AUS Tertiary Update
Academic freedom storm at
Canterbury
The storm over academic freedom, which blew up
at the University of Canterbury earlier this week, remains
unresolved with allegations and counter-allegations
following a decision by the University to destroy 500 copies
of the History Department journal History Now. The
controversy follows publication of an article by lecturer,
Dr Thomas Fudge, on a controversial Canterbury holocaust
scholar, entitled “The fate of Joel Hayward in New Zealand
Hands: from holocaust historian to holocaust?” The article
revisited the controversy that surrounded Hayward’s 1993
thesis which questioned the validity of holocaust history.
The decision to recall and destroy the May edition of
History Now led to the resignation of Dr Fudge and the
effective dumping of the journal editor, Professor Ian
Campbell.
Dr Fudge, has labeled the decision as
unconscionable and has told students that suppressing the
article contravened the Education Act which upholds the
academic freedom of university staff. The Act prescribes
the freedom of academic staff and students, within the law,
to question and test received wisdom, to put forward new
ideas and to state controversial or unpopular
opinions.
The University has defended the decision to
dump the journal saying that the overwhelming majority of
the academic staff in the History Department had agreed the
article, in its then form, should not be published in the
May issue of History Now. A statement from the University
says that other staff were concerned about possible
inaccuracies and misleading statements in the article, use
of internal documents without authorisation, and the naming
of specific individuals and businesses which could expose
the University to legal action including
defamation.
Adding to the intrigue, the Press ran an
abridged version of Dr Fudge’s article during the week.
While Tertiary Update was told that the editing was purely
on the basis of the article’s length, the University is
claiming the edited version omitted the specific material
that led to the concerns.
Dr Fudge declined to provide
AUS with an unabridged copy of the article.
AUS National
President, Dr Bill Rosenberg said the association strongly
defended the right to academic freedom and was closely
monitoring the affair to establish whether it was breached
in this case.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Governance review submissions due
2. Kiwis get
richer, students get poorer.
3. International enrolments
underpin Victoria enrolment growth
4. Academics in
degrees-for-cash inquiry
5. Pay deal offered by UK
employers
6. Chinese students test Blair over Iraq and
Kelly
Governance review submissions due
Discussion
within the AUS regarding the Association's response to the
recently released Report of the Review of NZ Tertiary
Education Institutional Governance continues. While AUS has
welcomed some aspects of the Report, significant issues
remain of concern. These include the Report's general
approach to the tertiary education sector which, despite
statements to the contrary, is seen as one homogeneous
entity. This continues what has been official practice in
recent years. As in earlier submissions on such issues, AUS
will be emphasising the need for differentiation. The
universities, in terms of their role, large size, statutory
obligations and culture often require a different approach.
AUS also believes that the Report does not uphold the
Associate Minister of Education's key parameter which was
to: “guarantee continued stakeholder representation on
governance bodies and democratic processes”. The TEC
deadline for submissions to the Report is 30 July.
Kiwis
get richer, students get poorer.
“The Social Report 2003,
released late last week by the Ministry of Social
Development, paints a rosy picture for most New Zealanders,
yet students are still the only group in society that must
borrow to meet their costs of living,” says Lincoln
University Students’ Association President Andrew
Kirton.
“Fewer and fewer students are eligible for living
assistance from the student allowance scheme because the
parental income threshold is still only $50,752 combined,”
Kirton said. “As a result, only approximately 1/3 of
students are eligible for the student allowance”.
“The
income threshold is not adjusted for inflation, so actually
decreases in real terms every year, meaning fewer students
will get an allowance,” Kirton said. “The average income, as
stated in the report, was $27,095, yet parent who earn
$25,376 will be over the threshold”.
“It just makes me
sick how the government will not assist people who are
actually educating themselves and will be able to make a
significant contribution to the nation,” said Andrew
Kirton.
International enrolments underpin Victoria
enrolment growth
Victoria University continues to
experience strong growth in enrolments, with an increasing
number of international students in Trimester 2. At the end
of last week, the University had enrolled 1,931
international students for Trimester 2 compared with a total
of 1,446 for the whole of Trimester 2 last year. Enrolments
for Trimester 2 close at the end of this week.
With more
than 17,108 students so far enrolled at the University this
year, Victoria has already broken the record of 16,624
students it enrolled for the whole of 2002. Enrolments will
get a further boost in November when students enrol for
Summer Trimester courses.
New international enrolments
for Trimester 2 have increased by 39 percent compared to the
same time last year. In the year-to-date, the University
has enrolled about 1,900 international students in
undergraduate and graduate programmes and a further 234 in
English Proficiency courses.
Vice-Chancellor Professor
Stuart McCutcheon said the number of students from China
remains steady and that Victoria had seen no obvious
evidence of the SARS driven downturn that had affected other
parts of the industry. He said that Trimester 2 enrolments
have also seen increased student numbers from the United
States and Germany, and enrolments from these two countries
now account for almost 300 students.
Professor McCutcheon
said “Victoria was increasingly seen as the destination of
choice for international students by providing quality
education in a supportive environment”.
Worldwatch
Pay deal offered by UK employers
The
Association of University Teachers (AUT) and other UK higher
education unions have received a salary offer from
university employers after lengthy negotiations which ran
into last weekend. The two-year offer for academic and
related staff equates to an increase of 3.5% for year one,
followed by 3% in year two, and is linked to a complex
package of conditions.
It falls well short of the AUT
claim which was for 14% over three years plus indexing to
movements in average earnings.
If agreed it would mean
that the current salary scales would be increased by 3.44%
from 1 August 2003 and a further increase of 3% from 1
August 2004. A new single salary scale of 51 points which
would come into effect in 2004, and to which universities
would gradually be expected to move, has been proposed as
part of the package. Movement to that new scale would be
dependent upon the introduction of new pay arrangements
including the conclusion of a role analysis/job evaluation
exercise. The employers estimate the average increases in
salary arising from transfers to the new scale would be
1.1%, and are therefore stating that the overall value of
the deal is 7.6% over two years. The London weighting would
go up 4 per cent.
The AUT is currently analysing the
offer and its national executive will be considering it at a
special meeting on Monday 28 July.
Academics in
degrees-for-cash inquiry
Eighteen people including
students, university administrators, lecturers and
professors were confined by judicial order to their homes in
and around Rome late last week as police continued an
investigation into what they said was a huge degree-trading
racket at Europe's biggest university. Investigators said
they had secretly recorded conversations worthy of a Mafia
thriller, in which law students at La Sapienza University
bought exam results using a code based on the names of
flowers.
(Guardian Saturday)
Chinese students test
Blair over Iraq and Kelly
Chinese students gave Tony
Blair a public mauling this week over the war in Iraq and
the death of David Kelly as controversy continued to dog the
prime minister during his Far East tour. Despite being 5,500
miles from home, Mr Blair found himself repeatedly put on
the spot and unable to escape the political crisis that has
raged in Westminster in his absence. He was ambushed by
students during a question and answer session at a Beijing
university over how he felt when he heard about Mr Kelly's
death on the flight to Tokyo, whether he had lied about
Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction and how he
planned to regain trust at home.
(Financial Times)
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AUS
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