AUS Tertiary Update
Massey no comment on split allegations
Massey University
has declined to comment on a recent report of splits within
its Council, with one group said to be backing the
Vice-Chancellor and the other the Chancellor. Neither does
it want to comment on an apparent leaking of information at
senior levels within the University.
In its current
edition, Education Review reports that it has received a
letter from a Council member alleging that a group of core
councillors effectively runs the Council, acting as an “A
team” that makes decisions which are then signed off by a
“B team”. The letter’s author suggests that boundaries
between governance and management are blurred and that the
Vice-Chancellor is “regularly and deliberately”
undermined. It goes on to say that there has been no
strategy to pull the Council together because that “would
not suit the cause”, that some Council members are back
into “war” with the Vice-Chancellor and that it will not
be long before details leak out and become
public.
Sources spoken to by Tertiary Update say that
there is no doubt that the letter sent to Education Review
is genuine and its claim of a divided Council not
over-stated. It is also understood that senior University
management are privately furious at the leaks from within
Council but are saying nothing on the record.
The latest
allegation follows last week’s revelation of rifts between
the University’s Council and senior management, with the
Council claiming authority to overturn a senior-management
decision to close the University’s Engineering course at
its Wellington campus.
When asked for a comment on the
reported conflict of views over decision-making with regard
to Engineering at Wellington, a University spokesperson said
that while, “clearly there have been differing views”, a
decision is imminent. The Council is due to meet this
Friday.
Despite recent reports, the Council Chair, Nigel
Gould, is reported as saying that the Council is “very
collegial” and there is plenty of evidence that it was not
divided, wilful and fragmented and that such rumours were
the product of the way universities are structured.
The
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Judith Kinnear, is due to retire
in March next year.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Caught up in purgery?
2. Fee increase story
not true, says Key
3. ASTE confirms amalgamation
intention
4. Education figures released
5. Policies
attract top international PhD students
6. UK lowest on
academic-freedom list
7. Iran University invites Bush to
speak
8. ACLU sues Government over exclusion
9. Israel
boycott illegal, UCU says
10. Say goodbye to the
office
Caught up in purgery?
In something akin to the
notion that history occurs twice, the first time as tragedy,
the second time as farce, Lincoln University appears to have
adopted its own version of the political purge and
historical revisionism when reporting a recent expedition by
staff members to the former Communist stronghold of
Russia.
Under the headline ‘Lincoln academics take
landscape love to Russia’, the University last week issued
a press release saying that three Christchurch landscape
architects with extensive international experience have
helped organise a global conference in the old Russian
capital of St Petersburg as a contribution to the emerging
landscape architecture profession in the former Soviet
state. The release also names another Christchurch resident,
unconnected to the University but present at the June
conference.
In its telling of its story, Lincoln omits
the name of a fifth person, one of its own then staff
members, Associate Professor Glenn Stewart, who was both
part of the staff group at the Conference and a major
contributor. Not only was he on the Conference Programme
Committee, but Associate Professor Stewart also helped to
arrange speakers, was the senior editor for the 213-page
Conference proceedings, chaired one session and presented a
paper in another on Urban Ecology and then moderated the
main conference panel discussion.
Keen readers will
observe that, in August, Tertiary Update ran a story saying
that Associate Professor Stewart, a highly respected
scientist with a more than thirty-year career in Ecology and
Conservation, was sacked without notice in late July after
an investigation by Lincoln University into a complaint of
alleged serious misconduct. AUS believes the dismissal to be
both procedurally and substantively unfair and a claim of
unjustified dismissal is due to be heard in the Employment
Relations Authority on 4 and 5 December.
The question
which arises is whether there is any connection between the
Associate Professor’s dismissal and the removal of any
reference to him from Lincoln’s public record of the St
Petersburg Conference. If analogies with the soviet past are
to be drawn, one recalls that there was at least a show
trial before a purge was carried out.
Fee-increase story
not true, says Key
The National Party says it has no
plans to remove the fee-maxima policy which prevents
tertiary-education institutions increasing student-tuition
fees by more than 5 percent in any one year. The denial
follows claims that National Party leader John Key told an
audience at an AUT Business School Breakfast Club address
that, under a National Government, there would be no
restrictions on fee increases.
The New Zealand Union of
Student Associations says it is alarmed that National may be
considering freeing up the rules around fee increases,
particularly given that tertiary-tuition fees increased at
alarming rates under a National government in the 1990s, in
some cases by as much as 100 percent in a year. “This set
the path for New Zealand students to now be paying some of
the highest fees in the world,” said Joey Randall, NZUSA
Co-President. “The result is a collective student debt
that has now ballooned to over $9 billion.”
Mr Key
says, however, that the assertion about removing the
fee-maxima policy is incorrect. “I did not make that
statement,” he said.
Following reports of Mr Key’s
address to AUT, acting Minister for Tertiary Education Steve
Maharey has warned that a National government would make a
giant leap backwards for tertiary education. “The focus on
collaboration and cooperation would once again be ditched in
favour of more ideologically driven free-market
competition,” he said. “Just like their health policy,
which would see fees for visiting your local GP skyrocket,
National’s approach to tertiary-student fees is all about
ideology and shows little interest in the people that end up
paying more.”
Meanwhile, students at Victoria plan to
protest against that University’s plan to increase tuition
fees for 2008 by 5 percent at its Council meeting on Monday.
It is understood that, after a protest meeting, students
will attend the Council meeting in an effort to stop the fee
increase.
ASTE confirms amalgamation intention
With the
results confirmed from all but one of its branches, members
of the Association of Staff in Tertiary Education have given
their union an overwhelming mandate to proceed towards the
creation of a new tertiary-education-sector union.
Almost
94 percent of the 1900 members of ASTE who participated in
the ballot have cast their vote in favour of amalgamation.
ASTE now joins AUS, whose members voted by a 73 percent
margin to proceed towards amalgamation. The results from the
Tertiary Institutions’ Allied Staff Association, the third
union expected to make up the proposed Tertiary Education
Union, are expected to be confirmed later today.
ASTE
National President, Tangi Tipene, said that her union was
particularly pleased with the clear mandate that union
members had given for the amalgamation to proceed. “Our
union has promoted the concept of amalgamation for a number
of years, and so we were confident of a high level of
support”, she said. “In fact fifteen of our branches
gave unanimous support.”
Once the final ballot result
is known, new rules will be drawn up for the proposed union
and final consultation would be held around proposed new
structures and staffing arrangements. The new union would
become operational at the beginning of 2009.
Education
figures released
New Zealand spent 5.9 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP) on education in the year 2006/07,
according to figures just released by the Ministry of
Education. As a proportion of government expenditure the
spending on education is 17.9 percent.
The proportionate
figures reported in Education Statistics of New Zealand 2006
show that, while this year’s figures are both lower than
those for 2005/206, there has been a steady increase in this
country’s education expenditure since 2001/02. The
forecast spending for the 2006/07 year is $9.64 billion
against $9.9 billion in 2006/06. The spending in $2001/02
was only $6.47 billion, or 5.1 percent of GDP
While
Education Statistics of New Zealand 2006 deals primarily
with statistical information at the pre-tertiary-education
level, it also includes enrolment data around the age and
ethnicity of tertiary education students at July 2006 and
details of the number of each type of tertiary-education
institution.
Interestingly, it shows that the number of
private training providers has dropped from more than 500 in
2002 to 323 in 2006. The number of polytechnics or
institutes of technology has dropped from 22 in 2001 to 20
last year and the number of wananga and universities has
remained constant over the same time period, at three and
eight respectively.
Education Statistics of New Zealand
2006 can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/homepages/education-statistics/ed-stats-2006.html
Policies
attract top international PhD students
New Zealand
universities are attracting some of the world’s best
doctoral students because of two Government initiatives,
according to the Acting Minister for Tertiary Education,
Steve Maharey. He says that enrolments by international PhD
students in New Zealand universities rose by 56 per cent in
one year, more than double the annual growth rate from 2003
to 2005, as a result of the Government’s domestic fees for
international PhDs policy. “We will also have thirty-eight
new International Doctoral Research Scholarship recipients
studying in New Zealand from next year,” he said.
Total
international PhD enrolments rose from 693 in 2005 to 1,084
in 2006. The rise follows the introduction of government
policy in January 2006 whereby international students
enrolling in New Zealand institutions pay the same fees as
domestic students.
The domestic-fees policy builds on
the success of the International Doctoral Research
Scholarship introduced three years ago, which provides full
funding for course and living costs for up to three years
while students undertake PhD work in New Zealand.
The
largest growth in PhD enrolments from 2005 to 2006 came from
India (up 205 percent), China (up 103 percent), and the
United States (up 102 percent). Most new enrolments were in
Sciences and Arts subjects.
The International Doctoral
Research Scholarship recipients come from twenty countries
and will be researching subjects ranging across glacial
changes resulting from global warming, molecular biology,
film and environmental chemistry.
Mr Maharey said that
the Government wants New Zealand tertiary-education
institutions to participate actively in the global academic
community as it helps businesses and communities gain access
to international research and technology. “If we are to
transform New Zealand into a higher-wage, knowledge-based
economy, this kind of engagement is vital,” he
said.
Worldwatch
UK lowest on academic-freedom list
The United Kingdom is the worst country in Europe for
supporting and protecting academic freedom and free speech,
according to a new research paper from Lincoln University.
The paper says that the UK suffers because academics have
comparatively weak job protection, more limited
self-governance and, in particular, because the UK lacks
formal guarantees of freedom of expression or academic
freedom.
The research was carried out by Dr Terence
Karran, a researcher at Lincoln’s Centre for Educational
Research and Development. He studied legal provisions in
twenty-three European Union member countries and graded
countries’ provisions as high, medium or low. Spain,
Slovenia, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Finland came out
best, with the UK at the bottom of the table.
Dr Karran
blamed “the (apparent) need for greater managerial
professionalism, both as the participation in higher
education rises and as the universities’ research role
becomes ever more important in determining national
prosperity within the emerging global knowledge economy”.
He said the right of academics to “question received
wisdom” and to put forward unpopular ideas was enshrined
in the 1988 Education Reform Act, but the Act had the effect
of weakening academic freedom by removing tenure from newly
hired academics and staff at former polytechnics.
Dennis
Hayes, of Academics for Academic Freedom, said UK academics
suffered from a cosy indifference to the problem.
“Academic freedom in the UK is constrained by a
politicised and compliant academic culture in which debate
is discouraged for fear of causing offence to colleagues,
students, ministers or the quangocracy,” he said.
From
The Times Higher Education Supplement
Iran University
invites Bush to speak
An Iranian University has invited
United States President George Bush to speak following his
Iranian counterpart’s hostile reception at Columbia
University last week. The University’s President, Lee
Bollinger, introduced Iran’s President, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, to an audience of 600 as a “petty and cruel
dictator” and said that his Holocaust denials suggested he
was either “brazenly provocative or astonishingly
uneducated”.
The head of Ferdowsi University in
Iran’s second city of Mashhad said Mr Bush could answer
students’ questions about the Holocaust, terrorism and
human rights.
A White House spokeswoman responded,
saying that, if Iran were a free and democratic society that
allowed its people freedom of expression, wasn't pursuing
nuclear weapons and wasn't advocating destroying the country
of Israel, the President might consider that
invitation.
On his return from the United States,
President Ahmadinejad cancelled a speaking engagement at
Tehran University. Students there wrote him a letter asking
about the academic freedoms he had described to his New York
audience. They complained about arrests of students and
staff members and what they said were the appalling
punishments handed out to critics of the President.
Meanwhile, in the US, one Republican senator has
introduced legislation that would prohibit federal grants to
or contracts with Columbia University in retaliation for its
hosting of Ahmadinejad. “It is troubling to see that a
university such as Columbia, with a reputation as one of
America’s leading universities, is more receptive to
America’s adversaries than it is to the military that
protects its right to free speech and assembly,” the
senator said.
From the BBC and Teheran Times
ACLU sues
Government over exclusion
The American Civil Liberties
Union has issued legal proceedings against the United States
Federal Government in an attempt to try to force it to allow
a senior South African academic to enter the United States.
The scholar, Adam Habib, has been barred from entering since
last year, when he was detained at a New York airport and
deported after arriving for a series of academic meetings.
Recently, he applied for a new visa, in hope of attending
the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association
in New York in August, where he had been invited to speak on
a presidential panel. US authorities never responded to his
request.
Dr Habib, Deputy Vice-Chancellor of Research,
Innovation, and Advancement at the University of
Johannesburg, is one of a growing number of foreign scholars
whom the Bush administration has barred from entering the
United States. Like many of the others, he had been a
frequent visitor before being designated undesirable. Like
almost all the rest, he has never been given any
explanation.
His supporters believe he was excluded
because of his views as the US-educated academic has been a
prominent critic of the US-led war in Iraq and certain
aspects of the “war on terrorism”.
Melissa Goodman, a
staff lawyer with the ACLU’s National Security Project,
says that the Government is acting illegally and unwisely in
keeping Mr. Habib out. “When the Government excludes
scholars who have been invited to speak here, especially
when they’ve had no problem travelling here in the past
but have been vocal critics of US policy in recent years, it
sends the cowardly message that we are afraid of their
ideas,” she said.
From the Chronicle for Higher
Education
Israel boycott illegal, UCU says
The
University and College Union in the United Kingdom has
dropped plans to debate an academic boycott of Israel
universities after being given legal advice that such a
boycott would be unlawful and could not be implemented. UCU
had passed a motion at its Congress in May calling for the
circulation and debate of a call to boycott but, since then,
the Union has sought extensive legal advice in order to try
to implement Congress policy while protecting the position
of members and of the Union itself.
The legal advice
makes it clear that making a call to boycott Israeli
institutions would run a serious risk of infringing
discrimination legislation. The call to boycott is also
considered to be outside the aims and objects of the
UCU.
UCU General Secretary, Sally Hunt, said she hopes
the decision would allow the Union to move forward and focus
on representing its members.
Say goodbye to the office
Coventry University in the United Kingdom is pioneering
a “no desk” work scheme in which academics would agree
to give up their permanent university desks and offices in
return for contracts allowing them to work on the move or
from home, coffee shops and bistros.
The voluntary
scheme is to be piloted for two years by the University’s
Business and Environment School and is backed by £250,000
from the Joint Information Systems Committee, which is
hoping that other universities will consider similar moves.
Staff who work flexibly will be provided with the
technological trappings of a home office and the equipment
needed to work on the move, including laptops and mobile
phones with internet access, and will be permitted to work
almost anywhere.
“The big question is how much we can
persuade academics not to have their cake and eat it. Are
they prepared to benefit from flexible work but also give up
their treasured offices and desks?” a University
spokesperson said.
From The Times Higher Education
Supplement
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
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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