Gordon MP has
been elected chair of the Education and Science select
committee.
Following its first meeting on 24 February, Ms
Gordon says she expects ‘vigorous’ debate on science and
education issues from the ‘feisty’ committee which includes
Helen Duncan, Mark Peck, Nanaia Mahuta, Maurice Williamson,
Nick Smith, Brian Donnolly, and Donna
Awatere-Huata.
SCIENCE INPUT AT TOP LEVEL
The proposed
Science and Innovation Advisory Council will report directly
to prime minister Helen Clark on key science and technology
issues.
The council is part of Labour’s plan to give
science a higher public profile and promote a long-term
strategic direction for science and technology. A paper on
its role will go to Cabinet in early March.
Later in the
month Cabinet will appoint council members including
representatives from government, industry, and research and
academic communities. Nominations are now being
called.
WORLD WATCH
AUSTRALIAN STRIKES
IMMINENT
At least seven Australian universities will be
hit by strikes and bans this year unless rapid progress is
made during talks over a 19 percent staff pay claim.
A
recent Melbourne meeting of union representatives decided to
step up the industrial campaign at universities where talks
have been going on with little to show - Monash, RMIT, QUT,
Southern Cross, New England, Wollongong, and South
Australia.
GOVERNMENT FUNDING FOR BRITISH
E-UNIVERSITY
A British “e-university” which will deliver
online courses is being set up with government and private
funding. Half the estimated £200 million set-up costs will
come from government, and the e-university could be
enrolling its first students in two years’ time.
“We are
all aware of the development in the United States and
elsewhere of major virtual and corporate universities,” said
Sir Brian Fender, head of England’s Higher Education Funding
Council. “We would want the e-university to be clearly
positioned overseas as the flag-carrier for the best of UK
higher education in virtual
delivery.”
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AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly on Fridays and
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