AUS Tertiary Update
Lincoln appeals Authority decision
Lincoln University has
appealed a determination (or ruling) to allow a claim of
unjustified dismissal to be heard in the Employment Court
rather than in the lower-level Employment Relations
Authority. In December, the Association of University Staff
(AUS) applied to the Authority to have a hearing in relation
to the summary dismissal of Associate Professor Glenn
Stewart transferred to the Court because it said that a
number of matters related to the dismissal were important
questions of law.
Associate Professor Stewart, a highly
respected scientist with a more than thirty-year career in
Ecology and Conservation, was sacked last July after an
investigation by the University into a complaint of alleged
serious misconduct. At the time of Associate Professor
Stewart’s sacking, the AUS said that the University acted
unfairly and that the Vice-Chancellor should not have
dismissed him.
In December, the AUS argued that, because
of the importance of a number of legal issues arising in the
case, the Authority should exercise its right to allow the
matter to be referred directly to the Court for a ruling.
Among those issues was whether, in the circumstances, the
dismissal of Associate Professor Stewart was beyond the
scope of or in excess of the legal powers vested with the
Vice-Chancellor.
In allowing the application from AUS,
Employment Relations Authority member Paul Montgomery said
that the Authority had some concerns around the standard of
proof applying to serious allegations made against an
employee, and also concluded that, given the high profile
“enjoyed” by both parties and preliminary publicity
given to the matter in the local media, public interest was
high.
Lawyers acting for the University have appealed the
removal decision, saying that they now want the Court to
decide whether it or the Employment Relations Authority
should hear the dismissal case. The reason given for the
appeal is that the Vice-Chancellor is dissatisfied with the
determination from the Authority.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. TEC denies backdown over SIT
2. NZ link
to virtual university
3. Changing of the Education
guard
4. Expert review, reference group for
PBRF
5. Interest-free loans for students on NZ exchange
programmes
6. AUT Manukau campus scrapped
7. Massey
graduate wins AUS Crozier Scholarship
8. US Higher
Education Bill gets strong support
9. Universities back
apology
10. Ban on headscarves lifted
11. Saudi
students told how to behave
TEC denies backdown over
SIT
The Tertiary Education Commission has denied
accusations of backing down on its decision to cut funding
to the Southland Institute of Technology, saying that its
announcement this week of an additional $6.53 million to SIT
is for capability development in Southland and cannot be
used to fund activities for which other funding was cut last
year.
Responding to the announcement of the new funding,
Invercargill’s Mayor, Tim Shadbolt, told Television One
News that the funding decision was political, in what he
described as a hugely important election year. Late last
year, Mr Shadbolt reacted to cuts of $6.2 million to SIT’s
then funding by threatening to campaign to bring down the
Labour Government. Mr Shadbolt’s threats were backed by an
advertising campaign which claimed that the changes would
threaten the Southland economy and the future viability of
SIT.
Strongly denying any political link, the TEC Chair,
David Shand, says that he can “only assume the Mayor’s
campaign of misinformation is simply based on his own agenda
in the Southland region”. TEC says that the new funding
for SIT had been under negotiation since early last year and
was awarded as part of the Quality Reinvestment Fund,
established by Government in 2005 to help institutes of
technology, polytechnics and wānanga develop the strengths
and capabilities they need for the future. TEC says the
funding will be used by SIT to consolidate and enhance the
education and training it offers to meet the needs of
Southland industry and business. Some of the funding will be
used for the establishment of an Industry Training Centre
and Business Development Centre, upgrading existing teaching
equipment and facilities and improving internal systems and
processes.
Meanwhile, the National Party has taken the
opportunity to accuse the Government of a cynical stunt,
with the Party’s Tertiary Education Spokesperson, Dr Paul
Hutchison, saying that the new funding smacked of political
expediency. “When the outcry over the withdrawal in
funding became too much, Labour simply handed the funding
back but called it a one-off grant,” he said.
The
Television One News item referred to in this story can be
viewed
at:
http://tvnz.co.nz/view/video_popup_windows_skin/1578445
NZ
link to virtual university
A strong New Zealand link has
emerged in the case of a virtual university that has been
denied the right to register in the Solomon Islands,
according to a lead story in the current edition of
Education Review. The story says that the Solomon Islands
Government has rejected an application from a New Zealander,
Denis Adonis, representing a group which wants to establish
the “University of Honiara Online”.
According to
Education Review, the so-called University is said to have
its roots in the International Institute of Travel and
Tourism, claimed by Adonis to be a New Zealand-based
business, which was established online in February 2006 by a
Caribbean-based company, Caricon E-learning Group.
In a
notice to students on its website, the University of Honiara
Online says it wishes to emphasise that it is a virtual and
NOT a physical University. “This means that we do not
maintain a campus, but an administrative facility,” it
reads. “All of our courses are done completely online,
while physical training (if required) are [sic] generally
contracted to third parties.” It goes on to say that the
University is “a [sic] 80 percent virtual and 20 percent
physical liberal arts academic institution that was founded
on the principle of easily accessible education for a better
planet”. It also stipulates that it does not offer any
degree courses and will not be offering any postgraduate
courses until after an accreditation evaluation
process.
Although a search of the Companies Office
carried out by Education Review failed to find a company
called the Institute of Travel and Tourism, the University
lists a New Zealand address in Johnsonville and provides
both an Auckland and Wellington phone number. One of those
numbers did not work, the other went unanswered.
In an
email, a spokesperson for the University said that it was
currently in discussion with a New Zealand institution to
iron out a partnership arrangement for their flight
attendant course. Once that was formalised, the name of the
institution would be placed on the website.
In the
meantime, the Solomon Islands has refused to allow the
company to register in that country and Mr Adonis is
understood to be somewhere in the Caribbean.
Changing of
the Education guard
Yesterday’s announcement that the
National Party Education spokesperson, Katherine Rich, is
not to stand at the next general election followed the
resignation from Parliament on Tuesday of the New Zealand
First Education spokesperson and Chair of the Education and
Science Select Committee, Brian Donnelly.
Described as
one of the worst-kept secrets of the political year, it has
been confirmed that Mr Donnelly will take up the position of
High Commissioner to the Cook Islands. During his time in
Parliament, Mr Donnelly has been the Minister of the
Education Review Office and Associate Minister of Education.
Most recently he has been calling for the establishment of a
new category of university, a university of technology,
through his Education (Establishment of Universities of
Technology) Amendment Bill
Announcing her decision not to
stand at the next election, Katherine Rich said that she had
no doubt that National would win the next election and that
being in John Key’s Cabinet would have been a huge
privilege and honour. “I do not doubt my ability to fill
such a role. However, after much thought, I have reluctantly
come to the conclusion that with two young children I would
not have been able to do justice to it without unfairly
impacting upon their lives,” she said.
East Coast MP
Anne Tolley will take over as National Party Education
spokesperson.
Expert review, reference group for
PBRF
An independent expert review of the $230 million
Performance-Based Research Fund for tertiary-education
organisations is getting under way this week. The review
will be undertaken by Dr Jonathan Adams of Evidence Ltd from
Leeds in the United Kingdom. TEC says that the terms of
reference for this review have been developed in
consultation with the tertiary-education sector.
The
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) Acting Chief Executive,
Dr Colin Webb, says that ongoing valuation is important for
testing, maintaining and enhancing the effectiveness and
credibility of the Fund. “The independent expert review
underlines our commitment to the Fund and the key role it
plays in the tertiary-education reforms as we continue to
improve the quality of tertiary education and research,”
he said.
The review will involve consultation with
stakeholders across the sector, including the Association of
University Staff (AUS), as well as an extensive literature
and data review. It is expected that the review will be
completed by the end of June this year.
Meanwhile, the
TEC has announced that, in preparation for the next Quality
Evaluation Round of the PBRF, it is to establish a Sector
Reference Group (SRG), whose role it will be to provide
advice on what changes, if any, should be made to the
design, implementation, timing, nature and conduct of the
Quality Evaluation. The SRG will be chaired by Professor
John Hattie and will comprise no more than fifteen members,
including a representative each from the AUS and the New
Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee.
Once the
membership of the SRG has been decided, a first meeting will
be held on 28 March 2008 to approve its terms of reference,
agree on the scope of the work required and outline a
schedule for future meetings. The second meeting is
scheduled for 9 May.
Interest-free loans for students on
NZ exchange programmes
The Minister of Revenue, Peter
Dunne, has announced that the Government is to extend
interest-free loans to people studying full-time overseas as
part of formal exchange programmes. Mr Dunne says that
extending the exemption to include these students will
remove an obstacle to further education and training that
will ultimately benefit New Zealand when they return from
their overseas study.
To qualify for an interest-free
student loan, borrowers must generally be in New Zealand for
183 or more continuous days. However, the loan provision
does not currently include students enrolled with a New
Zealand provider who are studying overseas as part of a
formal exchange programme.
For the exemption to be
granted, a student’s New Zealand tertiary provider must
certify that the study is full-time and towards a
qualification of a minimum of level seven on the New Zealand
Register of Quality Assured Qualifications.
Mr Dunne said
the change would be included in a bill scheduled for
introduction later this year. The exemption would be
backdated to apply from 1 April 2007.
AUT Manukau campus
scrapped
The Manukau City Council has scrapped plans for
a joint venture with the AUT University to establish a new
tertiary-education campus at a site believed to be on Great
South Rd in Auckland, according to a report in the Manukau
Courier.
The Council and AUT had been planning the campus
since last year but, last Thursday, the Council abandoned
forming the proposed joint venture to buy a site and
buildings and lease it back to AUT for the campus. The land
and buildings were expected to cost less than $60 million
but the Council had said there would be no direct impact on
rates.
Last year, Manukau Mayor, Len Brown, said that the
Council saw 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.”
The Courier reports that, while the
Council discussed the matter behind closed doors, a
statement explaining the decision to abandon the plan said
that, while a collaborative approach for establishing
another campus in Manukau is worthwhile, the requirements of
the Council and AUT could not be met.
There were 301
submissions on the plan from the public with 222 opposed,
including the Manukau Institute of Technology.
Massey
graduate wins AUS Crozier Scholarship
Clare Mariskind, an
MEd(Hons) graduate from Massey University, is the winner of
the Association of University Staff Crozier Scholarship for
2008. Clare receives $5000 to assist with PhD study at
Victoria University of Wellington’s School of Education
Studies on the topic “Tertiary teachers’ experiences of
student diversity: a narrative and discursive
investigation”. The scholarship honours long-serving AUS
Executive Director Rob Crozier and supports postgraduate
study in a number of fields, including issues to do with
ethnicity, gender and/or other socio-economic factors
affecting tertiary-education staff and
students.
Worldwatch
US Higher Education Bill gets
strong support
The American Federation of Teachers says
that a Bill to renew the United States Higher Education Act
for the next five years is an important piece of legislation
that will make higher education more affordable and no
longer just a dream for millions of low-income and
middle-class families.
The Higher Education Act Bill,
which was last renewed in 1998, touches on an enormously
wide range of issues, including giving the Education
Department significantly more authority to regulate private
student loans, dictating that colleges develop plans to give
students legal ways to download movies and music and
requiring that institutions explore technologies to stop
illegal file sharing It also bars the US Education
Department from issuing regulations governing
higher-education accreditation, extends from two to three
years the period the Federal Government uses to calculate
the student loan borrowers default rate and allows for
students to receive Grant funds year-round, instead of just
during the traditional academic year.
The legislation
would also require states to maintain their financial
support of higher education, crack down on diploma-mill
institutions by directing the Education Department to
publish lists of accredited institutions and accreditation
agencies and toughen standards for teacher-education
programmes.
From The Chronicle of Higher
Education
Universities back apology
Australian
universities have backed the historic apology to Aborigines
for their “profound grief, suffering and loss” made by
that country’s Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, in Federal
Parliament this week.
Deakin, Melbourne, Victoria and
RMIT universities are all reported as endorsing Mr Rudd’s
apology and adding their own. Deakin held its own minute of
silence to mark the occasion, with its Vice-Chancellor,
Sally Walker, saying that she congratulated the Government
on taking the symbolic action in such a way as to allow
indigenous and non-indigenous Australians to commence a
shared healing process.
The University of Melbourne
formally apologised to Aborigines for the wrongs of the past
and encouraged staff to watch the historic apology this
week. “The University records its deep regrets for the
injustices suffered by the indigenous people of Australia as
a result of European settlement,” Vice-Chancellor Glyn
Davis said.
Similarly, Victoria University
Vice-Chancellor, Elizabeth Harman, said the Federal
Government’s national apology to indigenous Australians
was a significant moment in history. “Saying sorry is an
important first step towards true reconciliation and the
establishment of equal opportunity for all Australians,”
Professor Harman said.
Universities Australia welcomed
the apology, saying that it hoped it would help the way
forward and improve education outcomes for indigenous
Australians.
From The Australian
Ban on headscarves
lifted
The Turkish Parliament has voted to amend its
Constitution to lift a decades-old ban on Islamic head
scarves at Turkey’s universities, despite fierce
opposition from the secular establishment. Tens of thousands
of Turks demonstrated in the capital, Ankara, against the
amendments and called for the Government's resignation.
“Turkey is secular and will remain secular,” they
chanted, many waving flags.
Head scarves have long been
prohibited at universities in predominantly Muslim but
fiercely secular Turkey, a country seeking to join the
European Union.
In a final decision, lawmakers voted
411-103 to approve two constitutional amendments that will
providethat everyone has the right to equal treatment from
state institutions where “no one can be deprived of (his
or her) right to higher education”.
The changes must be
signed by President Abdullah Gul, who is widely expected to
approve the amendments.
Nesrin Baytok, a Republican
legislator, said approval of the law “would turn Turkey
into Afghanistan” in a domino effect. “You are not
opening the door of freedom, you are shutting it forever for
the girls,” he said. “The heads of many girls are shaved
by their brothers to force them to wear head
scarves.”
From the Associated Press
Saudi students
told how to behave
Over 3,000 students from Jeddah in
Saudi Arabia who are going abroad as part of the King
Abdullah Scholarship Programme, including some to New
Zealand, are attending four-day orientation courses offering
them tips on how to behave in their host countries.
Workshops provide the students with knowledge about their
destination countries, including how to respect the
traditions of the countryto which they are travelling.
As part of the orientation, students are able to ask
questions about the limits of dealing with people of the
opposite sex and are warned against marrying non-Saudis,
especially non-Arabs. Around twenty students who married
abroad last year had to cut short their scholarships and
return to the Kingdom.
It also transpired that the bad
attitude of students last year resulted in seventy-one
students being forced to return from the United States,
thirteen from New Zealand and five from Malaysia.
The
orientation programme is part of scholarship procedures,
with students having to log in and log out of sessions using
special cards provided with barcodes. Attendant timings will
be sent to the Ministry of Education and those who do not
attend 30 percent of the orientation programme will be
deprived of their scholarships.
From Arab News
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