AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
Domestic university enrolment numbers slow
The
Association of University Staff says that data on
participation in tertiary education recently released by the
Minister of Tertiary Education reflects a continuing trend
of little growth in domestic students enrolling in
university education - with most growth occurring in the
shorter and cheaper education courses.
Figures released
by the Ministry of Education show that the number of
domestic students enrolled at universities increased by
1,587 (1.4%) between 31 July 2001 and 31 July 2002, up from
115,849 to 117,436. By comparison polytechnic numbers
increased by 5,371 (up 6.4%) and wanangas by 16,257
(144.2%). Domestic enrolments at colleges of education
dropped by 175 (-1.6%) and the number of students enrolled
with private training providers receiving government tuition
subsidies fell by 828 (-2.2%).
The overall growth in
university participation is skewed by significant growth in
the Auckland University of Technology, which still offers a
range of shorter, vocational courses. If the other seven
universities are considered alone, there is a significant
drop in participation.
Dr Bill Rosenberg, AUS National
President, said that, "The data supports the latest OECD
report which notes that New Zealand tertiary education
participation rates are above average in attainment of
certificates, diplomas and vocational courses, but below
average attainment in university level education - and
considerably behind countries such as Australia, the United
Kingdom and Canada in that respect."
"Relative to other
OECD countries, New Zealand is also currently producing a
below average number of PhD graduates," said Dr Rosenberg.
"If Government is serious about investing in research and
development and developing New Zealand as a highly-skilled
knowledge society, it must recognise that university
education is expensive. Students, particularly those from
currently under-represented groups, must be adequately
supported if they are to commit to university degree and
post-graduate study."
"If slow growth in university
enrolments continues, Government under-funding will clearly
be exposed. It was previously masked by faster growth rates,
but a continued participation decline will result in more
universities in financial difficulties."
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. International student numbers
leap
2. Export education levy details
announced
3. Strike looms at Canterbury
4. Massive
funding injection for UK universities
5. “London
Weighting” Strike Planned
6. Researcher
jailed
International student numbers leap
While
domestic numbers may be sluggish, the number of equivalent
full-time international students studying at New Zealand
universities has increased by 62% between July 2001 and July
2002, from 8,427 to 13,373. The most significant area of
growth was in the number of students from China which
increased from 3360 to 7889 over the same period, a growth
of around 135%. The figures do not include international
students undertaking sub-degree programmes such as
foundation and English language courses.
Export Education
Levy Details announced
Coinciding with the release of
increases in international student numbers, Education
Minister Trevor Mallard has announced details of the export
education levy to be paid by education providers. The levy
is expected to generate more than $2.8 million and is
intended to support a wide range of development and “risk
management” activities for the export education
industry.
From 10 January 2003, all education providers
will pay a flat fee of $185 as well as 0.45% of the gross
tuition fee income from foreign fee paying students into a
fund to be managed by the Ministry of Education. An
indicative budget of how the levy income will be spent
reveals that $453,000 will be allocated to promotions and
communications, $837,000 to capability development, $363,000
to quality assurance, $253,000 to research, $350,000 to
“industry body core operating”, $275,000 to set-up and
administration and $269,000 to “partial reimbursement of
funds advanced by Government on a recoverable
basis”.
Strike looms at Canterbury
Staff at the
University of Canterbury will meet on Friday this week to
consider strike action in protest against a 2% salary offer
made by the university during collective agreement
negotiations late last year. The salary offer was
overwhelmingly rejected at Canterbury after staff at other
New Zealand universities settled salary claims at between 3%
and 4%.
Members of the main on-site unions will vote on
a proposal which would see more than 1200 academic, general,
maintenance staff and cleaners take strike action for a 24
hour period during enrolment week (17 – 21 February). Two
stopwork meetings will be held during that week and academic
staff will vote on whether to refuse to work on enrolment
desks for a day.
AUS Branch President, Jane Guise, said
that while enrolment week was a sensitive time for staff to
strike, the unions believed that it was an effective time to
highlight concerns.
Staff will also stage a rally next
Monday, 3 February, to coincide with the campus visits of
the three short-listed candidates for the vacant vice
chancellor’s position.
Worldwatch
Massive funding
injection for UK universities
The British Government will
increase funding for higher education in the UK by
$2.3billion pounds (around $NZ7billion) over the next three
years. Details of the funding boost were released in a white
paper last week showing that spending on higher education
will rise from 7.6 billion pounds this year to 9.9 billion
pounds in 2005-06.
Also announced were plans to
“restratify” higher education and further concentrate
research funding, introducing a new 6 star rating for
departments with world-class research. The white paper
envisages a handful of elite research institutions, a group
of leading research universities, a group of leading
regional universities doing research and teaching, a number
of institutions concentrating mainly on teaching and a
cohort of former higher education colleges gaining
university status, but only for undergraduate
teaching.
British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, has made it
known that he wants part of the funding package to be used
to boost lecturers’ pay. At Labour’s national policy forum
on 1 December 2002, he said university lecturers were
'probably the worst paid workers in the public sector.'
“London Weighting” Strike Planned
British university
unions are gearing up for a second one-day strike next
Tuesday, 4 February, in a dispute over a “London allowance”.
Staff employed in 40 of London’s higher education
institutions currently receive an allowance of between 600
and 2,355 pounds, but are claiming 4,000 pounds. Unions are
angry that many university staff have seen no increase in
the London allowance since 1992, despite a 155 per cent hike
in the cost of living during the same period.
The joint
union action, led by the Association of University Teachers
(AUT), marks an escalation in the campaign, and follows
strike action in November, which forced a virtual shutdown
of institutions across the capital.
After initially
refusing to negotiate an increase to the allowance, the vice
chancellors have now requested that further meetings are
held on Thursday 14 February in an attempt to resolve the
matter.
Researcher jailed
The sentencing of
Australian-based academic researcher, and sometime Asia
Times Online contributor, Dr Lesley McCulloch to five
months' imprisonment in Indonesia earlier this month has
sent a clear signal that the Indonesian military's tolerance
for what it regards as foreign interference in domestic
issues has come to an end. It is the first such sentence to
be handed down for a foreigner in Indonesian legal
history.
McCulloch was sentenced to five months
imprisonment for allegedly violating a tourist visa while in
Indonesia's troubled province of Aceh in September. She had
published reports of human rights abuses while there on a
short term tourist visa, and had exposed the Indonesian
Military’s legal and illegal business interests in
Aceh.
It is believed the Indonesian military, the TNI,
wanted to send a clear message to other foreign researchers
and journalists who expose the TNI's activities, and had
pushed for McCulloch to be charged with possession of
military secrets.
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AUS Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
issues are archived on the AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz