AUS Tertiary Update
International warnings against staff cuts at Auckland
A
number of senior academic staff in some of the world’s top
universities have written to the Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Auckland warning about the damage to the
University’s international reputation if proposed staff
cuts go ahead. Among them are senior professorial staff from
Cambridge University and Kings College in the United
Kingdom, the University of California at Berkeley, George
Washington University in the US capital and the University
of Paris.
The warnings follow recent announcements that
the University of Auckland proposes to shed fifty-four
academic positions, six alone of which will come from the
twenty-four-strong staff establishment in the English
Department. The proposed cuts come at a time when the
University has climbed in the Times Higher international
university rankings from fifty-second in 2005 to forty-sixth
this year.
A number of the letters warn, not just of the
potential damage to the University’s international
reputation, but also of the effect that short-sighted and
short-term managerial decisions have on morale, levels of
disaffection and an increasing overall distrust of
university management.
On Tuesday, the Association of
University Staff Auckland Branch President, Associate
Professor Peter Wills, told Radio New Zealand’s Morning
Report that the process being undertaken by the University
was nasty, brutish and short, and done with little thought
to departments such as English. “You cannot cut a
department by one quarter and maintain the integrity of its
teaching programme,” he said. “One real effect on staff
is that they no longer feel security of tenure. Your job can
be gone in the twinkling of an eye if what you teach isn’t
the student flavour of the month.”
Associate Professor
Wills said that the University needed to take a longer-term
view, with decisions about matters such as staff and
programme cuts based on enrolment figures and other
indicators over a decade. He added that government had a
responsibility to provide an economic buffer to deal with
such situations as had arisen at Auckland.
Auckland’s
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Stuart McCutcheon, said that many
of the letters were from academics who described themselves
as “bewildered”, indicating that they did not know
what’s going on. He said that several faculties had more
staff than the University’s enrolments could
justify.
The Morning Report interview can be heard
at:
http://www.radionz.co.nz/audio/national/mnr/auckland_uni_reputation
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Mediation over
implementation of policy
2. Auckland and Lincoln fees
increase
3. Critic named best student
publication
4. TES evaluation report now
available
5. New AUS national officers
elected
6. Universities urged to spy on Muslims
7. Classes resume at Gallaudet University
8. Poll
says government wrong over future of research funding
9. University makes golf compulsory
Mediation over
implementation of policy
Lawyers acting for the
Association of University Staff and Massey University are
meeting in mediation today after that University introduced,
without agreement, significant changes to the performance
review and planning (PRP) policy for academic staff. AUS
believes that the new policy, implemented earlier this
month, has been applied in breach of the University’s
collective employment agreement.
At stake are changes
which significantly alter the PRP process from one which is
used exclusively for staff development to one which can be
used to inform performance-related disciplinary processes,
including those which could lead to dismissal. Under the new
policy, the process could also be used to deny promotion or
performance-based salary increases.
In further changes,
the policy’s rights of appeal have been changed.
Previously, where there was a disagreement between an
academic staff member and a head of department, attempts
were made to reach a resolution between the parties under
the guidance of a senior academic. Under the new policy, a
manager can make a binding decision without any attempt at
an agreed resolution.
Issues of confidentiality have also
arisen. Previously, information developed under the policy
could be released or used only with the consent of the
parties but, under the new policy, that right to
confidentiality has been lost.
AUS Massey Branch
Organiser, Lawrence O’Halloran said that the changes
unilaterally introduced by the University fundamentally
changed the nature and purpose of the original policy.
Previously, it has encouraged a full and frank discussion
between an academic staff member and department head, with a
view to collegially setting performance targets and
providing a constructive mechanism for examining why
previous targets may not have been met. “To now try and
use this information to implement sanctions where
performance targets have not been met means that academic
staff will no longer be prepared to talk openly with
management about their performance, nor to make ambitious
plans which run any risk of not being fulfilled,” he said.
“Staff development and performance management are separate
principles, and our intention in mediation today is to reach
agreement that the original policy will apply.”
Auckland
and Lincoln fees increase
In part of what seems to have
become an increasingly predictable pattern, Auckland and
Lincoln have become the latest universities to increase
student-tuition fees for 2007 by the maximum or near to the
maximum increase permitted under the Government’s Fee
Maxima regulations. The regulations restrict
tertiary-education institutions from increasing domestic
tuition fees by more than 5 percent without specific
exemption from the Tertiary Education Commission.
Fees at
the University of Auckland will rise by an overall average
of 4.7 percent, comprising an average increase of 3.7
percent for undergraduate courses and $500, or an average of
9.8 percent, for postgraduate courses. Fees at Lincoln will
rise by an average of 4.98 percent.
Predictably, also,
Auckland’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Stuart McCutcheon,
has said the tuition fee increases are regrettable but
unavoidable, while Lincoln’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor
Roger Field, described the hike as inevitable.
According
to Professor McCutcheon, Auckland’s costs are forecast to
increase by 5.5 percent next year, leaving the University
facing an overall revenue shortfall of $7.3 million. “Our
costs are forecast to increase by 5.5 percent. If we wanted
to offset the low increase in government subsidy rates and
maintain this year’s income per student at the same level
in real terms next year, we would have had to increase fees
by an average of 11.6 percent,” he said. “But because of
the constraints of the fees maxima policy, fees will
increase by a much smaller percentage, leaving the
University with a revenue shortfall next year. This will
affect expenditure levels.”
Meanwhile, Professor Field
said that, while the Government’s student-component
funding has risen by 2.5 percent, an inflation rate running
at close to 4 percent immediately eroded any benefit. “We
must meet the Government’s expectation that through
teaching and research we contribute to the ‘national
good’ and the ‘knowledge economy’, and we must also
meet the expectation of our students that we give them an
internationally competitive standard of education and an
internationally credible qualification,” he said.
“Naturally we regret the need to increase fees, but we
have little option if we are to maintain the quality of our
teaching, research and service.”
Critic named best
student publication
Otago University student magazine
Critic was named the best publication by a panel of media
experts for the second year running at the annual Aotearoa
Student Press Association (ASPA) awards held in Auckland
recently in association with the NZ Listener.
Critic
scooped five of the fourteen categories, including Best
Columnist, Best Reviewer, Best Feature Writer and Best News
Writer. Victoria University’s Salient was placed second
and Auckland University’s Craccum third. Other winners
included Craccum Editor Ryan Sproull (Best Editorial
Writer), Critic’s John Hartevelt (Best News Writer) and
Ryan Brown-Haysom (Best Feature Writer).
Although
student magazines are often associated with controversial
issues, this year’s judges commented on the number of
investigative stories on tertiary education which were
broken in student media before being picked up by television
and newspapers. Student media led the way on stories as
diverse as Otago’s student code of conduct and Palmerston
North's business school restructuring
One judge, Olivia
Kember, a TVNZ reporter and Sunday magazine features writer,
said that Critic has a tone – intelligent, perceptive and
witty – which carries through every page. “The design is
slick; the headlines smart; the articles relevant,
well-written and engaging,” she said. “I like the way
Critic treats topics judiciously but without heaviness or
pretension. Even the small items are inventive and funny.
It's a very accessible, enjoyable read.”
The Aotearoa
Student Press Association comprises thirteen publications
from the country's university and polytechnic campuses. This
was the fifth annual ASPA prize giving and the third held in
association with The Listener.
TES evaluation report now
available
A new report covering stage one of the
evaluation of the Tertiary Education Strategy 2002/07 and
focusing on how effective the Strategy has been in creating
change in the tertiary-education system is now available on
the Ministry of Education website.
The report, Getting
Started: Report on Stage 1 of the Evaluation of the Tertiary
Education Strategy 2002/07, provides a mid-term review of
progress, covering the first three years of the Strategy,
and draws together information from recently released
reports on the use of the Strategy, profile objectives and
monitoring of the Strategy, as well as other sources.
The
Executive Summary says that, overall, the TES has provided a
basis for engagement between the Government and the
tertiary-education sector and that there is broad acceptance
of the value of having a Tertiary Education Strategy. It
says that the Strategy has provided a sense of there being a
tertiary-education system that encompasses and connects all
post-school learning.
The report says that the TES has
informed a greater focus on quality of education and
research. However, the broad nature of the TES has allowed
tertiary-education organisations to focus on the aspects
that best fit their strategies.
Where the TES has been
explicitly linked to funding, shifts towards improved
outcomes are already apparent. This is exemplified by the
growth in research production, supported by improvements to
quality and reputation, in response to the shift to
performance-based research funding. However, in areas where
there is no strong link between funding and strategy, shifts
towards improved outcomes are not apparent. For example,
within the context of a demand-driven student-funding
system, there has been a continued focus on increasing
certificate-level provision, with few apparent improvements
in participation and outcomes at degree level and above.
The full report can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/tertiary/get-started-tes02-07.html
New
AUS national officers elected
The Association of
University Staff has announced its new national officers for
2007, following an election for the post of Academic
Vice-President. Current National President, Professor Nigel
Haworth from the University of Auckland, has been elected
unopposed for a third one-year term and Dr David Small has
been elected as the new Academic Vice-President.
Cate
Wartho from the University of Otago will continue for a
second term as General Staff Vice-President, Fiona Te Momo
from Massey University Albany as the Maori Vice-President
and Associate Professor Maureen Montgomery from the
University of Canterbury has been returned as the Women’s
Vice-President.
James Oxnam, from the University of
Canterbury, has been elected as the Academic Support
Vice-President and Lyndsay Ainsworth as the Library
Vice-President.
Returning Officer, AUS General Secretary
Helen Kelly, said that the contested election for the
position of Academic Vice-President had resulted in a high
turnout of voters indicating that there was a healthy
interest in senior elected positions within the
union.
The officers will commence their one-year terms on
1 January 2007.
Worldwatch
Universities urged to spy on
Muslims
Lecturers and university heads across Britain
have reacted with anger and alarm to plans by the Government
to encourage academics to spy on their students. They said
the measures, outlined in a leaked document obtained by the
Guardian, were misplaced and likely to be counterproductive
in the drive to root out extremist activity on university
campuses.
According to the proposals, ministers are to
ask staff to spy on “Asian-looking” or Muslim students,
informing Special Branch of anyone they suspect of being
involved in Islamic extremism. They will be told to inform
on students to Special Branch because the Government
believes campuses have become “fertile recruiting
grounds” for extremists.
The Department for Education
has drawn up a series of proposals which are to be sent to
universities and other centres of higher education before
the end of the year. The eighteen-page document acknowledges
that universities will be anxious about passing information
to Special Branch for fear it amounts to “collaborating
with the ‘secret police’”. It says there will be
”concerns about police targeting certain sections of the
student population (eg Muslims)”.
Paul Mackney, joint
General Secretary of the University and College Union (UCU),
has likened the call to an anti-Muslim McCarthyism which has
serious consequences for civil liberties by blurring the
line between what is illegal and what is possibly
undesirable.
Sally Hunt, the other joint UCU General
Secretary, said that government attempts to restrict
academic freedom or freedom of speech on campus would be
opposed. “Academic freedom is a key tenet of any
democratic society, even if this sometimes means the
discussion of ideas that many would find unacceptable.
Universities have traditionally encouraged debate, allowed
students the opportunity to broaden their horizons and
challenged opinion,” she said.
From the Guardian and
UCU
Classes resume at Gallaudet University
Classes
resumed on Monday this week at Gallaudet University, the
premier US higher-education institution for the deaf, while
faculty members voted overwhelmingly in support of students
calling for the resignation of the incoming
President.
The campus was closed for three days last week
after protesters blocked all entrances, leading to the
arrest of 133 protesters last Friday night.
Although the
University re-opened on Monday, students remained camped out
at the main entrance but did not attempt to block access,
partially out of respect for the twice-yearly faculty
meeting. The faculty meeting, attended by 168 of the
University’s 221 academic staff, voted by a margin of 82
to 18 percent to demand that the University’s new
President, Jane K. Fernandes, resign or be removed. In a
similar vote earlier this year, 68 percent of the faculty
voted no confidence in Fernandes.
Those opposed to the
presidency of Fernandes, currently Gallaudet’s Provost,
say that she isn't open to different points of view and that
the selection process did not reflect the student body’s
diversity. Fernandes is scheduled to take office in
January.
The faculty also voted no confidence in the
Board of Trustees and outgoing President I. King Jordan.
Jordan said after the vote that Fernandes would not
resign.
The students who were arrested Friday night were
freed after paying a $US50 fine.
From Fox News
Poll
says government wrong over future of research funding
More than 81 percent of academics do not support British
government proposals for the future of research funding,
according to a poll released by the University and College
Union (UCU).
The Government announced earlier this year
that the Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) would be
scrapped after 2008, saying that a replacement system would
involve moving to metrics to assess research.
The UCU
poll of more than 1500 academic staff also reveals that over
41 percent of academics believe the Government should
abandon plans to stick with the 2008 RAE and scrap it
immediately. Only 13.2 percent said that the RAE should
remain unchanged. The poll coincides with a major UCU
conference where academics will debate what they feel needs
to happen to really improve research funding.
While
pleased that the RAE is to be scrapped, the UCU has
expressed its concern that the people most affected by the
changes, the staff, have not been allowed to have any real
input into what should replace it.
Sally Hunt, UCU joint
General Secretary, said that the RAE was a fundamentally
flawed system which has done enormous damage to research,
scholarship and teaching in higher education, and had led to
the unfair treatment of staff, particularly women, and to
departmental closures and job losses. “Academics are keen
for a change from the RAE, but metrics are not the right
change. In fact, they are a step backwards,” she said.
“It is incredible that proposals were drawn up without any
representation from the people who do the research. Although
the voice of the profession is absent from the
Government’s proposals, we will continue to press for it
to be properly heard.”
University makes golf
compulsory
A Chinese university aiming to produce
“socially elite” graduates is to make golf compulsory
for students, according to reports in the China Daily
newspaper. Golf, once said to be reviled in Communist China
as a symbol of western decadence, has become hugely popular
among the newly affluent since the first golf course opened
on the mainland in the early 1980s. Students majoring in
management, law, economics and software engineering at
Xiamen University in China’s southeastern Fujian province
would be required to take a course in golf “to achieve
their elite ambitions”.
The University’s President,
Zhu Chongshi, is reported as saying that golf is not only
good exercise but will teach students communication skills
and benefit their future careers. “The highest embodiment
of the education system is producing socially elite people
with the best education,” he said.
Meanwhile, a British
university is offering its students a chance to learn the
origins and development of England’s most enduring
legendary figure, Robin Hood. Nottingham University will
offer the postgraduate course from October next
year.
China Daily and
BBC
*******************************************************************************
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