AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 25, July 18
In our lead story this
week…..
PROTECTION OF AUTONOMY VITAL UNDER PRIVATE
PARTNERSHIPS
The Association of University Staff (AUS)
says the minister responsible for tertiary education, Steve
Maharey has failed to provide any satisfactory assurance
that government-sponsored partnerships between universities
and private enterprise will protect academic freedom. Mr
Maharey this week outlined plans for partnerships involving
private sector investment in universities to a business
audience. He said these partnerships would uphold "the
values of academic freedom, scientific rigour and critical
inquiry”. But AUS national president, Dr Grant Duncan says
the goals and criteria for Cabinet approval of the
partnerships contain at best only "general and vague"
references to these, suggesting the minister's assurances
must be "taken with a grain of salt". Dr Duncan suggests the
Education Act should be strengthened to protect academic
freedom and the 'critic and conscience' role of universities
so that universities could not, for example, be used as
promotion tools or training departments of big business. He
also suggests that as well as having to come up with ‘a
thorough business case’ to support proposals for funding,
private investors should have to meet strict, explicit
criteria to protect academic freedom. Dr Duncan also
predicts that if the private partnership initiative
proceeds, universities will become dependent on private
enterprise, just as they are now dependent on overseas
students. "We are concerned that this will provide an
excuse for government not to increase needed public
investment in tertiary education," he adds.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. First STEP emphasises
sector ownership of reforms
2. Government to appeal
dentistry decision
3. MORST responds
4. Private
hospital plans alliance with Auckland medical faculty
5.
Greater scrutiny for job applicants
6. Israeli troops
move on Palestinian university
7. Policies boost faculty
diversity
'STEP' EMPHASISES SECTOR OWNERSHIP OF
REFORMS
The first Statement of Tertiary Education
Priorities (STEP) calls for sector ownership of the current
reforms and a system that is more focused on quality as they
keys to improving connections between the tertiary education
sector, industry and the community. Statements of Tertiary
Education Priorities will be issued at least once every
three years under the new system. Commenting on the first
statement, the minister, Steve Maharey said the key priority
during the current financial year would be developing the
infrastructure and processes needed to support the new
system, and he said building strong outward-looking
relationships with the communities they serve was the top
priority for tertiary institutions.
GOVERNMENT TO APPEAL
DENTISTRY DECISION
The Government has lodged an appeal
against the High Court’s decision in April in favour of
Otago University and several hundred dentistry students and
graduates who had challenged funding cuts in 1994 when a
National government was in power. The present government
says it is filing an appeal to preserve its position. More
than 460 current students and graduates had joined the
university in challenging the decision to cut back funding
from $40,334 to $25,001 over three years, forcing the
university to raise tuition fees to recover costs. The
Labour-Alliance coalition raised funding for dentistry
courses when it came to power.
MORST RESPONDS
The
Ministry of Research Science and Technology (MORST) has
responded to some of the issues raised in last week's
"Tertiary Update" (see Vol. 5 No. 24) by the Chief Executive
Officer of Victoria Link, Mike Doig about the "2000 R&D
Statistics Report". Mr Doig commented on the drop in total
expenditure on research and development, the fall in
salaries and wages despite a rise in staff numbers, a drop
in the level of business funding and in funding from
offshore. MORST says the drop in total and government
expenditure is the result of a $38m. revision of university
R&D expenditure by the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors'
Committee. Without this, MORST says, spending would have
remained at 1.1% of GDP. It says the discrepancy between
salaries and wages and staff numbers happened because
universities did not revise their staff figures at the same
time as the expenditure figures. On business expenditure,
the Ministry says spending actually increased by 3.7% and
the drop in offshore funding was in line with previous
trends after an exceptional high of $35m. in the 1997-98
year. MORST says the statistics give no reason for
complacency but says a 2001 survey suggests the situation
may be better than expected. While the survey did not
measure R&D expenditure itself, MORST says it found the
median innovation expenditure in firms with 6 or more staff
was $23,000 – a level in line with European rates.
PRIVATE
HOSPITAL PLANS ALLIANCE WITH AUCKLAND MEDICAL FACULTY
The
country's largest private hospital, MercyAscot says it is
planning Auckland's first private sector medical research
and training partnership with the Auckland University
Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences. Under the alliance,
two university units – the Surgical Skills Training Unit
from Greenlane Hospital and the Department of Anaesthesia
from Auckland Medical School – would be relocated to
MercyAscot's Mercy site. The faculty also plans to appoint a
senior lecturer in gastro-intestinal surgery based at Mercy.
AUS will be inquiring of Auckland University the provisions
it plans to put in place to ensure academic freedom is
protected within this new arrangement.
WORLD WATCH
GREATER SCRUTINY FOR JOB APPLICANTS
Australian
universities are expected to increase their scrutiny of
applicants for top positions after the rapid departure of
newly-appointed Monash University vice-chancellor, David
Robinson for plagiarism. Monash had hired a search firm to
vet applicants for the job. It is making no comment on the
case, but commentators say the incident has pointed to
sensitive issues about disclosure and research on people
seeking the top university positions as well as questions
about the capacity of search firms to get information on
applications from informal academic networks.
ISRAELI
TROOPS MOVE ON PALESTINIAN UNIVERSITY
Israeli troops
this week raided and closed down the administration building
of Al-Quds University in Jerusalem, accusing its president
Sari Nusseibeh of undermining Israeli sovereignty. Officials
were detained and questioned and files, documents and
computers were confiscated. An official Israeli statement
said Mr Nusseibeh's offices were "recognised as representing
the offices of the Palestinian Authority operating within
the sovereign area of Israel". Mr Nusseibeh is the
Palestinian Authority's commissioner for Jerusalem affairs
and is the senior Palestinian Authority representative in
Jerusalem. Israeli opposition MPs attacked the closure order
in the Israeli parliament saying the government's actions
were "sending a negative message to Palestinian academics
and intellectuals." About 6,000 students are currently
enrolled at Al-Quds University, which is considered the most
prestigious Palestinian academic institution in Jerusalem.
POLICIES BOOST FACULTY DIVERSITY
Nearly 90% of new
staff employed this year by the Virginia Tech College of
Arts and Sciences in the United States were female or
scholars from minority groups following its introduction of
a series of policies aimed at diversifying the faculty
workforce. The college uses search committees to find staff
and they are sometimes ordered to add non-faculty members to
ensure that the committees are diverse. They are also not
allowed to rank finalists, but must simply pass on all of
the names to the dean, who, along with the department head,
makes a selection, with diversity frequently a major factor
in deciding who to appoint.
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AUS
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