AUS Tertiary Update
Canterbury management confused
Proposals released on
Tuesday to cut thirteen jobs from the University of
Canterbury’s college of arts show just how confused
management is when it comes to running a university,
according to the Association of University Staff.
In
response to the 340 submissions it received on proposed
changes to the college, the university has tempered plans to
completely axe its American studies and theatre and film
studies programmes and now intends to resubmit two different
models for a new college structure for further consultation
with staff.
The decision, announced by the pro
vice-chancellor for arts, is that American studies would be
retained, but with the loss of 4.5 staff. It is proposed
that the programme be taught by three full-time staff,
giving the programme a staff-to-student ratio of 1 to 45.3,
which is 50 percent higher than the highest student-to-staff
ratio in any existing programme in the college.
Meanwhile, theatre and film studies will be split into
two separate programmes located in different schools within
the college, with the loss of one technical position, and
film production will no longer be part of that particular
programme. The new proposal was never discussed with the
head of theatre and film studies and, according to a number
of affected staff and students, makes almost as little sense
as the plan to axe the whole programme. This raises the
question whether the vice-chancellor has fulfilled his
contractual obligation to staff requiring that there be an
attempt to reach agreement over any planned changes.
Both
models for a new college structure involve considerable
disruption and uncertainty for the administrative staff.
While fewer job losses will be incurred, the implementation
of the new structure will not be finalised until the second
half of the year. AUS national president, Associate
Professor Maureen Montgomery, commented that the proposed
changes do not take into account or sufficiently value the
specific skills and institutional knowledge of
administrative staff: “They cannot simply be moved around
a draught board like pieces,” she said.
Dr Montgomery
expressed deep concern about the long-term sustainability of
the college of arts given the proposal to have larger
classes, a high staff-to-student ratio, further savings to
be made from staff attrition, and ongoing fiscal constraints
to the operational budgets of schools within the college.
“This plan does not offer long-term stability to the
college of arts and there needs to be an urgent national
debate as to what kind of university we want for New Zealand
because, at this rate, even history will be history,” she
said.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Super-union
for tertiary-education sector
2. Email scandal at
Otago
3. Green light for national salary
bargaining
4. PBRF review focus on Māori
knowledge
5. Little for tertiary education in China
FTA
6. Business-friendly universities for the
UK
7. OECD opposes short-term pressures
8. English
college lecturers vote to strike
9. “Linguistic
terrorism” strikes Portuguese
10. Know your culinary
enemy
Super-union for tertiary-education sector
A
new “super-union” will be created in the
tertiary-education sector with the announcement this week
that the Association of University Staff and the Association
of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) will amalgamate to
form the New Zealand Tertiary Education Union from 1 January
2009.
The new, 11,500-strong union will represent
academic and general staff in New Zealand’s eight
universities, twenty polytechnics and institutes of
technology, two wānanga, and a number of allied
organisations.
AUS members have voted by a margin of 77
percent to amalgamate with ASTE to create the new union
following a conference recommendation last December in
favour of a proposed merger. ASTE members voted last year to
merge and have been waiting on the outcome of the AUS vote.
Almost 94 percent of ASTE members who participated in the
ballot voted in favour of amalgamation.
The presidents of
the two existing unions, Maureen Montgomery of AUS and Tangi
Tipene of ASTE, said they are delighted with the strong
support from the memberships of the two unions for
amalgamation. Each existing union required a threshold of 65
percent of those participating to favour the proposal in the
respective ballots for it to proceed.
Dr Montgomery said
that amalgamation is a logical move, given that both unions
have much in common and are committed to a strong,
well-funded, public tertiary-education system. “Both
unions have worked successfully together and already
collaborate in the negotiation of collective employment
agreements in the university sector. The benefits of this
cooperation will be enhanced by amalgamation,” she
said.
Tangi Tipene said that amalgamation would
strengthen both the political and industrial objectives of
union members and would allow for the better use of
resources. “Already this has been evidenced by the two
unions combining to produce a common submission opposing the
creation of universities of technology as proposed by the
New Zealand First Party,” she said.
Preparations for
the formation of the new union are under way, with a rules
conference to be held in late July and the two unions to
hold a joint conference in November.
Email scandal at
Otago
In another emerging email scandal, The Press
reports that a computer hacker has infiltrated the
University of Otago’s IT system and sent out “hundreds
of private messages” which appear to have been written by
the dean of the school of surveying, Professor Brent
Hall.
Knowledge of the break-in and of the dispatch of
emails to university staff and others as far away as Canada,
which began in September last year, has apparently been
suppressed for well over a month and the university is still
not commenting on specifics. In an email circulated by the
university to staff last month and subsequently leaked, the
science pro vice-chancellor, Professor Vernon Squire, casts
doubt on the authenticity of the emails and expresses full
support for Professor Hall.
Other university sources are
quoted as saying that some of the emails discuss sensitive
matters such as salaries, grants, thesis-examiners’
reports, and staff appointments and resignations while
others contain personal abuse. One surveying-staff member is
said to have taken stress leave as a consequence of the
content of the leaks.
The paper quotes the university’s
communications manager as describing its computer systems as
robust and “in place to prevent such breaches”. She adds
that the university is concerned that security has been
compromised but that it is inappropriate to give details
when a police investigation is under way.
While The Press
claims that the AUS is understood to be pressuring the
university to take action over the content of the emails,
its Otago organiser, Shaun Scott, was unprepared to comment
at this stage. Dunedin CIB’s Detective Sergeant Brett
Roberts has confirmed that the police have been approached
by the university but would would not reveal when.
Green
light for national salary bargaining
Members of the major
unions representing staff in New Zealand’s universities
have voted overwhelmingly to support the negotiation of
national collective employment agreements in the next
bargaining round. The ballot has endorsed a recommendation
by the unions to move from enterprise-based bargaining at
each university to the negotiation of one national
collective agreement for academic staff and another for
general staff.
More than 95 percent, 1906, of the 1993
academic staff who participated in the ballot voted in
support of the proposal, and 94 percent, 1802, of the 1907
general staff also voted to support national bargaining.
The result means that bargaining with the universities will
be initiated in April and it is expected that formal
negotiations will commence in May.
Combined unions’
spokesperson, Marty Braithwaite, said he was pleased with
the result as, following last year’s negotiations, the
unions have been engaged in a tripartite process with the
government and vice-chancellors to find solutions to
long-standing funding and salary problems facing the
university sector. “The high number of union members
voting in this ballot, along with the high level of support
for national bargaining, has given us a very clear mandate
to continue this process with university employers,” he
said. “It also shows that university staff appreciate the
link between funding and salaries and support the view that
the best means to improve salaries is through a national
collective bargaining process.”
Mr Braithwaite added
that the unions’ position would be strengthened by the
inclusion of AUT and that he expected university employers
to support the decision of union members and recognise that
the salary crisis in the sector was an issue that would only
be resolved on a national basis and with the cooperation of
university employers, unions, and the government. “We are
providing the vice-chancellors with the mechanism of
national collective employment agreements to make this
happen,” he concluded.
PBRF review focus on Māori
knowledge
The New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee
(NZVCC) reports that its Māori standing committee, Te
Kāhui Amokura, recently met Dr Jonathan Adams, independent
strategic reviewer of the Performance-Based Research Fund.
The discussion focused on the fund’s Māori knowledge and
development (MKD) panel, with Te Kāhui Amokura strongly
supporting its retention for future PBRF rounds and agreeing
that it should be “leading edge and
multidisciplinary”.
The meeting noted that the work of
the MKD panel had tended to be defined by methodology rather
than subject area and the importance of building Māori
academics’ confidence in the panel. This could be achieved
by clearly defining the research paradigm within which it
operates so that its legitimacy and usefulness can better be
understood. It was also suggested that the panel’s
guidelines would need to be clearly focused in order to
ensure that its distinctive approach to research can be
discerned.
During the meeting with Dr Adams, it was
agreed that Te Kāhui Amokura could have a significant role
in developing the scope of the panel and he invited it to
forward a submission based on the matters raised in the
meeting.
AUS vice-president Māori, Dr Fiona Te Momo, has
applauded the actions of Te Kāhui Amokura in meeting with
Dr Adams and supporting the funding and retention of the MKD
panel.
She went on to say, however, that, “Although Te
Kāhui Amokura is likely to have a significant role in
developing the panel’s scope, I am concerned that only a
small proportion of Māori academics may be invited to
contribute.” Dr Te Momo urged the Tertiary Education
Commission to engage extensively with Māori academics and
researchers in the sector through their organisations such
as the Association of University Staff.
Little for
tertiary education in China FTA
Any gains for tertiary
education from the signing of the free trade agreement with
the People’s Republic of China are likely to be limited to
spin-offs from the high profile the agreement has given New
Zealand, according to Education Review.
It quotes
Education New Zealand chief executive, Robert Stevens, as
commenting that “the agreement reiterated education
commitments China made to the World Trade Organisation in
2005” and committed that country to maintaining its
current list of approved New Zealand tertiary-education
providers. Currently, all this country’s public
institutions are on that list as well as six degree-granting
private training establishments that were added in
2006.
He added that it is significant that the agreement
excludes the education sector from most favoured nation
(MFN) status, meaning that New Zealand would not
automatically gain any future liberalisation commitments
China might give to other countries in the field of
education. “ He sees, however, the short-term rise in New
Zealand’s profile as “an excellent thing”.
Minister
of education Chris Carter has also celebrated that rise in
profile, saying that, “At this moment in China, our
country’s profile just couldn’t be higher, so this has
been the perfect opportunity to make sure Chinese students
see New Zealand as an education provider of first
choice.”
Former AUS national president Bill Rosenberg
warns, however, that there are other considerations:
“GATS-plus commitments under the agreement limit New
Zealand’s choices in regulating ‘other education’
providers owned by China-based investors, including language
schools, Chinese language assessment services, and private,
specialist scool-level institutions outside the compulsory
system.”
“This is despite language schools having
damaged New Zealand’s reputation in the past. In addition,
China-based owners of private educational institutions get a
higher level of investment protection, including the right
in some circumstances to take the New Zealand government to
international arbitration,” Dr Rosenberg added.
World
Watch
Business-friendly universities for the UK
The
United Kingdom’s University and College Union (UCU) has
warned against giving businesses too much influence over the
content and design of university courses, as the government
launched plans to make universities more business-friendly.
The UCU argued that plans outlined by the universities
secretary, John Denham, would stifle innovation in higher
education.
The high-level skills consultation from the
department of innovation, universities and skills urges much
more involvement of employers in designing and paying for
university courses. In particular, the proposal includes
provision of 30,000 new university places to be co-funded by
employers, with most future spending increases going towards
business-focused degrees which will be partly designed by
them.
However, UCU general secretary Sally Hunt said,
“Affording the private sector a major say in the
curriculum today will mean less innovation and invention for
tomorrow as university staff are forced to prioritise policy
that focuses purely on the numbers game.”
“The most
effective way for universities to contribute to society and
the economy is by allowing them to retain their principal
missions as places of research and scholarship,” she
added. “We would advise against embracing any new form of
league tables or target-driven approaches to measuring
higher education.”
She went on to say, “Experience
has taught us that such an approach generally lowers
quality, rather than raises it, and is a bureaucratic
nightmare.”
Ms Hunt argued that problems putting the
government’s flagship 14-19 diplomas in place were down to
confusion over curriculum organisation and content in the
Diploma Development Partnerships, which are led by business.
“The main reason why the first five diplomas are running
very close to deadline is the confusion created in the
sector by those very partnerships.”
“Put simply,
business leaders are not educationalists,” she
said.
OECD opposes short-term pressures
Effective
tertiary education is a sure-fire way to achieve economic
growth, a new report from the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development says. But universities should
avoid striving for quick fixes such as swift
commercialisation of studies and funnelling research
resources into the latest scientific hotspot, such as
nanotechnology or IT.
In its Thematic Review of Tertiary
Education, a three-year study of tertiary-education policies
in twenty-four countries, the Paris-based OECD has devised a
comprehensive set of proposals designed to help its
rich-country members devise effective higher-education
policies.
For the economists of the OECD, successful
universities and colleges are crucially important.
“Tertiary education matters for economic development,”
declared Aart de Geus, OECD deputy secretary-general, at a
Lisbon conference where the review report was launched.
“Globalisation has intensified competition and there are
important new players in the world economy,” de Geus
said.
He reported that the OECD had calculated that each
extra year of education could lift a country’s economic
output per person by around 6 percent. But he and his
economists advised universities and colleges to take a long
view when examining the contribution they might make towards
enriching their countries.
Therefore, research and
innovation policies at government and university level must
take “a long-term perspective to ensure the system is
capable of contributing to future economic growth,
technological progress, and sustainable
development”.
In this regard, the OECD is concerned
about some of the indicators used to measure the quality of
research conducted in tertiary education, claiming they are
problematic. “Linking funding to quantifiable output
measures, such as publications and patents, has had
unintended impacts on the quality of research, skewing it
away from basic work that could have a bigger economic
impact in the long term,” the report said.
From
University World News
English college lecturers vote to
strike
Further education lecturers in England have voted
to strike on Thursday 24 April in support of a demand to
bring their pay up to that of schoolteachers. Lecturers in
over 250 colleges were balloted by the University and
College Union and the result shows solid support for
industrial action: 65.5 percent of those voting supported
strike action and 86.2 percent also supported other forms of
industrial action short of a strike.
UCU, along with
other further education unions, submitted a joint pay claim
for a 6 percent increase or £1500, whichever is the
greater, for 2008-09. The unions will meet employers again
on 1 May.
Thousands of college lecturers, including large
numbers who are part-time and hourly paid, can’t reach the
higher pay levels enjoyed by schoolteachers. And no further
education lecturers get the allowances enjoyed by 50 percent
of schoolteachers, worth between £2,364 and £11,557 a year
on top of the pay scales.
Growing workloads are also a
major concern. As well as teaching, lecturers carry out
course development, lesson preparation, marking,
professional development, and administration. A quarter of
lecturers already teach more than 850 hours a year,
jeopardising quality in UCU’s view. The lecturers want
negotiations on common conditions of service across all
colleges.
Sally Hunt, general secretary of UCU, said,
“College lecturers feel undervalued, despite their
successes, which the government has recognised. The
considerable difference in the average pay of lecturers and
teachers doing the same work is grossly unfair. It is more
than four years since the employers agreed to move lecturers
to the same length pay scales as school teachers but 47
percent of colleges still haven’t done that. The treatment
of FE staff is a scandal. Pay has been further eroded by
below-inflation pay awards.”
“Linguistic terrorism”
strikes Portuguese
Plans to drop the letters c, p and h
from some Portuguese words have provoked outrage among
academics who describe the move as an act of “linguistic
terrorism”. “The proponents of change say that there
will be a breakdown in communication, and that Brazil will
take over in the future if we do not do something,” says
António M Feijó, professor of literature at the University
of Lisbon. “I think that this proposal is both absurd and
reckless.”
An international conference in Lisbon later
this month will seek to impose a system of standardised
spelling reform that was initially supported in 1990 by the
governments of Portugal, Brazil, Angola, and East Timor,
among others. The agreement they ratified, known as the
orthographic accord, was never fully put into practice but
has now been given fresh impetus by José Sócrates, the
Portuguese prime minister, who seeks a timetable of six
years for its introduction.
Portugal’s recently
appointed culture minister, José António Pinto Ribeiro,
has argued that “it is necessary to unify the Portuguese
language in order to consolidate it
internationally”.
The orthographic agreement proposes,
for example, the elimination of the letters c, p and h from
the European and African spelling whenever they are silent.
It establishes common guidelines for capitalisation but will
allow some divergence in the case of particular spellings
such as the English word “fact”, which is spelt facto in
Portugal, Asia, and Africa and fato in Brazil and East
Timor. The divergence in the spelling will depend on the
dialect of the region.
This flexibility, however, is
exactly what makes the whole new proposal flawed, according
to its detractors. “It is only partial standardisation
because there will be optional adoption depending on how
different countries pronounce words,” says Feijó. He also
argues that the USA and UK have different spellings for a
large number of words but that this diversity has not
affected the power or influence of the language.
From
University World News
Know your culinary enemy
Soon
after starting research for his book on the multicultural
history of food, Panikos Panayi found his name on a
rightwing website, under the heading “Know your enemy”.
A serious, slightly diffident professor of European history
at De Montfort University, he had committed a supposedly
hostile act by raising the possibility that fish and chips
may not be entirely British.
Frying was a typically
Jewish way of eating fish, he had suggested, while chips
were probably pre-dated by French pommes frites. The idea
proved so controversial that it prompted newspaper
headlines. Some interpreted the attempt to deconstruct a
British national dish as akin to attacking the nation
itself.
It was a clear demonstration of how intimately
connected people perceive food and national identity to be.
But according to Professor Panayi, this perception is wrong.
He argues that dishes don’t have a nationality. Examine
any one of them closely and you are likely to find
influences from all over the world, not only in the
ingredients but in the way they are served and eaten.
Rather than being a symbol of nationality, he says,
“what people eat is a really important symbol of the
integration and assimilation process”. In his view, it is
impossible to understand what British food, and especially
eating out in Britain, is about without also studying
immigration.
So, for Professor Panayi, “saying foods
have a nationality is extremely bizarre”. At best, it is
sometimes possible to say that foods are regional, with
wheat changing to rice between regions in India, for
example.
But even this can only be taken so far. He takes
from his shelves a book on British cuisine, the kind of
concept that irritates him, which is divided into regions.
The section on south-east England is written by Gary Rhodes
and Atul Kochhar. “I’m not sure what that says apart
from that curry has become part of “south-east English
cuisine”, although curry is also part of Midlands cuisine,
since baltis are supposed to come from Birmingham,” he
says.
From Harriet Swain in the Guardian
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AUS Tertiary
Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and distributed
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