AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 9
In our lead story this
week…..
Industrial action continues around the country
today
While Victoria members began a 24-hour strike at 1
p.m. today, colleagues at Waikato, Massey and Lincoln were
attending members’ meetings to discuss progress in
negotiations.
The Victoria strike centres on the
university’s refusal to withdraw a late claim relating to
the term of the contract. Meanwhile, Victoria students who
have missed lectures are filling out forms requesting a
pro-rata fees refund.
Waikato and Massey members will be
informed about the latest developments in negotiations that
have continued this week. At Massey, AUS and the university
were in mediated discussions on Monday 25 March with a
second session scheduled for tomorrow. Lincoln members are
being addressed by the Vice-Chancellor and Human Resources
Manager, who will endeavour to explain the financial basis
for refusing to increase the university’s offer.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. AUS urges change to status
of proposed TEC
2. Massey VC jumps ship to
Australia
3. On-again merger at Otago
4. Commonwealth
Universities concerned at government
‘micro-management’
5. New General Secretary for AUT
6.
Rank injustice
AUS urges change to status of proposed
TEC
Last week, Rob Crozier, AUS General Secretary and
Margaret Ledgerton, Policy Analyst made an oral submission
to the Education and Science Select Committee in relation to
the Tertiary Education Reform Bill (see written submission
at www.aus.ac.nz). AUS supports the Tertiary Education
Commission in principle but is nevertheless strongly
critical of its proposed status as a Crown Agent, “giving
effect to” policies determined by the Minister of the day.
Rob Crozier urged the Committee to give serious
consideration to making the TEC a body that would “steer”
the tertiary sector “having regard to” Government policy.
TEC should also become the principal policy adviser on
tertiary education to the Minister, rather than the Ministry
of Education, as set out in the Bill, and TAMU should be
assimilated into TEC. AUS called for a review clause to be
included in the legislation if these changes were not agreed
to.
AUS joined other submitters (NZVCC, NZUSA and most of
the universities) in expressing concern at the proposed
powers of the Minister in the draft
legislation.
Massey VC jumps ship to
Australia
Massey Vice-Chancellor, Professor James McWha
has been appointed as Vice-Chancellor of Adelaide
University. Prof McWha will be remembered most for his
“repositioning” project, which led to the lay-offs of more
than 100 staff, and for the lavish expenditure on buildings
at Albany and Massey’s Wellington campus. Prof McWha, who
currently chairs NZVCC, has been at the forefront of the
market-driven system during his time at Massey. Staff have
accordingly expressed the hope that the new Vice-Chancellor
should “…be a servant of the university rather than its
master.” It is rumoured that Sir Neil Waters may be
appointed acting VC while the search for a permanent
replacement continues.
On-again merger at Otago
The
on-again, off-again merger between Otago University and the
Dunedin College of Education seems to be on-again. A
proposed merger between the two organisations in 1997 did
not reach fulfilment and led to Otago restructuring its
Education Faculty, laying off staff and going into direct
competition with the College. The current College principal,
Dr Roger Green, says that the merger has many benefits, but
was mainly aimed at avoiding unnecessary
duplication.
Commonwealth Universities concerned at
government ‘micro-management’
The Council of the
Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU) is currently
meeting in Dunedin. Professor Michael Gibbons, London-based
ACU Secretary-General, has said that universities in New
Zealand and elsewhere are being encouraged by governments to
contribute to the development of a wealth-generating
“knowledge economy”. This, in his view, requires an element
of experimentation and exploration. However, governments
were seeking greater central planning control and becoming
increasingly involved in ‘micro-management’ of university
education and this risked undermining the “knowledge
society” benefits if universities could not maintain their
independence to experiment.
World Watch
New General
Secretary for AUT
Sally Hunt has been announced as the
winner of the election to lead the UK’s largest academic
trade union, pledging to fight planned cutbacks and job
losses in UK universities. The Association of University
Teachers (AUT) is the largest TUC trade union to back a
woman for the top post.
Currently Assistant General
Secretary, Ms Hunt, will take up the position of AUT General
Secretary with immediate effect.
Sally Hunt wants “…to
lead a rejuvenated and re-focused union better able to fight
poor management decisions, cutbacks in research funding and
burdensome red tape. The Government has to realise that it
cannot deliver world-class research and ever wider
participation on the cheap.”
Rank injustice
Peter
Lawrence writing in “Nature” recently says the practice of
citing the principal investigators as senior author in
science publications is leading to a loss of credit for the
actual innovators and discoverers. He gives the example of
the discovery of HIV, widely attributed to Gallo, who “spent
much of the mid-1980s travelling, yet managed to author up
to 90 papers per year!” The modern research lab is a
production line where credit flows to the top. Post-doctoral
fellows are treated little more than glorified technicians
with precious little time to innovate or reflect. He
attributes the high drop out rate of women PhDs to the
“aggression and competition “ that is a feature of research
laboratories. Lawrence calls on leaders to address the
injustice of not giving credit where credit is
due.
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AUS
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