AUS Tertiary Update
CPIT boss must be sacked, says English
The
National Party spokesman on Education, Bill English, has
called for the sacking of the Christchurch Polytechnic
Institute of Technology CEO, John Scott, following the
release of an Auditor-General’s report into possible
conflicts of interest in CPIT’s Cool-IT community education
computing programme. He has also called on former
Christchurch Mayor Vicki Buck, who has been at the centre of
the controversy, to disclose how much money she has received
from her association with a private company involved with
the programme.
The Auditor-General was asked to
investigate the management of conflicts of interest at CPIT
after allegations that Vicki Buck, CPIT’s Development
Manager, was also a director and shareholder of Brylton
Software, CPIT’s joint-venture partner in running the Cool
IT programme. CPIT had drawn more than $13.8 million in
public funding for running the courses, of which more than
$6 million went to Brylton Software.
Mr English has
called for action after the Auditor-General’s report showed
that, while there was no evidence that Ms Buck had acted to
misuse her position, the CPIT allowed her to be put in a
position which gave her the opportunity to use her
CPIT-funded time, resources and position to enhance the
value of her private financial interests in Brylton
Software. The Auditor-General’s report found that the
existence of this conflict of interest raised a serious
management issue for CPIT which had not been dealt with
properly. It said that the CPIT should have excluded Ms Buck
from anything other than the most peripheral involvement in
the Cool-IT programme, and declined to consent to her
appointment to the joint-venture committee as a
representative of Brylton Software.
CPIT management told
the Auditor-General that Ms Buck’s conflict of interest was
“adjudged not to be material or problematic”, and had
subsequently failed to adequately inform its Council about
it. It went on to say that John Scott believed it was up to
him to manage the conflicts, and there was nothing wrong
with the situation.
Mr English said that Mr Scott had
grossly mismanaged the conflict of interest at the heart of
the Cool-IT scandal. “If the Council doesn’t sack him,
Minister Steve Maharey should sack his appointments to
Council,” he said. They wasted $15 million of public money
on a bogus course, and $6 million of that ended up in a
company in which a senior staff member had a “keen awareness
and involvement” according to the report. If the CPIT
Council won’t bring John Scott to account, Maharey must hold
the Council itself accountable and sent them packing.”
In
response to a statement from Ms Buck saying she had made no
money from the Cool-IT programme, Mr English has called on
her to disclose Brylton’s profits and dividend policy, and
to declare she will not share in those profits.
The
Auditor-General’s report can be found at
http://www.oag.govt.nz/HomePageFolders/Publications/cpit-cool/default.htm
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. New initiative to support
tertiary teaching excellence
2. Massey jobs may be
axed
3. New V-C for Victoria
4. Fear of a return to
Soviet taboos
5. LMU staff “demoralised"
New initiative
to support tertiary teaching excellence
A major new
initiative to support excellence in tertiary teaching was
announced earlier this week by the Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey. Speaking to the
Association of University Staff conference in Wellington, Mr
Maharey said a National Centre for Tertiary Teaching
Excellence will be established next year to build on the
work already undertaken to acknowledge and reward excellence
in tertiary teaching. The Government has agreed to provide
up to $4 million a year for the Centre’s operating costs.
“The standard of tertiary teaching is already high,”
said Mr Maharey. “Like governments around the world, we are
keen to support tertiary teachers in areas like curriculum
development, methods of assessment and good teaching
practices.”
The National Centre for Tertiary Teaching
Excellence will promote effective teaching and learning
through describing the components of effective teaching and
learning, documenting systems and practices (with examples
and case studies) required for effective teaching and
learning, providing a clearing house for research on
teaching and learning, networking educators at local and
regional levels, and undertaking research into teaching and
learning.
“The National Centre will also explore the need
for tertiary teaching qualifications and support the
development and availability of quality professional
development options for tertiary teachers,” said Mr Maharey.
“A Teaching Matters Forum will be set up to provide advice
on the establishment of the National Centre for Tertiary
Teaching Excellence and other issues like the annual
Tertiary Teaching Excellence Awards.”
Mr Maharey said
that the “innovative approach” of the Teaching Matters Forum
will ensure that effective teaching and learning is seen as
the cornerstone of a high-performing and effective tertiary
education system. “We’ll use the feedback we receive from
tertiary staff to develop our efforts to pursue excellence
in teaching and learning,” he said.
Massey jobs may be
axed
More than sixty jobs may be axed from Massey
University’s College of Sciences following an emailed
announcement that current spending is “untenable”, and that
changes have to be made so that Massey can concentrate on
areas of expertise it wants to specialise in.
Of the
sixty jobs under threat, forty will go to save money and a
further twenty positions will be replaced by people who have
the qualifications to match the University’s future
strategic direction, according to a report in the Manawatu
Standard. It is proposed that the cuts will be achieved
through a targeted voluntary resignation/retirement
programme, initially aimed at those who have expressed an
interest in leaving, part-time staff already engaged in
outside interests and academic staff who have relatively
small student numbers, who work in areas of declining
strategic importance or who are not significantly involved
in either research or College management and administration.
In a paper to staff, Massey’s College of Sciences
Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor Robert Anderson, wrote that
the two critical issues are that staffing costs are too high
when compared with revenue, and staff have an unsustainable
teaching portfolio involving too many papers with too few
students. His paper said that agriculture, veterinary
sciences, life sciences, land, water and the environment and
industrial innovation via engineering were general areas
that the College’s “distinctive character” would need in the
future.
AUS Massey Branch President Harvey Jones said he
believed that the Palmerston North campus would bear the
brunt of the cuts because the newer science-teaching
programmes at Albany and Wellington focus on more popular
papers. He told the Manawatu Standard that it could “suck” a
minimum of $3.5 million in wages out of the local economy
from 2006. “That’s going to have a major effect on this
city,” he said. “And it’s not just those wages, it’s the
spouses’ wages as well, as families shift away to get work”.
Mr Jones said that the parlous state of science-research
funding in New Zealand meant it was unlikely that those
people who lost their jobs would get other similar ones in
Palmerston North.
Forums will be held at Massey’s three
campuses this week for staff feedback and questions.
New
V-C for Victoria
Victoria University has announced the
appointment of Professor Pat Walsh as its new
Vice-Chancellor. From 1 January 2005, he will replace
Professor Stuart McCutcheon, who will take over as the
Vice-Chancellor at the University of Auckland. Professor
Walsh was selected for the position ahead of two other
candidates, one from Australia and the other from the United
Kingdom.
Professor Walsh, an industrial relations expert,
is currently Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Dean of the Faculty of
Commerce and Administration at Victoria. Previously he was
Head of the School of Business and Public Management, now
the Victoria Management School, and the Director of the
Industrial Relations Centre.
The University’s Chancellor,
Rosemary Barrington, said she was delighted to have
appointed a person of the calibre and scholarly stature of
Professor Walsh. “With his strong commitment to academic
values, together with the forward momentum of the
University, Professor Walsh will strengthen Victoria’s
extensive relationships with the many communities it
serves,” she said.
Professor Walsh said he was excited
about the new challenges presented by the role. “Victoria
University is an outstanding university with a vibrant and
stimulating community of scholars and students, supported by
able and committed general staff,” he said. I look forward
to taking the Capital City University forward as a
pre-eminent provider of quality, research-led university
education.”
AUS Victoria Branch President David
Weatherburn said that, while Professor Walsh was perhaps the
least experienced of the three candidates, he had a strong
and proven commitment to Victoria and was familiar with the
New Zealand university system. He said that Professor Walsh
had previously been active within AUS and had promised to
engage with AUS on matters of interest.
Worldwatch
Fear
of a return to Soviet taboos
Belarusian authorities are
clamping down on the scope of higher-degrees dissertations
in a move believed to be politically motivated, according to
a reprt in the Chronicle of Higher Education. It reports
that the Higher Attestation Commission has refused to confer
qualifications and has banned individuals from teaching on
the basis of the content of their work. The move has alarmed
some Belarusian scholars who fear a return to the Soviet
practice of forbidden themes and persons.
Dissertations
for candidates’ and doctoral degrees are defended before a
panel of experts appointed by individual universities, but a
degree cannot be conferred without the Commission’s
approval.
In one example of change, a History lecturer
at Brest University has been refused a candidate’s degree
and banned from teaching because her dissertation was on the
life and work of Kastus Yezavitau, a military leader in
Belarus’s struggle for independence in 1918-20. The
Commission Chairman said the lecturer was unfit to have
contact with young people.
The Chronicle says the
lecturer’s supervisor was drawn into the dispute after
lodging an appeal against the decision. The day after the
appeal was lodged, the supervisor’s contract to take over a
new prestigious job as the Director of the Institute of
History of the Academy of Sciences was cancelled.
It is
reported that he died a short time later, as have several
academics who have clashed with the state in recent
years.
LMU staff “demoralised”
A detailed survey of
academic staff at London Metropolitan University has
revealed a bleak picture of a thoroughly demoralised
workforce who feel undervalued, ignored and poorly led by
their senior management. The survey, organised by UK
lecturers union, Nafthe, was sent to almost 1100 staff in
all categories of academic ranking.
Of the four hundred
staff who responded, 72 percent said they were dissatisfied
or very dissatisfied with the support they get from the
University, 65 percent were dissatisfied or very
dissatisfied about the amount of influence they have over
decisions, and 67 percent were dissatisfied or very
dissatisfied about the extent to which the institution
values their work.
Most staff reported dissatisfaction
with the way the University has handled changes since its
creation in 2002. When asked how they would rate the
relationship between senior management and staff, not one
respondent rated the relationship as very good, while 85
percent rated it as poor or very poor.
Roger Kline, head
of Nafthe’s universities department, said that the most
stunning revelation in the survey was that so few staff
think that anything has been managed well at senior levels.
“There clearly appears to have been a serious failure of
leadership at London Metropolitan that requires fundamental
change,” he said.
The results come nearly eight months
into a dispute over the University management’s attempt to
impose a new, inferior employment agreement on academic
staff from the former Guildhall site of the new
University.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
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the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz