AUS Tertiary Update Vol 4 No 19
In our lead story this
week…..
CRUNCH DECISION TIME FOR UNIVERSITY
COUNCIL
The Waikato University Council has voted
overwhelming to reject the Government's funding offer in
return for a freeze on fees -- the first institution to vote
on the deal. Only two councillors voted for the offer to be
accepted. Earlier, the Vice-Chancellor, Brian Gould had
recommended the meeting reject the Government deal, saying
Waikato lost $1.5m. when it accepted a similar deal last
year. The President of the Waikato Branch of the Association
of University Staff, Dr Stan Jones had earlier urged the
Council not to make a decision yet, but to wait until the
"unpalatable options" can be debated at a crisis summit AUS
has called to discuss the funding issue.
And the
Vice-Chancellor of Otago University, Dr Graeme Fogelberg has
made clear that accepting the Government's fee freeze deal
will put that university "on an irreversible path" to
becoming a "second-class" institution. In a report to a
University Council meeting this week, Dr Fogelberg said the
Council's decision on funding would be "probably the most
important it has ever made". A vote for the deal would mean
implicitly accepting that the quality of Otago's teaching
and research will be damaged permanently, while a vote
against would mean future Otago graduates would have to pay
more to get the education of earlier generations -- a case,
he said, of "intergenerational inequity".
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
Union seeks compliance order
against Massey
Call for Knowledge Society
debate
Changes stressing podiatry students
Too few
graduates to lure Microsoft
Knowledge Economy needs
funding increase
Woollongong officials under
fire
Academic human rights group founded
Ten UK
universities reveal new PhD format
UNION SEEKS
COMPLIANCE ORDER AGAINST MASSEY
The Employment
Relations Authority (ERA) has set aside 20 July for an
investigative meeting in Wellington into a dispute between
the union representing allied staff in polytechnics (TIASA)
and Massey University. The union sought an order from the
Employment Relations Authority last week to get Massey to
comply with the terms of settlement of their collective
agreement. TIASA says Massey had failed to make a $400 lump
sum payment as agreed under the Collective Agreement
negotiated in February. Massey gave assurances it would
comply with the settlement by Wednesday of this week, but is
disputing the entitlement of some staff to the payment.
CALL FOR KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY DEBATE
The minister in
charge of tertiary education, Steve Maharey has called for a
national debate on the kind of ‘knowledge society’ that New
Zealand is aiming to develop, and how tertiary education
could contribute to that. In a speech to a business group
in Auckland, Mr Maharey said the tertiary education system
was one of the greatest resources for skills and knowledge
development. He said the Tertiary Education Advisory
Commission was now working on a report on possible
priorities for the sector which would be a starting-point
for national debate on tertiary education as well as the
kind of knowledge society New Zealand should be aiming at.
Mr Maharey said he believed the strategy for success lay in
recognising the country's existing advantages as a
biological economy. "Now we have to combine that with the
innovations of biotechnology and information and
communications technology," he told his audience.
TOO
FEW GRADUATES TO LURE MICROSOFT
Microsoft New Zealand's
General Manager says the software giant could not establish
a development laboratory in this country because there were
not enough world-class graduates and world-class
universities. In an interview with "Infotech Weekly", Geoff
Lawrie said such a lab would need 20 world-class PhDs and a
team of bright support staff -- something New Zealand did
not have. New Zealand universities were not bad, Mr Lawrie
said, but the funding model was wrong, and the focus should
be on fewer, and better, learning institutions.
KNOWLEDGE
ECONOMY NEEDS FUNDING INCREASE
Victoria University's Pro
Vice-Chancellor, Professor David Mackay says an increase in
funding is urgently needed if New Zealand universities are
to maintain their international standing and contribute to
the knowledge society. In a report on an international study
tour, Professor Mackay said he was dismayed at the funding
disadvantage New Zealand universities were operating under
compared with U.S. universities. "Private universities, such
as Stanford, have per-student funding rates up to 35 times
greater than those in New Zealand," said Professor Mackay.
But he says the publicly-funded universities are also ahead.
He cited the University of California, Berkeley which has
8.5 times the funding per student. Professor Mackay says the
top Australian universities get one-and-a-half times the
funding of comparable institutions here. His remarks are
endorsed by the AUS Wellington Branch president, Professor
Peter Barrett. "We know it is increasingly difficult to
recruit and retain expert staff and to properly support
those we currently have," said Professor Barrett. "NZ
Universities are living on borrowed time after a decade of
chronic underfunding and the Government's budget offer fails
to address this."
CHANGES STRESSING PODIARY STUDENTS
Podiatry students from the Central Institute of
Technology are unsure whether or not they can complete their
three-year course following CIT's merger with Hutt Valley
Polytechnic at the end of the month. A spokesperson says
they are suffering "stress and anxiety" over their future as
the first semester exams approach. He said about ten CIT
podiatry lecturers and six support staff had been offered a
contract extension to the end of the year but appeared
reluctant to accept it at this stage. The University of
Otago has been considering taking over the bachelor course
in podiatry but Professor Linda Holloway, who's in charge of
Health Sciences, says plans are being thwarted by inadequate
Ministry of Education funding.
WORLD WATCH
WOOLLONGONG
OFFICIALS UNDER FIRE
The Vice-chancellor and Chancellor
of Woollongong have been accused of trying to gag debate on
the sacking of one of its senior academics, Dr Ted Steele.
The criticism centred on the proceedings of a Council
meeting at which Dr Steele's summary dismissal came up. Dr
Steele was dismissed after he said he had been told to
upgrade the marks he had awarded two of his honours
students. The case has gone to the Australian Federal
Court. The president of the Post-graduate Students'
Association said he had been invited to speak at the
meeting, but was then not given the chance to speak. The
meeting was also prevented from discussing an open letter,
signed by a number of prominent Australians, which took the
university authorities to task for dismissing Dr Steele
before proper steps had been taken to establish whether or
not his comments did constitute serious misconduct.
ACADEMIC HUMAN RIGHTS GROUP FOUNDED
A new group has
been set up to monitor violence and repression against
academics and students. The Network for Education and
Academic Rights began operating this week with funding from
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organisation (UNESCO). It will organise global campaigns
against governments abusing academic human rights, getting
its information from a network of human rights
organisations, professional associations and trade unions
around the world. Reports will be posed on a web site
http://www.nearinternational.org. It is led by John Akker,
who in the 1980s was deputy general secretary of the
Association of University Teachers in Britain. AUS is a
foundation member.
TEN UK UNIVERSITIES REVEAL NEW PHD
FORMAT
Ten British universities are to this year offer 41
PhDs based on the Harvard model. The move follows recent
surveys showing that doctoral students in the U.K. are often
considered too narrow in their speciality and are suited
only for narrow academic careers. See more at
http://www.newphd.ac.uk/
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AUS
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