AUS Tertiary Update
Steady progress in tripartite talks
Following a meeting
of the Universities Tripartite Forum late last week, union
representatives are currently meeting with vice-chancellors
to discuss technical details relating to funding and the
negotiation of collective employment agreements for
2006.
Association of University Staff General Secretary,
Helen Kelly, said that the combined unions’ bargaining team
will meet in Wellington on Friday 16 June to make
recommendations for the forthcoming salary round, and that
meetings with union members would be held soon after that.
Ms Kelly said that good progress had been made in the
tripartite process but, because of the nature of
discussions, the parties were unable to release details at
this stage.
In a newsletter to union members last week,
Ms Kelly said that, while it had initially been expected
that an announcement would be made on salary funding in the
2006 Budget, it had become apparent that a different process
would be required to progress the issue. That had been the
basis of the discussions with the Government and
vice-chancellors last week.
Ms Kelly said that, as a
result of the tripartite process, the Government had
accepted that additional funding is required to resolve
salary problems. “In an interview in the AUS Bulletin, the
Minister agreed that money is needed up front to start the
process, following which there would need to be further
movement over a period of time,” she said. “The Minister has
also confirmed post-Budget that additional funding could be
made available through contingency funding to address these
issues, and this had been discussed in last week’s
tripartite meeting.”
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Jobs to go at TWOA
2. Ninety-day bill will
inhibit recruitment, says AUS
3. Explanations racist and
confused, says Maori Party MP
4. Education contract with
Oman signed
5. AUSA calls for end to oppression of
Baha’i
6. Lecturers vote to boycott Israeli academics
7. Staff, students oppose constraints on free
expression
8. Academic shortage looms
9. Bangladesh
university suspends exams for World Cup
Jobs to go at
TWOA
Around 330 staff employed by Te Wananga o Aotearoa
learned this week that their jobs are to be disestablished
as the institution restructures in the wake of a major
reduction in student numbers. All staff members have
received letters advising whether they have been confirmed
in their existing positions or are among those whose jobs
have gone. Those whose positions have gone in the new
structure will be able to apply for 150 internal vacancies;
those who do not apply, or those who are unsuccessful in
appointment to a new position, will be made redundant, with
that process expected to be completed over the next two
months.
From a peak of more than 30,000 students, TWOA is
budgeting this year on 18,000, with the consequential effect
that staff numbers will drop to 750 from a current
establishment of around 1100. A number of staff have already
left or not had employment agreements renewed.
In a
written statement, TWOA Chair Craig Coxhead said that the
new structure is substantially the same as that proposed in
April, with the major difference being that, following
consultation, an increased number of staff would be employed
at regional sites rather than at head office.
The
disestablished positions are concentrated in middle
management and support roles. “Students will not be affected
by changes as the number of teaching staff is determined by
enrolments,” Mr Coxhead said.
According to an earlier
statement from Mr Coxhead, carrying on with the current cost
structure and forecast enrolments, TWOA would run a deficit
for the year of between $13 million and $27 million. Even
when the restructuring proposal is implemented, the
institution will face a deficit of around $13 million in the
first half of the year, exclusive of redundancy costs, but
it is then predicted to enter a period of recovery in the
second half of the year.
Ninety-day bill will inhibit
recruitment, says AUS
The Association of University Staff
has added its voice to those opposing the Employment
Relations (Probationary Periods) Amendment Bill, saying
that, if passed, the legislation would create a significant
disincentive for overseas staff to come and work in New
Zealand universities.
The Bill, introduced by National MP
Dr Wayne Mapp, proposes removing personal grievance rights
for all employees in the first ninety days of employment
with a new employer. Those rights currently include
protection against unjustified dismissal or disadvantage,
unlawful discrimination or sexual and racial harassment or
duress in relation to joining a union.
AUS National
President, Professor Nigel Haworth, says that the Bill
proposes giving employers the power to dismiss new workers
without reason or explanation, and would remove job security
every time a worker commenced new employment. “With more
than 50 percent of university academic staff recruited from
overseas, it is our view that the Bill creates an
unacceptable risk for staff considering a career move to New
Zealand,” he said. “University lecturers are already on the
Immigration Department’s Long Term Occupational Shortages
list and, with the current dearth of academic staff on the
international market, the legislation would disadvantage the
university sector by making it a less attractive employment
destination than at present. Salary levels in the sector are
already uncompetitive; making employment less secure simply
adds to the problems of international
recruitment”.
Professor Haworth said that the Bill would
also mean that current university staff, both academic and
general, will be unwilling to move to other university
employment within New Zealand, with the result that it would
further exacerbate recruitment problems and restrict career
development. “The Bill, if enacted, would put in place a
measure that is likely to stop highlyskilled, valuable staff
from taking advantage of new, better opportunities,” he
said. “This flies in the face of the promotion of a dynamic,
upwardly flexible labour market.”
AUS representatives
will appear before Parliament’s Transport and Industrial
Relations Select Committee when it hears submissions soon.
The AUS submissions on the Bill will be made available after
the Select Committee hearing.
Explanations racist and
confused, says Maori Party MP
The Maori Party Co-Leader,
Dr Pita Sharples, has labeled as racist and confused
explanations provided to Parliament to justify the axing of
the Manaaki Tauira grant scheme which provides financial
assistance to Maori students in tertiary education. As part
of the 2006 Budget it was announced that an initial $2.1
million in funding was to be cut from the scheme and the
programme wound down.
In response to a question from Dr
Sharples last Thursday, the Minister of Maori Affairs,
Parekura Horomia, appeared to tell Parliament that Manaaki
Tauira funding could be better used elsewhere on the basis
that, when the scheme started, there were only 8,000
students receiving tertiary education compared to 90,000
now. Only 11 percent of current students were using the
grants, he said, so the funding had been reallocated to
strengthening teacher capability in secondary
schools.
According to Dr Sharples, to say that the very
successful needs-based Manaaki Tauira grant scheme should be
cut because Maori tertiary enrolments have increased is
another example of confused logic. “One would have thought
that the Minister would have advocated for more money to
support Maori tertiary education, rather than taking money
from needy students and giving it to secondary-school
teachers instead,” he said.
Dr Sharples said that the
Minister for Tertiary Education had earlier given the reason
for “chopping the programme” as that the administration
costs were high compared with the amount of money that found
its way to students. Investigation had shown, however, that
the administration cost was $39 per application,
significantly less than that incurred by other schemes. “We
have undertaken some investigation into the truth of Dr
Cullen’s claims, and found that the truth has been
sacrificed for political spin and the denigration of Maori
administrative skill and professionalism,” Dr Sharples said.
“It is a racist slur on the quality of the administration
undertaken by the Maori Education Trust and its staff, and
the Maori Party will continue to expose the subtle use of
racism which our society needs to protect itself
from.”
Education contract with Oman signed
A five-year
deal to provide course content to universities in Oman has
been agreed between the New Zealand Tertiary Education
Consortium (NZTEC) and the Omani Minister of Higher
Education, Her Excellency Dr Rawya Saud Al Busaidi. Under
the deal, a consortium comprising the Academic Colleges
Group, Auckland University of Technology, the University of
Waikato, Victoria University of Wellington, the University
of Otago and PINZ Limited will provide content for several
business and IT degrees and English language
courses.
While the value of the deal is confidential, it
is understood to be the biggest ever for our international
education sector.
The Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr
Michael Cullen, said the agreement is a testimony to the
quality of New Zealand’s tertiary-education institutions.
“Education has become the cornerstone of the developing
bilateral relationship between New Zealand and Oman,” he
said. “This is a great opportunity for both countries and
further underlines our international reputation for
excellence.”
Dr Cullen said that, although individual
institutions have previously had off-shore contracts, this
is the first time such a consortium had been formed, adding
that this project would have been too big for any one of our
institutions. “It is particularly exciting to see New
Zealand education providers diversifying and recognising
that, by working together, they can access high-value
opportunities in international markets,” he said. “A
partnership approach, involving collaboration between
education institutions, backed by government support of the
kind New Zealand Trade and Enterprise has provided, is a
winning formula for growing New Zealand’s international
education sector.”
AUSA calls for end to oppression of
Baha’i
The Auckland University Students’ Association has
called on the Government to take action against the
oppression of Baha’i students in Iran, saying that, since
1979, the Iranian Government has systematically blocked more
than 300,000 members of the Baha’i community from having
access to higher education. Baha’i youth are refused entry
into Iranian universities and colleges, and the Government
there has stopped Baha’i efforts to establish their own
institutions of higher education.
Dan Bidois, AUSA
President, said the matter is a serious human-rights issue.
He said that the denial of higher education is based
entirely on religious discrimination and, unless Baha’i
students recant their faith, they are not allowed to attend
colleges and universities. “Furthermore, the right to
education is enshrined in international covenants as well as
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which Iran is a
party to,” he said.
Mr Bidois said that the University of
Auckland had a small community of Baha’i students, and
wanted to voice concerns on their behalf. “AUSA believes
that all persons, regardless of their religious
affiliations, should have equal access to higher education,”
he said.
Worldwatch
Lecturers vote to boycott Israeli
academics
Delegates to the annual conference of the
British lecturers’ union, Natfhe, have narrowly voted in
favour of a resolution to boycott Israeli academics and
academic institutions that do not publicly disassociate
themselves from Israel’s “apartheid policies”. The
resolution, debated in a closed session of the conference,
criticised Israeli policies, including the construction of
the exclusion wall and discriminatory educational practices.
Natfhe members were invited to “consider the appropriateness
of a boycott of those that do not publicly dissociate
themselves from such policies”.
The boycott proposal
seems, however, destined to be short-lived. Last year,
delegates to the Association of University Teachers’ (AUT)
conference voted in favour of a similar resolution to impose
a boycott on two Israeli universities, only to have the AUT
Council later reverse the decision and reassert its belief
that freedom of expression, open debate and unhampered
dialogue are prerequisites of academic freedom. AUT, which
will amalgamate with Natfhe today to form the new University
and College Union, has issued a statement saying that it
does not endorse the boycott and is strongly advising its
members not to implement it.
The International Advisory
Board for Academic Freedom, an Israeli-led body formed at
Bar-Ilan University last year after the AUT boycott, has
vowed to oppose any renewed plans “through legal
channels”.
Staff, students oppose constraints on free
expression
State-imposed restrictions on classroom
discussion, currently under consideration by Pennsylvania
legislators in the United States, would erode the learning
process, according to a report issued this week by Free
Exchange on Campus, a coalition of student, faculty and
civil-liberties groups.
The group released the report,
Campus Voices: Students and Faculty Speak Out on the Free
Exchange of Ideas in Pennsylvania Colleges and Universities,
in advance of a Pennsylvania legislative committee’s
hearings today and tomorrow at Harrisburg Area Community
College investigating political bias in college classrooms.
Free Exchange on Campus says that, in preparing the
report, it has consulted more than one hundred faculty
members and seventy students in Pennsylvania, and found that
both groups strongly opposed any restrictions on open
debate. Many students quoted in the report say they find the
idea of limiting campus discussion demeaning. “Students are
not simply vacuous imbeciles, accepting everything they are
told,” said Zachary Yeates, a student at the University of
Pennsylvania. “They are intelligent individuals with the
capability of thinking critically about even their
professors’ beliefs.”
Meanwhile, the US Supreme Court
has limited the free-speech rights of government employees
in a whistle-blower case which threatens to affect the
academic freedom of university staff. The Court has ruled
that, when public employees make statements pursuant to
their official duties, they are not speaking under the
protection of the US First Amendment, and the Constitution
does not insulate their communications from disciplinary
proceedings.
In a statement to the Court, the American
Association of University Professors expressed concern that
undermining the protection of a public employee’s
work-related speech would undercut the federal courts’
traditional deference to academic freedom.
From the
Chronicle of Higher Education and Inside Higher
Ed
Academic shortage looms
Australian university
leaders are calling for visa reform to allow them to enlist
more foreign PhD students as the next generation of academic
staff. With a quarter of all current academic staff expected
to retire during the next decade, vice-chancellors are
planning a multi-million-dollar recruitment drive to meet
the predicted skills shortage.
As universities devise
costly recruitment plans, they say that uncompetitive
academic salaries deter local talent, with Australian
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee Chief Executive, John Mullarvey,
warning that low salaries could undermine university plans
to cope with the challenge of mass retirement. “[Staffing]
might be a crisis in ten years’ time if we’re not able to
offer competitive salaries and conditions,” he said.
Carolyn Allport, National President of the National
Tertiary Education Union, said she was not impressed by
current recruitment strategies. “I don't see much progress
at the [recruitment] entry points into university,” she
said. “It's a crisis we must resolve or we will lose our
competitive position in the international arena; and that
arena is becoming more, not less important.”
According to
a report commissioned by the University of New South Wales,
that institution will suffer a loss of intellectual capacity
and corporate memory if it fails to find replacements for
senior academics about to retire. The University has been
told that it has five years to find replacements for half of
its 680 academics in the humanities and social sciences.
From The Australian
Bangladesh university suspends
exams for World Cup
A Bangladesh university has postponed
exams until after the soccer World Cup finals after hundreds
of students lay siege to the Vice-Chancellor’s office.
Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology had
earlier rejected students’ calls to postpone exams scheduled
between 3 and 29 June. “The classes will remain suspended
until July 14,” an official at the University in Dhaka said
on Monday.
Bangladesh failed to qualify for the World Cup
finals, which will be hosted by Germany for a month from
June 9.
Reuters
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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