AUS Tertiary Update
University bargaining gets under way
This year’s
university collective employment agreement negotiations get
under way between university employers and unions on Tuesday
17 June with a preliminary meeting to agree on a bargaining
process, set further dates, and introduce union claims.
Substantive negotiations on the claims will go ahead in a
series of meetings in July.
Advocacy will be led by
Association of University Staff deputy secretary Marty
Braithwaite with Association of Staff in Tertiary Education
(ASTE) national secretary Sharn Riggs and Public Service
Association (PSA) organiser Keith McFadyen and the remainder
of the bargaining team will comprise seven representatives
from AUS, three from ASTE, and three from the PSA. Other
university unions have delegated authority to the
participating unions.
The government has contributed the
sum of $15 million to be applied specifically to university
salaries but its exact distribution has still to be
computed. Until that is done, there will be no specific
salary claim, although it is likely to be calculated on a
flat-dollar basis to give a boost to the salaries of the
lower paid as well as going some way towards reducing the
disparities among university salary levels.
Also
significant is a claim for the development of a new national
salary scale for general staff which would allow for
progression unhindered by merit bars. It is intended that
placement on such a salary scale would be informed by an
equitable job-evaluation process with pay and employment
equity reviews sought to be conducted at all universities
during 2009. General staff are also seeking the removal of
bars on eligibility for overtime payment and amendment of
time-in-lieu provisions to allow for pay-out of accrued time
at overtime rates where it cannot be taken.
Other claims
include recognition of tikanga Māori and te reo Māori
skills, the extension of the 37.5-hour week to workers such
as maintenance staff and cleaners, a standard provision for
twenty-five days’ annual leave and five days’ university
holidays, and a host of others. In response to membership
concerns about freeloading, agreement will be sought to hold
a bargaining-fee ballot which could see non-members paying a
bargaining fee to the unions. The full log of claims is
available on the AUS website.
As this issue of Tertiary
Update goes to press, the Universities Tripartite Forum,
comprising unions, vice-chancellors, and government, is
meeting to discuss the Tertiary Education Commission report,
New Zealand universities of the future, the contents of
which were summarised in our 22 May issue.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Health-research funding
recognises university role
2. ASTE and ITPs seek
government salary boost
3. Migrants to replace
“missing” men?
4. Samoan youth doing
well
5. Radical proposals for Australian
universities
6. A fixed term fixed
7. An academic
licence to roam
8. Star rankings for
academics
Health-research funding recognises university
role
The Health Research Council (HRC) has announced
funding of $63 million for 57 health-research contracts,
with more than 80 percent of the money going to Auckland and
Otago universities. Contracts totalling $9 million were also
awarded to researchers at Massey and the Auckland University
of Technology, with smaller amounts going to research staff
at Victoria and Waikato. In all, 52 of the 57 contracts,
most of them of three years’ duration, went to university
researchers.
The New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee (NZVCC), describing itself as “the peak body for
the country’s eight universities”, has expressed
appreciation of the HRC’s support for the many talented
medical researchers working in the university system,
according to NZVCC chair, Professor Roger Field. In what
appears to be an indirect reference to the role of crown
research institutes, he has also suggested that the amount
of funding devoted to universities emphasises their
importance as the principal providers of research in New
Zealand.
A University of Otago biochemistry team headed
by Dr Tony Merriman has received $3.43 million for a
programme that uses new gene-based technologies to analyse
several common disorders found in New Zealand.
University
of Auckland department of paediatrics staff member, Dr
Catherine Byrnes, was successful with her first HRC
application, having been awarded $556,000 for her work on
the antibiotic treatment of lung scarring in Māori and
Pacific Island children.
Professor Neil Pearce of Massey
University’s centre for public health research heads a
team that will receive $2.53 million for a project to build
research in occupational health in this country.
Professor Kathryn McPherson of AUT’s division of
rehabilitation and occupational studies has been awarded
$1.54 million for work on goals and self-regulation skills
in brain injury rehabilitation.
ASTE and ITPs seek
government salary boost
Further to our recent coverage of
a union and six-polytechnic working group on staff salaries,
the latest edition of Education Review suggests that the
institutes of technology and polytechnics sector is gearing
itself up to increase government salary funding with two
separate initiatives around pay rates in the sector.
Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics New Zealand
(ITPNZ), the story says, is working on a report comparing
ITP pay rates with those prevailing in professions from
which the sector draws its staff; and the Association of
Staff in Tertiary Education is similarly comparing ITP pay
rates with those for school teachers and those obtaining in
the Australian vocational-education sector.
ASTE
president Tangi Tipene has said that it is expected that the
reports will be used to seek increases in government salary
funding in parallel with the Association of University
Staff’s universities tripartite forum initiative. While
salaries had increased by between 3 and 3.37 percent last
year, she said, ITPs are still having difficulty attracting
young people to replace retiring staff.
“We’re not
attracting young men and women because the salaries are too
low. In trades, there are people who have been teaching for
forty years and are ready to retire but there is nobody to
take their place,” she said. “Higher salaries would
enable ITPs to fulfil their role in the government’s drive
to address skill shortages,” Ms Tipene added.
ITPNZ
executive director Dave Guerin is quoted in Education Review
as saying that his organisation is exploring whether the
government’s annual inflation-linked increases are
sufficient, particularly in relation to salaries. “ITPs
have a concern that salaries are increasing at a rate higher
than inflation, but also that our salaries are falling
behind our comparator professions,” he said.
Migrants to
replace “missing” men?
There is a huge gender
imbalance in favour of women when it comes to the holding of
tertiary-education qualifications and New Zealand should be
looking to immigration to correct that imbalance,
particularly among teachers and doctors, according to a
Victoria University researcher. The Pathways, Circuits and
Crossroads conference, held in Wellington this week, heard
institute of policy studies senior fellow, Dr Paul
Callister, say that, while about 38 percent of New Zealand
women had a tertiary education, only 28 percent of men
completed university qualifications.
As a result, he said
in his paper on tertiary education and “missing men”,
there are insufficient numbers of men becoming teachers and
doctors, and he suggested that New Zealand could look to
immigration for correction and, in particular, draw on
models developed in Sweden, Singapore, and even New York to
help generate gender equality.
Dr Callister is the leader
of a $1.7 million research project funded for three years by
the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology (FoRST)
to investigate “education capital formation, employment,
migration, gender, work-life balance and missing men”. The
project addresses wider data quality issues as well as
actual changes for both men and women in education,
employment, migration, and family life.
Its premise is
that a group of young men has been increasingly missing from
official statistics, skewing social-policy analyses, and
confronting education funders and providers with a gendered
“education transition” as a result of which there is a
gap in both participation and achievement between women and
men, especially within Māori and Pacific populations. The
project seeks to explain this transition and investigate its
consequences.
The conference is an annual event organised
by a group of research programmes funded by FoRST. The
programme featured sessions on economic and social
dimensions of migration and settlement, return migration and
circulation in global and local migration systems, social
inclusion and wellbeing in a more diverse society, and
migration and development in the Pacific.
Samoan youth
doing well
Another paper delivered to the Pathways,
Circuits and Crossroads conference, and a particularly
interesting one in view of recent media stories based on a
controversial paper suggesting under-performance by Pacific
Islanders in New Zealand, suggests that, in spite of
discrimination against them, Samoan youth adapt well to the
circumstances of this country.
Professor Colleen Ward,
director of the centre for applied cross-cultural research
at Victoria University, presented the results of a study,
co-conducted with psychology master’s student Matthew
Viliamu, to the conference this week. The study, of 250
Samoan youth, found that those in the first generation
report greater life satisfaction and better school
adjustment than their Māori and Pakeha peers, in spie of
experiencing more discrimination.
Professor Ward said
that the results reflect the “immigrant paradox” found
in Asian and Hispanic groups in the United States, where
first-generation migrants have better psychological and
social outcomes than native-born Asians, Hispanics, and
whites, despite their relative socio-economic disadvantage.
“The study also revealed that Samoan identity was
strong in both first and second-generation groups, but the
second-generation youth were less likely to speak Samoan,
had better English language proficiency, and had a stronger
New Zealand identity,” Professor Ward said.
The
study’s key research questions were designed to find out
how Samoan youth aged between 12 and 19 live within and
between two cultures and deal with their intercultural
situation, how those intercultural and adaptation processes
vary over generations, and what the relationship is between
how well they engage in intercultural relations and how well
they adapt. Professor Ward says that the research supports
policies and practices that encourage maintenance of
traditional language and cultures.
World Watch
Radical
proposals for Australian universities
THE quality of
university education in Australia is set to decline, with
few staff teaching more students, a reduction in academic
career opportunities, and an increasing reliance on
full-fee-paying students to balance the books, according to
a much-awaited discussion paper from a committee reviewing
higher education in that country.
In order to correct the
decline, the committee has proposed a government-supported
industry restructure in a wide-ranging discussion paper that
has the potential to transform post-school education more
completely than any reform since the creation of the unified
national system in the late 1980s.
According to the
paper, the government’s existing indexation formula is
unlikely to cover the cost effects of expected wage
inflation and infrastructure-funding shortfalls and will put
increased cost pressures on universities. “These factors
combine to produce a strong incentive for universities to
increase staff-student ratios, increase the rate of
casualisation of the academic workforce, and pursue revenue
from the same, limited number of other sources,” the paper
argues.
Pointing to the possibility of an end to the
existing single system, the discussion paper suggests
competition for resources, staff, and students may force
universities to focus on their strengths and abandon a
full-service approach. “Higher-education providers may
seek to merge and reconfigure in different ways in order to
achieve competitive advantages, increased critical mass to
sustain key areas, or benefit from economies of scale,”
the paper says.
It places at centre stage the most
contentious issue in higher education: stripping some
institutions of a research role; and it invites comment on
whether “there is a place in Australia’s
higher-education system for universities that are
predominantly “teaching only”.
The paper also
highlights the prospect of government intervention to
restructure the university system, arguing that “it could
be appropriate for government to play a facilitating role in
supporting restructuring of the industry where the changes
are in the public interest”.
From Stephen Matchett in
The Australian
A fixed term fixed
An academic employed
for nine years in the United Kingdom on a succession of
fixed-term contracts has won a landmark legal battle for a
permanent contract. In a case with implications for the
60,000 UK academics on fixed-term contracts, an employment
tribunal has said that the University of Aberdeen could not
refuse a researcher a permanent contract on the grounds that
funding for such posts is short-term. The University and
College Union said that it would now use the ruling to
challenge other employers across the sector.
Aberdeen
University had employed Andrew Ball, a research fellow in
zoology, on three successive contracts since 1999, each
linked to external short-term funding. His situation was not
unusual: only about 8 percent of research staff at the
university are permanent. In its school of biological
sciences, 97 percent of researchers are on fixed-term
contracts and, of them, 70 employees have been continuously
employed for six or more years.
With his third contract
due to end last month, Dr Ball asked the university to make
his position permanent. He cited employment law that states
that any person continuously employed for four or more years
on fixed-term contracts should be treated as permanent
unless the employer can justify not doing so “on objective
grounds”. The university refused, saying, “We believe
the uncertainty of funds is an objective reason for the
continued use of a fixed-term contract.”
Aberdeen
University had argued that it would cost $NZ37 million to
employ all its contract researchers beyond the limits of
their contracts. The tribunal said this was “a red herring
since in the real world there was simply no possibility of
this happening”, pointing out that the university could
still make the researchers redundant if initial funding ran
out.
From Melanie Newman in Times Higher Education
An
academic licence to roam
Academics have never had
standard nine-to-five jobs but, until now, a university
position has at least tended to come with an office desk.
That could change, however, with a trial of
“location-independent working” that suggests that a
rootless future may await the academics of tomorrow. The
concept is being piloted at Coventry University in the UK,
where forty staff have volunteered to give up their offices
for three months in return for a single drawer in a communal
filing cabinet and a licence to roam.
The idea is
credited with improving productivity and staff satisfaction
while reducing stress and sickness absence. Dina Shah, the
manager of the project, said, “It doesn’t mean that
academics will be at home all the time. It means that they
can work from the lecture theatre and the library, and that
they can work more intelligently. They can have all their
files at hand and can do surgery hours over a wider range of
times because they have a headset and webcam and other
technologies enabling them to interact with their
students,” she said.
“We have put in facilities
around the university that have hot-desk facilities, as well
as rooms for one-to-one sessions with students,” Ms Shah
continued.
The pilot, which has involved academics from
across the university but has focused on the department of
business, environment and society, has proved a success,
according to university management. “People have seen all
sorts of benefits, from their work-life balance to
satisfaction levels to innovation in teaching.”
“An
interesting point one person made was that, while academics
were already sort of location independent, it was formalised
under this scheme and so this person did not feel an
obligation to be seen at the office at certain hours. The
set-up allows academics to work more flexibly, and that
improves productivity,” concluded Ms Shah.
From John
Gill in Times Higher Education
Star rankings for
academics
First came Amazon book rankings, and word
leaked out that perhaps some vaunted writers spent more time
than you would think checking how popular they were, hour by
hour. Then newspapers started tracking the most popular
articles on their sites and journalists, it was said, spent
more time than you would think watching their rankings, hour
by hour. But would you believe that academics could become
caught up in such petty, vain competition?
Of course they
would but, short of hanging out in the stacks at the library
and peeking over shoulders, the pursuit of that particular
vanity had to wait for the internet and the creation of the
Social Science Research Network (SSRN), an increasingly
influential site that now offers nearly 150,000 full-text
documents for downloading.
So far, more than 550,000
users have registered to download documents. And with a
precision common to the digital age, its rankings of
downloads can be sliced and diced in many ways with only a
click: most downloads overall or most downloads in the last
12 months, either by article, by author or by
institution.
As an example of the new concern for
ratings, Professor Glenn H Reynolds of the University of
Tennessee law school, who publishes a popular blog,
Instapundit, claimed not to have checked his SSRN ratings
for months. When questioned by a reporter, however, he
admitted knowing that he had recently fallen behind one Cass
Sunstein, a professor at the University of Chicago, whose
total downloads for the last year make him fourth among
authors. Professor Reynolds is fifth.
Ruminating on his
his fall from grace, Professor Reynolds confessed, “I was
ahead. I knew I didn’t deserve to be ahead of him, but
that made it all the more sweeter, if that makes
sense.”
From Noam Cohen in the New York Times
More
international news
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News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
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 inquiries should be made to the
editor, email:
editor@aus.ac.nz.