AUS Tertiary Update
Australian universities shut
by strike action
Australian universities closed today as
staff from seven higher education unions went on strike in
protest at a government proposal to deny universities $404
million in funding unless they adopt a series of hard-line
industrial reforms. They include breaking-down collective
bargaining and forcing staff onto individual employment
contracts, called Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs).
The proposal has already resulted in Sydney University
withdrawing an agreement to increase salaries by 20% over
the next three years, and which was due to be ratified last
month.
The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) says
the government's industrial requirements would lift the
limits on casual employment in the university sector and
leave staff without many of the protections, such as
maternity leave, overtime and penalty rates, provided in
union negotiated agreements.
NTEU General Secretary
Grahame McCulloch said that collective bargaining had been
particularly successful in maintaining strong salaries and
conditions of employment for staff over the last decade and
the government’s actions were designed to try and break
this. “The government's requirements do not deal with the
real workplace issues facing academic and general staff,” he
said. “Instead, they will make the situation worse and erode
the quality of education provided by our public university
system”.
Mr McCulloch said the decision to take national
strike action would demonstrate to the government and
university management the determination of academic and
general staff to resist Commonwealth meddling and to protect
the independence of our public university system.
AUS
National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said that the fight the
unions were entering into was vitally important for the
future of the Australian university system and for
industrial relations in general. “Under the Employment
Contracts Act we experienced conditions similar to those the
Australian Federal Government is attempting to impose on
NTEU members, and they are aimed only at undermining union
strength, hindering fair bargaining, and denying the ability
of democratic unions to represent their members in their
workplace. In all workplaces this is appalling, in
universities it is unworkable,” he said
Higher education
unions in the United Kingdom will meet today to consider
their response to a failure to agree on new salary rates
there. Unions rejected an offer from the university
employers, made in July, which would have resulted in salary
increases of up to 7.6% over 2 years. The unions have argued
salaries are 28% behind comparable rates and have claimed an
increase of 14% over the next three years in addition to
further increases linked to average UK salary
settlements.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. TEC
budget blow-out
2. Massey students
remanded
3. Bargaining protocol agreed
4. VC questions
PBRF
5. Big response to tertiary innovation and
e-learning funds
6. Do good looks equal good
evaluations?
7. GATS demand withdrawn
TEC budget
blow-out
The Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) will
exceed its budget by $11 million in its first full year of
operation, from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004. Figures
obtained by Education Review under the Official Information
Act show an operating budget of $43 million, almost 35%
ahead of the estimated budget of $32 million. The figures
include $18.38 million for staff, $5.58 million for
contractors and $2.73 million for the implementation of the
PBRF.
The TEC was formally created on 1 January this year
and took over Skill New Zealand and part of the Ministry of
Education, as well as undertaking a number of new roles
specifically created for the commission.
TEC chair Andrew
West has told Education Review that $9.2 million of the
estimated budget would be for new roles.
It is understood
that a third of the increased funding was for assessment
work associated with the introduction of the PBRF, a further
third for the administration of new initiatives and the
remainder because of higher than anticipated costs
associated with the establishment of the commission.
Massey students remanded
Twelve students arrested in
last week’s protest against fee increases at Massey
University have been remanded without plea following an
appearance in the Palmerston North District Court. The
student are facing trespass and related charges following
the occupation of a part of Registry in which it is alleged
they broke down two doors and did thousands of dollars worth
of damage.
Police raided the offices of the Massey
extra-mural students’ association yesterday searching for
evidence related to the protest.
Bargaining protocol
agreed
An agreement on a bargaining protocol has been
reached between university unions and employers after
mediation in Christchurch this week. A number of dates have
also been confirmed for bargaining.
The bargaining
protocol, which governs arrangements and conduct between the
parties during the bargaining process, was finalised on
Tuesday after earlier discussions had reached an impasse
over representation and the use of information provided
during bargaining.
Some university’s had attempted to
limit the participation of staff representatives by
restricting the numbers of staff to be released on pay for
negotiations and by placing limits on which of the staff
representatives would have access to confidential
information during bargaining. Disagreement also remained
about the confidentiality and use of commercially sensitive
information.
Following mediation, the universities have
agreed to release staff representatives on pay for the
negotiations, but will review progress after 15 days. They
have also withdrawn the limitation on those staff
representatives to whom commercially sensitive information
would be made available. The unions have agreed to
provisions which are intended to establish parameters by
which any analysis of confidential information provided by
employers can be subsequently reported to union members.
The unions’ advocate, AUS Industrial Officer Jeff Rowe,
said that although it had required four days and mediation
to achieve a protocol, it would provide a good basis on
which the negotiations would proceed.
The negotiations
will commence on 6 and 7 November in Wellington with a
further six days scheduled before the end if the year. They
are 26 and 27 November (in Christchurch), 3 and 4 December
(in Wellington) and 15 and 16 December (in Hamilton).
VC
questions PBRF
The Australasian Research Management
Society conference in Auckland has been told that the
performance based research fund (PBRF) was demoralising
staff and eating up all extra money in bureaucracy.
Victoria University vice-chancellor, Professor Stuart
McCutcheon told the conference that the PBRF, which grades
staff from A to C on the basis of their research
publications and evidence of "peer esteem,” will consign a
good many researchers to the 'research-inactive' grade, not
because they are poor performers but because they are new to
the research community.
“What we have done is take $5 to
$6 million of research top-ups from the polytechnics and
spend them on overheads. My view is that, in a situation in
which we are strongly competitive internationally, we
shouldn't waste anything. We should spend every dollar that
we can on frontline researchers,” he said.
Big response to
tertiary innovation and e-learning funds
Two hundred and
seventy applications have been received for a share of the
$34 million available for the Innovation and Development
Fund (IDF) and the e-Learning Collaborative Development Fund
(eCDF). These funds have been established to improve the
“connectedness” of tertiary education organisations with the
needs of business and the community, and to foster the use
of technology-based learning tools. Both capital and
operational funding is available for projects to be
undertaken during the period 1 January 2004 to 30 June
2005.
Associate Education (Tertiary Education) Minister
Steve Maharey said “the number of applications received for
this new funding, and the calibre of the individual
applications, demonstrates that tertiary education
organisations have been carefully thinking about their
future role in the new system and how they could make use of
new learning technologies”.
The Tertiary Education
Commission will assess the applications and allocate the
funding. Applicants will be notified by 22 December 2003 as
to the result of their application.
Worldwatch
Do good
looks equal good evaluations?
Researchers at the
University of Texas have found that attractive professors
consistently outscore their less comely colleagues by a
significant margin on student evaluations of teaching. The
findings, they say, raise serious questions about the use of
student evaluations as a valid measure of teaching quality.
Students were asked to look at photographs of 94
professors and rate their beauty. Then they compared those
ratings to the average student evaluation scores for the
courses taught by those professors. They found that the
professors who had been rated among the most beautiful
scored substantially higher than those rated least
beautiful.
The research also found that both female and
minority professors earned lower overall ratings for their
teaching than their white, male peers.
GATS demand
withdrawn
A spokesman from the Norwegian foreign ministry
said last week that Norway would withdraw its GATS demands
on South Africa on higher and adult education.
The event
is followed by a strong statement by the South African
Minister of Education, Kadar Asmal, at a conference in
Norway, reported in Tertiary Update last week.
Norway has
informed other developing countries that they will withdraw
demands on the trade liberalisation of education if
requested.
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