AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 34, 19 September
In our lead story this
week…..
MEDIATION RESULTS IN NEW SALARY OFFER AT OTAGO
Staff at the University of Otago are to meet this week
to consider a new salary offer from their employer of 3%, up
from an original 1.5% over a 12-month period. Changes to
conditions included in the new offer will also be discussed.
Combined Unions' spokesperson Dr Shef Rogers says the
increased offer and the removal of some employment claims
was sufficient to warrant taking the offer back to members
for consideration. Dr Rogers says industrial action
affecting the setting of exams will continue until members
vote to end it.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1.
NZ Govt & VUW partners in ANZ School of Government
2.
Signing on the dotted line
3. New Pro Vice-Chancellor
for Victoria
4. ATSA survey 'women and student
debt'
5. UNSW pay offer proves controversial
6. TUC
signals opposition to GATS
7. Retired academics targeted
to fill Commonwealth vacancies
8. Review of 9/11 impact
on academic freedom
9. UCLA entry tougher for
foreigners
NZ GOVT & VUW PARTNERS IN ANZ SCHOOL OF
GOVERNMENT
The Prime Minister, Helen Clark has announced
that the New Zealand government will be a partner with
Victoria University in a new Australian and New Zealand
School of Government. Also involved are the state
governments of Victoria and Queensland, the Commonwealth of
Australia government and the universities of Melbourne,
Brisbane and Canberra. The new school will offer masters
degrees in public administration as well as executive
development courses. A small full-time teaching faculty
will be based at Melbourne, with other teaching done by
faculty at the other partner universities.
SIGNING ON THE
DOTTED LINE
Palmerston North-based tertiary institution
UCOL has signed a community charter to provide tertiary
education and training in Wanganui. The signing follows the
merger at the end of last year of the Wanganui Polytech with
UCOL. And the New Zealand International Campus has signed a
lease formalising its tenancy of the former Central
Institute of Technology campus at Heretaunga in Upper Hutt.
The campus became vacant when CIT merged with Hutt Valley
Polytechnic to form the Wellington Institute of Technology.
Other international education providers are also expected to
set up bases at the Heretaunga campus.
NEW PRO
VICE-CHANCELLOR FOR VICTORIA
Professor Pat Walsh has been
appointed Pro Vice-Chancellor and Dean of Commerce and
Administration at Victoria University. He replaces
Professor Neil Quigly, who competes his term in the position
at the end of this year. The Pro Vice-Chancellor is a
member of the university's senior management team with
responsibility for the schools of accounting and commercial
law, economics and finance, information management,
marketing and international business, and the Victoria
Management School.
ATSA SURVEY 'WOMEN AND STUDENT DEBT'
The Aotearoa Tertiary Students' Association (ATSA) has
surveyed 338 women as part of a study of the impact on women
of student debt. ATSA president Julie Pettett says the
organisation decided to do the survey because the majority
of tertiary students at all levels except doctorates are
women. "The focus of the research has been on the lived
experiences of women and how they perceive the benefits and
deficits which have flowed from their student loan debts
after they have completed study,” she says. ATSA will
release the findings to government next week.
WORLD WATCH
UNSW PAY OFFER PROVES CONTROVERSIAL
An offer by
the University of New South Wales of a total 12% pay rise
over three years for academic and general staff and a
AUS$3000 a year living allowance for academics has upset
both general and academic staff unions. The union
representing general staff has rejected the offer because of
the extra loading for academic staff. The academic staff
union is unhappy with parts of the offer that broaden the
categories of staff that could be employed on contract and
casual basis. President of the National Tertiary Education
Union (NTEU) Carolyn Allport saying more flexibility in
hiring casuals will have disturbing implications for entry
jobs and the career paths for young academics. The level of
the pay offer is expected to have a flow-on effect on the
coming round of enterprise bargaining and could add
AUS$500m. to university staff costs by late 2005.
OPPOSITION TO GATS
The Association of Teachers and
Lecturers wants the Trades Union Congress (TUC) to persuade
the British Government to stop supporting the General
Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). The Association says
the GATS erodes the working conditions of public sector
employees and is also "a challenge to democratic policy."
RETIRED ACADEMICS TARGETED TO FILL COMMONWEALTH
VACANCIES
The Association of Commonwealth Universities
(ACU) is setting up a database of retired academics from
around the world who are willing to take up short-term
contracts at universities in Africa, Asia and the Caribbean.
The scheme – known as the Retired Academics Database or RAD
– is prompted by shortages in key areas such as business and
accounting, mathematics, computing, medicine and the
sciences. ACU envisages putting the retired academics into
vacant posts for between two months and two years, allowing
the universities time to find a permanent person. For more
information, visit the RAD website at
www.acu.ac.uk/adverts/rad.
REVIEW OF 9/11 IMPACT ON
ACADEMIC FREEDOM
The American Association of University
Professors (AAUP) has set up a committee to review academic
freedom in the wake of the September 11 2001 terrorist
attacks, saying it is concerned at an array of recent events
suggesting limits may be being set. The review will include
responses by academic leaders and politicians to
controversial speech and teaching, restrictions proposed by
the federal government on university research that is
considered sensitive but not classified, and restrictions on
foreign scholars and students.
UCLA ENTRY TOUGHER FOR
FOREIGNERS
The University of California, Los Angeles says
it will scrutinise foreign applications to its biomedical
and life-science programme after some Chinese students
submitted fraudulent application documents. In future, no
foreign students will be accepted until faculty members have
independently verified the accuracy of documents. The
programme will also only accept students from top
institutions in China - Fudan, Tsinghua and Beijing
universities - and will require documentation to be sent
directly from the universities, rather than from the
students themselves. "The message we're sending out is that
if you're on our short list, and you're sending a fraudulent
transcript, you'll be found out," a UCLA spokesperson said.
The university had initially threatened to suspend all
admissions of Chinese students, but later softened its
stance. After some admissions officials and students
complained that Chinese students were being unfairly singled
out it was decided to expand the verification rules to
include all foreign students. However, officials said the
initial efforts would focus on applicants from China.
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