AUS Tertiary Update
Collective agreements ratified
New collective employment
agreements have been ratified for academic and general staff
at seven New Zealand universities, with the result that the
salary increases negotiated as a result of the tripartite
discussions among unions, vice-chancellors and the
Government can be implemented.
The settlements follow a
lengthy process during the year culminating in the decision
by the Government to provide a funding package of $26
million to universities as an interim step to resolving
long-term funding and salary problems in the
sector.
Provisional figures show that more than 98
percent of those participating in the ballots voted in
favour of the settlements at Auckland, Waikato, Massey,
Victoria, Canterbury, Lincoln and Otago universities. The
ratification will see salary increases for academic staff of
between 6.0 and 7.5 percent and for general staff of between
4.0 and 5.5 percent over the course of the year.
Association of University Staff (AUS) General Secretary
Helen Kelly said that, while the salary increases varied
among universities and between academics and general staff,
she believed that AUS members saw the settlements as a
positive step towards resolving salary problems. “Union
members also know that the government money, which funded a
major portion of the increases, was a direct result of their
campaigning over the past three years, and that this
campaign would continue” she said. “The vote indicated
an overwhelming mandate for the national approach to
bargaining and our priority now is to enter the second stage
of the tripartite process.”
Ms Kelly said she expected
that tripartite process would provide an opportunity to
engage with the Government on the new funding model for and
governance of tertiary education as well as salaries and
associated issues around national collective
bargaining.
The AUS Council is meeting over the next two
days, during which time it will consider the
organisation’s approach to the tripartite process.
The
most recent bargaining newsletter, with details of the
salary settlements, can be found
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/national_bargaining/2006/Newsletter-June.pdf
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Sharpening the tertiary
education focus
2. Tertiary-education bureaucracy
doubles
3. Hunger pangs for fee rise
4. New Tertiary
Education Strategy reports available
5. CPIT loss may be
$3.5m
6. Scholar under fire for 9/11 views
7. US
Government fails to act on ruling over academic
8. UNSW
protests over job cuts
9. China's elite tee off at
University
Sharpening the tertiary education focus
A
Tertiary Education Strategy discussion document released on
Tuesday this week aims to reinforce the contribution that
the tertiary-education system makes to the performance of
the economy and New Zealand's social and cultural
development.
The discussion document will form the basis
of consultation on the development of a new Tertiary
Education Strategy (TES) from which the Government will be
able to establish detailed priorities for the sector. In
turn, these will be published in the next Statement of
Tertiary Education Priorities (STEP) in December.
The
discussion document is open for public consultation until 27
October, with the current TES and STEP both expiring in
2007.
The TES and STEP will be important components in
the new tertiary-funding framework, with tertiary-education
organisations funded according to how their plans align with
the new priorities for the sector as set by the TES and
STEP.
According to the Minister for Tertiary Education,
Dr Michael Cullen, the discussion document is the first step
in providing a clear statement of the Government's
priorities in tertiary education and one that will give a
broad direction for the sector. “The first TES and STEPs
set a broad and inclusive direction for tertiary education.
We propose to build on this and provide a sharper focus on
the shifts that the Government expects in tertiary education
in order to achieve greater quality, relevance and value for
money. The sharper focus is not at the expense of New
Zealand's broad and inclusive tertiary education system,
which must be maintained.”
Dr Cullen said the sector
faces significant challenges in the next five to ten years.
“A large group of young New Zealanders, the ”baby
blip”, will be moving into the tertiary sector and the
workforce. At the same time, there will continue to be
urgency to lift skills, qualifications and productivity
during a time of high employment,” he said. “It is
critical that the tertiary-education sector plays its part
in accelerating the transformation of New Zealand into a
high-wage, knowledge-based economy. We must continue to grow
globally competitive firms through improving our creation,
transfer and application of knowledge.”
The discussion
document can be found at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=11445&data=l
Tertiary-education
bureaucracy doubles
Figures released this week by the
National Party spokesperson on Education, Bill English, show
that administration costs from the government agencies
overseeing the tertiary sector rose from $64 million in the
2000/01 financial year, to $140 million in 2005/06.
Mr
English says that, while the tertiary-education bureaucracy
has more than doubled under Labour, students haven’t
benefited at all. “Taxpayers are paying more and more for
public agencies which are moving in ever-decreasing circles
trying to implement increasingly impractical strategies,”
he said. “There is no evidence of any benefit for anyone
and plenty of evidence to the contrary.”
According to
Mr English, a National Government will cut back on what he
describes as a growth in spending which has failed
spectacularly to ensure value for taxpayers’ investment in
tertiary education. “This is the bureaucracy that has
overseen uncontrolled and arbitrary growth in low-value,
low-relevance sub-degree courses which less than a third of
enrolees ever complete, at the expense of skills and trade
training where providers can’t keep up with industry
demand,” he said. “The massive growth in the state
sector is double that of the overall economy, which had job
growth of just 3 percent. This continues the trend of a
rapidly growing state sector. We’ve now got to the stage
where one in fifty jobs in New Zealand is as a bureaucrat,
and that's contributing nothing productive to the
economy.”
Hunger pangs for fee rise
Ahead of the
Massey University Council meeting tomorrow morning, when
tuition-fee levels for 2007 are expected to be set, students
are sending a clear message that fee increases will not be
tolerated. A “Stop Lecture Protest” today at Palmerston
North, during which lecture times will be shortened to allow
protest action, will build on a hunger strike currently
under way by Massey Albany student President, Josh Clark.
In a statement earlier this week, Mr Clark said that he
was personally disgusted at a move signalled by the
University that student tuition fees could rise next year by
10 percent, and that he would go on a hunger strike to
protest “this injustice to students”. He said the
proposed 10 percent increase would see domestic students
having to pay up to an extra $500 to study at Massey
University in 2007. “Current student debt is already over
eight billion dollars and steadily climbing, the University
has a responsibility to students to help reduce this massive
debt burden and not put up excessive fee increases,” he
said. “Students are already struggling to support
themselves while they study at university, and this proposed
fee increase will just exacerbate the problem. Students are
one of the poorest and most debt-ridden groups in our
society; why the university would want to take more money
from them in 2007 is beyond me and that is why I am going on
a hunger strike,” he said.
Meanwhile, the University of
Canterbury Council last night increased domestic student
tuition fees for 2007 by 5 percent, the maximum permitted
under the Government’s fee-maxima policy. Fees for current
College of Education students will rise by 10 percent to
bring their fees into line with those at the University when
the two institutions merge next year.
Canterbury
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, is reported as saying
that the University had little choice but to raise fees
because its costs are increasing at a rate higher than that
of inflation, and government funding next year was due to
increase by only 2.5 percent.
New Tertiary Education
Strategy reports available
A number of new reports
examining the influence of the Tertiary Education Strategy
(TES) are now available on Education Counts, a
government-sponsored website for educational statistics and
research in New Zealand.
The first of the reports,
Lining Up? The influence of the Tertiary Education Strategy
2002/07 on tertiary education organisation profile
objectives, presents an analysis of the 2005/07 and 2006/08
profiles of tertiary-education institutions and a sample of
industry-training organisations. The analysis looked at the
organisational objectives in the profiles and mapped them to
the Tertiary Education Strategy to establish a sense of
where change is planned across the various areas of the
strategy, and by which types of organisations. The analysis
provides a view of governance and senior-management
perspectives of important changes in their organisations in
relation to the Tertiary Education Strategy.
The second
report, Making Use? - views on the use and usefulness of the
Tertiary Education Strategy 2002/07, presents results of
interviews with key people in tertiary education
organisations and stakeholder groups on the use and
usefulness of the Tertiary Education Strategy 2002/07. The
information in this report contributes towards the
evaluation of the TES.
Outcomes of the New Zealand
tertiary education system - a synthesis of the evidence, the
third report, provides a synthesis of the evidence of the
outcomes of the New Zealand tertiary-education system. The
report quotes a number of statistical studies completed over
the last six years and also reproduces some previously
published summaries of the evidence.
The final report,
Tertiary Education Strategy 2002-2007 Monitoring Report
2005, tracks further progress of the tertiary education
system against the Tertiary Education Strategy 2002-07 in
the period following implementation of the key aspects of
the tertiary-education reforms up to the end of 2005.
These reports can be found at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/index.html
CPIT
loss may be $3.5m
A report this week in The Press
reveals that the country’s second largest polytechnic, the
Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology, is on the
brink of major financial strife this year. The report says
that CPIT is looking at a possible $3.5 million loss in
2006, and that early indications are that things could be
worse still in 2007.
The current financial problems
compound those of last year, when CPIT ran a deficit of $2.5
million after earlier predicting a surplus of $429,000
In
May this year, CPIT said a 6 percent drop in student numbers
would cut revenue by $3.56m and ultimately cost it around
$2.7m. The original target of 6349 equivalent full-time
students for the year has now been pruned to 5942.
New
CPIT Chief Executive, Dr Neil Barns, told The Press that the
estimated $3.5 million deficit was only a rough figure and
he was working on getting more accurate accounts ready for
Council members. He acknowledged the institution’s money
problems were a “real issue for both CPIT and for the
region”, but said it was important not to be alarmist
about the situation. “Despite the reduction in revenue
that we face this year, we will still enrol and provide
tertiary education to over 20,000 Cantabrians this year, and
I am sure we will continue to do so in the
future.”
Worldwatch
Scholar under fire for 9/11
views
The University of New Hampshire in the United
States is refusing to fire a tenured professor whose views
on 9/11 have led a number of politicians in the State to
demand his dismissal. William Woodward, a professor of
Psychology, is among a number of academics who believe that
US leaders have lied about what they know about 9/11, and
were involved in a conspiracy that led to the massive deaths
on that day, setting the stage for the war with Iraq.
State legislators have demanded Woodward’s dismissal
and are threatening to consider the issue when they next
review the University’s budget funding. New Hampshire
Republican politicians are also calling for the University
to fire Woodward, with one quoted as saying that “there
are limitations to academic freedom and freedom of speech”
and that “it is inappropriate for someone at a public
university which is supported with taxpayer dollars to take
positions that are generally an affront to the sensibility
of most all Americans.”
The University of New Hampshire
is reported to have been quick to back its professor, with
officials saying there are no plans to take any action
against Woodward and that it would be inappropriate to do
so.
“What we’re saying is that we support and are
committed to academic freedom,” said Kim Billings, a
University spokesperson. “We may not agree with Professor
Woodward, but he is entitled to his opinion.”
Woodward,
who describes himself as an “aging hippie”, said that he
has never tried to hide his controversial political views,
but had never before had politicians demand he be fired.
“It’s a little unsettling,” he said.
From Inside
Higher Education
US Government fails to act on ruling over
academic
In a case considered a bell-wether of policy
towards foreign scholars, the United States Government has
decided not to appeal a court ruling ordering it either to
issue a visa to Tariq Ramadan, a prominent Swiss Muslim
scholar, or to provide good reasons for not doing so.
A
Federal court issued the ruling in June in a lawsuit brought
on Mr. Ramadan's behalf by a number of groups, including the
American Association of University Professors.
In 2004,
US authorities revoked a visa issued to Mr. Ramadan when he
was hired as a tenured professor at the University of Notre
Dame. Neither the professor nor the University received an
explanation for this action, but a spokesperson for the
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Division of the US
Department of Homeland Security told media that the visa was
revoked because of a section in Federal law that applies to
aliens who have used a “position of prominence within any
country to endorse or espouse terrorist activity”. That
language appears in section 411 of the US Patriot Act, and
is known as the “ideological exclusion”
provision.
Federal authorities now have thirty days to
act on a visa request from Mr. Ramadan, filed in September
2005, which has been left pending since then.
From the
Chronicle of Higher Education and AAUP
UNSW protests over
job cuts
Protest action at the University of New South
Wales in Australia has followed an announcement last week
that the University will outsource 120 cleaning and security
jobs and shed as many as 500 administrative and support
jobs. The cuts will affect as much as 10 percent of the
University’s workforce.
An initial protest meeting last
Friday was followed with another yesterday addressed by
Midnight Oil rock star turned politician Peter
Garrett.
UNSW Vice Chancellor, Fred Hilmer, has sent an
email to staff calling for expressions of interest in
voluntary redundancy after previously saying that the
University had too many general staff.
The University has
also recently released a discussion paper to staff proposing
a major restructure of its campus libraries which will see
the disappearance of reference desks and a reduction in the
number of professional and specialist librarians on campus.
The UNSW National Tertiary Education Union Branch
President, Susan Price, said that the proposed job-shedding
was short-sighted, would lead to long-term damage to the
institution and would undermine the core research and
teaching activities. “We understand that [management’s]
intention is to redirect spending away from administrative
and support staff into an advertising and marketing
strategy, undergraduate first-year scholarships and
research-infrastructure projects, with only a portion of
these cost savings spent on employing additional staff in
research areas," she said. “This protest rally is just the
beginning of our campaign against these job losses.”
China's elite to tee off at University
Peking
University, where Mao Zedong once worked as an assistant
librarian, plans to teach China's intellectual elite how to
play golf, according to the Beijing News.
The report said
lessons in golf would be offered to students at the
University, and that permission would be sought to build a
driving range on its scenic campus in the northwest of
China’s capital.
Since the first golf course opened in
mainland China twenty-two years ago, the sport has become
extremely popular among the newly affluent. During the 2003
SARS epidemic, many Chinese entrepreneurs decided that doing
business on the golf course was preferable to the office,
where the risk of contracting the virus was considered to be
higher.
Reaction to the news was mixed among students at
the University. “Golf isn't a proletarian sport,” one
told the paper. “Most students wouldn't be able to afford
it and the University should concentrate on providing better
facilities for more popular sports.”