AUS Tertiary Update Vol 4 No 10
In our lead story this
week…..
CONSULTATION PROMISED ON TRADE IN EDUCATION
SERVICES
The Association of University Staff has written
to the Trade Negotiations Minister, Jim Sutton to take up an
offer of consultations prior to a new round of international
trade talks in Geneva. Mr Sutton has said the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) will be consulting with
representatives of the country's service industries – which
includes the tertiary education sector – as the Geneva talks
enter a more substantive phase. "We now have a work
programme for negotiations over the next year, and a process
for discussing how to further liberalise the services
sector. This means New Zealand and other WTO members will
start to consider in detail a range of negotiating proposals
from developed and developing countries alike," he says.
AUS Executive Director, Rob Crozier has written to Mr Sutton
requesting a meeting with MFAT officials and the Ministry of
Education later this month. A meeting with MFAT officials is
now scheduled for 19 April.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. ACT support for competition strongly
criticised
2. Debt-free women key to our children’s
future
3. Employment Relations Education group
named
4. Review team announced for Massey
5. MIT
classes free on the web
6. …Meanwhile, over at U21
7.
Hawaii academics on strike
8. Streamlining urged in
Europe
9. Dartmouth College increases financial aid to
students
ACT SUPPORT FOR COMPETITION STRONGLY
CRITICISED
Tertiary Education spokesman for the ACT
party, Stephen Franks has criticised the Tertiary Education
Advisory Commission's blueprint for the future, saying it
will stamp out competition in the sector. Referring to the
Wellington situation, Mr Franks says the capital has "the
exciting prospect of becoming a hub for design" with Massey
and Victoria Universities both determined to have
architecture schools. "In competing they will create a buzz
of ideas," he says. "Wellington as an education centre will
complement our growing IT industry. But we need the ferment
of lots of providers and employers, public and private".
But Mr Frank's comments have drawn a sharp response from
the Victoria University Students' Association. Its
president, Chris Hipkins calls the ACT Party's opposition to
the recommendations "short-sighted" and lacking in vision.
"Even the National Party has admitted that the market has
failed to deliver real choice in tertiary education," Mr
Hipkins says. "Why can’t the ACT party face up to the
realities too?” Taking Mr Franks' example of Victoria and
Massey competing in Wellington, he says it has meant scarce
resources have been split in half, and students have
suffered as a result. We'd agree there!
DEBT-FREE WOMEN
KEY TO OUR CHILDREN’S FUTURE
The Aotearoa Tertiary
Students Association (ATSA) says recent research undertaken
for the Ministry of Education has highlighted the importance
of investing in the future of New Zealand by releasing
female students from a lifetime of debt. The ATSA
president, Keith Clark says Cathy Wylie's study, "Competent
Children" has highlighted the fact that a well-educated
mother could mean the difference between a child passing or
failing at school. “In light of this research, how can the
government continue to support a student loan scheme which
discourages women from studying, or commits them to a
lifetime of debt?” asked Mr Clark. Research undertaken by
ATSA and NZUSA in 1999 showed that the average time taken
for a woman to repay her student loan was 51 years, compared
to the average repayment time of 17 years for men.
EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS EDUCATION GROUP NAMED
The
Minister of Labour, Margaret Wilson has named the people who
will service on the Employment Relations Education group
under the new employment law. The 9 members of the
committee include people from employer, employee, Maori,
Pacific and tertiary education organisations. From the
tertiary sector are Wilf Malcolm, former vice-chancellor of
Waikato University – who will chair the committee – and
Professor Pat Walsh of Victoria University.
AUS intends
applying for funding from the committee later this year to
run courses in 2001 relating to stress and workload levels
in universities.
REVIEW TEAM ANNOUNCED FOR MASSEY
Massey University Vice-chancellor, Professor James McWha
has announced the members of the review body that will
investigate and report on the university's structures and
processes for academic policy-making. The review was agreed
to as part of the out-of-court settlement between AUS and
Massey in October last year and AUS was consulted about the
review team membership. It is headed by Professor Sylvia
Rumball, a former Dean of Science at Massey. The other
members are former Waikato Vice-Chancellor, Dr Wilf Malcolm;
Professors Luanna Meyer of Massey's Hokowhitu campus, Robyn
Munford of the Tiritea Campus; and Robert McKibbon
representing the Albany campus. The review is due to be
completed by 31 October 2001.
WORLD WATCH
MIT CLASSES
FREE ON THE WEB
While other universities ponder how to
make money out of their courses on the Internet,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology has decided to put all
its course materials on the Internet where they will be free
to all-comers. MIT says that over a 10-year period it will
put lecture notes, exams, simulations, and video lectures
for around 2,000 courses on public web sites. Visitors to
the sites will not, of course, earn college credits. The
Institute says it is not worried that its students will
resent paying $26,000 a year in tuition fees when the public
can simply log on and get the material for free. Officials
say the web surfers will miss out on the intensive learning
environment that students experience when they attend MIT.
…MEANWHILE OVER AT U21
Universitas21 campuses are
apparently falling over themselves to commit large sums of
money to the joint U21 venture with Thomson Learning (see
“Tertiary Update” Vol. 4 No. 2). “Tertiary Update”
understands that the universities of Nottingham, Birmingham,
Glasgow, Edinburgh, Melbourne, New South Wales, Hong Kong,
British Columbia, McGill and the National University of
Singapore are prepared to “invest” sums between $US1m. and
$US5m in the venture. Toronto and Michigan appear to have
abandoned U21 but new entrants Virginia Tech, Georgia and
New York University are also likely to contribute. Auckland
and Queensland have yet to commit but “Tertiary Update”
understands that Auckland is seriously considering
contributing $US1m.
HAWAII ACADEMICS ON STRIKE
More
than 3,000 faculty members at all campuses of the University
of Hawaii have been on strike for the past week. The strike
coincides with a teachers’ strike that has also closed all
public schools in Hawaii. Salary scales for faculty have
not increased since the previous contract expired in June
1999. AUS has sent a message of support to the
union.
STREAMLINING URGED IN EUROPE
European university
leaders want their governments to speed the harmonisation of
Europe's highly diverse tertiary system. Among the changes
they want are bachelors' and masters' degrees to replace the
current variety of qualifications, and a credit system to
help make studies more flexible. The education leaders, who
were meeting in Spain, stressed that reforming the system
would enhance the international reputation of European
universities, and help them compete for the growing number
of Asian students who want to study abroad.
DARTMOUTH
COLLEGE INCREASES FINANCIAL AID TO STUDENTS
Dartmouth
College is the latest top-notch United States institution to
announce financial incentives to attract top students to
study there. It says it is reducing the loan-repayment
obligations of its students, based on their parents' income,
and is adding an extra US$1.6m. to its scholarship fund.
Most students will see a reduction of between US$1,225 and
US$1,500 in their loans, while those from families earning
less than US$45,000 will receive outright grants in their
first year.
EASTER GREETINGS We’re a day early because
of the Easter break. We wish all our readers a happy
Easter.
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