AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.26
FUNDING FOR PTE STUDENTS
INCREASED 322 PERCENT
Funding for students in private
training establishments has increased from around $7 million
in 1998 to $71 million this year, while $110 million has
been cut from public tertiary education in the last three
years.
AUS President Neville Blampied said members were
alarmed to hear the tertiary education funding figures
released by Associate Minister (Tertiary Education), Steve
Maharey last weekend.
“While the number of funded student
places in PTEs has increased by 31.2%, government subsidies
for these students have increased by a massive 322.8%.”
Mr Blampied said this year’s increase represents a
permanent reduction to public tertiary education funding of
around $50 million per annum, added to the $60 million Jenny
Shipley removed from the sector in 1998 to cope with the
‘Asian crisis’.
“As AUS members at Massey and Victoria
know only too well, public tertiary education in New Zealand
is on the brink of a catastrophe of mass redundancies,
abolition of courses, and loss of key research programmes
and capacities, all caused by the cumulative effects of
persistent under-funding,” said Mr Blampied.
He called
for the Government to act decisively to restore these savage
cuts.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1. Cyberuni
Reappears
2. Industrial Action Planned at Massey
3.
Modest Enrolment Increase Estimated for 2000
4. Singapore
Treaty Text Agreed
CYBERUNI REAPPEARS
An organisation
calling itself ‘World School Hastings’ advertised in the New
Zealand Herald this week for tutors and teaching faculty
with masters degrees.
Described as a subsidiary of
‘Cyberuni Org, inc’ (sic), a New Zealand owned and managed
Californian Corporation, it claims that it will be offering
university level courses next year in NZ Dip Bus,
Information Technology, Gender Studies, NZ Literature, Core
Mathematics, Statistics and Science courses,
Philosophy/Ethics.
In an indictment of Government’s
attitude to the funding of private training establishments
(see above), World School claims that “…through a
combination of tight financial control, committed staff, and
community support, we do not intend to charge fees to
students eligible for New Zealand's Universal Tertiary
Tuition Allowance subsidy…”
AUS sought an assurance from
the Ministry of Education last year that Cyberuni was
operating within the constraints of the Education Act 1989
and is currently following this matter up.
INDUSTRIAL
ACTION PLANNED AT MASSEY
Union members at Massey
University voted last week to reject the university’s offer
on the collective employment contract and also to begin an
industrial campaign.
A complete withdrawal of goodwill
and a 24-hour strike scheduled for 1 September kick off the
campaign.
The action comes after five months of dispute
with the University’s senior managers over their stewardship
of Massey University, including controversial downsizing and
cost-cutting.
Joint unions' action committee
spokesperson, Dr Karen Rhodes said the deteriorating working
conditions that would result from accepting this contract
were the key concern of members, rather than
money.
“Although management has conceded some issues in
an attempt to gain an ‘interim contract', they have
signalled more clawbacks of current conditions for next
year. We find this whittling away of conditions totally
unacceptable,” said Dr Rhodes.
MODEST ENROLMENT INCREASE
ESTIMATED FOR 2000
While growth in tertiary student
numbers is predicted to remain modest this academic year,
the Government wants to see higher levels of participation
in post-school education and training.
Ministry of
Education figures released by Associate Education (Tertiary
Education) Minister Steve Maharey this week showed that
160,282 equivalent fulltime students (EFTS) were enrolled at
tertiary institutions in 1999, with a 1.8% increase in EFTS
enrolments expected in 2000.
Wananga, polytechnic and
college of education EFTS were predicted to increase by 61%,
3% and 4% respectively in 2000, but university EFTS were
predicted to increase by just 0.1%.
“The new measures we
have already implemented such as freezing tertiary fees next
year and stopping the accumulation of interest on loans
while students are studying are making tertiary education
more affordable to the many New Zealanders for whom cost had
become a barrier,” Steve Maharey said.
SINGAPORE TREATY
TEXT AGREED
A Closer Economic Partnership agreement with
Singapore is a step closer. Trade Negotiations Minister Jim
Sutton announced that the text for the agreement had been
agreed and after consideration by Cabinet it will be tabled
in the House and referred to the Foreign Affairs, Defence,
and Trade select committee for consideration.
Although
the Government has refused to release the actual text, it
has admitted that it plans to extend New Zealand's existing
commitments to trade in education services under the WTO.
AUS is vigorously monitoring this matter and continues to
have deep concerns about its implications for public
tertiary education.
.
WORLD WATCH
‘RETIRING’ TO THE
GOLD COAST
Michael Irving, former Vice-Chancellor of
Victoria University has apparently ‘retired’ to the
Queensland’s Gold Coast, where he is now Professor of Health
Sciences at Bond University – a private university.
His
website bio-pic tells us that he retired from Victoria
University in 2000. During his time there, we are informed
that “he completed a major reform of the University
administration, developed new courses in Health Sciences,
implemented new research initiatives, expanded the
University campuses, co-ordinated the Centenary celebrations
of the University, and significantly increased the enrolment
of international students at the University.” And not a
golden handshake in sight!
TERROR ON USP
CAMPUS
The Association of the USP Staff has demanded a
tightening of security in the wake of an alleged assault
last week by USP Students’ Association President Veresi
Bainivualiku on an Indo-Fijian student.
The Staff
Association also wanted the University’s security officers
investigated amid reports they are taking a ‘racial
approach’ while carrying out their duties.
The letter to
the Registrar says: “AUSPS is concerned about the threats
made by the USPSA President on USP staff and we wish to
inform you (Registrar) that if you fail to provide security
to the staff at the University then your office will held
responsible.”
***************************************************************************
AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
issues are archived on the AUS website: