AUS Tertiary Update Vol 4 No 17
In our lead story this
week…..
AUS CALLS CRISIS SUMMIT
The Association of
University Staff has written to the Chancellors,
Vice-Chancellors and student presidents of the country's
eight universities inviting them to a crisis summit meeting
on last week's Budget announcement on tertiary funding. In
a letter, AUS Executive Director, Rob Crozier, says it is
essential that all the parties affected – Councils,
Vice-Chancellors, staff and students – should discuss the
implications of either accepting or rejecting the
Government's 2.6% fee-freeze offer (in reality about 1.8%).
He is suggesting the meeting be held in Wellington as soon
as possible, but in the meantime says the various parties
should also discuss the issue at the local level.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. Action on the
campuses
2. AUS criticises fee-freeze link with
'excellence' funding
3. TEC no threat, says
Minister
4. Church minister speaks up for academic
freedom
5. UK universities cash-strapped
6. European
universities seek harmonisation
7. Journal costs
escalate
ACTION ON THE CAMPUSES
There has been strong
criticism, along with direct action, from universities in
reaction to the Government's fee-freeze offer unveiled in
last week's Budget. The AUS organised forums for Massey
University's Palmerston North and Albany staff on Wednesday
(29 May) while the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education (ASTE) helped organise a similar event at the
Wellington campus. The Massey Vice-Chancellor, Professor
James McWha, urged staff to attend and also spoke at the
Palmerston North forum. Professor McWha told staff that
all eight university Vice-Chancellors have confirmed that
they are "not of a mind to accept the offer" because it is
not sufficient to maintain the quality of university
education in New Zealand. The final decision on whether or
not to accept the Government's offer must be made by
university councils by 1 August. He pointed out that there
had already been an impact on the university of a "very
small increase" in funding in the current year. "We need
substantially more than the government appears ready to
offer, if we are to maintain staffing levels and ensure we
can adequately reward our staff," he said.
Earlier, more
than 3000 staff and students from Canterbury attended a
rally in protest at the funding offer. The Vice-Chancellor,
Daryl Le Grew, who had closed down the university for the
afternoon, addressed the rally. He told the crowd: "We've
heard a lot about the knowledge society and the
knowledge-driven economic recovery. It's hollow rhetoric if
it's not going to be backed up by some decent funding." He
said the university was already $5m worse off by accepting
the fee-freeze deal for this year, and would be another $5m
worse off if it accepted another similar deal. In a show of
solidarity, staff and students from Lincoln University and
from Otago University's Christchurch School of Medicine
joined the Canterbury rally.
Meanwhile, the
Vice-Chancellor of Waikato University, Bryan Gould, says the
universities and the Government are on a collision course
over the matter of funding. He takes the Government to task
for deciding on the offer without negotiating, or even
discussing the matter, with the universities. "Their
unilateral decision was the way it was going to be," he
says. "It's a bit rich therefore to be told that it's now
'too late' to make the argument that the deal cannot be
accepted". The Waikato Vice-Chancellor calls for common
sense to be brought to bear, saying that everyone wants to
hold down fees, and all that is needed to make this possible
is "a fair offer".
AUS CRITICISES FEE-FREEZE LINK WITH
'EXCELLENCE' FUNDING
The AUS National President, Neville
Blampied, has voiced serious concern that only institutions
that accept the Government's fee-freeze deal will be
eligible for money to set up Centres of Research Excellence.
He was speaking during a forum on funding held at Otago
University. The Government announced in the Budget a $46m
package to set up the centres of excellence, but tied it to
acceptance of its offer of funding in return for a freeze on
fees. Mr Blampied said the AUS was concerned about this
"coercive" element and was seeking a meeting with the Prime
Minister, Helen Clark to discuss it. He suggested
universities were, in effect, being "given a bowl of thin
soup…served by a surly waiter". Unfortunately the waiter is
insisting that the universities eat their crumbs or there
will be no soup at all!
TEC NO THREAT, SAYS
MINISTER
The Minister in charge of Tertiary Education,
Steve Maharey says the thriving tertiary education sector in
Otago will do even better under the Government's planned
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC). In an interview with
the "Otago Daily Times", Mr Maharey said the TEC would take
an evolutionary rather than a revolutionary approach and he
called on tertiary institutions in the city to discuss their
strengths and how they could co-operate to develop them.
The AUS National President, Neville Blampied agrees that the
TEC approach will benefit Dunedin. He says it promises to
reduce duplication within the private sector, allowing more
funding to go to public institutions.
CHURCH MINISTER
SPEAKS UP FOR ACADEMIC FREEDOM
A Presbyterian minister in
Invercargill, the Rev. Simon Rae has criticised as "too
drastic" a Government proposal that would see a commissioner
appointed to run a university when it is in financial
difficulty. Writing in the publication, "Religion and Life",
the minister recalls the fact that the modern western
university grew out of the church, evolving into "a
corporate body of masters and students with its own
government, its own values and its own curricula and
qualifications". That autonomy, he says, led to it having
a moral authority within society. To dissolve that
corporate governance, the Rev. Rae writes, would change the
nature of its role in society: "An independent, critical
voice would become just another agent of the ideology of the
day. A long-valued ally in the search for wisdom and
knowledge would be significantly weakened."
WORLD WATCH
UK UNIVERSITIES CASH-STRAPPED
A report released
by Britain's Association of University Teachers (AUT) shows
that 44% of the country's universities recorded deficits in
the 1999-2000 year. That compared with the 28% that
recorded a deficit in the previous year. The AUT general
secretary, David Triesman says: "Universities cannot
continue to meet the needs of a growing student population
unless there is a real drive to invest money in research and
teaching."
EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES SEEK
HARMONISATION
Officials from tertiary institutions in 30
European countries have re-affirmed their commitment to
harmonise their diverse national university systems. In a
statement released at the end of a two-day meeting in
Prague, the officials called for the adoption of the
'European Credit Transfer System'. This will allow
students to accumulate and transfer credits and provide
universities and employers outside their home country with
the detailed information they need on the academic work they
have completed. The meeting also agreed to adopt a system
for degree qualifications. The meeting also called for a
common framework of reference to be established as a way of
assuring quality standards.
JOURNAL COSTS ESCALATE
More
than 22,800 scientists from around the world are saying they
will boycott any publishers of scientific journals that
refuse to make research papers freely available on the
Internet after six months. The boycott is the result of
building anger at the high cost of subscriptions to the
journals (some cost up to £9,000 a year), and the fact that
access on the Internet is also by subscription only.
Scientists who publish in the journals are not paid for
their contributions and say they see no reason why they
should hand over copyright to the publishers. But a
spokesman for one major publisher, Elsevier says someone has
to pay for putting the papers up on the Web.
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AUS
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