AUS Tertiary Update Vol 5 No 27
AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 27, 1
August
2002
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In
our lead story this week…..
NO DELAY FOR TERTIARY
EDUCATION REFORM BILL
The Association of University Staff
[AUS] has called on the incoming Labour-led minority
Government to ensure that the Tertiary Education Reform Bill
is passed into law without undue delay. The National
President of AUS, Dr Grant Duncan, says that although
university staff have many reservations about the Tertiary
Education Strategy, the fact that the new legislation had
not been passed prior to the election had caused "some
uncertainty" in the sector. "AUS would favour some minor
amendments to the Bill and there are significant concerns
about the impact of the Tertiary Education Strategy, but we
would not like to see any major about-face or disruption in
the overall policy direction," he says. "As neither the
Greens nor United Future oppose setting up a Tertiary
Education Commission it should be business as usual for the
tertiary education sector”. Dr Duncan notes that both
parties have a number of tertiary education policies that
would be of benefit to the university sector.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. Post-election issues for
universities
2. University industrial negotiations on
again
3. Private institutions threaten legal action over
cash freeze
4. AUT hails academic freedom victory
5.
NTEU acts over Monash V-C's resignation
6. British
delegation calls for Israeli academic
boycott
POST-ELECTION ISSUES FOR UNIVERSITIES
AUS has
produced a briefing paper focusing on current major issues
in the university sector and will be seeking appointments to
discuss these with incoming political party spokespeople on
tertiary education as soon as practicable. They include a
range of workforce issues linked to demographic changes and
the composition of the university workforce, and the current
framework for the negotiation and funding of salaries. Given
more than a decade of declining or, more recently, static
government investment, AUS also emphasises the urgent need
for a firm commitment by government to a long-term,
sustained schedule for significant new investment in the
university system.
UNIVERSITY INDUSTRIAL NEGOTIATIONS ON
AGAIN
The next schedule of collective employment
agreement negotiations has begun for university staff, with
the University of Otago the first institution to begin the
bargaining process. AUS will be initiating bargaining at
most universities in the next couple of months. Both the
Public Service Association and the Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education will be involved in joint bargaining with
AUS at some of those sites.
PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS THREATEN
LEGAL ACTION OVER CASH FREEZE
The chairman of the
Association of Private Education Providers, Kevin Smith,
says the Association is consulting lawyers over the freeze
at 2001 levels of the amount of public money they may
receive. The private institutions say the freeze represents
a broken promise that has cost them hundreds of thousands of
dollars. Last year the Government announced a 12-month
moratorium on the establishment of any new private tertiary
institutions [PTEs] seeking public money or offering new
qualifications that were already available elsewhere. But
some institutions gained exemptions to set up new courses on
the understanding they would attract government subsidies.
Then, in this year’s Budget, the Government announced the
pool of money available would be frozen at last year's
levels – around $150m. for the 400-plus PTEs - effectively
cutting, the private providers say, the amount of money
available for those new courses. AUS, along with other
tertiary education groups, has supported the moratorium,
emphasising that the public education system must come first
in the Government’s funding priorities. Public funding of
PTEs rose from $1.98 million in 1992 to over $151 million in
2001.
WORLD WATCH
AUT HAILS ACADEMIC FREEDOM VICTORY
In Britain, the Association of University Teachers (AUT)
has welcomed a vote by the Upper House of the British
Parliament, the House of Lords, to include a defence of
academic freedom in the Government's Export Control Bill.
The AUT has been working with the employers' group,
Universities UK, to have academic freedom enshrined in the
proposed legislation. The two groups have also worked with
Government officials and members of the House of Lords on an
amendment enshrining academic freedom that was acceptable to
both universities and the Government. The General Secretary
of the AUT, Sally Hunt, thanked members of the House of
Lords of all political parties who had ensured the principle
of academic freedom was not compromised.
NTEU ACTS OVER
MONASH V-C'S RESIGNATION
The Monash branch of the
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) is to seek a report
from the council of Australia's Monash University on its
selection process after the rapid departure last month of
newly-appointed Vice-Chancellor, David Robinson, for
plagiarism (see "Tertiary Update" Vol. 5 No. 25). A meeting
of staff and students at the university passed a motion
expressing grave concern at the impact of the incident on
the "good name and reputation" of the university and called
for a focus on teaching and research excellence to rebuild
its reputation. The NTEU will also seek negotiations for an
improved selection process for senior management, including
increased staff and student representation in the process.
Meanwhile, reports of corruption have been dogging
academic institutions around the world. A recent Chronicle
of Higher Education report states that in the United States,
colleges are engaged in what many academics think of as a
losing battle to prevent students from buying term papers
and admissions essays online. In Japan, a senior
vice-minister resigned in July after publicly admitting that
he had used his political influence to help a supporter's
grandson get into Teikyo University's medical school. While
in Britain, a Sunday Times newspaper reporter, posing as a
wealthy parent wanting to get his child into a University of
Oxford college, was reportedly told the child would be
admitted if he made a sizeable donation to the college.
BRITISH DELEGATION CALLS FOR ISRAELI ACADEMIC
BOYCOTT
A delegation of British lecturers and students
have called for an academic boycott of Israel after a visit
to the occupied territories of the West Bank and Gaza. In a
report in the Times Higher Education Supplement [26 July],
the delegates say they were left in no doubt that the
boycott was justified. They say the Israeli government has
destroyed the Palestinian education system by preventing
students from attending universities and schools. Curfews,
they report, have caused months of disruption to lectures at
Bethlehem University, meaning up to one-third of the
syllabus has had to be dropped. Roadblocks have also
prevented students from small villages from getting to
university. The delegation found strong support for the
boycott among Palestinians, many of whom see the actions
against universities as a concerted assault on Palestinian
education rather than an consequence of increased security
as the Israelis suggest.
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AUS
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