AUS Tertiary Update
Natural justice not part of process, says University
The
Employment Relations Authority has been told that the
University of Auckland disestablished this country’s only
full-time lectureship specialising in Māori Art History
while the lecturer concerned was on sick leave and even
though he had been given a written assurance that he would
be fully consulted if his position was in jeopardy.
In a
hearing last week, the Association of University Staff
challenged the dismissal of Dr Rangihiroa Panoho, saying the
axing of his position was unlawful not only because the
University had failed to honour its commitment to consult
him properly, but also because, on appointment, Dr Panoho
was told that, following an initial four year appointment
period, he would be given tenure until the (then) mandatory
retirement age.
In the run-up to a restructuring in the
Faculty of Arts in 2006, the Faculty’s Dean, Professor
John Morrow, wrote to Dr Panoho encouraging him to give
priority to improving his health, saying that, in the event
of a redundancy selection process affecting his department,
he would contact Dr Panoho if he was still on sick leave to
discuss the process and to offer further assistance. Without
further personal contact, however, Dr Panoho received a
letter from the University advising that his position had
been disestablished.
What became evident during the
hearing was that the selection of those to be made redundant
was based on performance-related criteria. Despite staff
knowing nothing of this process, each was rated by a
selection committee as exceeding expectations, meeting
expectations or falling below expectations in each of the
three areas of research, teaching and service.
Those
assessments were never put to the individuals concerned, nor
was there an opportunity for them to comment on or challenge
any errors in their assessment prior to their positions
being disestablished. To compound matters, the
selection-committee members did not know affected staff, but
worked off papers, in some cases submitted by potentially
affected staff and, in other cases including Dr Panoho’s,
prepared by management.
When it was put to a University
Human Resources representative, Sandra Lem, that this was in
breach of natural justice, she told the Employment Relations
Authority that, in this instance, natural justice did not
form part of the process.
The hearing of evidence in this
matter was heard last Thursday and Friday, with final
submissions expected to be made on 20 December. A decision
is not expected to be made until the New Year.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Universities move towards
entry restriction
2. Students, others oppose restriction
policy
3. SIT may sue over funding cut
4. New Board
members for NZQA
5. Council proposes joint venture for
new tertiary campus
6. Police withdraw riot
charges
7. HR iniatives fail to boost
performance
8. University staff pleased with
higher-education line-up
9. Students, staff say they were
ordered to vote for Putin
10. Sex, spending scandal rocks
US college
Universities move towards entry
restriction
In statements which have aroused considerable
disquiet this week, both the University of Auckland and
Victoria University of Wellington have proposed restrictions
on open entry of undergraduate students from 2009. On
Monday, the University of Auckland Senate, an academic board
comprising senior University management and academics,
accepted a recommendation that first-year entry to the
University in Arts, Science, Education and Law may be
restricted from the end of next year. The recommendation
will now go to the University Council for a final decision
on 10 December. This was followed, on Wednesday, by Victoria
University, which has indicated it may also restrict entry,
saying that it will have 600 unfunded students next year at
a cost of more than $4 million. Unfunded students are those
for whom a university will not receive government
funding.
The moves by the universities come a week ahead
of announcements by the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC)
which will set out details of the new funding arrangements
for tertiary-education institutions for the next three
years. The new funding arrangements reflect the current
tertiary reforms and are based on the result of negotiations
between individual institutions and the TEC.
Vice-chancellors are understood to have argued that the
proposed funding has failed to take into account expected
student growth in the sector.
Association of University
Staff National President, Professor Nigel Haworth, said it
is essential that universities consider the long-term
effects of any restricted-entry policy, adding that, while
Auckland's rationale for restricted entry is the new funding
arrangements, it may also reflect a strategy by the
University to differentiate itself from other NZ
universities, modelling itself on elite universities
overseas. “AUS supports moves to improve quality in the
university sector, but also understands the vital role
played by universities in their local and regional
communities and by the university system nationally”, he
said. “Restricted access to universities, potentially
accompanied by reduced opportunity, especially for groups
such as Māori and Pasifika, may not be in New Zealand’s
long-term interests. For example, if all three major
university institutions in Auckland restrict entry, the
Government’s drive for quality may induce significantly
reduced opportunity for university education, with
undesirable consequences for the regional economy and
community.”
Professor Haworth also noted that the AUS
has long argued for an integrated approach to national
university provision, which might make redundant the
competitive model currently driving university
decision-making and replace it with a co-operative model in
tune with academic endeavor and national needs.
Professor
Haworth said that any change in entry policies must involve
wide community consultation and the full disclosure of
information in order that informed decisions could be made.
“In Auckland’s case,” he said, “that includes an
examination of how the University would continue to meet its
social obligations, including prospective students from a
broad variety of backgrounds being able to get access to the
University. AUS will be monitoring carefully Auckland’s
proposed taskforce, which is to provide ways of addressing
the adverse impacts of restricted entry.”
Students,
others oppose restriction policy
Students and others have
been quick to react to the University of Auckland’s move
to restrict undergraduate-student entry from 2009, saying
they are appalled at the rushed introduction of a proposed
policy which, if adopted, will result in “elitism and
competition”.
Auckland University Students’
Association (AUSA) Education Vice-President, David Do, said
that universities should be open to all who are able and
willing to study. “AUSA is appalled at the absence of
consultation with students, with the proposal going through
University committees at the end of the year after students
have finished their study and exams,” he said. “The
University has failed to meaningfully consult with key
stakeholders such as students.”
Similarly, the New
Zealand Union of Students’ Associations says the proposal
represents a very real and unacceptable threat to access to
tertiary education in New Zealand. “Scrapping open entry
has been floated before and comprehensively rejected as
discriminatory,” said Joey Randall, NZUSA Co-President.
“The University of Auckland is turning to outmoded and
prejudicial methods that have no place in contemporary
education.”
For its part, the Institutes of Technology
and Polytechnics of New Zealand (ITPNZ) says it strongly
opposes the University of Auckland’s proposal. “New
Zealand has a proud tradition of providing open access to
tertiary education, including universities. That should not
be changed in the Christmas rush”, said Dave Guerin, ITPNZ
Executive Director. “This debate should be widened to
examine the effect of restricting entry across the
tertiary-education sector, as other institutions will
inevitably follow Auckland’s example.”
Meanwhile,
the Quality Public Education Coalition says it is appalled
at the attempt by Auckland University to restrict entry to
courses which currently have open entry, adding that it is a
short-sighted and selfish policy proposal which will favour
students from high-income families over students from
low-income communities.
Green Party Education
Spokesperson Metiria Turei, too, says she is dismayed at
Auckland’s announcement, adding that it is using the
tertiary-funding reforms as an excuse to disenfranchise
thousands of students from university education, and that
low income and Māori students will be at highest risk of
being turned away.
SIT may sue over funding cut
The
Southern Institute of Technology is not ruling out taking
legal action to recoup any losses it suffers as a result of
government funding cuts, according to a report in the
Southland Times.
Recent reports have suggested that SIT
may lose as much as $8 million, or 26 percent of its
funding, as a result of moves by the Tertiary Education
Commission to curb out-of-region provision of courses, in
this case in Christchurch where SIT and the Christchurch
Polytechnic and Institute are in head-to-head competition
over trade training. The funding changes signalled by the
TEC would see between one-half and two-thirds of SIT’s
student funding cut from its Christchurch campus, while
further cuts would be made to its mixed-medium
distance-education programmes.
The TEC Board is
currently in the process of finalising its decisions on new
funding, with decisions expected to be released to
institutions by 14 December.
SIT Chief Executive Penny
Simmonds is reported in the Southland Times as saying that
the timing was “absolutely shocking” in terms of being
able to make sensible decisions for her institution. “We
have maintained with the TEC all of the way through this
process that the process they have undertaken and timing of
it would be fine if they were going to implement it in 2009,
but it is nonsense to be hearing at this time of the year
for 2008,” she said.
Ms Simmonds is reported as saying
she hoped the TEC would have reconsidered its earlier
stance. “If they haven’t and we get the same outcome [as
previously indicated] then we’ll have to make a decision
about what our actions are from then on, and obviously legal
action is a possibility,” she said.
If the funding cuts
proceed as expected, it is believed about 1300 students will
be cut from the roll.
New Board members for NZQA
The
New Zealand Qualifications Authority has announced the
appointment of two new Board members, Professor Scott
Davidson from the University of Canterbury and Samantha
Lundon, Chair of Aotearoa Māori Providers of Training,
Education and Employment (AMPTEE).
Professor Davidson is
currently Pro Vice-Chancellor and Dean of Law at the
University of Canterbury. He is a former Dean of the
University of Waikato Law School and a former Director of
the University of Hull Law School in the United Kingdom.
Professor Davidson is familiar with course design and
delivery in a tertiary context and qualification
quality-control processes in the New Zealand tertiary
sector
Samantha Lundon is of Tainui descent and, as well
as being Chair AMPTEE, is also Curriculum Advisor for the
Ideal Success Academy, a private training establishment in
South Auckland. She has served on several working groups for
NZQA and the Tertiary Education Commission and is currently
on the TEC Māori Reference Group.
Other members of the
NZQA Board are Sue Suckling (Chair), Warwick Bell, Margaret
Bendall, Angela Foulkes, Dr John Langley, John Morgan and
Keith Taylor.
Council proposes joint venture for new
tertiary campus
The Manukau City Council is proposing a
joint venture with the AUT University to help establish a
new tertiary campus in the city centre which it says will
fill a gap in university-education opportunities in South
Auckland. The proposal appears to be one in which the
Council would buy the campus site and then establish a
joint-venture company with AUT. Ownership of the site would
then be transferred to the new company which would be
Council controlled, following which the company would lease
the site to AUT and provide AUT with the opportunity to
acquire an equity stake in the site.
The new campus
would, apparently, be complementary to a joint university
campus proposed for AUT and the Manukau Institute of
Technology.
Manukau Mayor, Len Brown, says the Council
sees the campus proposal as a unique opportunity to focus on
the priority goal of closing the education skills gap in
Manukau and to empower the city’s youth. “We have
450,000 people in the southern Auckland region, and we need
direct access to a designated university,” he said.
“This proposal aims to help enlarge the skills base of
local people, especially young people, to provide new
opportunities from next year to fill the new, often highly
technical, jobs that are being created by our burgeoning
industries.”
Mr Brown said a period of community
consultation would run until 25 January 2008, following
which there would be an opportunity for people to speak to
submissions. The Council will make its decision on whether
to proceed with the joint venture on 7 February 2008.
The
full Statement of Proposal and submission form will be
available from Council libraries, the Civic Centre and
Kotuku House in Manukau Square and on the Council’s
website from this Friday. It can be found
at:
www.manukau.govt.nz
Police withdraw riot
charges
Dunedin police have withdrawn rioting charges
against sixteen of those arrested in what was described at
the time as a weekend of drinking and couch and car-burning
following the annual student Undie 500 car race between
Christchurch and Dunedin in August. Sixty-nine people were
arrested in what international media described as a “vast
riot”.
According to a report in the Otago Daily Times,
the police say they did not have “quite enough” to make
the riot charges, but will still charge those involved with
a variety of lesser offences, mainly obstruction and
disorderly behaviour. Police say they have not ruled out
laying riot charges in the future should a similar
circumstance arise.
Inspector Alastair Dickie is reported
as saying he was a “wee bit disappointed”, but had
withdrawn the charges on the advice of Dunedin’s Crown Law
office which, although being “really supportive”,
“didn’t seem confident”.
The Otago University
Students’ Association (OUSA) has welcomed the decision to
drop the rioting charges, adding that it always had faith in
the court process. “We are relieved for our members and
encouraged by the developments,” said Rachel Heal, OUSA
President.
Ms Heal said that OUSA would support any
students who may now be punished under the University of
Otago’s Code of Conduct, which gives the University the
power to discipline students for misconduct occuring away
from the University premises. Ms Heal said the advice
received by OUSA is that the University does not have the
power to implement the Code in these
circumstances.
University Student Services Director David
Richardson said the University is awaiting the outcome of
the court proceedings before deciding what action it should
take.
Worldwatch
HR iniatives fail to boost
performance
A “massive” investment in human-resource
management in the United Kingdom is apparently having no
impact on universities’ overall performance, according to
new research. A survey carried out on behalf of the
Leadership Foundation for Higher Education has shown that,
although universities’ HR directors say they now have
well-integrated human resources strategies, there is no
demonstrable correlation between HR activity and the overall
performance of universities against standard performance
indicators such as league tables.
Since 2000, the sector
has seen an investment of £880 ($NZ2,379) million under the
Government’s human-resources “rewarding and developing
staff” initiative. However, HR directors responding to the
survey admitted that they were not certain that the
strategies they had put in place were effectively
communicated to the academics who have to implement their
policies and practices as line managers.
The report,
Human Resource Management and University Performance, found
that the least effective practices in higher-education HR
included performance management, succession planning and
managing poor performance.
Susan Rutherford, Chair of
the Universities Personnel Association, said, however, that
it is encouraging that universities overwhelmingly had a
strategic HR policy in place.
From The Times Higher
Education Supplement
University staff pleased with
higher-education line-up
The Australian National Tertiary
Education Union (NTEU) has welcomed the appointmen of Julia
Gillard as that country’s new Minister of Education and
Senator Kim Carr as Minister for Innovation, Industry,
Science and Research.
NTEU National President, Dr Carolyn
Allport, said that, while statements made by the Australian
Labor Party about universities were limited during the
election campaign, the Party’s emphasis on the importance
of higher education, its recognition that universities have
been significantly underfunded over the last decade and its
commitment to reverse this situation were significant. “In
addition to implementing Labor’s current plans, future
priorities need to include securing an increased and more
stable funding stream that covers the full cost of providing
quality teaching and research,” she said. “We need a new
funding model that allows institutions to be more
internationally competitive but also ensures equity for
students and nurtures the public-interest role of
universities.”
Dr Allport said it is also clear that
the election had, in effect, been a referendum on industrial
relations. “This was particularly contentious in the
higher-education sector where we had both WorkChoices and a
separate set of harsh industrial conditions tied to funding
called the Higher Education Workplace Relations
Requirements,” she said. “We welcome Labor’s
commitment to abolishing them.”
Students, staff say they
were ordered to vote for Putin
Widespread criticism that
Russia’s parliamentary elections last weekend were heavily
manipulated has been echoed by Russian university students
and professors this week. A number of students reported that
their rectors compelled them to vote for President Putin’s
United Russia party at campus polling stations, while some
students said they were also threatened with expulsion for
criticising the party.
United Russia, whose party list
was headed by Mr. Putin, won an overwhelming victory amid
news-media reports that election abuse may have contributed
to the win.
One said his university made students stay in
their dorms for the weekend and go to vote for United Russia
at the institute’s polling station. “We were also told
in different ways that if we want to graduate next year, we
should not criticize the party of power,” the student
said. “The demand to vote sounded like a threat that in
case we do not participate in the election, we would not get
paid our student stipends.”
Professors, too, said they
were compelled to vote in an election in which low turnout
would have harmed United Russia. One teacher said she was
told by her deputy dean that, if she did not vote, she would
not be paid her monthly salary.
From the Chronicle of
Higher Education
Sex, spending scandal rocks US
college
The Lord works in mysterious ways, but few
apparently as strange as those involving the Oral Roberts
University in the United States. The Christian college with
bizarrely futuristic architecture was built on God’s
instructions, according to its founder, the pioneering
televangelist Oral Roberts.
The 5300 students, who have
their body fat tested regularly as part of a stern fitness
regimen, are expected to attend chapel at least twice a
week, keep their hair short and sign pledges not to lie,
swear, gamble, drink alcohol or engage in a number of sexual
activities, including homosexuality.
The University has,
however, been rocked by recent allegations of sinful
behaviour in a wrongful dismissal lawsuit filed by three
professors. They accuse the University President of
spending University money on himself and his family,
including buying expensive cars, keeping a stable of horses
on campus for the exclusive use of his children, remodelling
his home eleven times in fourteen years and paying for one
of his daughters to holiday in the Bahamas using the
University’s private jet.
But the most salacious
claims involve the President’s wife, who is accused of
sending text messages on University ‘phones, mostly
between 1.00 and 3.00 am, to “underage males”. It is
alleged that a University maintenance worker was fired and
replaced by one of these underage male friends and that the
President’s wife spent at least nine nights in a
University guest house with a sixteen-year-old.
CanWest
News
More international news
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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