AUS Tertiary Update
Academics not safe in Iraqi, says unionist
A leading
Iraqi trade unionist has told New Zealand university staff
that academics in his country face daily threats to their
lives, with as many as 300 professors, lecturers and
researchers having lost their lives during the period of the
United States occupation. In a particularly moving address,
Abdullah Muhsin, the International Representative of the
General Federation of Iraqi Workers, told the Association of
University Staff Annual Conference on Monday that the
situation in Baghdad remains grave, with university teachers
becoming targets of assassination simply because they are a
voice of reason, democracy and human rights. “In this
climate of violence and intimidation, being a teacher with a
humanist and progressive agenda is a dangerous and cruel
job,” he said.
According to Mr Muhsin, the most recent
murder was that of Ali Hassan, a young, promising Iraqi
social scientist who promoted and campaigned for democracy,
human and women’s rights and, above all, stood against the
politics of sectarianism and the division of Iraq. He was
“brutally eliminated” on 5 October this year. In a
further example, he said that an economics lecturer who
refused to be intimidated or give in to threats found his
obituary in the newspaper. “Other dissenters”, he says,
“are beaten, tortured or simply disappear.”
A former
student-union activist, Mr Muhsin fled Iraq in 1978 after
Saddam Hussein waged his campaign of terror against that
country’s civil-society organisations independent of
Ba’athist control, including trade unions, student groups
and women’s organisations. Although currently residing in
the United Kingdom, Mr Muhsin travels regularly to Iraq,
most recently four months ago.
Mr Muhsin says that the
situation in Iraq is complex and often very difficult.
“Higher education has huge problems and the Iraqi
institutions lack real solutions,” he says. “The
Government, its education ministries and their relevant
agencies seem incapable of providing a way out of these
problems.” He said it was vital that militias are removed
from all Iraqi universities and heads and deans of colleges
and universities are appointed on the basis of merit,
expertise and accomplishment and not on the basis of party
politics or family connection.
Mr Muhsin will address
meetings in Christchurch today and Auckland on Friday
(details on the AUS website). He will also be interviewed in
Kim Hill’s Radio New Zealand National programme on
Saturday morning.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Hodgson points to innovation links in new
role
2. One in three has tertiary qualification, says
report
3. TEC questions a bit Rich
4. Position on
mining degree misrepresented, says NZVCC
5. Hodgson tells
National to be patient on funding
announcement
6. Protests as Holocaust denier appears at
Oxford
7. Few academic research jobs permanent, says
report
8. New Australian Government hopes to halt decline
in higher education
9. Blog MP shares vision of slashing
academia
Hodgson points to innovation links in new
role
The new Minister for Tertiary Education, Pete
Hodgson, has sent a strong signal that he sees a strong
synergy between tertiary education and his other two
ministerial portfolios, Economic Development and Research,
Science and Technology, in effect creating a new role for
him as a Minister of Innovation.
In his first major
address to the tertiary-education sector, Mr Hodgson told
the AUS Conference on Tuesday that the development of human
capital is central to all of his portfolios and that the
exciting and challenging prospect for him is to use the
opportunity the Prime Minister has given him to explore the
synergies that this collection of portfolios offers up.
“New Zealanders are renowned for innovation –
introducing better ways of doing things and finding creative
solutions to problems. We wear this badge with pride across
the world and often hear positive comments about our
graduates from overseas colleagues,” he said.
Mr
Hodgson also used his speech to refer to the importance of
teaching, saying that society has always looked to
universities to lead the development of tomorrow’s
leaders. “The way you carry out your role impacts on the
skills, attributes and attitudes students develop,” he
said. “Each year, 125,000 students attend our
universities. If there is one single factor that will make
a difference to whether they do well in their studies, it is
the quality of the teaching they receive and how their
learning is managed and supported.”
Referring to his
own experiences, Mr Hodgson said that those, like him, who
have had the opportunity to go to university, will remember
the power and influence of inspiring lecturers and the
impact they had on the way they thought, how much they
learned and, in many cases, what they did next. “That was
the case for me at Massey, and at Vic, and as the MP for
Dunedin North and the views of Otago academics continue to
influence me, albeit informally,” he added.
Mr
Hodgson’s speech recognised the contribution of the AUS to
the Tripartite Forum, which he described as a commitment by
unions, government and the vice-chancellors’ to finding
ways of addressing issues affecting the sustainability and
effectiveness of the university sector. “It is already
clear that the Forum has been, and is, a good thing,” he
concluded.
Mr Hodgson’s speech can be found
at:
http://www.beehive.govt.nz/ViewDocument.aspx?DocumentID=31428
One
in three has tertiary qualification, says report
The
number of people in the New Zealand population with a
tertiary-education qualification is rising, more than one in
three New Zealanders in 2006 having some form of
post-compulsory-school qualification. According to the
latest edition of Profiles and Trends 2006, New Zealand’s
Tertiary Education Sector, the proportion of the population
without a tertiary qualification has fallen significantly,
the proportion of people with a bachelor’s degree or
higher qualification has increased in all ethnic groups and
the proportion of women who are tertiary-qualified is
increasing.
Profiles and Trends 2006, New Zealand’s
Tertiary Education Sector, is the ninth annual publication
in a series released by the Ministry of Education and
provides a summary of the overall performance and key
characteristics of the tertiary-education sector. In
addition to its analysis of sector trends and performance,
the report contains a number of short articles covering a
wide-range of topics of interest to the sector's
stakeholders and those who are involved in the provision of
tertiary education.
Among perhaps the unexpected findings
in the report is that the earnings premium for those with a
tertiary-education qualification decreased in 2006 compared
with those with no qualifications. While the premium is
described as still significant, the report suggests that the
reason for the decline reflects the strength of the labour
market, currently providing greater access to employment for
those with no or lower-level qualifications.
The report
says that the research performance of the sector improved in
several areas, with research training and enrolments in
doctoral degrees increasing substantially. Meanwhile, the
total research output increased at four of the six
universities that reported research outputs in 2006. The
academic impact of research by the New Zealand universities,
relative to the world average, increased between 2000-2004
and 2001-2005 in four out of ten broad subject areas
monitored.
The 235-page report can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/series/profile_and_trends/15141
TEC
questions a bit Rich
The Tertiary Education Commission
says that it absolutely has not spent Commission or
government money on staff and partners or friends attending
the 2007 Taste Martinborough Food and Wine Festival earlier
this month. Some staff attended the festival but completely
at their own expense.
Last week, it was reported in
Tertiary Update that the National Party Education
Spokesperson, Katherine Rich, posed a series of seven
written parliamentary questions to the Minister for Tertiary
Education, asking, in a variety of ways, whether TEC staff
and management attended the Martinborough festival on 18
November. The questions also asked whether their attendance
was at a cost to the TEC, how many staff attended, whether
attendance was for a work purpose and, if so, what the
purpose was, whether travel was paid for and whether any
form of allowance was granted to attend.
Ms Rich told
Tertiary Update that her office had received information
which had led to the questions.
Position on mining degree
misrepresented, says NZVCC
The New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee says that its opposition to
the setting up of a mining degree based on New Zealand
Qualifications Authority (NZQA) unit standards has been
misrepresented.
On Monday this week, the Industry
Training Federation of New Zealand said that statements by
the vice-chancellors opposing the proposed mining degree
show they are sadly out of touch with the needs of industry.
The Extractives Industry Training Organisation (EXITO), the
body established by the mining industry to address skills
issues in their industry, has been working to develop a
degree in mine risk management for the last several years.
EXITO says it has taken this step in direct response to the
lack of interest in this area by New Zealand universities.
NZVCC Executive Director Lindsay Taiaroa said, however,
that the issue is not about the mining industry or
industrial qualifications, but whether the NZQA is prepared
to register degrees on the National Qualification Framework
which neither meet the statutory requirements for a
bachelor’s degree nor have a provider with accreditation
and approval to deliver them. “The issues are complex, as
NZQA realises, and at this stage the universities, along
with other interested bodies, are being consulted on their
views,” he said.
Mr Taiaroa added that the NZVCC is
interested in protecting the integrity of degree standards
in New Zealand. “NZVCC is responsive to the needs of
industry and for many years the University of Otago and
later the University of Auckland offered degrees in mining
which were eventually discarded because of lack of student
demand and employer interest. A wide range of current
university degrees are relevant to industrial employers in
New Zealand,” he said. “No other tertiary-education
provider is allowed to get away with this approach and gain
public funding so it is difficult to see why an industry
training organisation should be exempted.”
Hodgson tells
National to be patient on funding announcement
The
Minister for Tertiary Education, Pete Hodgson, has told the
National Party spokesperson on Tertiary Education, Dr Paul
Hutchison, to be patient, saying that the proposed
three-year funding deals for New Zealand’s
tertiary-education institutions will be announced in early
December. Mr Hodgson’s comment follows a statement by Dr
Hutchison, to the effect that the tertiary-education reforms
being imposed by the Tertiary Education Commission on
polytechnics and universities are so alarming that they have
been compared to Labour’s attempts to close primary
schools.
Dr Hutchison said that patch-up funding,
including the Quality Reinvestment Fund, was being used to
prop up institutions starved of funds instead of being used
to enhance quality. “Some of our best-performing
polytechs, like Southland Institution of Technology, which
is losing $8 million in this process, are being sacrificed
to save under-performing institutions,” he said.
Responding, Mr Hodgson said that, while universities and
polytechnics are currently finalising triennial investment
plans with the Tertiary Education Commission, Dr Hutchison
is attempting to spread pessimism with the use of a standard
doom and gloom message. “The only person who seems unduly
alarmed is Dr Hutchison, as the sector has known about the
funding decision for some time,” Mr Hodgson said. “If he
could just hold his breath for a fortnight he may be able to
make a more informed comment.”
Mr Hodgson said that the
investment plans form part of wider reforms within the
sector which will offer universities, polytechnics and
industry training organisations more certainty of funding
and taxpayers’ additional confidence that they are getting
value for money. “We are also about to pass legislation
that confirms a shift towards even greater responsiveness
between educators and those they serve. The legislation
will also take into account inflation pressures, expected
demographic change, student demand and competing priorities
within and outside the education sector.” he said.
It
is expected that new funding allocations will be announced
around 14 December.
Worldwatch
Protests as Holocaust
denier appears at Oxford
Angry protesters clashed with
police on Monday night before an Oxford University student
debate on free speech at which convicted Holocaust denier
David Irving had been invited to speak. Jewish and Muslim
students joined raucous demonstrations outside the Oxford
Union, the highly esteemed 184-year-old debating society
that has hosted such prominent figures as former New Zealand
Prime Minister David Lange and United States President Bill
Clinton.
The protests turned chaotic when around thirty
demonstrators broke through police barricades to launch an
assault on the Union building where Irving had taken up his
seat several hours before the event was due to begin to
avoid any violence.
The start of the debate was delayed
as police battled to remove several sit-in protesters from
the packed Union hall.
Irving had been invited to speak
alongside Nick Griffin, the leader of the far-right British
National Party, whose anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim views
have sparked heated argument in the past. Four others were
to debate against them.
Commentators have lined up to
condemn the Union for staging the debate, saying the
student-led organization is giving a platform to extremism
partly in an effort to attract attention. Oxford Union
President Luke Tryl, however, has defended the decision to
invite Griffin and Irving, saying the best way to counter
extremism is to defeat it intellectually in debate. “These
people are not being given a platform to extol their views
but are coming to talk about the limits of free speech,”
he wrote in a letter to Union members who had expressed
concern. “It is my belief that pushing the views of these
people underground achieves nothing ... Stopping them
speaking only allows them to become free-speech
martyrs.”
From Reuters
Few academic research jobs
permanent, says report
A survey of currently advertised
research jobs in United Kingdom universities by the
University and College Union (UCU) shows that casualised
short-term employment contracts remain the norm for staff
beginning their careers, with 96.5 percent of their posts
being fixed-term. This is despite agreement between the
employers’ body, the University and Colleges Employers’
Association, and the unions which says that “indefinite
contracts” should be the normal form of employment.
The
survey comes as part of a new report from UCU which shows
that, overall, more than two-thirds of academics (70
percent) are still being employed on fixed-term contracts
when they start employment. The report, Fixed-term: the
scandal continues, analyses all new academic appointments in
2005 (the latest statistics available) and scrutinises
researcher jobs recently advertised on an academic-jobs
website.
UCU General Secretary, Sally Hunt, said that it
is a source of great shame for UK higher education that only
the hotel and catering sector employs a greater percentage
of staff on temporary contracts. “The widespread use of
fixed-term contracts is the unacceptable underbelly of
higher education in this country,” she said. “Despite
specific guidance agreed by the employers and trade unions
to discourage the abuse of fixed-term contracts,
universities seem to be ignoring it and persisting with
short-term and short-sighted employment practices; in fact
it is getting worse. The best brains in Britain are held in
positions of insecurity and it is no wonder that they look
for jobs abroad or outside higher education.”
New
Australian Government hopes to halt decline in higher
education
In an immediate-post-election speech, Kevin
Rudd, the Australian Labor Party Prime Minister-elect, says
he will oversee an “education revolution” to increase
public spending on schools and universities and arrest the
“brain drain” of talented academics to universities
abroad.
Mr Rudd’s statement has been welcomed by the
University of Melbourne Vice Chancellor, Glyn Davis, who
says the sector now expects “modest” immediate gains for
universities. “The test will be whether, over the next
three years, overall levels of public investment rise,
access and equity improve for disadvantaged groups, student
life is restored to campuses and Australia is able to
reverse its current overall decline in international
rankings of university performance,” he said.
During
the election campaign, the Labor Party promised an
additional $NZ4.6 million of government support for
universities to increase enrolments in priority areas of
teaching, nursing and medicine, a plan to lure mid-career
researchers home from overseas universities and funds for a
small number of research and infrastructure programs.
The Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations
attempted to dampen expectations raised by Mr. Rudd’s talk
of an “education revolution” by stressing that radical
reforms could not be “pulled out of a hat overnight”.
Fielding questions from students on the eve of the
election, Mr. Rudd promised to tackle the rising cost of
higher education if elected. “This is the beginning of an
approach by us which has the affordability of higher
education for kids from working families at its core,” he
said.
From the Chronicle of Higher Education
Blog MP
shares vision of slashing academia
Half the university
courses on offer in the United Kingdom should be scrapped
and the brightest students paid to go to university,
according to a Conservative Member of Parliament, Nadine
Dorries.
Ms Dorries, dubbed “queen of the bloggers”
after winning a Tory award for her blogging prowess, said
she felt the need to set out her thoughts on university
education after having been appointed a member of the new
House of Commons Innovation, Universities and Skills Select
Committee
She called for an end to the Government’s
target of 50 percent participation in higher education by
young people and said that the brightest students should,
through grants, be paid to attend university and not be put
in a position where they start their working lives “up to
their necks” in debt.
She said she believed that half
of the country’s students are attending inappropriate
courses and are being forced into a system of education that
makes them unhappy and shatters their confidence and belief
in themselves. “Walk around any halls of residence at the
moment and spot the unhappy students,” she said, adding
that, while her daughter’s room at university was
“smaller that a prison cell”, a prisoner would not have
had to put up with the cockroaches.
From The Times Higher
Education Supplement
More international news
More
international news can be found on University World
News
http://www.universityworldnews.com/
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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