AUS Tertiary Update
Underfunding blamed for
deficit forecast
Underfunding has been blamed by the
University of Otago for significant budget blow-outs
predicted for its Schools of Medicine. The Christchurch
School of Medicine is expected to post a $5 million deficit
this financial year, while the Dunedin and Wellington
Schools are expected to run deficits of $2.5 million and $1
million respectively.
The University’s Acting Assistant
Vice-Chancellor of Health Sciences, Professor Peter Innes,
has warned that if the Government does not increase funding,
staff numbers and courses may have to be cut. The University
receives around $57 million per year from the Government for
its health programmes.
The Press reports Professor Innes
saying that the University was concerned about the financial
state of its programmes which were struggling under a
Government-imposed cap of 325 on annual student enrolments
and a tuition fee cap of $10,000 per student.
Professor
Innes said that high staff recruitment and retention costs
were placing a strain on the schools as the University had
to compete with hospital and health boards for health
professionals. Under current salary structures, base
salaries for medical specialists are $20,000 higher than for
equivalent university staff, with the differential expected
to increase to at least $40,000 within 5
years.
“Recruitment has become a serious problem,” said
Professor Innes. The real problem is salaries. We just
cannot afford to keep them (specialist staff).”
Professor
Innes said there were no easy answers as medical schools
were working on cost reduction plans for already-tight
budgets. “It worries me that we can’t reduce costs without
reducing staff . . . it’s something that we’re going to have
to look at very seriously,” he said.
The Dean of the
University of Auckland Faculty of Medicine and Health
Sciences, Professor Peter Smith, said his school was
“stressed”, but still running on budget. “(These issues)
indicate that Government needs to readdress the whole issue
of funding medical schools,” he said. The Auckland School
receives $33 million per year in Government funding.
Acting Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary)
Margaret Wilson said the Government had given more money to
tertiary institutions every year since it came into office
and it was up to each institution to decide how to allocate
its money. The Government had also raised the cap on funded
medical students by 20 each to the Otago and Auckland
medical schools.
Association of University Staff (AUS)
National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said that the
Government had been consistently warned over the last five
years that the situation in the schools of medicine and
dentistry had reached a critical stage. “Ms Wilson’s
response shows an unfortunate lack of understanding,” he
said. “If medical schools are to retain their international
accreditation they must be resourced in a manner which
allows them to recruit and retain high calibre clinical and
other staff. It is a red herring to say that the government
had given more money to the tertiary sector each year. As
the recently released research on University funding by Guy
and Helen Scott shows, universities are getting a decreasing
share of the tertiary funding pie, and student numbers and
costs are rising faster than the funding they receive. The
plight of the medical and dental schools is a symptom of
underfunding across the whole university sector.”
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. PBRF report due
soon
2. VCs and Government must avert university staff
strike action
3. AUT posts $6.5m surplus
4. College
head to desert
5. Vote on new UK pay offer
6. Student
sues over PhD comments
PBRF report due soon
The
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) has confirmed it hopes
to release its report on the Performance-Based Research Fund
(PBRF) to participating institutions by the end of April,
with the public release to follow about a week later.
A
spokesperson for the TEC told Tertiary Update that the
Commission is currently working through the process and
hoped to finalise the timeline and other details relating to
the report’s release later this week. Arrangements for
consultation with tertiary institutions over the release of
comparisons between New Zealand universities in the PBRF and
British universities in the Research Assessment Exercise
RAE) are also expected to be released.
The High Court
last week continued an interim order blocking the release of
the comparisons until proper consultation had taken place
between the TEC and universities.
VCs and Government must
avert university staff strike action
Students have called
on vice-chancellors and the Government to act quickly to
avert planned strike action by university staff. It follows
the decision last week by university staff around the
country to take strike action over five weeks starting from
Wednesday 28 April in support of pay claims and new national
collective employment agreements for academic and general
staff
“The vice-chancellors need to make a decent pay
offer to staff to stop disruptive strike action,” said Fleur
Fitzsimons, Co-President of the New Zealand University
Students’ Association (NZUSA) “University managers have an
obligation to students to provide the right conditions for
study, including fair pay for university staff.”
“The
Government and the universities will be to blame if strike
action goes ahead. They must start to value university staff
in New Zealand,” said Ms Fitzsimons.
“If the Government
wants universities of a world class standard, they have to
start putting their money where their mouth is and fund them
properly,” said Ms Fitzsimons. “Students are keenly aware of
the fact that staff at New Zealand universities are
overworked and underpaid and support their claims for better
pay and conditions.”
University unions and employers will
meet again on 20 April to try and resolve the impasse in
negotiations.
AUT posts $6.5m surplus
The Auckland
University of Technology (AUT) recorded a $6.457 million
operating surplus in 2003, more than $1.25 million ahead of
a budgeted $5.2 million. The University’s 2003 annual
report, published this year in a compact disc format, shows
a growth of 1,113 equivalent full time students (EFTS) in
Ministry of Education funded programmes, from 13,031 to
14,144. International EFTS increased by 746 (41%), from
1,828 in 2002 to 2,574 in 2003.
The University’s $6.457
operating surplus was derived from a total income of $168
million of which $81 million (48%) came from Government
operational funding, and $67 million (40%) from student
tuition fees. From the tuition fee income $35.7 million
(53%) came from international students, meaning that for the
first time ever the University derived more income from
international fees than from domestic tuition fees.
The
University boosted its research performance with 1,203
“research outputs” recorded at a rate of 1.6 per full time
academic staff member. The report lists 881 academic staff
and 733 allied staff, giving an academic staff to student
ratio of 16.1 to 1, down on 17.3 in 2002 and 17.0 in 2001.
College head to desert
Principal of the Christchurch
College of Education, Dr Ian Hall, has announced his
resignation and is leaving to take up a position as a
director of two colleges of higher technology in the United
Arab Emirates city of Ras al Khaimah.
Dr Hall told The
Press that he appreciated the support he had received from
the College Council and acknowledged the professionalism and
dedication of staff. He said the move was a career
opportunity for him.
Council Chairwoman Wendy Ritchie
described Dr Hall as a person of ability and strategic
vision. “We have been privileged to have had Ian as our
Principal for (the last eight years) and he will be sorely
missed,” she said.
Dr Hall said he left the College
concerned about the ongoing struggle to attract secondary
teachers. “Until the community gets serious about the work
schools and teachers do, we will continue to lose good
people from the profession and struggle to attract
sufficient numbers,” he said.
Dr Hall takes up his new
appointment in August.
Worldwatch
French Government
backs down in dispute with scientists
French scientists
are celebrating victory after the Government gave ground on
key issues in a long-running dispute over government support
of scientific research. Some two hundred directors of
research laboratories and scientific research teams had
earlier resigned from their administrative duties, and tens
of thousands of researchers had signed an on-line petition
in protest about research funding. They claimed that the
Government was neglecting the public research sector and was
undermining its very survival.
The scientists’ main
demands were for the immediate payment of overdue research
funds from 2002, an increase in the number of junior
researchers and the convocation of a national assembly on
research.
After the intervention of French President
Jaques Chirac, negotiations between the Government and
scientists resulted in agreement in all areas in dispute.
Notably, 550 contract jobs have been made permanent and
another 1,000 new university positions have been
agreed.
Vote on new UK pay offer
The Association of
University Teachers (AUT) is currently balloting union
members in the United Kingdom after delegates to the AUT’s
annual conference recommended that a new pay offer from
university employers be accepted. If accepted by members the
new pay offer will give salary increases of between 8.7% and
24.7% over the next two years. The average increase is
understood to be around 12.2%. Staff at the top of grades
would receive lower increases while those on the lower end
of the salary scales will receive a higher increase. The new
offer applies only to old (pre-1992) universities.
AUT
General Secretary Sally Hunt said that while the AUT was
disappointed that the improved offer applied only to old
universities, it was the best achievable through
negotiations.
The union held UK-wide strike action
during February and then, in March, staged other protest
action which included a boycott of student
assessments.
The ballot will conclude on 28
April.
Student sues over PhD comments
A PhD student who
was told that his work was “some of the dullest and most
unimaginative” an examiner had seen is seeking almost
£100,000 from Royal Holloway, University of London. The
music student has been told by a lawyer that he has a strong
claim for breach of contract and negligence after he was
told repeatedly that his work was progressing
satisfactorily, only to have it ridiculed by external
examiners.
One examiner reported, “I find this music some
of the dullest and (most) technically unimaginative I have
come across at doctoral level and, perhaps more importantly,
lacking in any real originality of style, approach or
intent.”
The student had originally appealed against a
decision not to award him a PhD, but withdrew the appeal and
sought compensation. His lawyer has claimed that the
student’s supervision was wholly inadequate. “Four outside
examiners were clear in their view that his work was not of,
or even close to, PhD standard. Yet he was consistently told
by his supervisors and advisors that his progress was more
than satisfactory.”
His lawyer is claiming damages for
inconvenience or discomfort, and loss of earnings for five
years “wasted
study”.
********************************************************************************
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