AUS Tertiary Update
Otago polytechnic council
members gagged
The Otago Polytechnic council has
prohibited all members, including staff and student
representatives, from publicly speaking out against
decisions made by the council. It has also ruled that no
member, apart from the chairman, can speak to the
media.
The council voted by nine votes to four to adopt
the new rules which are part of a code of conduct governing
the conduct of council members. A proposed amendment to
allow divergent views to be expressed was defeated. The new
code stipulates that the chairman may take “whatever action
he regards as appropriate” if council members are found to
have breached the code of conduct.
Association of Staff
in Tertiary Education (ASTE) National President, Lloyd
Woods, said the decision flew in the face of common sense
and risked denying staff representatives their right to
academic freedom. He said he believed the “rather
unfortunate” performance of the council in recent years had
resulted in critical media scrutiny and may have led to the
ban. It showed the council was shy of its performance being
open to full scrutiny.
“A statement by the polytechnic
council chairman, Graeme Crombie, that the code is a
voluntary guideline and ‘had no teeth’ to gag council
members is at odds with the powers of censure it gives him,”
said Mr. Woods. “ASTE will be challenging the
decision”.
Mr. Woods said the recent review of tertiary
institution governance has suggested the Education Act be
amended to include measures to deal with clear breaches of
duty by council members and that should be all that was
required.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. University negotiations begin
2. Waikato fees
to increase
3. Nominations open for 2004 teaching
awards
4. Princeton may spend millions to improve gender
equity
5. Australian staff endorse national
strike
6. King's College members accept London
offer
University negotiations begin
University unions
and employers will meet in Wellington on Monday and Tuesday
next week to commence collective bargaining for the
university sector.
The unions are seeking new national
collective employment agreements for academic and general
staff, as part of an effort to ensure the long term
sustainability of high-quality university education in New
Zealand. The new agreements are proposed to replace the 13
current collective agreements negotiated separately at each
of the universities.
Central to negotiation is a claim
for a salary increase of 10% per annum over the next three
years for academic staff and 10% in 2004 for general staff
plus increases in job evaluation alignments to the higher
quartiles of the salary market.
The unions will also be
seeking to increase staff involvement in strategic
decision-making within the universities and introducing
measures for protection against increasing
workloads.
Association of University Staff National
President, Dr Bill Rosenberg, said that staff have been
caught in a pincer between eroding levels of funding and
constraints on increasing tuition fees which had led to low
salaries, increased workloads and administration, and a
deteriorating university infrastructure. “During the last
decade most universities have been constantly restructured
resulting, almost without exception, in the loss of
frontline staff. Morale is at an all-time low,” he
said
Dr Rosenberg said that vice-chancellors and
university councils had lacked the courage or the collective
will, particularly through the 1990s, to seriously challenge
government on funding. He said that unless the universities
and unions break through funding barriers, bargaining would
continue to have limited outcomes and would neither deliver
the increases needed to neither restore salary levels to
acceptable levels nor be sufficient to maintain the quality
and reputation of academic programmes.
Dr Rosenberg said
this was no longer acceptable to staff and that national
bargaining would provide a means by which all parties,
including government, could work together to address the
issues of funding, salaries and quality.
Waikato fees to
increase
Waikato University is proposing to increase
student tuition fees overall by 3.78% for 2004 in a move
that will increase revenue by around $1 million.
Waikato
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould, said that the
university had suffered financially as a consequence of the
fee stabilisation scheme in place between 2001 and 2003, and
that this was the first opportunity since 2001 to address
tuition fee levels. “With the continued demand on resources
from both the internal and external drivers, including the
university’s fiscal targets, there is no option but to
generally increase most fees for 2004 to the levels
permitted by the Fee Maxima policy,” he said.
The
increases, which were approved by council this week, will
see fees for most undergraduate and taught postgraduate
courses increase by 5% or by a lesser percentage where 5%
would go above the allowable fee maxima. Fees for
undergraduate teaching courses, doctoral, research masters
degrees and executive education fees will not
increase.
Last month the university announced a
scholarship scheme which would see every Year 13 A bursary
student enrolling in a full-time bachelor’s degree programme
receiving $3,000 and B bursary students receiving
$2,000.
Meanwhile, the Northland Polytechnic has voted to
keep tuition fees for 2004 at the same levels as 2003. The
polytechnic has 1800 full time equivalent
students.
Nominations open for 2004 teaching
awards
Nominations have opened for the 2004 Tertiary
Teaching Excellence Awards. The awards, which were
established in 2002, recognise excellence in tertiary
teaching, promote good teaching practice and enhance career
development for tertiary teachers. There are three
categories of awards; sustained excellence, excellence in
innovation and excellence in collaboration. The winner of
the Prime Minister’s supreme award receives $30,000 and
recipients of the excellence awards will each get $20,000 to
be spent enhancing their teaching career and promoting best
practice.
Copies of the 2003 Tertiary Teaching
Excellence Awards publication, along with details of the
2004 awards, have been sent to tertiary education providers.
Nominations for the 2004 awards close on 31 March 2004 with
winners announced midway through the year.
Further
details are available from the NZQA website:
www.nzqa.govt.nz
Worldwatch
Princeton may spend
millions to improve gender equity
Princeton University in
the US has announced the appointment of a new administrator
to oversee gender-equity issues, following the
recommendations of a group of professors that spent more
than a year studying the status of female faculty members on
the campus.
In a report issued on Monday, the panel said
that the proportion of female professors in the sciences and
engineering at Princeton remains small, and that female
faculty members in the fields are not as happy as their male
counterparts.
The panel recommended that Princeton
establish a $10-million fund to "promote the recruitment,
hiring, and retention of women faculty" in the sciences and
engineering.
The Princeton panel surveyed professors in
the sciences and engineering, and analysed hiring records,
salaries, and the rates at which men and women are granted
tenure. Over all, the percentage of female faculty members
in the natural sciences and engineering at Princeton
increased from 8.4 percent to 13.9 percent between 1992 and
2002. Four departments saw no increase in the proportion of
women during that period and one declined from 30 percent to
19 percent. Women make up more than 20 percent of the
faculty in only 2 of Princeton's 14 science and engineering
departments.
The report says that women are also
"underrepresented" in leadership positions. Only two science
and engineering departments have had a female head, and
women held only 5.7 percent of endowed chairs in 2002.
Australian staff endorse national strike
University
staff have voted to take a nationwide 24 hour strike at all
38 of Australia’s public universities on October 16, in
pursuit of their bargaining claims. The decision was carried
overwhelmingly by delegates at the National Tertiary
Education Union’s (NTEU) conference in Melbourne this
week.
“This vote is a direct response to the Government’s
announcement last week to deny universities up to $404
million in public funding unless they adopt a range of
hardline workplace requirements, including placing staff on
Australian Workplace Agreements and lifting limits on casual
employment,” said Grahame McCulloch, NTEU General
Secretary.
The vote followed a decision by University of
Sydney management not to sign an enterprise bargaining
agreement with the NTEU because it did not include the
requirements set down by the Government.
“The
Government’s latest proposals will do nothing to deal with
the real workplace issues staff face. Indeed the proposals
will only make the situation even worse. They are a direct
attack on the collective bargaining process, the right of
staff to be represented by the NTEU, and an unnecessary
interference in university affairs,” said Mr
McCullough
King's College members accept London
offer
Staff at King's College in London have voted to
accept an offer to increase their regional allowance by
8.9%. The offer was made by King's management in the face of
a renewed commitment to industrial action by Association of
University Teachers (AUT) members over the lack of progress
in resolving the London Allowance dispute.
The £2,323
allowance falls short of the £4,000 called for by the AUT
and other higher education unions, but means that staff at
King's will get an increase in their allowance for the first
time in 11 years.
The offer from King's has started to
have an impact elsewhere in London. Planned strike action at
five other institutions has been suspended while members are
balloted on offers similar to that accepted at King's, or
because the management is now holding serious
talks.
Strikes are taking place at most other pre-1992
London institutions where the freeze on the capital's
allowance continues.
The AUT has also called a special
meeting of its policy-making council after rejecting a pay
offer (detailed in earlier issues of Tertiary Update) made
by higher education employers during lengthy negotiations in
July.
AUT's Executive Committee sent its negotiators back
to the table in order to try and secure a satisfactory offer
and the Executive Committee warns that industrial action
will be considered if any new offer falls short of AUT's
objectives. The Council meeting on 16 October will discuss
the latest developments and next steps.
******
Tertiary
Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays by the Association of
University Staff
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