AUS Tertiary Update Vol.4 No.18
In our lead story this
week…..
NO COERCION, PLEASE
The AUS President, Neville
Blampied has written to all Labour and Alliance MPs pointing
out the resentment felt by universities at what they see as
Government coercion in getting them to accept its fee-freeze
deal. In his letter, Mr Blampied criticises the Government
for making it clear that only institutions that accept the
fees-freeze will be eligible to draw on a new fund set up to
finance the establishment of Centres of Research Excellence.
He sees "no principled basis" for linking the two and says
it is severe coercion at the least. Mr Blampied says the
action falls well short of the standards expected of a
social democratic Labour-Alliance Government and suggests
the fact that the Government has had to resort to this
action shows how little confidence it has in the adequacy of
its fees stabilisation offer. He is appealing to the MPs to
try to reverse the decision in caucus.
Meanwhile,
Canterbury University's official magazine, "Chronicle" says
those who are calling the Government's Budget funding deal
'blackmail' are "not too far wide of the mark". In an
editorial, the editor, Paul Gorman, criticises the funding
offered in return for a fees freeze as "paltry" and says the
penalties universities face if they turn it down are
"nasty".
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1. Pay
equity stalled
2. Loan scheme 'out of control'
3.
Tertiary libraries feel the pinch
4. Visit
premature
5. Proposal could see tests for bedside
manner
6. Future of U21 in doubt
7. Canadian students
get less for more
PAY EQUITY STALLED
A new study has
found that pay equity has effectively stalled despite the
fact that more women are now better educated. The paper –
which was co-authored by the Alliance MP, Dr Liz Gordon and
Missy Morton – shows that pay rates for women in the private
sector last year stood at 82% of those for men, while the
figure for the public sector was 80%. Moreover, the public
sector figures showed a widening in the pay gap since 1990,
when women's hourly wage rates stood at 83% of men's rates.
Dr Gordon points out that this is happening at a time when
women are graduating from universities in greater numbers,
and with better qualifications than men. "Men underachieve
relatively in education, but they overachieve in the job
market," Dr Gordon told the conference. The researchers
found the gap was bigger in some government departments than
others. In January this year, the average salary for
Treasury's 134 permanent female staff was $62,038 while the
average income for its 171 male staff was $95,327 – a pay
gap based on gender of 65%. Dr Gordon says the findings
underline the need for pay equity legislation.
LOAN
SCHEME 'OUT OF CONTROL'
University student leaders say
figures just released show how out of control the student
loan scheme has become. Figures released to the New Zealand
University Students' Association (NZUSA) under the official
information act show that the biggest student loan is now
$167,000 – $27,000 more than the highest one last year.
NZUSA co-president, Andrew Campbell says the figures show
the Government needs to do more than "simply tinker" with
the loan interest rate. "The two primary causes of student
loan debt are the lack of a living allowance for most
students and high tuition fees," he says. "The government
needs to address these two issues if it is truly committed
to making inroads into the student debt problem." Mr
Campbell also calls on universities to "mitigate" the
snowballing effect of the loans scheme by accepting the
Government's fee-freeze deal for 2002.
TERTIARY LIBRARIES
FEEL THE PINCH
Librarians have warned that university and
polytechnic libraries face a lean year as the Government's
2.6% (effectively 1.8%) funding offer follows on from three
years of falling exchange rates. Libraries import more than
98% of their materials, and the Chair of the University
Librarians' Council, Sue Pharo says they have been
struggling to make ends meet over the past three years as
the New Zealand dollar fell 24.5% against the U.S. dollar
and 12.5% against the British pound. She says the situation
has been made worse by rises of between 8% and 12% a year in
publishers' prices. The result is that libraries have seen
their costs rise up to 30% in a three-year period. The
result, Ms Pharo says is that several libraries have had to
consider cutting what they buy rather than purchasing what
is best for the library.
VISIT PREMATURE
A
typographical error is being blamed for an error in the
Deputy Prime Minister, Jim Anderton's itinerary that would
have seen him visit the country's newest – but as yet
non-existent – tertiary education institution. A draft
itinerary for Mr Anderton's visit, tabled at a Taupo council
meeting, had him visiting the site of Lake Taupo University
College. But with discussions still underway on purchasing
land, it's clear there will be no site visit. Instead,
Taupo officials say they will hold a meeting with the Deputy
Prime Minister.
PROPOSAL COULD SEE TESTS FOR BEDSIDE
MANNER
The Otago Medical School is currently seeking
public comment on the future of medical training. A
discussion document has been produced that looks at future
options for the selection and training of doctors, including
introducing psychological testing into the selection process
to ensure that students have the qualities needed to be a
doctor. It also suggests less emphasis on academic grades.
The author of the document, Dean of the Dunedin School of
Medicine, Professor Bill Gillespie, says an overseas study
has determined that modern doctors need a mix of skills,
including clinical, advocacy, communications and managerial
expertise. As a result, grades were less important: "We
believe anybody with B+ or better can cope with medical
courses", he says.
WORLD WATCH
FUTURE OF U21 IN
DOUBT
With the deadline approaching, only a minority of
Universitas 21 universities have committed funding towards
its online teaching institution, raising questions over
whether the venture can proceed. The consortium
universities must come up with $US25m for the project within
two weeks under an agreement with its venture partner,
Thomson Learning. But to date only five of the 16 have
committed themselves. They are the universities of Glasgow,
Melbourne, New South Wales, Nottingham and Queensland.
Auckland University has said it supports the online
university but is waiting on further details before
specifying how much it will put towards it. One other
university says its rules do not allow it to contribute
financially, and Edinburgh University says it is
reconsidering its role. Earlier, Toronto and Michigan
universities said they would not back the venture, with
Toronto withdrawing from the consortium altogether.
Meanwhile, a U.S. company specialising in Internet business
courses has filed for bankruptcy after failing to attract
enough business. Pensare worked with Duke University and
other institutions offering business courses to
corporations.
CANADIAN STUDENTS GET LESS FOR
MORE
Canadian students may be paying more in fees, but
research suggests that they may not be getting a better
education as a result. A report released by the Canadian
Association of University Teachers says fees rose 64% during
the 1990s in response to a 25% drop in public operating
grants. Over the same period, it says, university
expenditure on salaries has fallen 16% – meaning the
students are getting less for their money. The study says
rises in fees have worsened inequality of opportunity for a
tertiary education. It shows that at the beginning of the
1990s, families on the lowest income would need to set aside
14% of their disposable income to cover these costs. By the
end of the decade that figure had risen to 23%. The rise for
Canada's richest families was from 3% to 4%. The report
calls for increased operating grants and grants for
economically disadvantaged
students.
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AUS
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