AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 3 No. 13, 26 May 2000
'REPOSITIONING' IS NO
POSITION
Staff at Massey University yesterday found out
whether they still had a job, had to reapply for a job, or
no longer had a job.
Of the 116 redundancies announced,
104 were from the Palmerston North campus.
"This is a
horrible process and it saddens us that loyal, and in some
cases, very long-serving staff, have received these
letters," said Association of University Staff (AUS) Massey
Branch President, Associate Professor Tony Lewis.
Despite
the fact that the University is not currently in deficit,
the management says it needs to shed $11 million from its
expenditure.
"Staff morale took a tumble during last
year's restructuring, and now anxiety about the direction in
which Massey University is headed is at a crisis level,"
said Professor Lewis.
The AUS are meeting with all
campus unions on June 7 to formalise the unions' response to
the review.
The National President of the Association of
University Staff, Neville Blampied, has joined colleagues at
Massey in condemning the untimely action and has urged the
University to be patient on the 'repositioning and
cost-saving exercise' until TEAC has reported.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. Employment Relations Bill
Submission
2. Diversity with Excellence
3. Auckland
and Murdoch's Virtual University
4. Legislation to Limit
Universities Introduced
5. Debate Between ACENZ, Massey
and ACE Misses Point
EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BILL
SUBMISSION
Three main points were presented to the select
committee considering the Employment Relations Bill
yesterday by AUS representatives. They were:
* supporting
the principle of collectivity, but that the Bill be amended
to ensure that members who remain on individual contracts
can continue to be union members;
* we endorsed
voluntary union membership but asked that the '30 day rule'
be changed to prevent freeloading. This would involve new
employees joining both the collective and the union for a
30-day free trial;
* amending the expiry of collective
contracts at Massey and Waikato on 31 July 2000 so they can
continue as collective agreements from 1 August.
The
submission is available on the AUS website.
DIVERSITY WITH
EXCELLENCE
Associate Minister of Tertiary Education,
Steve Maharey, promised a return to the intention of the
'Learning for Life' reforms in relation to the degree
programmes offered by polytechnics. He told a Royal Society
gathering earlier this week that market pressures over the
past decade had led to "...increasing homogeneity in order
to attract enrolment-driven dollars".
Acknowledging that
this did not mean taking degree programmes away from
polytechnics totally, he said it was envisaged in 1989 that
degree programmes would be "...a small percentage only of
the total courses offered by polytechnics".
Mr Maharey
said that the Government was committed to supporting those
degree programmes with an adequate research underpinning and
that regulatory requirements for degrees would be
complemented by the way that funding was allocated.
AUCKLAND AND MURDOCH'S VIRTUAL UNIVERSITY
Auckland
Vice-Chancellor, John Hood, gave AUS President Neville
Blampied, and Executive Director Rob Crozier an assurance
this week that the new virtual university that Rupert
Murdoch's Newscorp is proposing to establish in association
with Universitas 21 is only at the memorandum of
understanding stage.
As far as Auckland University's
participation was concerned, further developments would be
referred to Senate for discussion in the normal
way.
Staff at Auckland however, have serious reservations
about the amount of effective input they would have, and
point to the appalling track record of Rupert Murdoch in
suppressing freedom of speech and critical journalism.
Reservations about the use of web-based delivery to provide
a quality university-level education have also been
expressed.
LEGISLATION TO LIMIT UNIVERSITIES
INTRODUCED
The Government introduced legislation to cap
the number of universities in New Zealand last night, but
needed the support of New Zealand First after the Green
Party abstained.
The Education (Limiting Number of
Universities) Amendment Bill limits the number of
universities to eight until the new Tertiary Education
Advisory Commission has developed a strategy for the
tertiary sector.
Auckland-based UNITEC, who had applied
under the previous Government to become a university, said
it was considering legal action as a result of the
legislation.
The select committee considering the Bill
will report back at the end of July.
DEBATE BETWEEN
ACENZ, MASSEY AND ACE MISSES THE POINT
The debate
between the Association of Colleges of Education, Massey
University and the Auckland College of Education (ACE) about
the merger of ACE with Massey University misses the point,
says the union representing teacher educators.
ASTE
National Executive Colleges/Universities representative, Dr
Joce Jesson says the issue is not about whether teacher
education happens in a college or a university, but is about
the quality of it.
"We have been raising concerns about
the proliferation of teacher education courses for several
years, and while that is part of it, our concern is mainly
about the quality of those courses."
Dr Jesson says ASTE
supports the concept of a Teaching Council, a self-
regulatory body for the teaching profession, controlling
entry to the profession, monitoring teacher education and
ongoing education, as well as dealing with concerns about
discipline and competency.
Dr Jesson says the ACE merger
with Massey University should not be affected by the
introduction of legislation limiting the number of
universities while the Tertiary Education Advisory
Commission deliberates.
WORLD WATCH
* MONASH
AGREEMENT CLOSE
After months of difficult negotiations,
and an industrial campaign including exam bans and strike
action, the NTEU has now reached an in-principle agreement
with Monash University on several issues.
Nearly 2000
NTEU members will receive salary increases from March 2000
to March 2003. They represent a cumulative increase of
13.1%. Other main features of the Monash outcome include
maintenance of existing superannuation; measures to deal
with excessive workload; a commitment to maintain the size
of the workforce; and a roll-over of all current and
relevant award
conditions.
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AUS
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