AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
Pre-Budget announcements offer little for
varsities
Pre-Budget announcements for education have
given little confidence that funding woes in the university
sector will be significantly eased in this year’s Budget, to
be presented on 15 May.
Education Minister, Trevor
Mallard, announced this week that additional funding of
nearly $167 million over four years would be given to fund
774 new teaching positions in primary and secondary schools
and funding in the early childhood sector would be increased
to “recognise that salaries are going up” - and to save
parents from having to “fork out” for those additional
salary costs.
No such commitment has been given for
universities. While the pre-budget announcement said that a
cash injection for universities will be announced in the
Budget it is understood it will only be sufficient to
cushion the need for significant increases in student
tuition fees.
AUS General Secretary, Helen Kelly, said
today that in order to ensure that New Zealand universities
retain world class staff the Minister must ensure, as he has
done in the early childhood sector, that funding is not only
increased, but that the increases are earmarked for salaries
and improved working conditions. She noted the national
bargaining of kindergarten teacher’s collective agreements
as the driver behind these increases and said this confirmed
the AUS decision to bargain nationally.
The Budget will
contain details of the fee maxima, fund some specific
“research initiatives”, spell out the student component of
tertiary funding for the next three years, and provide money
for the first stages of a strategic workforce review.
Also
in Tertiary Update this week:
1. Postgrads likely to be
excluded from fee maxima
2. $85m Industry Training
Package revealed
3. Social science research funding
announced
4. Car parking saga heads to
court
5. Rejected ideology finds way to UK
6. Thumbs
down to recruitment inducements
Postgrads likely to be
excluded from fee maxima
The Association of University
Staff (AUS) has expressed concern that postgraduate students
may be excluded from new tertiary fee maxima regulations,
due to be announced in the Budget. It means that tuition
fees for students studying at advanced levels will be exempt
from regulation, and institutions will be free to set fees
at whatever level they determine.
AUS National President,
Dr Bill Rosenberg, said today that the latest OECD data
indicates that New Zealand’s graduation rate for advanced
research programmes, PhD or equivalent, is low by comparison
to other OECD nations.
A 1991 Ministry of Education
report cited cost as a factor in the low recruitment of
postgraduate students after figures showed that
undergraduate numbers were increasing while postgraduate
enrollments were static.
Dr Rosenberg said that allowing
any increase in postgraduate fees would threaten prospective
growth. “Given the economic and social importance of these
students to New Zealand’s research base, incentives are
needed to encourage more students to complete postgraduate
work. Increasing costs for postgraduate students is
unacceptable and not in the national interest,” he
said.
Dr Rosenberg also pointed to the need to ensure our
academic workforce is replenished, noting that a PhD is
generally required as the base qualification for university
academic positions.
Calling on the Government to include
postgraduate students in the fees maxima regulations, Dr
Rosenberg said that it is not a matter which should be left
to individual institutions to decide
$85m Industry
Training Package revealed
An industry training package
was announced by government today as a part of the
pre-Budget releases. $84.3 million in additional funding
will be invested in the Industry Training Fund in an attempt
to increase the number of workers participating in workplace
learning to 150,000 by 2005.
As a part of the package,
the government is to join forces with Business New Zealand
and the New Zealand Council of Trade Unions to promote the
benefits of workplace learning in what has been described by
the Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary), Steve
Maharey, as “future proofing our economy against
debilitating skill shortages and international
uncompetitiveness.”
Also included in the package is
funding of $50,000 to develop a proposal for a national
centre for vocational education and training
research.
Social science research funding announced
A
project to network New Zealand’s leading tertiary sector
social scientists and to share their expertise with policy
makers heads up an $8.6 million funding package announced
this week. $5.208 million of the funding will be for a
project to link researchers in the tertiary sector to “build
up critical mass in priority areas in the social sciences
aligned with the government’s goals”. It includes a range of
disciplines which can make a significant contribution to New
Zealand’s social, economic and environmental
goals.
On-going operational funding of $1.5 million
annually will be provided to support the project and a
one-off capital grant of $500,000 will be available in 2004.
Additional funding will also be invested through the
Foundation for Research, Science and Technology in the
Budget to support social science research.
Several other
specific research initiatives are also being funded in the
Budget to give the government better information on which to
make policy decisions. These include a new national clearing
house for information on family violence, additional
questions being added to Statistics New Zealand’s Household
Labour Force Survey to show the extent to which New
Zealander’s are participating in education and training, and
a research project to examine sickness and invalids benefit
dynamics to inform the government’s welfare reform
programme.
AUS National President, Dr Bill Rosenberg,
said it was encouraging to see the importance of social
science research being recognised by the government.
Car
parking saga heads to court
Canterbury University staff
are to ask the Employment Authority to determine whether
free car parking at that university is a condition of
employment. The move comes after the University of
Canterbury implemented an annual parking charge this month
after having previously provided free parking. Mediation
between AUS and the university failed to resolve the matter
and an application to the Employment Authority to have the
charges held off until the matter was resolved was
unsuccessful. The case is expected to be heard in
July.
Worldwatch
Rejected ideology finds way to
UK
Former New Zealand politicians, Sir Roger Douglas and
Ruth Richardson, are proposing a radical overhaul of British
Education. In a report from UK think-tank Reform’s
Commission on the Reform of Public Services, they propose
that parents are given purchasing power to educate their
children by means of a voucher system or tax credit, heads
and teachers are given the right to buy their schools, and
that education regulations are cut to a minimum. The report
says the objectives of a reformed system would be to
transfer the purchasing power from government providers to
individual parents and to deregulate the supply of education
so that new providers can enter the sector. Pay and
conditions, they say, should be determined on a school by
school basis. Richardson and Douglas make up two of the
three people on the Reform’s Commission.
Thumbs down to
recruitment inducements
Proposals by the Higher Education
Funding Council for England to allocate £20 million over
three years so that universities can boost recruitment have
been criticised by vice-chancellors and teachers unions.
Recruitment supplements of up to £9,000 will be available
only to those who have never taught in higher education
before and who will do at least ten hours a week of
teaching.
Lecturers' union Natfhe said the scheme would
be divisive and damaging, and would create ill feeling
between existing and new staff. Natfhe said the supplements
would mean new lecturers with no experience could earn
£26,000 - more than lecturers who started on the basic
£22,000 would earn after three or four years. The new
recruits could be on £33,000 in their third year if they
receive both their supplement and annual pay increment.
Ivor Crewe, president elect of the Vice Chancellor’s
body, UUK, said: "While we are pleased the government has
recognised the size of the recruitment problem and would
welcome any additional money to help, we must be clear that
this is just a short-term palliative when what is really
required are sufficient resources to address the pay
problem."
(THES)
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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