AUS Tertiary Update
Legal action to stop further dismissals at Auckland
Legal
proceedings were filed in the Employment Authority this week
by the Association of University Staff (AUS) to stop the
dismissal of six lecturers and senior tutors from the Elam
School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland. All were
employed on a series of consecutive, fixed-term employment
agreements, one of them continuously for twelve years, but
were told their employment would end as a result of a
decision to consolidate approximately twenty-one jobs into
about half of that number. A further five cases initiated by
the AUS have been settled at mediation.
AUS Auckland
Branch Organiser, John Leckie, said around 80 percent of the
staff in the School had been employed on fixed-term
agreements, and that the Dean, Professor Sharman Pretty,
believed she could simply cut numbers by letting their
current fixed-term agreements end rather than going through
a proper consultation and management-of-change
process.
Mr Leckie said that the University did not have
genuine reasons based on reasonable grounds for using
fixed-term agreements, and he believed that the jobs were
permanent ones. He said the University had also breached the
Employment Relations Act by failing to advise the staff,
before employing them, of the reasons their agreements would
come to an end. “As such, we believe that all six are
permanent employees, and the University is not entitled to
simply dismiss and, in some cases, replace existing staff
with new ones.”
Earlier in the year, the University was
forced to reinstate a senior music lecturer after it refused
to confirm his appointment at the end of an initial period
of employment. The Employment Relations Authority also
ordered the University to pay $10,000 compensation and
reimburse lost salary. Although the University has appealed
this decision, it is now trying to invoke a redundancy
process involving the staff member before the appeal is
heard.
A broader view on the use of fixed-term employment
agreements, following the recent decision of the Employment
Relations Authority in the case between Susan Wood and
television New Zealand can be found on the AUS website at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/news/2005/woodcase.htm
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Loan loophole to be
scrutinised
2. Universities top contributors to
research
3. Questions remain for universities over trade
agreements
4. Stub out tobacco-funded research, says
lobbyist
5. Open Polytechnic’s unimpressive salary
offer
6. VCs attempt to kick unions off campuses
7. UK
universities still plagued by discrimination
8. US
slashes student-loan programmes
9. Dons clash with
Cambridge over intellectual rights
Loan loophole to be
scrutinised
The Minister of Education, Dr Michael Cullen,
says the Government may move to close a loophole which
allows borrowers to reclaim repaid student loans in order to
take advantage of the Government’s new interest-free-loan
policy. Under current legislation, student loan borrowers
who have made voluntary repayments are permitted to request
a refund of those repayments up to six months after making
them.
In Parliament yesterday, the National Party leader,
Dr Don Brash, used the example of a former student, Thomas
Banfield, who had asked Inland Revenue to refund $15,000 he
had voluntarily repaid a few months previously so that he
could place the money on interest-bearing deposit.
Mr
Banfield told Morning Report today that, while he feels bad
about it, obtaining the refund was within the rules of the
student-loan scheme and allowed him to invest the
interest-free loan money at between 8.5 and 9 percent
interest.
While Dr Cullen told Parliament that, though he
had no information on the particular case, he doubted Mr
Banfield would be the only person who would request a refund
in order to reinvest the money, and he would discuss the
issue with Inland Revenue.
The Inland Revenue
Department’s latest estimate was that $167.4 million was
made by way of voluntary repayments in 2004.
Universities
top contributors to research
Universities are the major
contributors to New Zealand’s research outputs, according to
a briefing paper prepared for the new Minister of Education
by the Ministry of Education. The paper reports that nearly
two-thirds of all New Zealand indexed research outputs are
produced from universities, New Zealand ranks second out of
twenty-two countries in indexed research outputs per million
dollars invested in research, tenth when measured per
person, but twentieth when measured by citation.
The 2003
quality evaluation for the Performance Based Research Fund
(PBRF) showed that around half the researchers are producing
work of national or international reputation. Philosophy,
archaeology, anthropology and most of the natural and
physical sciences were particularly high-performing areas.
Most university research-income growth has come from
increases in research contracts other than through Vote
Research Science and Technology, suggesting that
universities’ research activities are increasingly
responsive to the needs of industry and other
stakeholders.
The report also says that the PBRF seems to
be delivering improved focus on high-quality research.
However, it says this has led to a tension within
universities between research and teaching outcomes, with
research often taking priority because of the explicit and
direct link with funding. The labour-market dynamics of
competition for researchers with higher grades could have
wider implications for quality and lead to further variance
within the sector. The new performance element of the
student-component funding may shift this balance slightly
more in favour of high-quality teaching, although the
prestige value of research over teaching is likely to
remain, as the quality of research establishes academics’
and universities’ reputations, both nationally and
internationally.
The full Ministry of Education briefing
paper to the Minister can be found
at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=10907&data=l
The
Tertiary Education Commission briefing paper to the Minister
can be found
at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/downloads/a2z_publications/bim-post-election2005.pdf
The
Tertiary Education Commission Annual Report can be found
at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/downloads/a2z_publications/annual-report-30-june-2005.pdf
Questions
remain for universities over trade agreements
The
Minister of Tertiary Education has moved to reassure the
university and polytechnic sector that it will not be forced
to compete for public funding with overseas-owned tertiary
providers by the establishment of trade agreements, but
concerns nevertheless remain, according to the AUS.
In
response to questions from Green Party Education
spokesperson, Metiria Turei, Dr Michael Cullen told
Parliament that current trade negotiations will not affect
New Zealand’s ability to regulate the educational area nor
would the establishment of the Friends of Private Education
Exports, set up to protect and advance the interests of New
Zealand’s private-education exporters in the World Trade
Organisation (WTO) General Agreement on Trade in Services
(or GATS) negotiations. “The group was explicitly set up to
pursue improved export opportunities in private, not public,
education,” he said. “Of course, those providers that
already meet New Zealand regulatory standards in the private
sector can be overseas owned. That is the current
situation.”
Ms Turei also asked the Minister why the
Government is pushing for further free-trade agreements in
education when there is a real risk that New Zealand will
lose the right to limit the number of universities, the
number of overseas students, and the number of
English-language schools, or lose the right to require that
educational facilities be not-for-profit or have staff and
student representation on their boards.
In response, Dr
Cullen said that the Government would not be making any
initial offers that would limit the Government’s right to
provide, fund or regulate public services such as health and
education. “One can jump at shadows on the wall in that
respect, but they are puppet shadows, not real ones,” he
said.
AUS National President Professor Nigel Haworth
said, however, that controversy over the quality and
duplication of some courses and the explosion in sub-degree
enrolments illustrated the very real need for the Government
to be able to regulate the entire industry. “Given that
officials have not yet even defined private education within
the WTO rules, one wonders why Government would make it
harder for itself to protect the public-education sector by
entering such broad trade agreements.”
Stub out
tobacco-funded research, says lobbyist
The Smokefree
Coalition is calling on New Zealand universities to
introduce formal policies that prohibit them from working
with the tobacco industry, following revelations in an
article by University of Otago researchers that associations
between universities and the tobacco industry have continued
until at least 2004.
The paper, by George Thomson and
Louise Signal from the Wellington School of Medicine,
examines the extent of the relationship between the tobacco
industry and New Zealand universities, and the institutional
mechanisms that have been used to limit such associations.
It shows that one multi-national company, Philip Morris,
invested at least US$790,000 into research at the University
of Auckland between 1988 and 1996.
According to the
paper, there are few formal policies in New Zealand to
prevent associations with the tobacco industry but, by
contrast, a number of prominent Australian universities have
introduced formal limits. “If the evidence of harm to the
public interest from associations with the tobacco industry
is accepted, then, despite the risk to academic freedom,
formal policies to address such associations may be
warranted,” says the paper. “To be most effective, policies
by research institutions and funders on tobacco-industry
associations should be formal and explicit, and also need to
be comprehensive and effectively implemented.”
Smokefree
Coalition Director Leigh Sturgiss says that the tobacco
industry knows that associations with New Zealand
universities will give it more credibility in the eyes of
the public, and add legitimacy to its research. “Such
associations risk universities remaining silent about
industry behaviour and tobacco harm, university research
being perverted by the industry and the diversion of public,
scientific and government attention from tobacco harm.”
Ms Sturgiss urged all universities to introduce policies
against associations with the tobacco industry.
Open
Polytechnic’s unimpressive salary offer
Academic staff at
the Open Polytechnic have voted overwhelmingly in favour of
taking industrial action if an offer of a 1.5 percent salary
increase from their employer does not improve. The staff,
who are members of the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education (ASTE), say they find it difficult to reconcile
the employer’s offer, made during current collective
employment agreement negotiations, with a salary increase
paid to the Chief Executive Officer and with reported
surpluses of $4m for the last two financial years.
Phil
Dodds, ASTE Central Region Field Officer, said that union
members were dismayed at the pay offer, especially given
that they accepted a “bonus-type” payment in 2004 to
“assist” the Polytechnic deal with its struggling financial
position. “Already this year, inflation is hitting 3.4
percent,” said Mr Dodd. “Members have asked the question:
Where is the logic in such a miserly offer from the
employer?”
Mr Dodds said that some other polytechnics,
whose financial positions were considerable worse than that
of the Open Polytechnic, had acknowledged the contribution
of staff with reasonable pay deals. “Staff recognise that
The Open Polytechnic is an important institution for
delivering distance education across the whole of New
Zealand. However, they want real acknowledgement that their
goodwill has contributed to the institution’s overall
success,” he said.
The Open Polytechnic was among the top
seven performers in the polytechnic sector last year,
returning a surplus of 5.6% in 2004. In addition, its 2004
Annual Report shows that it has nearly $14m in investments
and one of the highest student-to-academic-staff ratios.
Worldwatch
VCs attempt to kick unions off
campuses
Vice-chancellors at three New South Wales
universities have attempted to use government funding
requirements to kick unions off campuses and adopt
discriminatory commercial practices. Letters received by the
Australian National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) order it
to vacate office space at the University of Newcastle,
Southern Cross University and University of New England.
Newcastle management is also refusing to allow unions to
commercially lease premises, drawing accusations of
discrimination.
The Australian Government is making
$A260 million funding contingent on individual universities
meeting its Higher Education Workplace Relations
Requirements, which include restricting union involvement,
restricting the content of enterprise agreements and forcing
staff onto Australian Workplace (Individual) Agreements.
Chris Game, State Secretary of the NTEU (NSW), said that
it appeared that the managers of the universities concerned
wanted to proactively use the new workplace requirements to
attack the Union. “We will resist management’s attempts to
pander to Minister Nelson by adopting a belligerent
anti-union approach. In the meantime, we’re not going
anywhere,” said Ms Game. “We will also be investigating
legal avenues such as trade practices and
anti-discrimination legislation, given that [Newcastle]
University sees fit to lease out considerable office space
to many other organisations and businesses, but not the
unions.”
UK universities still plagued by
discrimination
The true diversity of the academic
workforce and the need for modernisation are both revealed
in a major piece of research published in the United Kingdom
this week by Association of University Teachers
(AUT).
The Diverse Academy paints a picture of
universities in which approximately half of professional
staff are women and where a large number arrive from many
different backgrounds and nationalities, but where women and
non-white staff continue to be paid less. Worryingly, it
says, few UK black and minority ethnic (BME) staff choose to
enter a career in higher education.
The report’s key
findings include that 40 percent of academics are women, yet
men receive 14 percent more in pay; women are far more
likely to be employed on fixed-term contracts than men; BME
academics are paid 13 percent less than their white
colleagues; and that UK nationals from a black or Asian
background are heavily under-represented in the UK academic
population.
AUT General Secretary Sally Hunt said that,
while the diversity of backgrounds among staff in higher
education is something that great pride can be taken in, it
is clear that pay and employment discrimination on the
grounds of gender and ethnicity continues to bedevil UK
universities.
The Diverse Academy can be located at:
http://www.aut.org.uk/media/pdf/5/r/diverseacademy_oct05.pdf
US
slashes student-loan programmes
The United States House
of Representatives has narrowly approved, by 217 votes to
215, legislation that will cut about $US50 billion from
federal entitlement programmes by the end of the decade,
with more than a third of that ($US14.3 billion) coming from
the Government’s student-loan programmes. Fourteen
Republicans joined almost all of the Democrats in opposing
the Bill.
College lobbyists and advocates for students
had waged an aggressive campaign to defeat the measure,
citing a report, released this month by the Congressional
Budget Office, that said the budget-cutting Bill would
impose $US7.8 billion in new charges on students and their
families, resulting in an average increase of $US5,800 in
the interest individual students pay on their loans. The
rest of the student-loan cuts would come largely from
reductions in government subsidies to private lenders and
student-loan-guarantee agencies.
American Federation of
Teachers Legislative Director, Kristor Gowan, said the cuts
were at the expense of America’s most vulnerable citizens.
Dons clash with Cambridge over intellectual rights
Cambridge University is bracing itself for a battle over
the right of its academics to own their inventions in what
is being seen by some as a test of the leadership of
Vice-Chancellor Alison Richards. The University is planning
to reform its system of intellectual property rights, a move
it says will clarify who owns researchers’ inventions. The
plan involves controversial stipulations that mean the
university would play a part in every application for a
patent. Rebel academics are claiming that the wording of the
plan is an attack on Cambridge’s uniquely liberal system,
which currently allows them to own their discoveries and
control how and for what purposes they are patented.
Ross Anderson, a computing professor and a key figure in
the academics’ Campaign for Cambridge Freedoms, which is
opposing the changes, said he objected to a rule which could
allow the University to bind academics to doing research on
behalf of external sponsors without their agreement. “I
simply don't trust our bureaucrats to write contracts for
us. It is critically important that academics retain a veto
over their work. Otherwise people will make a deal with
side-effects which could trash their work without them
knowing,” he said.
Academics at the 800-year-old
institution have a unique role in the running of their
University and, along with owning their own intellectual
property rights, members of the University’s Regent House
can lobby for a vote on all amendments and additions to the
University's governing rules.
Education
Guardian
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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