AUS Tertiary Update
Lincoln fails in bid to shift hearing
Lincoln University
management has failed in its bid to stop the employment
court deciding whether or not the university was justified
in sacking one of its senior staff members, Associate
Professor Glenn Stewart, last July. The case is now being
set down for a five day hearing in the court, expected to
start in late August or early September.
Lincoln had
appealed an employment relations authority decision in which
the Association of University Staff had successfully argued
that, because of the importance of a number of legal issues
arising in this case, it should be referred directly to the
higher-level employment court for a ruling. The reason given
for the university management’s appeal stated simply that
it was dissatisfied with the decision from the
authority.
Associate Professor Stewart, a highly
respected scientist with a more than thirty-year career in
ecology and conservation, was summarily dismissed after an
investigation by university management into an allegation of
serious misconduct. The AUS has consistently argued that
university management acted unfairly and that the
vice-chancellor should not have dismissed Associate
Professor Stewart.
In declining Lincoln’s appeal,
employment court judge Tony Couch said that, while he
believed the authority was wrong not to hear the matter in
the first instance, he was exercising his discretion not to
refer it back to the authority, allowing the proceedings to
remain in the court. In a decision released late last week,
Judge Couch provided only his decision, saying his reasons
would follow in due course.
The parties will attend a
judicial conference on 20 June to see if a settlement can be
reached under the guidance of an employment court
judge.
Meanwhile, proceedings have been filed by AUS in
the employment relations authority alleging that the
vice-chancellor of the University of Canterbury has breached
his statutory authority with his proposals to restructure
the university’s college of arts and the consequential
axing of thirteen jobs. The proceedings also ask that the
vice-chancellor be required to fulfill his obligation to try
and reach agreement with affected staff and the union over
the change proposal.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. From Honiara to Honorius to New
Zealand
2. UCOL’s Cordon Bleu cooking school
kaput
3. Auckland students support Philippines
activist
4. Rutherford’s den gets Canterbury
cash
5. Cash bonanza for Oz universities
6. Students
into instant security threats
7. Australian
universities’ IP position weakened
8. Online journals
to go 3D
9. Arachnid honour for Neil Young
From Honiara
to Honorius to New Zealand
A special investigation
conducted by Joanne Harris of Education Review has revealed
that an online university, previously denied entry to the
Solomon Islands to establish a campus in Honiara, has
renewed its New Zealand presence. The company promoting what
was once the University of Honiara and is now the University
of Honorius had advised of its intention to withdraw from
New Zealand earlier this year.
Its abandoned New Zealand
links included a postal address in Johnsonville, Wellington,
local phone numbers, and a plan to establish a travel and
tourism school. Now, however, the company’s assistant
director for a project titled “Campus 2012”, Megan
Alveira, has admitted that it proposes to set up the travel
and tourism school within the next two years.
The
Education Review story reports that its website,
www.university-of-honorius.com, gives Level 5, 22 The
Terrace, Wellington as its new New Zealand base as well as a
local phone number that transfers to voicemail and an
Auckland fax number. The Terrace address is that of a
mail-forwarding service provided by the firm Business
Suites.
The Ghana-based company is apparently not covered
by domestic legislation restricting the use of the term
“university” because it is not registered in New
Zealand. Ms Alveira is quoted in the story as advising that
the project will be established two years earlier than
planned, in 2010, “in conformity with the laws of New
Zealand (by then)”.
She added that, “We do not know
of any restrictions that prevents [sic] an online
institution from allowing its communications to be received
in New Zealand.”
UCOL’s Cordon Bleu cooking school
kaput
The Dominion Post reports that the Universal
College of Learning has pulled out of a well-publicised deal
to set up an international school of cuisine in
Martinborough. As a result, it will have to renegotiate a
partly spent government-funding agreement intended for the
school’s establishment. Legal advice to the trade and
enterprise economic-development agency, which had approved
$1.125 million for the project from its regional initiatives
fund, is said to have confirmed that the funding agreement
was worded in such a way that any shift away from the
Wairarapa would necessitate renegotiation.
In association
with Le Cordon Bleu of Paris, UCOL was to have established
the 300-student cooking school by August, resulting in it
being one of thirty international Cordon Bleu schools. UCOL
had already spent $900,000 of its trade and enterprise grant
on market research, initial-concept work, and investigating
the Martinborough proposal.
Economic development minister
Pete Hodgson is quoted as saying that, “It is all a bit of
a mess at the moment but I did strongly advise UCOL when I
got wind of a change that it would be legally premature to
announce any change till the legal situation and the funding
arrangement was sorted out.”
Meanwhile, it is reported
that Martinborough lawyer and vineyard owner, John Porter,
whose environment court appeal against the siting of the
school in close proximity to his historic house and boutique
winery is thought by locals to have led to the pull-out, has
been banned from a shop and cafe in the town and there is
talk of a boycott of his wines in the district.
Meanwhile, local MP John Hayes has established a
taskforce to investigate the viability of establishing a
cooking school in Martinborough independently of
UCOL.
Auckland students support Philippines
activist
Auckland University Students’ Association
(AUSA) has requested that the prime minister, Helen Clark,
call on Philippines president Gloria Arroyo to ensure the
safety of a student unionist who has received death threats.
Glaiza Dimapilis, the 19-year-old president of the
Philippine Christian University student council and
secretary-general of the National Union of Students of the
Philippines-National Capital Region, has received death
threats from the Filipino military.
Meeting reporters
surreptiously because, she said, a military agent was
following her around, Ms Dimapilis told them that a military
officer approached her and told her that, “I could be on
the shoot-to-kill list or be arrested without a warrant”.
Since Arroyo came to power in 2001, 850 people have been
summarily murdered, and between January and October 2007, 68
people were victims of extra-judicial assassinations by the
military and a further twenty-six were “disappeared”,
according to AUSA.
“President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo,
who was hosted by our government at Waitangi last year, has
the power to end these violations of basic and fundamental
human rights, yet continues to allow her security forces to
terrorise students, trade unionists, and activists,” said
AUSA president David Do.
“We call on Helen Clark to
convey to Arroyo our deepest concern for the fate of Glaiza
Dimapilis and request that she do everything in her power to
end government killings of political activists in the
Philippines,” Mr Do concluded.
It has since been
reported that Ms Dimapilis has filed a writ of amparo in the
supreme court and sought the help of the human rights
commission to end her harassment. A writ of amparo allows
citizens to seek protection from the courts or redress for
extra-judicial killings and forced disappearances, removes
from authorities the defence of denial, obliges them to take
action to solve killings and disappearances, and holds them
accountable for such acts.
Rutherford’s den gets
Canterbury cash
What is said to be a world-class
multi-media visitor experience celebrating the life and work
of one of New Zealand’s greatest scientists, Ernest, Lord
Rutherford, is to benefit from a significant sponsorship
partnership with the University of Canterbury. Rutherford is
one of the University of Canterbury’s most illustrious
graduates and his original student laboratory at Canterbury
College, now the Christchurch arts centre, is the den’s
central exhibition space.
“We are absolutely delighted
to welcome the university as naming-rights sponsor for
Rutherford’s den, particularly in this the centenary year
of Rutherford receiving the Nobel prize,” said Jenny May,
chair of Rutherford’s Den Trust Board.
“The
university’s three-year sponsorship will make a major
contribution to ensuring the den continues to educate and
tell the story of Rutherford’s days at Canterbury College
and how he went on to become one of the greatest scientists
of the twentieth century,” said Ms May. She added that one
of the key objectives of the den is to inspire the
Rutherfords of the future through its school-education
programme.
Canterbury vice-chancellor, Professor Roy
Sharp, said that the the university is proud of its
connections with Rutherford. “The pioneering spirit that
enabled him to achieve what he did is certainly still alive
and well in the Canterbury University of today. It is in the
top tier of New Zealand universities and is certainly
well-respected for its world class research and
teaching.”
“I know how inspirational Rutherford’s
story is for aspiring scientists, and I am delighted that
the university’s relationship with the den has been
formalised in this manner,” he concluded.
World
Watch
Cash bonanza for Oz universities
Universities
have done well out of this week’s Australian budget, with
education minister Julia Gillard announcing an immediate
injection into the system of $NZ591.5 million. The one-off
renewal fund is intended to help universities “rebuild
their campus infrastructure after eleven years of Howard
government neglect”.
The unexpected announcement is an
early dividend from a new $13 billion resource, the
education investment fund, which adds $5.92 billion in new
money to the previous government’s $7 billion higher
education endowment fund.
Welcoming the transfusion,
National Tertiary Education Union president Carolyn Allport
said it was “a very good budget for higher education ...
it certainly exceeded our expectations”. She added that,
“The education revolution has started.”
Council of
Australian Postgraduate Associations (CAPA) president Nigel
Palmer said, however, that, “Promises were honoured but
opportunities were missed. CAPA was disappointed that the
Australian postgraduate award stipend rate and the award
duration were not increased.”
National Union of
Students president Angus McFarland said he was “shocked
and disappointed” that, out of $8.28 billion in new
funding for universities, “not one cent” would go to
restore essential student services.
Universities
Australia chief executive Glenn Withers said the budget
provided an “overall very welcome down-payment on the
higher-education component of the education revolution”.
That point of view was endorsed by RMIT University
vice-chancellor Margaret Gordon, who said, “We are
unlikely to see vice-chancellors dancing in the streets,
that would be too scary, but we'll be dancing privately in
our offices and lounge rooms.”
From the
Australian
Students into instant security threats
A
German graduate student in oceanography at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) applied to the transportation
security administration for a new ID card allowing him to
work around ships and docks. What the student, Wilken-Jon
von Appen, received in return was a letter that not only
turned him down but added an ominous warning from security
administration official John M Busch saying, “I have
determined that you pose a security threat.”
Similar
letters have gone to 5,000 applicants across the country who
have, at least initially, been turned down for a
transportation worker identification credential, an ID card
meant to guard against acts of terrorism. Administration
officials said they were sorry about the language, which
they may change in the future, but that they had no
intention of withdrawing letters already sent.
“It’s
an unfortunate choice of words in a bureaucratic letter,”
said Ellen Howe, a security agency spokeswoman. Ms Howe and
Maurine Fanguy, the official who oversees the new ID card
programme, said that most foreign students did not qualify
for the identity cards, but that the letters were not
intended to label the recipients as potential
terrorists.
Mr von Appen, one of at least four
oceanography students at MIT who received identical letters,
said he was stunned by its language. “I was pretty much
speechless and quite intimidated,” said Mr von Appen,
whose research is supported by a $US65,000-a-year grant from
the national science foundation.
A British student at MIT
who was also rejected, Sophie Clayton, said that at first
she was amused at what appeared to be a bureaucratic
absurdity. But, as she pondered the designation, Ms Clayton
said she grew worried. “The two words ‘security
threat’ are now in the files next to my name, my
photograph, and my fingerprints,” she said.
From the
New York Times
Australian universities’ IP position
weakened
A judgement against the University of Western
Australia (UWA) in an intellectual-property case involving a
former academic, Dr Bruce Gray, has weakened the position of
the entire Australian university sector in negotiating
benefits derived from the intellectual property generated by
their researchers, according to the lawyer defending the
case, Martin Bennett.
The university had sought rights to
the patent portfolio of Sirtex, a company set up to
commercialise IP developed by Dr Gray in a case that could
have been worth as much as $NZ240 million for the
university.
Mr Bennett said, however, that, in 2000, the
then vice-chancellor determined that the university did not
have a case. “The fact that, four years later, it
commenced a case, indicated that it was an action brought
somewhat opportunistically given the value of Dr Gray’s
shareholding in Sirtex,” he said.
Mr Bennett said that
UWA pursued the case when it realised the amount of money
at stake. He also described as “ludicrous” claims by UWA
vice-chancellor Alan Robson that the case was based on a
matter of principle.
“They have now established that
universities in Australia have a very weak position to claim
the IP of their academics. I don’t think that it was an
intended consequence of the litigation. It would appear to
be something the university didn’t consider in bringing
the action,” he said.
One of the more unexpected
findings in the case was that the duty to research does not
carry with it a duty to invent.
From Campus
Review
Online journals to go 3D
The world’s
researchers now have a startlingly novel method of
presenting their data as interactive, three-dimensional
visualisations in online publications. Developed only this
year by Melbourne-based astrophysicists Dr Christopher Fluke
and Dr David Barnes from Swinburne University of
Technology’s centre for astrophysics and supercomputing,
the system enables researchers to embed 3D illustrations
into their PDF files.
The development opens the way for
online publications, from academic journals to textbooks, to
present 3D images to readers without them having to log on
to another website to see a movie or view a CD. Students
studying astronomy, chemistry, biology, or any of the other
sciences can see illustrations of the planets, a benzene
molecule or human cells in 3D and be able to rotate and
explore them in a way not possible with the usual
two-dimension drawings.
Quoting from the television
series Star Trek, where Mr Spock observes in The Wrath of
Khan, “His pattern indicates two-dimensional thinking”,
Dr Fluke contrasted the age-old restrictions of the print
media with the potential of the new technique to overcome
the limits publishers have long experienced in trying to
represent three-dimensional objects in two
dimensions.
“This is an enhancement to the usual method
of presenting static, two-dimensional views, or ‘comic
strip’ sequences, to indicate changes in viewpoint,” he
said. “Interactive figures provide opportunities for
students to undertake active learning while reading a
textbook: they are able to explore and uncover the
connections between viewpoint, orientation, and the 3D
nature of models and data sets for themselves.”
From
Geoff Maslen in University World News
Arachnid honour for
Neil Young
In the midst of the season of bestowal of
often-dubious honorary degrees, it is a pleasure to be able
to report that veteran Canadian rock musician Neil Young has
been honoured by having a new species of trapdoor spider
named after him.
East Carolina University biologist, Dr
Jason Bond, discovered a new species of trapdoor spider and
decided to name it after his favourite musician.
Myrmekiaphila neilyoungi was found in Jefferson County,
Alabama, and Dr Bond established through DNA tests that it
is a newly discovered species. The spider is distinguishable
from others in its genus through its genitalia.
Dr Bond
said, “There are rather strict rules about how you name
new species. As long as these rules are followed, you can
give a new species just about any name you please. With
regards to Neil Young, I really enjoy his music and have had
a great appreciation of him as an activist for peace and
justice.”
Neil Young is not the first musician to have
a creature named after him. A species of beetle that looks
as if it is wearing a tuxedo was named Orectochilus
orbisonorum earlier this year after the late Roy
Orbison.
From the BBC and the New Musical Express
More
international news
More international news can be found
on University World
News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
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