AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.4
ACADEMIC FREEDOM – 121
EASY STEPS
That academic boards should be chaired by an
elected and independent chair instead of the Vice-Chancellor
as at present is one of the 121 recommendations made on
academic freedom by Dr Donald Savage.
Dr Savage, a
Canadian higher education consultant and former adviser to
UNESCO, was commissioned by the AUS to undertake an inquiry
into the state of academic freedom in New Zealand. His
report is to be published by Dunmore Press later this
year.
A summary of the report, together with its
recommendations, is about to be released and can be read on
the AUS website [www.aus.ac.nz] from Monday 13 March.
The
three main parts of the report cover definitions of academic
freedom, and examine the external and internal threats and
challenges to it.
Dr Savage stresses the importance of
staff and community involvement in university governance for
the protection of academic freedom. “Self-governing
structures such as academic boards play a key role in the
defence of academic freedom, ensuring that free discussion
can take place on campus,” says Dr Savage.
Dr Savage
recommends that academic boards should be consulted by
Vice-Chancellors and Councils on all significant matters
that touch on the academic enterprise, including
restructuring of academic faculties.
AUS National
President, Neville Blampied, welcomed Dr Savage’s
recommendations. “We intend to ensure that academic boards
are restored to their rightful place in collegial decision
making, and that they continue to comprise a majority of
academic staff not in senior management positions.”
“The
freedom of university staff to develop, debate and publicise
new and potentially controversial ideas is a vital
contribution to the knowledge society,” said Neville
Blampied.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1. $5
million for science funding requested from Lotteries
Board
2. Amendment covers return to compulsory
membership
3. No room for golden oldies at
Otago
RESTORE AND INCREASE LOTTERIES’ SCIENCE FUNDING
A
request to reinstate Lotteries Board funding for science and
research equipment and increase it to $5 million has been
made by AUS President Neville Blampied in a letter to
Internal Affairs Minister, the Hon Mark Burton.
The
previous sum of $1 million a year was cut arbitrarily by the
Board in 1997, an action defended at the time by then
Minister, the Hon. Jack Elder.
In his letter, Neville
Blampied points out that the Lotteries Board made a record
profit of $137.9 million dollars in 1999, up $1M over 1998.
“As a result of the previous government’s decision,
Lotteries’ profits now make no contribution at all to the
scientific and technological foundations of a
knowledge-based economy. Enhanced research in science and
technology is a vital component in the strategy to achieve
economic and social progress by developing this knowledge
economy,” he said.
“To support science at the previous
rate of $1 million per annum would require less than 1% of
current Lotteries profits.”
AMENDMENT COVERS RETURN TO
COMPULSORY MEMBERSHIP
Details of a proposed Education
Amendment Bill covering the membership of and fees for
Tertiary Students Associations were outlined by Education
Minister Trevor Mallard this week.
Students enrolled in
an institution which has voluntary membership may vote to
return to compulsory membership if the student body receives
a petition signed by 10% of students, or by a vote of an
existing students' association (so long as the association
represents at least 50% of students).
Fees for
membership of a students’ association would be collected
automatically by the tertiary provider on behalf of the
association. The amendment will also cover how to achieve
student representation on a Council.
AUS supports this
proposal.
NO ROOM FOR GOLDEN OLDIES AT OTAGO
Despite
recent changes to the Human Rights Act, Otago University has
confirmed that it will seek a declaratory judgement in the
Employment Court that anyone employed prior to 1 April 1992
can still be compulsorily retired at age 65. AUS will be
joined by the Human Rights Commission and the Public Service
Association in vigorously defending this action. The case
will be heard on 19 May.
WORLD WATCH
MANAGERIAL
‘MADNESS’ A WORLD-WIDE PHENOMENON
The Higher (25.2.00)
reports that Professor Peter Fowler, a senior consultant
behind reforms at Liverpool John Moores University, has
warned senior colleagues that management has isolated itself
with unaccountable decisions and said some plans were
‘madness’.
Professor Fowler believes that an alliance
between management and academics is essential to any reform.
“Central management…has no allies at all. It is disembodied
and acts as if it were running a Fordist production-line
factory. Given that we are now in the 21st century this is
utter folly and will lead to disaster.”
RECRUITMENT CRISIS LOOMING IN UK
A staffing crisis in the
UK could threaten the ‘knowledge economy’. A report,
Recruitment and Retention in UK Higher Education, lays the
blame firmly on low pay (see also next item). In common
with other countries that New Zealand traditionally recruits
from (Australia, Canada, USA), a significant proportion of
staff is now over 55 and likely to be retiring over the next
decade. The report notes that many university departments
are losing their brightest graduates to industry in what is
described as ‘one-way traffic’.
LOWLY-REGARDED
ACADEMICS
Researchers at Bath University have analysed
40,000 survey observations of British employees since 1986
to pinpoint trends in job attitudes. The survey shows that
on the ‘job satisfaction’ factor, university teachers rated
107th out of 143 occupations; on the ‘feelgood’ factor,
138th out of 143 occupations; and had the 5th highest
self-reported stress levels (one place ahead of trade union
officials!).
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AUS
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