AUS Tertiary Update
Minister acknowledges salaries need to improve
The
Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, has sent
the strongest signal yet that the Government intends to make
funding available to start the process of addressing salary
problems in the university sector. In an exclusive interview
for the AUS Bulletin, Dr Cullen acknowledged that university
salaries had moved ‘less quickly” than other comparable
salaries in New Zealand, and needed to be addressed over a
period of time.
Dr Cullen said that, while he did not
have the resources to resolve the problems in “one burst”,
he recognised that adjustments to salary levels needed to be
made. In a very clear statement, he indicated that
Government has a part to play in addressing salary problems.
“Universities can come to the party with a certain amount,
and the Government perhaps needs to come to the party with
some this year, and then try to continue to move over a
period of time so that we see university salaries, at the
academic level particularly, moving a little faster than
some comparable salaries so there’s a period of catch-up.
And maybe that catch-up is a bit faster at the front end,”
he said.
He said that, while it was hard to define a
time-period in which salaries could be expected to catch-up
to other comparable salary levels, the process could not be
indefinite and he hoped that funding could be agreed this
year as a part of the current salary round.
Consistent
with the tenor of other recent policy announcements, Dr
Cullen also raised the issue of increased differentiation
within the tertiary-education sector during the interview.
“The Government and the Tertiary Education Commission have
been working with the vice-chancellors on the development of
the proposed funding formula, and of opportunities both for
more differentiation between the university sector and other
sectors within tertiary education and between universities
individually in terms of more specific identification of
where they see their key roles and their key strengths
moving forwards,” he said. “If I see a trend, I’d prefer to
see more differentiation than less. I think that provides
the opportunity to provide more excellence around the
place.”
The full interview with Dr Cullen can be found in
the May issue of the AUS Bulletin, due out next week.
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. University of Auckland
makes major economic contribution
2. Student-allowance
numbers going down
3. Asia Foundation voices concern at
Canterbury cuts
4. Deed signals new way forward for
University and Polytechnic
5. Canadian academic-freedom
ruling upheld
6. Talks fail to break UK
deadlock
7. US academic salaries falter for second
year
8. RQF trial under fire at Monash
9. Driven to
dishonour
University of Auckland makes major economic
contribution
University of Auckland Vice-Chancellor
Stuart McCutcheon says that an economic study released
yesterday places a conservative value on the University’s
annual contribution to the Auckland region. The New Zealand
Institute of Economic Research (NZIER) study, The University
of Auckland: Economic Contribution to the Auckland Region,
estimated the regional economic impacts arising from the
expenditure of the University and its students at almost
$4.4 billion.
The study, which focuses on the immediate
flow-on effects of spending at the University and by its
students, measured net economic benefits the region would
miss out on if the University did not exist. NZIER estimated
the University and its students’ spending resulted in $4.39
billion of “output” being added to the Auckland region
during 2005.
Professor McCutcheon says the study
highlights the University’s significance to the Auckland
region. “The University is renowned as a long-established
Auckland institution and a centre for educational
excellence,” he said. “The NZIER’s research adds to this,
giving us a useful sense of the University’s economic
contribution.”
Professor McCutcheon said, however, that
the research didn’t measure long-term effects, like the
impact of future income streams from University graduates
who stay in Auckland, and does not seek to quantify the
University’s role in generating knowledge spillovers to
other sections of society. “It does not account for the
other consequences of the University's research efforts,” he
said. “These are becoming increasingly important to us. Our
research makes for more innovative and relevant teaching,
strengthening our institutional capacity.”
Other key
findings from the study include that the total direct
expenditure impact of the University, its staff and students
in 2005 was $1.34 billion; that the University provided
4,332 full-time equivalent jobs and that the University
contributed $2.43 billion worth of output to the Auckland
regional economy.
The study drew on data from numerous
sources including Statistics New Zealand, the New Zealand
University Students’ Association (NZUSA) and the
University’s financial records.
A full copy of the
report can be found
at:
http://www.auckland.ac.nz/uoa/about/uoa/plans/plans.cfm
Student-allowance
numbers going down
The number of students in the public
tertiary-education sector receiving a living allowance has
dropped significantly in the last four years, according to
information provided to the New Zealand University Students’
Association (NZUSA) by the Ministry of Education. The
figures, released under the Official Information Act, reveal
that the total number of students receiving a living
allowance dropped from more than 57,000 in 2001 to 47,500 in
2005. In the university sector alone, the numbers decreased
from 34,290 in 2002 to 30,373 in 2005, a drop of more than
11 percent.
The largest single drop in the university
sector was at Massey, where 4,610 students received a living
allowance in 2005, compared to 5,599 in 2002. “That is 989
(or 17.6 percent) fewer students being supported while they
study,” said NZUSA Co-President Conor Roberts.
Other
significant decreases occurred at the University of Waikato,
where 2,672 students received a living allowance last year,
compared to 3,541 in 2002 (a drop of 24.2 percent), and at
the University of Canterbury, where 3,645 students received
the allowance last year, compared with 2,903 in 2002 (a drop
of 16.2 percent).
Of the universities, only Victoria has
had an increase, up by 4.2 percent from 3,525 in 2002 to
3,676 in 2005.
Mr Roberts said that one-third of the
total student debt is owed by current students, who are
forced to borrow to live, pay the bills, rent and food.
“Students under twenty-five years of age have faced tough
parental means testing to determine their eligibility for a
student living allowance since 1992,” he said. “The
parental-means-test is unjust and we call upon the
Government to increase access to allowances in next month’s
Budget by dropping the unfair age test. This Government
needs to introduce policy so that all students receive a
living allowance and are supported while they study.”
Asia
Foundation voices concern at Canterbury cuts
The Asia New
Zealand Foundation has added its concern to the decision
made by the University of Canterbury to axe three staff
involved in Asian-related studies. Its Education Director,
Pamela Barton, is reported in the Foundation’s latest
newsletter as noting that Asian experience nationally is
very thin, with the proposed cuts at Canterbury continuing a
trend which has been felt at other universities.
“While
the importance of Asia to New Zealand is increasing, the
expert knowledge we need to underpin our engagement is being
hollowed out,” said Ms Barton. “Asia needs to be a national
priority that rises above short-term funding
decisions.”
The three academic staff members, in Asian
History, Chinese and Islamic Studies, are among eight
identified for redundancy as the University’s College of
Arts aims to cut $2 million from its operational budget.
Also reported is the President of the New Zealand Asian
Studies Society, Dr Brian Moloughney,
who says the
Government has indicated that it wants universities to place
more importance on areas of strategic importance to New
Zealand, and that Canterbury could position itself better in
this new environment if it retained its “Asianists”.
The
newsletter reports that one of the academics whose position
faces disestablishment is Professor Ghazala Anwar, a
Pakistan-born Islamic Studies lecturer at the University who
was scheduled to leave the position this year. Professor
Anwar says that, when she realised that her departure would
mean the disestablishment of Islamic Studies, she felt duty
bound to stay and fight for the position. “The loss of this
position will be a loss not only to the students but to the
wider community which has very often invited me for talks
and the media which has drawn on my expertise,” she said.
Dr Anwar says there is a real need to resist “a virtual
iron curtain” that is descending between the Muslim world
and the West because more and more venues for dialogue and
understanding are being closed.
Deed signals new way
forward for University and Polytechnic
On Friday last
week, the University of Waikato and Bay of Plenty
Polytechnic signed a deed of co-operation which is designed
to strengthen their commitment to work together to provide
high-quality tertiary education and research in the Bay of
Plenty. The deed commits both institutions to joint
strategic planning for the development of tertiary education
in the Bay of Plenty region, as well as joint delivery,
support and promotion of academic provision.
The
University and Polytechnic also announced that they are
currently working through the process of introducing the
first new degree to Tauranga under this agreement. The
Bachelor of Tourism is expected to be on offer to Bay of
Plenty students by 2007, offered jointly through the
University and Polytechnic.
University of Waikato
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Crawford, said the signing of
the deed of co-operation was an historic moment in the
relationship between the University and the Polytechnic, and
an extremely positive step for tertiary education in the Bay
of Plenty region.
Worldwatch
Canadian academic-freedom
ruling upheld
The Labour Relations Board has upheld a
ruling that the University of British Columbia (UBC) cannot
require a professor to relinquish copyright ownership of her
course material. In February 2004, an arbitrator found in
favour of the UBC Faculty Association, which challenged the
right of the University to demand that the staff member,
Mary Bryson, sign away copyright in a distance-education
course she was helping to develop.
The original
arbitrator’s decision, which identified copyright ownership
as an inherent right of faculty and a matter of academic
freedom, was appealed by the University’s management.
UBC
Faculty Association President, Elliott Burnell, said that
the arbitrator’s original decision was a landmark victory
for academic freedom and faculty rights. “When the
administration appealed the ruling to the provincial Labour
Relations Board, we were determined to see the arbitrator’s
decision upheld,” he said. “The Faculty Association’s
persistence was vindicated on all counts by the Labour
Board, which rejected each of the University’s five grounds
of appeal.”
The President of the Canadian Association of
University Teachers, Loretta Czernis, applauded the
decision, saying that academic staff across Canada owed a
debt of gratitude to UBC’s Faculty Association and Professor
Bryson. “The decision strengthens everyone’s academic
freedom and intellectual property rights,” she said.
Talks
fail to break UK deadlock
Talks between union and
employer representatives yesterday failed to break the
impasse in the pay dispute which has caused significant
industrial disruption throughout universities in the United
Kingdom.
The unions have claimed a 23 percent pay
increase over the next three years, while the employers have
offered 6 percent over two years. Union members have been
engaged in strike and other protest action over the last
month, the latter including a refusal by AUT members to set
and mark examination papers.
In a joint statement issued
last night, the university unions, AUT and Natfhe, said they
were disappointed that the talks, facilitated by Britain’s
industrial arbitration service, had not resulted in the
commencement of formal pay negotiations due to the refusal
of the employers’ body to meet and make a pay offer until
industrial action is suspended.
The unions say, however,
that the employers conceded yesterday that an improved pay
offer will be necessary to end the dispute.
US academic
salaries falter for second year
For the second year
running, the increase in overall salary rates for college
and university professors in the United States failed to
keep pace with the rate of inflation, according to figures
released this week by the American Association of University
Professors (AAUP). The Devaluing of Higher Education: The
Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession,
2005-06 shows that overall salaries for all ranks of
full-time faculty members across all types of institutions
rose 3.1 percent over the last year, 0.3 percent less than
the rate of inflation. This follows a 0.5 percent slip
against the rate of inflation in 2004-05.
The report also
reveals that the salary gap between full-time faculty
members at public colleges and universities and their
counterparts at private (non-church-related) institutions
continues to widen. It says the disparity makes it harder to
attract and retain the most qualified academic staff, or to
recruit the best students into academic careers.
Between
1995 and 2005, the median salaries for university presidents
increased by 29 percent, while salaries for full-time
faculty members increased by 9 percent.
The AAUP’s annual
report is recognised as the most authoritative sources of
data on university salaries and compensation in the United
States, and can be found
at:
http://www.aaup.org/surveys/06z/zrep.htm
RQF trial
under fire at Monash
Under-performing academics at
Australia’s Monash University are being pressured to leave
as a precursor to the Research Quality Framework, according
to the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU).
As
universities wait for a definitive model of the RQF to be
unveiled, Monash is reported to have started its own
research assessment trial at a cost of $A700,000 to run. The
trial is expected to be completed later this year, and is
one of several RQF test runs completed by various
institutions, including the University of Tasmania and
members of the Australian Technology Network of
Universities.
The National Tertiary Education Union has
demanded that a code of conduct be developed to protect
staff, saying it feared the trial was being used to axe
so-called “dead wood” from faculties rather than retrain and
support academics to fit in with new research requirements.
Dr Carol Williams, Monash Branch President of the NTEU,
said that University management was going from faculty to
faculty and school to school advising staff that the
institution’s research picture was “awful”, and that staff
wanting voluntary severance packages could get out “while
the going was good”.
While refusing to comment directly
on any discussions with staff about redundancy, Professor
Max King, Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research and Research
Training), said such talks were a standard affair. “I think
heads of departments, heads of schools are looking to
improve the quality of their staff and those things
naturally happen,” he said.
From The Australian
Driven
to dishonour
The Deputy Mayor of a Romanian town is
facing the sack and a jail term after sending his driver to
take a university exam in his place. Florin Oancea, from the
town of Deva, claims he did nothing wrong, but was simply
checking the rigour of Vasile Goldis University’s
examination system.
“I sent my driver to the exam
because I wanted to test the University,” he said. “No
identification check was made of those sitting the exam, and
the swap was noticed only afterwards.”
“The standard of
the test was also questionable as my driver, who only has
his high-school leaving certificate, managed to get 90
percent, the same level of marks that I, who have been
studying the subject, managed to achieve in previous tests,”
said Mr Oancea.
But the University declined to accept
the Deputy Mayor’s claims and expelled him from the
masters-level public administration course. Mr Oancea and
his driver, Ion Ognean, are also being investigated by local
authorities and could face up to three years in gaol for
fraud.
From the Times Higher Education
Supplement
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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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