AUS Tertiary Update
Major salary boost sought for university
staff
University unions are recommending a salary claim
of up to 30% for academic staff over the next three years in
pay negotiations expected to get under way soon with
university employers. A similar claim, to increase general
(non-academic) staff salaries by 16% over the same period,
along with a proposal to develop a national job evaluation
scheme, will also be recommended.
The claims are expected
to be endorsed by union members at a number of meetings over
the next fortnight in the seven universities to be covered
by the two proposed new national collective employment
agreements for academic and general staff.
The academic
salary claim is based around comparisons with the major
Australian universities and domestic relativities with other
groups of teachers. It is also intended to address
recruitment and retention problems forecast to hit
universities internationally by the end of the decade.
Estimates are that more than 230,000 new academic staff will
be needed by 2010 in the five countries (including New
Zealand) from which New Zealand universities recruit the
majority of their academic staff.
Spokesperson for the
university unions, Association of University Staff General
Secretary Helen Kelly, says analysis shows that New Zealand
salaries lag significantly behind those in Australia. “On a
straight conversion basis, New Zealand salaries are as much
as 22% behind and, even when using OECD Comparative Price
Level data, it is apparent that purchasing power value is up
to 13% behind. Higher superannuation and leave benefits give
the Australians a further margin of at least 11% on their
New Zealand counterparts,” she said.
Ms Kelly said that
the proposed national job evaluation scheme for general
staff would provide a mechanism to ensure that there is a
consistent and equitable approach to salary-setting across
the entire New Zealand university sector. “The current
national skills shortage makes it imperative that university
employers recognise that the role of highly skilled general
staff is essential to ensuring and maintaining the high
quality of New Zealand’s research-based university
education.”
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. TWOA
hits back at critics
2. Mallard maintains research link
to stay
3. $7.5 million donation to Business
School
4. Lincoln in sound financial position
5. $4.4
million to support top researchers
6. New figures show
big increase in student loans
7. Botswana professor
detained
8. University heads sacked over
skit
9. Harvard President to temper style
TWOA hits
back at critics
Te Wananga o Aotearoa has back at critics
this week with its Council Chair, Craig Coxhead, challenging
ACT MP Ken Shirley to repeat outside the protection of
parliamentary privilege allegations that it has misused
public funding. It also announced that it will create two
new positions, those of Chief Financial Officer and Chief
Operating Officer, to support its Chief Executive, Rongo
Wetere.
The Wananga has come under sustained attack over
the last few weeks, including accusations from a number of
quarters that it siphoned off millions of dollars into shelf
companies to line the pockets of senior management and their
families, offered students inducements in direct
contravention of government policy, enrolled tutors in
programmes they were teaching, purchased learning programmes
from family members and associates for inflated sums and
purchased property at an exclusive resort.
In a written
statement, Mr Coxhead urged students and staff to ignore
election-year political hype, and assured them that it is
business-as-usual at TWOA. “TWOA has some of New Zealand’s
leading business figures sitting on its Audit Committee,” he
wrote. “Our organisation is one of the most audited in the
land. There is nothing to hide, but much to be proud
of.”
Similarly, in a memo to staff, Mr Wetere said that
TWOA would strongly oppose any political agenda and would
vigorously refute the misleading allegations that seek to
undermine its hard work and dedication. “I can assure you
all that there is no solid basis for these concerns when
matched against the achievements of our institution. Our
organisation has proven, through the success of our students
as well as an endless stream of government audits and
reviews, that we can produce high-quality results in both an
academic and financial sense.”
In a bulletin entitled
Setting the Record Straight, Mr Wetere responded further,
denying eleven specific allegations, including that TWOA had
purchased a literacy programme for “an extraordinary
seven-figure sum” from his fiancée. “This is simply not true
and a deeply hurtful allegation to the people concerned,” he
wrote.
Meanwhile, the Government is awaiting a report
from the Auditor-General investigating allegations of
conflicts of interest at TWOA before it acts further. In
turn, Auditor-General Kevin Brady has said that the scope of
his inquiry may be widened following the current
allegations.
Mallard maintains research link to stay
In
his first formal meeting with tertiary education staff
unions, Minister of Education Trevor Mallard has confirmed
that he wants the research-teaching link in New Zealand
degrees to be maintained and protected. Trevor Mallard said
he supports retaining the legal requirement for degrees to
be taught mainly by people engaged in research. This view
was also supported by the majority of submissions on last
year’s Tertiary Education Commission paper on the
distinctive contributions of tertiary education
organisations, where the idea of breaking the link between
tertiary teaching and research was floated. Association of
University Staff National President, Professor Nigel
Haworth, said he welcomed Trevor Mallard’s comments.
“Protecting and strengthening the Education Act requirements
for research is vital if the international standing of New
Zealand degrees is to be maintained. TEC must pay attention
to the widespread opposition to separating research and
teaching and look instead at ensuring that the current
requirement is being met by all degree granting
providers.”
$7.5 million donation to Business
School
The University of Auckland’s Business School will
benefit from a $7.5 million donation, understood to be the
biggest-ever single contribution to a New Zealand tertiary
education institution from a private citizen. Owen Glenn, an
expatriate entrepreneur, has boosted fundraising for the
Business School with the donation which will be spread over
five years.
University of Auckland Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Stuart McCutcheon, said the donation was a
landmark for New Zealand. “Many overseas institutions,
particularly in the USA and Britain, work in a philanthropic
environment where gifts and bequests to learning
institutions are the norm. This contributes greatly to their
success and international status. But donations on this
scale are rare in New Zealand education and Mr Glenn’s gift
sets a new benchmark for this country.”
The Business
School’s fundraising target of $75 million will, it says,
enable the University to provide world-class programmes and
facilities, and draw top academic talent to New
Zealand.
Lincoln in sound financial position
An
operating surplus of $5.3 million for 2004 has been posted
by Lincoln University on the back of a “buoyant and diverse
range of activities connected with its core business of
teaching and research.” In a statement released this week,
Lincoln Vice-Chancellor Professor Roger Field said the
surplus was in line with the University’s target, but was
enhanced by a particularly successful 2004.
Professor
Field said that a revenue increase of $10.8 million over the
previous year, to $82.4 million, led to improvement across
core business performance. He reported that international
tuition fees increased by $4.2 million, while research
contracts increased by $3.1 million. “The University’s
surplus for 2004 is particularly notable insofar as it was
achieved in an environment of increasing operating costs,
particularly related to compliance costs, and personnel
expenditure.”
“It must be concluded that Lincoln
University is in a sound financial positions,” said
Professor Field.
$4.4 million to support top
researchers
The Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard,
has announced that forty-four students have been awarded Top
Achiever Doctoral Scholarships worth nearly 4.4 million. A
further sixty students are soon to be advised of their
success in the Enterprise Scholarships Programme.
Trevor
Mallard said that the students who have been awarded the
doctoral scholarships by the Tertiary Education Commission
will receive just under $550,000 this financial year, and
nearly 4.4 million over three years. “This government is
committed to developing world-class research in this
country, and these scholarships are designed to support
research at PhD level in all disciplines and increase the
supply of highly-trained researchers and highly-skilled
graduates,” he said.
The majority of the awards went to
the University of Auckland, with twenty-two, the University
of Otago with five, and Canterbury and Victoria each with
four.
New figures show big increase in student
loans
Figures released in the student loan scheme’s
December 2004 quarterly report show that the number of
people with student loan balances over $60,000 has grown by
a third since 2003, and those with loans over $80,000 have
grown by 67 percent over the same period. The report also
shows a 9 percent increase in student loan borrowers
currently overseas.
New Zealand Students’ Association
Co-President Andrew Kirton said the situation for students
was getting worse. “This is what happens when the Government
allows fees to go up by hundreds of dollars year after year
and slashes living allowances for independent students,” he
said. “The Government must act now to reduce fees and widen
access to allowances to ensure an entire generation of New
Zealanders is not burdened with a lifetime of
debt.”
Education Minister Trevor Mallard has said that
while he knows more needs to be done to improve student
loans and allowance rules, Labour is committed to giving
students a fair go. He said that between 2000 and 2004,
students had been saved $250.9 million in interest charges
as a result of the Government’s interest write-off policy.
“Labour has kept its word to students and their families by
making tertiary education more accessible and more
affordable,” he said.
Worldwatch
Botswana professor
detained
A seventy-two-year-old Australian professor was
arrested last Friday night on the orders of the President of
Botswana, shortly before he was due to give a seminar
critiquing the growing autocracy in that country. Professor
Kenneth Good of the Department of Political and
Administrative Studies at the University of Botswana was
detained and given forty-eight hours to leave the country
after it was learned he was to give a paper, ‘Presidential
succession in Botswana: No model for Africa’, at a
departmental seminar this week.
Professor Good has
appealed the deportation order and the matter is due to be
heard on 7 March. The Court has ordered Immigration not to
harass Professor Good in the meantime.
Professor Good’s
colleagues at the University of Botswana say his deportation
is an assault on academic freedom and an affront to the
fundamental values of democracy. The Academic and Senior
Support Staff Union said the action taken against Professor
Good undermined academic integrity and it vowed to support
him to the very end.
University heads sacked over
skit
Two senior staff at the Baranavichy University in
Belarus have been sacked after being accused of failing to
control students who poked fun at the country’s President,
according to a report in the Times Higher. In the opinion of
the provincial authorities, the University’s Pro-Rector and
her deputy were responsible for a skit performed at a
student comedy festival in Minsk last November. The Brest
Regional Executive Committee decided that the behaviour was
unacceptable because disrespect for the President was
disrespect for the country, and the pair were
sacked.
Harvard President to temper style
The President
of Harvard University, Lawrence Summers, has promised that
he will temper his management style and treat people with
more respect following a threat by academic staff to hold a
no-confidence vote over his leadership style.
Dr Summers
apologised this week for remarks he made at an Economics
meeting in January in which he suggested that women might be
under-represented in the top tiers of science and
mathematics because of innate differences of ability from
men.
In a statement reported in the Chronicle of Higher
Education, Mr Summers said that his remarks had
substantially underestimated the impact of socialisation and
discrimination on the gender gap, and that he should have
left such speculation to those more expert in the field.
“I am committed to opening a new chapter in my work with
you,” he told staff. “I pledge to you that I will seek to
listen more carefully and to temper my words and actions in
ways that convey respect and help us work together more
harmoniously,” said Mr Summers. “No doubt I will not always
get this right. But I am determined to set a different
tone.”
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz