AUS Tertiary Update
Union members to vote on amalgamation proposal
Union
members at the country’s tertiary-education organisations
will begin voting next week to determine whether or not the
three predominant unions in the sector will amalgamate to
form a single, new, tertiary-education-sector union. The
ballot follows agreement in principle by the Association of
University Staff (AUS), the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education (ASTE) and the Tertiary Institutions’ Allied
Staff Association (TIASA) to form the new union.
Each
union is requiring 65 percent of those participating in the
ballot to vote in favour of the amalgamation for it to
proceed. While ASTE and TIASA will be bound by the ballot
result, the AUS Conference will need to confirm the ballot
result at its conference in late November. At the same time
as the ballot is running, the AUS will be convening a series
of meetings in universities to enable members to discuss the
issue prior to casting votes.
If the merger proposal
receives the green light from union members, a year-long
process will then occur in order to ensure a successful
transition from the existing three unions into a new,
13,000-strong tertiary-education union by the beginning of
2009.
In a letter to AUS members, National President,
Professor Nigel Haworth, says that a strong, single,
tertiary-education union is in the best interests of the
members of all three unions for three main reasons: the
power of a single voice in the sector, the elimination of
duplication around membership coverage and the advantages
for union strength offered by combined resources.
“Moreover, the proposed structure of the new union
comprehensively meets member needs and permits and
encourages all parts of the union to have a voice,” he
said. “It will underpin a united union, able to play a
leading role in the direction of New Zealand’s
tertiary-education sector.”
Professor Haworth said
that, with more than one quarter of ASTE’s membership now
in universities through the mergers of colleges of education
with universities and AUT becoming a university,
amalgamation made good sense from industrial, policy and
political perspectives.
The proposed structure for the
new union, along with other details can be found
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/Current/amalgamation/amalgamation.asp
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. That Dunedin
riot, whose responsibility?
2. Another key resignation
from Auckland
3. Council restricts student fee increase
4. Leaked report says polytechnics not
viable
5. Victoria bid for fees increase in
limbo
6. Tertiary reforms a rat's nest of uncertainty,
says National
7. Universities not ready for RQF
8. Boys less likely to go to university, warns
charity
9. US university cancels courses, but teacher
vows to carry on
10. Phantom French professor claims
salary for 15 years
That Dunedin riot, whose
responsibility?
Something of a war of words has broken
out in the media this week over last Saturday night’s
student riot in Dunedin, with some student, university and
local-body leaders seeming either to avoid taking
responsibility or to blame others, including the police, for
the carnage. For the second year running, mayhem broke out
in that city following the annual Undie 500 car race between
Christchurch and Dunedin, with estimates of as many as 1,000
University of Canterbury students descending on Dunedin for
what has been described as a weekend of drinking and couch
and car-burning. Sixty-nine people were arrested,
twenty-four of them Canterbury students.
The Press
reports Dunedin Mayor Peter Chin describing comments by
Canterbury Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, to the
effect that he had little control over his students’
off-campus behaviour as pathetic and as telling him to
“get real” and take responsibility.
In response,
Professor Sharp told Tertiary Update that the behaviour was
deplorable and his statement that the University had little
direct control should not to be seen as an attempt by the
University to distance itself. He said that those students
who broke the law must face the full consequences of their
actions and that it is possible that the University could
take disciplinary action against students involved in the
incident.
Otago’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor David
Skegg, said that the events were particularly sad, given
that so much has been achieved over the past twelve months
with the City Council, police, and University working to
achieve a much better environment in North Dunedin. “We
will be liaising closely with the police and taking whatever
action is appropriate under our new discipline
regulations,” he said. “The University will not be
turning a blind eye to any of its members found to be
involved in some of the behaviour that was witnessed on
Saturday.”
Professor Skegg said that, in future, he
hoped that the Canterbury students head north or west (or
preferably east!). For the geographically uninitiated, the
east comprises a large, deep body of water between
Christchurch and South America.
Meanwhile, under the
inelegant heading “Vast student riot hits New Zealand
city”, the United States newspaper, Chronicle of Higher
Education, describes Dunedin as home of the University of
Otago and a “notorious binge-drinking center”.
Another key resignation from Auckland
A top professor
has resigned as head of the University of Auckland School of
Architecture and Planning, telling students a deep
“misalignment” of views between her and Faculty
management is behind her premature departure, according to a
story in today’s New Zealand Herald.
Professor Peggy
Deamer, who was Assistant Dean at New York’s renowned Yale
University's School of Architecture, took up her position in
February this year, appointed with much fanfare by Professor
Sharman Pretty, Dean of Auckland University’s National
Institute of Creative Arts.
The Herald says that
Professor Deamer, who resigned on 17 August, was ordered by
Professor Pretty to clear out her office over the weekend.
Professor Deamer told students she had offered six months’
notice to minimise disruption, but that was
rejected.
Professor Deamer’s sudden departure is
reported to have shocked staff and students, who have been
given no official explanation. Students gathered in the
School’s courtyard in protest and 372 have signed a letter
to the Vice-Chancellor asking for problems between the
Faculty and School to be resolved.
A group represented by
the University’s Students’ Association is due to meet
Professor Pretty next week. Most Architecture staff spoken
to by the Herald did not want to be named, describing a
climate of fear at the School and saying their jobs would be
in jeopardy if they spoke out.
The Herald understands
Professor Deamer was constantly thwarted by Professor Pretty
in her efforts to make changes at the School.
Acrimonious
relations between the School and the Faculty have been a
longstanding problem and were highlighted in a 2006
accreditation report. Staff talk of a lack of autonomy in
decision-making, token democratic processes in Faculty
meetings and centralised “micromanagement” control by
the Faculty.
Council restricts student fee increase
In
a split decision, the University of Canterbury Council voted
late yesterday to limit an across-the-board increase in
domestic student fees to 3.3 percent for 2008, despite a
University management proposal that fees increase by 4.5
percent. The decision will result in the University
receiving $545,000 less in fees than it had hoped which,
according to a newspaper report, could result in borrowing
money for capital expenditure or staff cuts.
The Council
voted by nine votes to eight to limit the increase to the
3.3 percent, one which the University says matches the Bank
of New Zealand’s Consumer Price Index forecast for
2008.
The proposed 4.5 percent increase was intended to
absorb a shortfall created by the level of government
funding which will increase by only 2.2 percent next year.
As a result of yesterday’s decision, the overall level of
income for the University for 2008 will increase at a rate
less than that of inflation.
University of Canterbury
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, said the University is
committed to providing a high quality education, but that it
was unfair that students shoulder the burden of the under
funding of the tertiary education sector. He said that the
Council decision reflected that belief.
Professor Sharp
said that the decision would have some impact on the
University’s 2008 budget which is being prepared and is
due to be presented to the Council in October. “It is my
hope that the upcoming reforms of the tertiary sector will
end the hand-to-mouth existence we are currently in, and the
financial impact that has on our students,” Professor
Sharp said.
It is understood that some Council members
believed that its decision would send a powerful message to
Government that under funding was unacceptable and could not
be made up by continually increasing student tuition
fees.
Leaked report says polytechnics not viable
The
polytechnic sector is not viable in its current state and
proposals for its future include rationalising course
development and the creation of universities of technology,
according to a report leaked to Education Review. The report
to the Minister for Tertiary Education covers the work of
the Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics Projects
Steering Group and discusses options for the sector’s
future.
Included among the options discussed in the
report is the creation of an over-arching university of
technology to bring the country’s polytechnics close
together, a mediation body that will rule where disputes
arise when an institution offers courses in competition to
another, the establishment of a national benchmarking system
and a shared servicing arrangement.
Education Review
says that the report also looks at a number of projects
which could be bankrolled by government over the next two
years. These are divided into “enabling projects”, aimed
at helping the polytechnic sector adjust to the new
tertiary-education system, and “collaborative projects”
that could be run nationally or among smaller groups of
institutions.
Included among the projects is the creation
of an entity to “assess new academic developments with an
impact beyond any one ITP and disputed out-of-region
activity”. That entity could approve new qualifications
and support development of national and multi-region
qualifications and curriculum development. It would also
investigate the desirability of seeking the ability to award
qualifications, either as a polytechnic-sector awarding body
or a New Zealand University of Technology.
The report
says that the move towards a sustainable network of
provision in the ITP sector is likely to see each
polytechnic having a different role and some polytechnics
exiting certain kinds and levels of provision where they
lack the required critical mass. It highlights out-of-region
provision and provision that overlaps with industry-training
programmes as issues that the Tertiary Education Commission
wants to resolve.
The full story can be read on Education
Review’s subscriber-based website
at:
http://www.educationreview.co.nz/
Victoria bid for
fees increase in limbo
Victoria University has been told
that an application to increase some student-tuition fees
has been declined in principle but that the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC) is yet to make a final
decision.
On top of a 5 percent tuition-fee increase from
the start of this year, Victoria sought an exemption from
the Government’s fee-maxima policy to increase fees by a
further 5 percent from the second trimester in a number of
courses, including Languages, Law, Architecture and
Education.
Victoria Vice-Chancellor, Pat Walsh, said
that, in some subject areas, fees at his University are
considerably lower than for other New Zealand universities
and that he would be continuing to discuss the current
application and associated matters with the TEC in the
coming months.
TEC Chief Executive, Janice Shiner, is
reported as saying that, on balance, Victoria’s
application failed to prove exceptional circumstances or
establish a special case to justify an exemption from the 5
per cent fee-maxima limit.
In order to get an exemption
from the fee-maxima policy, universities are required to
satisfy more than one of three principles, including the
cost of providing the course not being met by income from
the course, the institution being unable to cross-subsidise
the courses and/or a failure to increase fees compromising
education priorities or severely restricting students’
access to study.
Tertiary reforms a rat's nest of
uncertainty, says National
The Labour Government’s
tertiary-education reforms continue to cause confusion among
students and undue stress on tertiary-education providers,
according to the National Party Tertiary Education
spokesman, Dr Paul Hutchison. He says that the latest
bureaucratic nightmare to be inflicted on the sector is
Labour’s intention to split the current subsidy received
by students 70/30.
Dr Hutchison’s statement is an
apparent reference to the new funding system that will see
70 percent of government funding allocated to the sector on
the basis of student enrolments, with the balance shared out
on the basis of negotiations between individual institutions
and the Tertiary Education Commission, in line with their
investment plans.
According to Dr Hutchison, the new
funding regime means that up to 30 percent of funding can be
used for other than direct support for course fees.
“Labour is creating a trough of funds that will come under
the control of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC),”
he said. “The indications are that Labour has cut 24
percent from wānanga subsidy rates, 21 percent from
polytechnics, and 8.5 percent from universities in favour of
a TEC-controlled slush fund.”
“How many more millions
must Labour spend on untested reforms at the expense of
education?” Dr Hutchison asks. “Students are uncertain
about how much their course fees will be subsidised and
tertiary providers are left with yet another tangled
bureaucratic strand in the rat's nest of Labour tertiary
reforms.”
Dr Hutchison said that a new intake of
students is only months away and tertiary institutions need
to know now if their investment plans have been settled.
“It seems increasingly unlikely TEC will be able to
provide any surety in time. Meanwhile, students and
educators are left in a void of uncertainty - the only sure
thing being that, where Labour is concerned, incessant
change is the only inevitability,” he said.
Worldwatch
Universities not ready for RQF
Australian universities want the introduction of the
Research Quality Framework postponed for a year, saying that
they can’t get the necessary multi-million dollar
information-technology system in place in time because of
delays by the Federal Government in finalising the RQF
rules. The RQF is a research-funding scheme similar to the
Research Assessment Exercise in the United Kingdom and PBRF
in New Zealand. It is due to start in January
2009.
Universities also fear it would be a gamble to go
ahead with plans for the RQF in case of a change of
government or a change of minister should the Coalition
retain power in the coming Federal election.
While
universities have asked Federal Education, Science and
Training Minister, Julie Bishop, to delay the scheme’s
introduction by twelve months, it appears that the Minister
is unmoved. In a letter to Group of Eight chairman Glyn
Davis this month, Ms Bishop said that, no matter how much
time she provided to implement an RQF, the sector would ask
for an extension. “After nearly three years of
development, I consider the sector has been given
appropriate opportunity to provide input to the RQF,” she
said.
Universities have complained that they don’t have
time to put in place and test the necessary IT system, which
will need to be linked with each university’s systems
covering human resources, research and finances.
What
makes the situation worse is a shortage of qualified IT
specialists to do the job.
From The Australian
Boys
less likely to go to university, warns charity
Boys in
the United Kingdom are markedly less likely than girls to
consider going to university, according to a survey
commissioned by a charity. The Sutton Trust, which works to
increase educational opportunity for pupils from poorer
backgrounds, said its survey of 2,400 eleven to
sixteen-year-olds in 100 state schools reveals a worrying
gender gap in aspirations.
The results from
self-completed questionnaires show that 71 percent of young
people believed they would go to university, but this was
split between 76 percent of girls and 67 percent of boys.
The gap of nine percentage points is twice as high as the
year before. More concerning is that one in three boys said
they did not intend to go to university because they “do
not enjoy learning”, compared to one in five girls. The
study also warns that boys were more “pessimistic” or
“fatalistic” about the impact of a university education
on their future success.
The Trust said it had
experienced problems recruiting young men to its university
summer schools. Of 3,300 applications received from sixth
formers last year, only 29 percent were from boys. Each year
only about a third of those attending are boys.
The
report says that young women also perform significantly
better then boys in the state examination, GCSEs and
A-levels, and more women both apply to university and become
undergraduates.
From The Guardian
US university
cancels courses, but teacher vows to carry on
Although he
has had all of his courses cancelled, has been placed on
administrative leave and has had his office taken away, a
prominent United States political scientist, Norman
Finkelstein, has said that he will carry on teaching his
students, even if it means he ends up in prison.
In what
was described earlier in the year as one of the most
rancorous disputes in American academia, Finkelstein was
denied tenure at DePaul University, one of the United
States’ top ten private universities, and told he would
lose his job when his current fixed-term contract ends next
year. Finkelstein, a frequent critic of Israel’s treatment
of Palestinians, said he has been “blacklisted” by the
University after initially having been offered lifelong
tenure.
In an email to the news media, Mr. Finkelstein
said that he intends to show up on the first day of the new
academic year to teach his classes and to use his regular
office in the Political Science department. “If the
University attempts to impede my movements, I intend to
engage in nonviolent civil disobedience and go to gaol. If
incarcerated, I intend to go on a protracted hunger strike
until DePaul comes to its senses,” he said. “It is
regrettable that I have been driven to such drastic actions
to defend basic principles of academic freedom and my
contractual rights, upon which DePaul has been riding
roughshod for so long.”
Dr Finkelstein lost his bid for
tenure at DePaul in June after a bitter public fight that
featured the involvement of Harvard University law professor
Alan M. Dershowitz
From the Chronicle of Higher
Education
Phantom French professor claims salary for 15
years
It has been reported this week that a French tax
official cheated the government out of 600,000 euros ($NZ
1,154,457) by creating a phantom identity as a university
professor and claiming a salary for some fifteen years.
Education Ministry officials uncovered the scam in June and
began legal and disciplinary action to prevent a possible
recurrence of an abuse of this
kind.
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