AUS Tertiary Update
Seized Salient on Trade Me
The first copy of the student
newspaper, Salient, “liberated” after Victoria University
management seized the publication last week has been put up
for auction on the internet auction site, Trade Me. It comes
as the Victoria University of Wellington Students’
Association tries to recoup some of the $8,000 it lost in
legal fees and advertising revenue trying to overturn the
recent High Court injunction blocking its
publication.
The dispute arose recently after Victoria
University management became aware that Salient was about to
publish leaked preliminary information, prepared by the
Vice-Chancellor for the Council’s Finance Committee,
indicating the University would be considering tuition-fee
increases for next year of between 5 and 10 percent. Without
telling the students, University management obtained an
interim injunction in the High Court preventing Salient from
being published. They then seized all 6,000 copies of the
newspaper as they were being delivered from the printer,
intending to hold on to them until the substantive
injunction application was considered.
On the eve of the
injunction hearing, the parties settled the matter, with the
students returning the leaked papers, University management
lifting the injunction and returning the confiscated issue
of Salient and the parties issuing a statement saying that
there would be no further media comment.
In putting the
“liberated” copy of Salient on Trade Me, the newspaper staff
say they hope that the auction will help demonstrate the
strength with which New Zealanders believe in freedom of the
press and transparency in public bodies. “This gesture will
also underscore the lesson for any future organisations that
would consider using a similar tactic,” it says.
The New
Zealand University Students’ Association (NZUSA) says that
the outcry from students and the public over the release of
the confidential proposal to substantially increase tuition
fees at Victoria University should be a lesson to other
tertiary institution councils planning similar moves. “The
situation at Victoria has proven that tertiary institutions
are now willing to do almost anything to keep student
fee-setting procedures away from public scrutiny, even to
the extent of silencing students through the High Court,”
said Andrew Kirton, NZUSA Co-President. “The huge increases
proposed by Victoria University are shameful. While the
institution argues that it can’t afford lower fees, we can
assure it that students can not afford the increase. We
would urge other tertiary institutions to think carefully
before tabling similar proposals.”
Meanwhile, the
Christchurch College of Education last night voted to seek
permission from the Tertiary Education Commission to raise
its fees by 10 percent, double that allowed under the
current fee-maxima regulations.
The auction for the first
“liberated” copy of Salient, complete with verification of
its authenticity, can be found
at:
http://www.trademe.co.nz/Antiques-collectables/Postcards-writing/Other/auction-37493295.htm#history
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Salient’s troubles repeat
history
2. New Zealand pay gap widens
3. Workforce
review to enter second stage
4. Wananga distances itself
from Treaty claim
5. Flying courses face legal
wrangle
6. Cambridge tops international science
rankings
7. Call for elite group of Russian
universities
8. University unions demand pay
boost
Salient’s troubles repeat history
Last week,
Tertiary Update reported that it understood that the
injunction and seizure of Salient was the first time ever in
the publication’s history that such an action had been taken
against the magazine. Not so, it seems. We are told that in
1940, the Principal of Victoria University College, Sir
Thomas Hunter, following the intervention of Prime Minister
Peter Fraser, ordered Salient to cease publication after it
had published a short sketch critical of the
army-recruitment process, and was about to follow up with
commentary on freedom of expression. Salient was allowed to
reappear several months later after editorial guidelines had
been established. More details can be found in Stephen
Hamilton’s A Radical Tradition: A History of the Victoria
University of Wellington Students’ Association
1899-1999.
New Zealand pay gap widens
The pay gap
between men and women in New Zealand has widened over the
past year to June 2005, according to the latest New Zealand
Income Survey. The latest Statistics New Zealand Quarterly
Report shows that pay for full-time men went up by
approximately 6.3 percent compared to 3.2 percent for women.
Pay rates for part-time male workers increased by 8 percent,
compared to 2.8 percent for women. The report shows that
the gender pay gap has increased in the last year, with
women earning, on average, 82 percent of the earnings of
men, a drop from 86 percent in 2004.
AUS General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, who is a member of the Government’s
Pay Equity Task Force and Vice-President of the New Zealand
Council of Trade Unions, said that the widening of the
gender pay gap is significant and of particular concern.
“While workers may be pleased with the overall increase of
5.8 percent to wages and salaries since June 2004, these
figures show that women did not get an equal share of those
increases,” she said.
Figures being compiled by AUS
reveal that women employed in universities currently earn,
on average, 12.7 percent less than men, with the preliminary
analysis showing that the gap is wider among academic staff.
Data from one university reveal a $17,000 margin between the
genders, consistent with the recent publication of research
in the United Kingdom showing that the gender pay gap there
ranges between 6 and 17 percent across all academic
classifications.
Helen Kelly said that, while the
Government has set up the Pay Equity Taskforce to address
the pay gap in the state sector, the latest New Zealand
figures reveal the need to extend that work to the private
sector as a matter of high importance.
Workforce review to
enter second stage
The Tertiary Education Commission
(TEC) has called for expressions of interest from
organisations or individuals interested in managing the
second phase of the Strategic Review of the Tertiary
Education Workforce. The Review is intended to undertake a
stocktake of the tertiary education workforce and current
issues, advise on major workforce supply and demand trends
over the next twenty years, and any mismatch and advise on a
framework for describing and understanding future workforce
requirements. It is also designed to analyse issues relating
to the tertiary education workforce so that a more
comprehensive and strategic approach can be taken to
them.
The first phase, which was completed in July this
year, was asked to advise on the scope and objectives for
the second stage of the review, including proposals for the
on-going involvement of stakeholders and the need for
in-depth research. It proposed that the main research
project would be a comprehensive survey of tertiary
education staff and stakeholders designed to provide
information in a wide number of areas, including key issues
in recruitment and retention (salaries, career structures
and working environments), workloads, the role of casual and
part-time staff, skill shortages, barriers to workforce
diversity, links with employers and the community and the
effectiveness and availability of professional
development.
It also proposed that other research could
cover the aging of the workforce, the collection of
qualitative data, improving annual staff-data collection and
the sharing of best practice.
The second stage of the
review will produce a report which will describe the
capability of the tertiary-education workforce, identify
potential directions for change, propose initiatives for the
tertiary-education sector and recommend how these can be
implemented and monitored. It is due to be completed by 30
June 2006.
Expressions of interest in managing the second
stage are due with the TEC by 20 October 2005.
Wananga
distances itself from Treaty claim
In a move which has
been interpreted as distancing itself from the Aotearoa
Institute, Te Wananga o Aotearoa Chair, Craig Coxhead, has
issued a public statement saying that it is not a party to
legal action being taken by the Institute alleging that the
Government has breached its Treaty of Waitangi obligations
in its dealings with the Wananga. The Aotearoa Institute, a
charitable trust, is the former private training
establishment from which Te Wananga o Aotearoa developed.
The Waitangi Tribunal is considering this afternoon
whether or not to give urgency to a claim by the Institute
that the Crown’s failure to honour an agreement to pay the
Wananga $20 million due under a suspensory loan until it
satisfies a requirement that it has a proportion of 80
percent Maori students is both illegal and racially
divisive.
In his statement, Mr Coxhead says that the
Wananga is not a party to the application for the urgent
hearing, and that it remains in negotiation with the Crown
on the issue.
Mr Coxhead says, however, that the Crown
should make the suspensory loan available forthwith, and
that the commitment given by the Wananga that eligibility
for the loan be dependent on no less than 80 percent of the
students at TWOA be Maori should be renegotiated.
In
recent times, the Wananga has made a number of moves to try
and avert a decision by the Minister of Education, Trevor
Mallard, to remove the institution’s Council and replace it
with a commissioner.
Flying courses face legal
wrangle
Massey University is understood to be facing a
multi-million-dollar legal and academic grievance case after
concerns were raised about two of its aviation courses. The
Aotearoa Student Press Association says the students’ claim
could cost the university $4 million, based on a grievance
report presented last month.
Heli-Flight New Zealand,
which was contracted to provide practical flight training
for the students, is also suing the University for $2.6
million in the Auckland High Court, alleging breach of
contract on the grounds that the University’s School of
Aviation has failed to deliver the academic components of
its helicopter-flying courses, the Certificate in Aviation
and Certificate in Advanced Aviation.
The certificate
qualifies students as commercial helicopter pilots, and the
advanced certificate enables them to become instructors.
Aviation School Manager Captain Ashok Poduval said he
could not discuss the academic grievance report as it was
confidential, but said the School would ensure none of the
students was disadvantaged. “We have taken all the measures
to ensure that this litigation (Heli-Flight lawsuit) will
not disadvantage any students.”
Neither Poduval nor
Heli-Flight Managing Director Andy McKay would comment on
the legal proceedings.
Massey University spokeswoman
Rachel Donald would not comment on the University’s
subcontracting arrangement with Heli-Flight, or say whether
the University would review the subcontracting of its
courses.
The University was working on addressing the
students’ concerns but Donald could not say if that would
include fee refunds.
University management has not made
staff aware of the complaint.
From the Sunday
Star-Times
Worldwatch
Cambridge tops international
science rankings
Cambridge and Oxford Universities have
topped a world-wide sample of research-active science
academic institutions carried out for The Times Higher. For
the second year running, the British universities have come
first and second respectively in the peer review analysis,
with American universities taking six of the next eight
spots. The University of Auckland is the only New Zealand
institution to make The Times Higher top one hundred
rankings. At seventy-second it is up from ninety-ninth last
year.
US universities, the University of California at
Berkeley and Harvard University, are third and fourth
respectively, swapping their last year’s ranking. The
Australian National University takes thirteenth place, up
from eighteenth last year.
The top universities for
technology are led by the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and University of California, Berkeley, followed
by the Indian Institutes of Technology and Stanford. Again,
the University of Auckland is the only New Zealand
institution ranked; at forty-nine it is up from fifty-seven
last year.
The data are the first part of The Times
Higher World University Rankings 2005, which will appear
throughout October, and are available through subscriber
access at: http://www.thes.co.uk/statistics/
Call for
elite group of Russian universities
Russia needs an elite
group of universities to maintain high standards as it moves
to greater integration with Europe, according to Viktor
Sadovichny, Rector of Moscow State University. Professor
Sadovichny said Russia’s system of training specialists in
five-year diploma programmes must be protected.
“Too
many people talk about comparable standards [with Europe]
and not enough about quality. The quality of higher
education must not be compromised and we all know that the
quality of education at a lot of Russian universities
remains very high,” Professor Sadovichny said.
He said
there was a need for a Russian “Russell Group” of top
universities to ensure that the highest standards and best
traditions were maintained. “We very much want to create an
elite echelon of universities and, of course, there is a lot
of talk about who would be in such a group,” Professor
Sadovichny said. “Rather than a list of universities, we
should probably talk about the educational standards these
universities should meet. I think Moscow State can be
included and perhaps could even be head of this group.”
Professor Sadovichny said he preferred not to name
Russian Universities that might be included in such a
grouping but, when pressed, said that Moscow State and St
Petersburg universities regularly appeared on both Russian
and international lists of the top-rated colleges.
From
The Times Higher
University unions demand pay
boost
British university unions AUT and NATHE met with
their national university employers’ body this week to
demand that promises by vice-chancellors to spend additional
income on boosting staff pay would be honoured. The two
unions, representing nearly 70,000 higher-education
professionals, insisted that universities must now commit to
improving pay in the sector.
The unions estimate that
there will be an extra £3.5 billion in fees income coming
into the sector in England alone by 2009, with increases in
grant and other income also available in Scotland and Wales
to compensate for their lack of top-up fees.
Speaking
after the meeting, Sally Hunt, General Secretary of AUT, and
Roger Klein, head of NATFHE’s Universities Department said
that employers promised government that they would use extra
money to make academic pay a priority. They told employers
that they were prepared to negotiate on how the extra money
promised to staff would be allocated, but that members would
not accept them backtracking on their promise to boost pay.
“We stated our availability to meet urgently with a view to
avoiding a damaging dispute which would impact both on
universities themselves and their students. In order to
avoid conflict, all the employers have to do is honour their
promise,” they
said.
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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