AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No. 9
COMMERCIALISATION OF
UNIVERSITY RESEARCH THREATENS ACADEMIC FREEDOM
Potential
conflict between the principles of academic freedom and the
pressures to get commercial funding for research is revealed
in the report on academic freedom in New Zealand.
Report
author, Dr Donald Savage, recommends that research contracts
between universities and businesses are open contracts which
do not set up conflicts of interest and do not inhibit
research in social, environmental and health concerns.
AUS National President, Neville Blampied said Dr
Savage’s report draws attention to some disturbing possible
threats to academic freedom, including the possibility that
private research sponsors may try to prevent researchers
from doing further research which may reveal contradictory
results, or prevent university researchers from speaking out
where their research reveals threats to public health or
well-being. (see also “The Kept University” below.)
Also
in Tertiary Update this week:
1. Otago Council
Representation
2. Otago Students Support Concern at Them
and Us Divisions
3. Massey Staff to Rally at
Parliament
4. Balanced Scorecard Approach to Performance
Appraisal
5. Easter Break
OTAGO COUNCIL REPRESENTATION
(see Tertiary Update, Vol.3 No.8)
Otago Vice-Chancellor,
Dr Graeme Fogelberg, has written to Tertiary Update to
clarify his position on the proposal to provide for Senate
members and/or Professors to be represented on the
University Council. Currently neither is the case. The
academic staff representatives on Council are elected by all
permanent members of academic staff in accordance with the
provisions of the Education Act. While no Senate member is
currently also on Council, there is a vacant position that
provides an opportunity for a Senate member to stand for
election. Senate, however, is not a democratically-elected
body.
Dr Fogelberg says that the proposal is not his, and
it arises from a concern that has been brought to his
attention by “several senior members” of staff.
Otago
AUS representatives welcome this reassurance and look
forward to his careful consideration of the consequences of
potentially further disenfranchising academic staff. The
proposal is to be debated at a Senate meeting on 27
April.
OTAGO STUDENTS SUPPORT CONCERN AT ‘THEM AND US’
DIVISIONS
Otago students share with staff the feeling
that their views were not given sufficient weight in
university decision-making, as reported in the Otago Daily
Times (April 12). The comments followed a University Council
discussion of a working group report on university
administration and staff morale.
OUSA President, Andrew
Campbell, commented that ‘tinkering’ with aspects of the
senate constitution, as suggested in the report, did not go
far enough. He said the university needed to adopt a more
collegial management approach.
MASSEY STAFF TO RALLY AT
PARLIAMENT
A delegation of Massey Palmerston North staff
is meeting the Minister of Education in Wellington on 19
April to press their concerns about what is happening at
Massey and nationally to the university system.
This
action comes in response to the announcement by their
Vice-Chancellor that he intends to cut more than $7 million
from their operating budget next year. The fear is that this
could mean up to 200 job losses. Staff have been given
patchy reasons for the cuts and will have very little time
to develop or comment on proposals to meet the
cuts.
BALANCED SCORECARD APPROACH TO PERFORMANCE
APPRAISAL
The language and direction of the new
performance appraisal system at UCOL in Palmerston North
seems out of step with the new Government’s drive towards
greater co-operation and collegiality, says the Association
of Staff in Tertiary Education.
For example, the
proposal continues the reference to students as “customers”.
Among the performance measures listed for programme
leaders is their “positive contribution to brand values” and
for lecturers, their ability to meet marketing deadlines.
ASTE President, Jill Ovens, asked where education fitted in
with the scheme?
Among the more bizarre aspects to be
measured was “…actively seek to minimise occupancy costs”.
“Does that mean we get points for holding classes in the
park?” she asked.
EASTER BREAK
Tertiary Update wishes
all readers a happy Easter. We will also be taking a break
–back on 5 May.
WORLD WATCH
AUSTRALIA EXPORTS
SCIENTISTS TOO!
The 1999 Young Australian Scientist of
the Year is desperately seeking work overseas because her
university department is ‘broke’. Ian Lowe, Honorary
Professor in the School of Science at Griffith University
reports that the 1998 winner had also sought work
overseas.
THE KEPT UNIVERSITY
The Atlantic
Monthly, March 2000 edition, discusses the university’s
relationship with commercial sponsors. Its authors, Eyal
Press and Jennifer Washburn state that “Commercially
sponsored research is putting at risk the paramount value of
higher education – disinterested inquiry.” Even more
alarming, the authors argue, universities themselves are
behaving more and more like for-profit companies.
The
article can be found at the following URL:
http://www.theatlantic.com/cgi-bin/o/issues/2000/03/press.htm
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AUS
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